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Antiprotozoal drugsAntiprotozoal drugs
(Abstract)(Abstract)
1. Malaria1. Malaria
DRUG-RESISTANT MALARIA
Plasmodium falciparum is now resistant to chloroquine
in many parts of the world. Areas of high risk for
resistant parasites include Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin
America, Oceania, and some parts of South-East Asia.
Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium vivax is also
reported.
Malaria is the most important of
the transmissible parasitic diseases.
Over 90 million cases occur each year.
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Medical Lecture Notes – All Subjects
USMLE Exam (America) – Practice
The incubation period of malaria is 10–35 days.
Female anopheles mosquitoesFemale anopheles mosquitoes
require a blood meal for egg production and in therequire a blood meal for egg production and in the
process of feeding they inject salivary fluid containingprocess of feeding they inject salivary fluid containing
sporozoitessporozoites into humans. Since no drugs are effectiveinto humans. Since no drugs are effective
against sporozoites,against sporozoites, infection with the malariainfection with the malaria
parasite cannot be preventedparasite cannot be prevented..
Hepatic cycleHepatic cycle
SporozoitesSporozoites enter liver cells where they develop into tissue
(liver) schizonts(liver) schizonts which form large numbers of merozoitesmerozoites
which, usually after 5–16 days but sometimes after months or
years, are released into the circulation. Plasmodium
falciparum differs in that it has no persistent hepatic cycle.
Primaquine, proguanil, and tetracyclines (tissue
schizonticides) act at this site and are used for:
• Radical cure, i.e. an attack on persisting hepatic
forms. This is most effectively accomplished
with primaquine.
• Preventing the initial hepatic cycle. This is also
called causal prophylaxis. Primaquine may be
used safely; proguanil is weakly effective;
doxycycline may be used short-term.
Erythrocyte cycleErythrocyte cycle
Merozoites enter red cells where they develop into
blood schizontsblood schizonts which form more merozoites which are
released when the cells burst giving rise to the
features of the clinical attack. The merozoites
reenter red cells and the cycle is repeated.
Chloroquine, quinine, mefloquine, halofantrine,
proguanil, pyrimethamine, and tetracyclines (bloodblood
schizontocidesschizontocides) kill these asexual forms. Drugs which
act at this stage in the cycle may be used for:
• Treatment of acute attacks of malaria.
• Prevention of attacks by early destruction of the
erythrocytic forms. This is called suppressive
prophylaxis as it does not cure the hepatic cycle.
Sexual formsSexual forms
Some merozoites differentiate into male and female
gametocytesgametocytes in the erythrocytes and can develop fur-
ther only if they are ingested by a mosquito where they
form sporozoitessporozoites and complete the transmission cycle.
Quinine, mefloquine, chloroquine, artesunate,
artemether and primaquine (gametocytocidesgametocytocides) act on
sexual forms and prevent transmission of the infection
because the patient becomes noninfective and the
parasite fails to develop into mosquito.
In summary, drugs may be selected for:
• treatment of clinical attacks
• prevention of clinical attacks
• radical cure.
Life cycleLife cycle
of malariaof malaria
parasitesparasites
•Pl. falciparumPl. falciparum
•Pl. malariaePl. malariae
•Pl. ovalePl. ovale
•Pl. vivaxPl. vivax
Quinine as cinchona bark was introduced into
Europe from South America in 1633. It was
used for all fevers, amongst them malaria.
Further advance in the chemotherapy
of malaria was delayed until 1880, when
Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran, Prof. of Military
Medicine in Paris (Nobel prize winner 1907) finally
identified the parasites in the blood.
Quinine (Chinine) is an alkaloid, obtained
from the bark of the South American Cinchona tree.
It binds to plasmodial DNA to prevent protein
synthesis. It is used to treat Plasmodium falciparum
malaria in areas of multiple-drug resistance. Apart
from its antiplasmodial effect, quinine is used for
myotonia and muscle cramps because it prolongs
the muscle refractory period. Quinine is included in
dilute concentration in tonics and aperitifs for its
desired bitter taste. Adverse effects include tinnitus,
diminished auditory acuity, headache, blurred vision,
nausea, and diarrhoea. Idiosyncratic reactions include
pruritus, urticaria, and rashes. Hypoglycemia may be
significant when quinine is given by i.v. infusion.
