Malaria is a serious disease caused by parasites. As infected mosquito bites you, you will get it. Malaria is the leading cause of death worldwide, but almost no longer in the United States. In developing countries with a warm climate, the disease is mainly a problem. If you travel to these countries, you will be in danger. Four related parasites cause four different types of malaria. The most deadly type occurs in sub-Saharan Africa
Symptoms of malaria include chills, symptoms such as influenza, fever, vomiting, diarrhea, jaundice and so on. You can diagnose it with a blood test. There is a possibility of life threatening. However, it is possible to treat malaria with medicine. The kind of medicine depends on the malaria you have and the place you are infected
Malaria is caused by parasites of the malaria parasite. The parasites are transmitted to people through an infected female Hamadaka bite called "malaria-mediated virus". Five parasites cause malaria in humans, two of which, Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium v ivax are the biggest threats. Malaria is an acute febrile illness. In people who are not immunized, symptoms usually appear after 10 to 15 days after infectious mosquito bites. The first symptoms (fever, headache, chills) may be difficult to identify as malaria. Failure to treat within 24 hours, P. falciparum may develop into a serious disease that usually leads to death
Severe malaria is usually caused by Plasmodium falciparum (commonly known as P. falciparum malaria). Symptoms of tropical fever malaria occur 9 to 30 days after infection. People with cerebral malaria often show neurological symptoms including abnormal posture, nystagmus, conjugate vision paralysis (the eyes can not face the same direction), angular bow reflex, stroke or coma. Malaria has several serious complications. These include onset of dyspnea, up to 25% of severe female Plasmodium falciparum adults and 40% of children develop dyspnoea. Possible causes include compensated respiration of metabolic acidosis, noncardiac pulmonary edema, concomitant pneumonia, and severe anemia. It is rare in infants with severe malaria, but acute respiratory distress syndrome occurs in 5 to 25% of adults and up to 29% of pregnant women. Co-infection between HIV and malaria increases mortality