Increasing malaria treatment failures with chloroquine (C25) and reports of chloroquine resistant Plasmodium falciparum (CRPF) led to the field survey of two sites (Agbani and Jato-Aka) both in Primary Health Zone A, using WHO--in vivo seven-day test, modified to 14-day follow-up period. Of the 922 children studied, high transmission rates of 40 pc and 59.2 pc were found in Agbani and Jato-Aka respectively. Varying degrees of parasitologic failures (CRPF), 52 pc in Agbani and 60 pc in Jato-Aka were confirmed. However, chemotherapy with C25 significantly reduced the clinical symptoms of malaria infection, even in the CRPF-cases. The clinical success in the two study sites were 69 pc ad 94 pc respectively.
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Cent Afr J Med
June 1991
Department of Medicine, College of Medical Sciences, University of Calabar, Nigeria.
Increasing malaria treatment failures with chloroquine (C25) and reports of chloroquine resistant Plasmodium falciparum (CRPF) led to the field survey of two sites (Agbani and Jato-Aka) both in Primary Health Zone A, using WHO--in vivo seven-day test, modified to 14-day follow-up period. Of the 922 children studied, high transmission rates of 40 pc and 59.2 pc were found in Agbani and Jato-Aka respectively.
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