Amodiaquine is closely related to chloroquine, and
it probably shares its mechanisms of action and resi-
stance. Amodiaquine has been widely used to treat
malaria because of its low cost, limited toxicity, and,
in some areas, effectiveness against chloroquine-
resistant strains of P. falciparumP. falciparum. Important toxicities
of amodiaquine, including agranulocytosis, aplastic
anemia, and hepatotoxicity, have limited use, but
serious toxicity is rare.
Chloroquine is concentrated within parasitised
red cells and forms complexes with plasmodial
DNA. It is active against the blood forms and also the
gametocytes (formed in the mosquito) of Plasmodium
vivax, Plasmodium ovale, and Plasmodium malariae.
It is ineffective against many strains of Plasmodium
falciparum and also its immature gametocytes.
Chloroquine is readily absorbed from the GIT
and is concentrated several-fold in various tissues,
e.g. erythrocytes, liver, spleen, heart,
kidney, cornea, and retina. The long
t1/2 (50 d) reflects slow release from these sites.
Chloroquine is partly inactivated by metabolism
and the remainder is excreted unchanged in the urine.
Adverse effects are infrequent at doses normally
used for malaria prophylaxis and treatment, but are
more common with the higher or prolonged
doses given for resistant malaria or for
rheumatoid arthritis or lupus erythematosus.
Corneal deposits of chloroquine may cause
halos around lights or photophobia. These reverse when
the drug is stopped. Retinal toxicity may be irreversible.
In the early stage it takes the form of visual field
defects; late retinopathy classically gives the picture
of macular pigmentation surrounded by a ring of
pigment. The functional defect can take the form
of scotomas, photophobia, defective colour
vision resulting, in the extreme case, in blindness.
Other reactions include pruritus (which may be
intolerable), headaches, GI disturbance, precipitation
of acute intermittent porphyria in susceptible indivi-
duals, mental disturbances and interference with
cardiac rhythm; especially if the drug is given i.v.
in high dose (it has a quinidine-like action). Long-term
use is associated with reversible bleaching of the hair
and pigmentation of the hard palate.
Halofantrine (t1/2 2.5 d) is active against the
erythrocytic forms of all four Plasmodium species,
and at the schizont stage. It is used for the treatment
of uncomplicated chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium
falciparum and Plasmodium vivax malaria.
Halofantrine may cause GI adverse effects; pruritus (but
to a lesser extent than with chloroquine). It prolongs the
cardiac QT interval and may predispose to arrhythmia.
Mefloquine (t1/2 21 d) is similar in several respects
to quinine. It is used for malaria chemoprophylaxis,
to treat Pl. falciparum and chloroquine-resistant
Pl. vivax malaria. It should not be given to patients
with hepatic or renal impairment.
Adverse effects include nausea, dizziness, vomiting,
abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and loss of appetite.
More rarely, hallucinations, seizures, and psychoses
are observed.
Primaquine acts at several stages in the
development of the plasmodial parasite, possibly by
interfering with its mitochondrial function. Its unique
effect is to eliminate the hepatic forms of Plasmodium
vivax and Plasmodium ovale after standard chloroquine
therapy, but only when the risk of reinfection is absent.
Adverse effects: anorexia, nausea, abdominal cramps,
methaemoglobinaemia and haemolytic anaemia,
especially in patients with genetic deficiency of
erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
(G6PD). Subjects should be tested for G6PD and, in
those that are deficient, the risk of haemolytic
anaemia is greatly reduced by giving primaquine in
reduced dose.
Proguanil (t1/2 17 h) inhibits dihydrofolate reductase
which converts folic to folinic acid, deficiency of
which inhibits plasmodial cell division. Plasmodia,
like most bacteria and unlike humans, cannot make
use of preformed folic acid. Pyrimethamine and
trimethoprim, which share this mode of action, are
collectively known as the “antifols”. Their plasmod-
icidal action is markedly enhanced by combination
with sulphonamides or sulphones because there is
inhibition of sequential steps in folate synthesis.
Poguanil must be used daily when given for
prophylaxis, its main use, particularly in pregnant
women (with folic acid 5 mg/d).
AntifolsAntifols
Pyrimethamine (t1/2 4 d) inhibits plasmodial dihydro-
folate reductase, for which it has a high affinity. It is
well absorbed from the GIT and is extensively
metabolized. Pregnant women should receive
supplementary folic acid when taking pyrimethamine.
