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Malaria is an acute infectious disease, usually transmitted by the bite of a mosquito. Single-celled parasites (plasmodia) carried by the mosquito enter the bloodstream and travel to the liver. There they mature and proliferate for several days or weeks and cause no symptoms. Eventually, however, the plasmodia reenter the bloodstream and infect the red blood cells. After multiplying for two to three days the parasites cause massive destruction of the red cells. This initiates the classic cycle of malaria symptoms that last 12 to 24 hours. It begins as a period of uncontrollable shivering and chills, followed by a fever as high as 105°F. Finally, a period of profuse sweating occurs, which helps the body temperature return to normal. The patient is left exhausted but otherwise temporarily free of symptoms. However, plasmodia released from dying red cells and those continuing to multiply in the liver infect other red cells and cause repeated attacks, usually every two to three days. If untreated, attacks can continue intermittently for years and may be fatal, although the body gradually builds up defenses against the disease.While malaria is rarely life-threatening, one form of the disease, caused by the parasite Plasmodium falciparum, releases all of the parasites into the bloodstream at once and produces a single severe attack that is sometimes fatal. Falciparum malaria may be complicated by kidney failure or disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC).
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Content excerpted from Johns Hopkins Symptoms and Remedies: The Complete Home Medical Reference.