AI Article Synopsis

  • Chemotherapy remains the primary method for controlling malaria in sub-Saharan Africa, with the use of artemether-lumefantrine increasing the risk of drug resistance to lumefantrine.
  • Methylene blue has shown potential as an antimalarial candidate due to its effectiveness against drug-resistant strains of Plasmodium berghei in mice.
  • The study found that a dosage of 45 mg/kg/day of methylene blue resulted in over 99% parasite inhibition for at least six days, indicating its promising role in developing treatments for resistant malaria strains without serious side effects.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Chemotherapy still is the most effective way to control malaria, a major public health problem in sub-Saharan Africa. The large-scale use of the combination therapy artemether-lumefantrine for malaria treatment in Africa predisposes lumefantrine to emergence of resistance. There is need to identify drugs that can be used as substitutes to lumefantrine for use in combination therapy. Methylene blue, a synthetic anti-methemoglobinemia drug, has been shown to contain antimalarial properties, making it a candidate for drug repurposing. The present study sought to determine antiplasmodial effects of methylene blue against lumefantrine- and pyrimethamine-resistant strains of P. berghei.

Methodology: Activity of methylene blue was assessed using the classical four-day test on mice infected with lumefantrine-resistant and pyrimethamine-resistant P. berghei. A dose of 45 mg/kg/day was effective for testing ED90. Parasitemia and mice survival was determined.

Results: At 45 mg/kg/day, methylene blue sustained significant parasite inhibition, over 99%, for at least 6 days post-treatment against lumefantrine-resistant and pyrimethamine-resistant P. berghei (p = 0.0086 and p = 0.0191, respectively). No serious adverse effects were observed.

Conclusions: Our results indicate that methylene blue at a concentration of 45 mg/kg/day confers over 99% inhibition against lumefantrine- and pyrimethamine-resistant P. berghei for six days. This shows the potential use methylene blue in the development of antimalarials against lumefantrine- and pyrimethamine-resistant parasites.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3855/jidc.7556DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

methylene blue
28
lumefantrine- pyrimethamine-resistant
12
pyrimethamine-resistant berghei
12
combination therapy
8
lumefantrine-resistant pyrimethamine-resistant
8
methylene
7
blue
6
pyrimethamine-resistant
5
blue inhibits
4
inhibits lumefantrine-resistant
4

Similar Publications

This research focuses on the development of a novel Ru-doped TiO/grapefruit peel biochar/FeO (Ru-TiO/PC/FeO) composite catalyst, which exhibits exceptional photocatalytic efficacy under simulated solar light irradiation. The catalyst is highly effective in the degradation of rhodamine B (RhB), methylene blue (MB), methyl orange (MO), as well as actual industrial dye wastewater (IDW), and can be recovered magnetically for multiple reuse cycles. Significantly, the PCTRF-100 sample exhibited degradation efficiencies of 99.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adsorption of phenol and methylene blue contaminants onto high-performance catalytic activated carbon from biomass residues.

Heliyon

January 2025

Graduate School of International Agricultural Technology, Department of Green Eco System, Engineering, Seoul National University, Pyeongchang, 25354, Gangwon-do, South Korea.

Organic contaminants from wastewater toxicity to the environment has increased during the last few decades and, therefore, there is an urgent need to decontaminate wastewater prior to disposal. This study aimed to create a high surface area catalytic activated carbon (AC) under same carbonization conditions for phenol and methylene blue (organic wastewater) decontamination. husk (MH), sesame husk (SH), and baobab husk (BH) were used to prepare activated carbon for the removal of methylene blue (MB) and phenol (Ph).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A series of anionic poly(acrylamide--sodium acrylate)/poly(ethylene glycol), PAN/PEG, hybrids were conveniently synthesized free radical aqueous polymerization by integrating bentonite, kaolin, mica, graphene and silica, following a simple and eco-friendly crosslinking methodology. A comparative perspective was presented on how integrated nanofillers affect the physicochemical properties of hybrid gels depending on the differences in their structures. Among the five types of nanofillers, bentonite-integrated hybrid gel had the highest water absorbency, while graphene-integrated gel had the lowest.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!