Adverse effects reported include anorexia,
abdominal cramps, vomiting, ataxia, tremor, seizures,
and megaloblastic anaemia.
PyrimethaminePyrimethamine acts synergistically with SulfadoxineSulfadoxine
(as FansidarFansidar®®
) to inhibit folic acid metabolism;
sulfadoxine is excreted in the urine. The combination
is chiefly used with quinine to treat acute attacks of
malaria caused by susceptible strains of Pl. falciparum.
Artesunate and artemether are soluble deriva-
tives of artemisinin which is isolated from the leaves
of the Chinese herb Artemisia annua.
They act against the blood, including sexual forms of
plasmodia and may also reduce transmissibility.
Artesunate (i.v.) and artemether (i.m.) are rapidly
effective in severe and multidrug-resistant malaria.
They are well tolerated but should be used with
caution in patients with chronic cardiac disorders
as they prolong the PR and QT interval in some
experimental animals.
Doxycycline is commonly used in the treatment of falci-
parum malaria in conjunction with quinidine or quinine,
allowing a shorter and better-tolerated course of quinine.
RiametRiamet®®
tablets contain artemether and lumefantrine. These
are both antimalarial medicines. It is used for treatment of
uncomplicated Pl. falciparum malaria in adults, children
and infants weighing 5 kg and above.
2. Amoebiasis2. Amoebiasis
Infection occurs when mature cysts of E. histolytica
are ingested and pass into the colon where they
divide into trophozoites. Amoebiasis occurs in two
forms, both of which need treatment.
• Bowel lumen amoebiasis is asymptomatic
and trophozoites (noninfective) and cysts
(infective) are passed into the faeces. Treatment
is directed at eradicating cysts with a luminal
amoebicide; diloxanide furoate is the drug of choice;
iodoquinol or paromomycin is sometimes used.
Paromomycin is an aminoglycoside antibiotic
that is not significantly absorbed from the GIT. It is
used only as a luminal amebicide and has no effect
against extraintestinal amebic infections. The small
amount absorbed is slowly excreted unchanged.
However, the drug may accumulate with renal
insufficiency and contribute to renal toxicity.
Paromomycin is an effective luminal amebicide
that appears to have similar efficacy and probably
less toxicity than other agents.
• Tissue-invading amoebiasis gives rise to
dysentery, hepatic amoebiasis, and liver abscess.
A systemically active drug (tissue amoebicide)
effective against trophozoites must be used, e.g.
dehydroemetine, metronidazole, tinidazole.
In severe cases of amoebic dysentery,
tetracycline lessens the risk of
opportunistic infection, perforation, and
peritonitis when it is given in addition to the
systemic amoebicide.
Dehydroemetine (from Ipecacuanha), less toxic than the parent
emetine, is claimed to be the most effective tissue amoebicide.
Dehydroemetine inhibits protein synthesis. It is reserved for
dangerously ill patients, but these are more likely to be vulnerable
to its cardiotoxic effects. When dehydroemetine is used to treat
amoebic liver abscess, chloroquine should also be given.
Metronidazole, a nitroimidazole, is the drug of choice in the
treatment of extraluminal amebiasis. It kills trophozoites but not
cysts of E. histolytica and effectively eradicates intestinal and
extraintestinal tissue infections. It has anaerobic
antibacterial activity and antihelicobacater activity too.
It is an enzyme inhibitor.
Tinidazole appears to have similar activity and a better toxicity
profile than metronidazole, and it offers simpler dosing regimens.
3. African trypanosomiasis (sleeping disease)3. African trypanosomiasis (sleeping disease)
It is caused by the hemoflagellates Trypanosoma bru-
cei rhodesiense and Trypanosoma brucei gambiense.
The organisms are transmitted by bites of tsetse flies
(genus Glossina), which inhabit shaded areas along
streams and rivers. The largest number of cases is
in the Congo. Annual incidence estimates are about
100 000 cases and 48 000 deaths.
American Trypanosomiasis (Chagas’ Disease)
is caused by Trypanosoma cruzi.
African trypanosomiasis – treatment:
Suramin or pentamidine is effective during
the early stages but not for the later
neurological manifestations for which
melarsoprol should be used. Eflornithine
is effective for both early and late stages.
American Trypanosomiasis – treatment:
Prolonged (1–3 months) treatment with
benznidazole or nifurtimox may be effective.
4. Leishmaniasis4. Leishmaniasis is a zoonosis.
•Visceral leishmaniasis (kala azar) is caused mainly
by Leishmania donovani in the Indian subcontinent
and East Africa. Treatment:
Sodium stibogluconate or meglumine antimoniate;
resistant cases may benefit from combining
antimonials with allopurinol, pentamidine,
paromomycin, or amphotericin B.
•(Muco-) Cutaneous leishmaniasis is caused
mainly by Leishmania tropica, L. major, and
L. donovani. Treatment:
Mild lesions heal spontaneously,
antimonials may be injected intralesionally.
5. Toxoplasmosis5. Toxoplasmosis
T. gondii, an obligate intracellular protozoan, is found
worldwide in humans and in many species of animals
and birds. The definitive hosts are cats. Humans are
infected after ingestion of cysts in raw or under-
cooked meat, ingestion of oocysts in food or water
contaminated by cats, transplacental transmission
of trophozoites or, rarely, direct inoculation of
trophozoites via blood transfusion or organ
transplantation.
Life cycle ofLife cycle of Toxoplasma gondiiToxoplasma gondii
Most infections are self-limited in the
immunologically normal patient.
Pyrimethamine with sulfadiazine is used for treat-
tement of chorioretinitis, and active toxoplasmosis
in immunodeficient patients; folinic acid is
used to counteract the fatal megaloblastic anaemia.
Alternatives include pyrimethamine with
clindamycin or clarithromycin or azithromycin.
Spiramycin is for treeatment of primary
toxoplasmosis in pregnant women.
Expert advice is essential.
6. Human Trichomoniasis6. Human Trichomoniasis
(Metronidazole or tinidazole
is effective)
Human trichomoniasis caused by Tr. vaginalis,
seen in both females and males. It is usually trans-
mitted by coitus and is sometimes asymptomatic.
The symptomatic condition in females may take the
form of a severe vaginitis associated with discharge,
burning, and pruritus.
In males it may produce urethritis, enlargement of
the prostate, and epididymitis.
7. Giardiasis7. Giardiasis
It is a common infection of
the human small intestine with
the protozoan Giardia lamblia, spread via
contaminated food or water, or by direct
person-to-person contact.
Treatment:
Metronidazole, mepacrine, or tinidazole
8. Pneumocystis8. Pneumocystis
Pneumocystis carinii, the causative agent
of interstitial plasma cell pneumonia,
which can also cause extrapulmonary
disease in immunocompromised
patients (AIDS, etc) .
Treatment:
Co-trioxazole: i.v./p.o. in high daily doses

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Anti-Protozoal drugs

  • 2. 1. Malaria1. Malaria DRUG-RESISTANT MALARIA Plasmodium falciparum is now resistant to chloroquine in many parts of the world. Areas of high risk for resistant parasites include Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, Oceania, and some parts of South-East Asia. Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium vivax is also reported. Malaria is the most important of the transmissible parasitic diseases. Over 90 million cases occur each year.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5. Sponsored Medical Lecture Notes – All Subjects USMLE Exam (America) – Practice
  • 6. The incubation period of malaria is 10–35 days. Female anopheles mosquitoesFemale anopheles mosquitoes require a blood meal for egg production and in therequire a blood meal for egg production and in the process of feeding they inject salivary fluid containingprocess of feeding they inject salivary fluid containing sporozoitessporozoites into humans. Since no drugs are effectiveinto humans. Since no drugs are effective against sporozoites,against sporozoites, infection with the malariainfection with the malaria parasite cannot be preventedparasite cannot be prevented.. Hepatic cycleHepatic cycle SporozoitesSporozoites enter liver cells where they develop into tissue (liver) schizonts(liver) schizonts which form large numbers of merozoitesmerozoites which, usually after 5–16 days but sometimes after months or years, are released into the circulation. Plasmodium falciparum differs in that it has no persistent hepatic cycle.
  • 7. Primaquine, proguanil, and tetracyclines (tissue schizonticides) act at this site and are used for: • Radical cure, i.e. an attack on persisting hepatic forms. This is most effectively accomplished with primaquine. • Preventing the initial hepatic cycle. This is also called causal prophylaxis. Primaquine may be used safely; proguanil is weakly effective; doxycycline may be used short-term.
  • 8. Erythrocyte cycleErythrocyte cycle Merozoites enter red cells where they develop into blood schizontsblood schizonts which form more merozoites which are released when the cells burst giving rise to the features of the clinical attack. The merozoites reenter red cells and the cycle is repeated. Chloroquine, quinine, mefloquine, halofantrine, proguanil, pyrimethamine, and tetracyclines (bloodblood schizontocidesschizontocides) kill these asexual forms. Drugs which act at this stage in the cycle may be used for: • Treatment of acute attacks of malaria. • Prevention of attacks by early destruction of the erythrocytic forms. This is called suppressive prophylaxis as it does not cure the hepatic cycle.
  • 9. Sexual formsSexual forms Some merozoites differentiate into male and female gametocytesgametocytes in the erythrocytes and can develop fur- ther only if they are ingested by a mosquito where they form sporozoitessporozoites and complete the transmission cycle. Quinine, mefloquine, chloroquine, artesunate, artemether and primaquine (gametocytocidesgametocytocides) act on sexual forms and prevent transmission of the infection because the patient becomes noninfective and the parasite fails to develop into mosquito. In summary, drugs may be selected for: • treatment of clinical attacks • prevention of clinical attacks • radical cure.
  • 10. Life cycleLife cycle of malariaof malaria parasitesparasites •Pl. falciparumPl. falciparum •Pl. malariaePl. malariae •Pl. ovalePl. ovale •Pl. vivaxPl. vivax
  • 11.
  • 12. Quinine as cinchona bark was introduced into Europe from South America in 1633. It was used for all fevers, amongst them malaria. Further advance in the chemotherapy of malaria was delayed until 1880, when Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran, Prof. of Military Medicine in Paris (Nobel prize winner 1907) finally identified the parasites in the blood.
  • 13. Quinine (Chinine) is an alkaloid, obtained from the bark of the South American Cinchona tree. It binds to plasmodial DNA to prevent protein synthesis. It is used to treat Plasmodium falciparum malaria in areas of multiple-drug resistance. Apart from its antiplasmodial effect, quinine is used for myotonia and muscle cramps because it prolongs the muscle refractory period. Quinine is included in dilute concentration in tonics and aperitifs for its desired bitter taste. Adverse effects include tinnitus, diminished auditory acuity, headache, blurred vision, nausea, and diarrhoea. Idiosyncratic reactions include pruritus, urticaria, and rashes. Hypoglycemia may be significant when quinine is given by i.v. infusion.
  • 14. Amodiaquine is closely related to chloroquine, and it probably shares its mechanisms of action and resi- stance. Amodiaquine has been widely used to treat malaria because of its low cost, limited toxicity, and, in some areas, effectiveness against chloroquine- resistant strains of P. falciparumP. falciparum. Important toxicities of amodiaquine, including agranulocytosis, aplastic anemia, and hepatotoxicity, have limited use, but serious toxicity is rare.
  • 15. Chloroquine is concentrated within parasitised red cells and forms complexes with plasmodial DNA. It is active against the blood forms and also the gametocytes (formed in the mosquito) of Plasmodium vivax, Plasmodium ovale, and Plasmodium malariae. It is ineffective against many strains of Plasmodium falciparum and also its immature gametocytes. Chloroquine is readily absorbed from the GIT and is concentrated several-fold in various tissues, e.g. erythrocytes, liver, spleen, heart, kidney, cornea, and retina. The long t1/2 (50 d) reflects slow release from these sites. Chloroquine is partly inactivated by metabolism and the remainder is excreted unchanged in the urine.
  • 16. Adverse effects are infrequent at doses normally used for malaria prophylaxis and treatment, but are more common with the higher or prolonged doses given for resistant malaria or for rheumatoid arthritis or lupus erythematosus. Corneal deposits of chloroquine may cause halos around lights or photophobia. These reverse when the drug is stopped. Retinal toxicity may be irreversible. In the early stage it takes the form of visual field defects; late retinopathy classically gives the picture of macular pigmentation surrounded by a ring of pigment. The functional defect can take the form of scotomas, photophobia, defective colour vision resulting, in the extreme case, in blindness.
  • 17. Other reactions include pruritus (which may be intolerable), headaches, GI disturbance, precipitation of acute intermittent porphyria in susceptible indivi- duals, mental disturbances and interference with cardiac rhythm; especially if the drug is given i.v. in high dose (it has a quinidine-like action). Long-term use is associated with reversible bleaching of the hair and pigmentation of the hard palate. Halofantrine (t1/2 2.5 d) is active against the erythrocytic forms of all four Plasmodium species, and at the schizont stage. It is used for the treatment of uncomplicated chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax malaria.
  • 18. Halofantrine may cause GI adverse effects; pruritus (but to a lesser extent than with chloroquine). It prolongs the cardiac QT interval and may predispose to arrhythmia. Mefloquine (t1/2 21 d) is similar in several respects to quinine. It is used for malaria chemoprophylaxis, to treat Pl. falciparum and chloroquine-resistant Pl. vivax malaria. It should not be given to patients with hepatic or renal impairment. Adverse effects include nausea, dizziness, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and loss of appetite. More rarely, hallucinations, seizures, and psychoses are observed.
  • 19. Primaquine acts at several stages in the development of the plasmodial parasite, possibly by interfering with its mitochondrial function. Its unique effect is to eliminate the hepatic forms of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium ovale after standard chloroquine therapy, but only when the risk of reinfection is absent. Adverse effects: anorexia, nausea, abdominal cramps, methaemoglobinaemia and haemolytic anaemia, especially in patients with genetic deficiency of erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD). Subjects should be tested for G6PD and, in those that are deficient, the risk of haemolytic anaemia is greatly reduced by giving primaquine in reduced dose.
  • 20. Proguanil (t1/2 17 h) inhibits dihydrofolate reductase which converts folic to folinic acid, deficiency of which inhibits plasmodial cell division. Plasmodia, like most bacteria and unlike humans, cannot make use of preformed folic acid. Pyrimethamine and trimethoprim, which share this mode of action, are collectively known as the “antifols”. Their plasmod- icidal action is markedly enhanced by combination with sulphonamides or sulphones because there is inhibition of sequential steps in folate synthesis. Poguanil must be used daily when given for prophylaxis, its main use, particularly in pregnant women (with folic acid 5 mg/d).
  • 22. Pyrimethamine (t1/2 4 d) inhibits plasmodial dihydro- folate reductase, for which it has a high affinity. It is well absorbed from the GIT and is extensively metabolized. Pregnant women should receive supplementary folic acid when taking pyrimethamine. Adverse effects reported include anorexia, abdominal cramps, vomiting, ataxia, tremor, seizures, and megaloblastic anaemia. PyrimethaminePyrimethamine acts synergistically with SulfadoxineSulfadoxine (as FansidarFansidar®® ) to inhibit folic acid metabolism; sulfadoxine is excreted in the urine. The combination is chiefly used with quinine to treat acute attacks of malaria caused by susceptible strains of Pl. falciparum.
  • 23. Artesunate and artemether are soluble deriva- tives of artemisinin which is isolated from the leaves of the Chinese herb Artemisia annua. They act against the blood, including sexual forms of plasmodia and may also reduce transmissibility. Artesunate (i.v.) and artemether (i.m.) are rapidly effective in severe and multidrug-resistant malaria. They are well tolerated but should be used with caution in patients with chronic cardiac disorders as they prolong the PR and QT interval in some experimental animals. Doxycycline is commonly used in the treatment of falci- parum malaria in conjunction with quinidine or quinine, allowing a shorter and better-tolerated course of quinine.
  • 24. RiametRiamet®® tablets contain artemether and lumefantrine. These are both antimalarial medicines. It is used for treatment of uncomplicated Pl. falciparum malaria in adults, children and infants weighing 5 kg and above.
  • 25. 2. Amoebiasis2. Amoebiasis Infection occurs when mature cysts of E. histolytica are ingested and pass into the colon where they divide into trophozoites. Amoebiasis occurs in two forms, both of which need treatment. • Bowel lumen amoebiasis is asymptomatic and trophozoites (noninfective) and cysts (infective) are passed into the faeces. Treatment is directed at eradicating cysts with a luminal amoebicide; diloxanide furoate is the drug of choice; iodoquinol or paromomycin is sometimes used.
  • 26. Paromomycin is an aminoglycoside antibiotic that is not significantly absorbed from the GIT. It is used only as a luminal amebicide and has no effect against extraintestinal amebic infections. The small amount absorbed is slowly excreted unchanged. However, the drug may accumulate with renal insufficiency and contribute to renal toxicity. Paromomycin is an effective luminal amebicide that appears to have similar efficacy and probably less toxicity than other agents.
  • 27. • Tissue-invading amoebiasis gives rise to dysentery, hepatic amoebiasis, and liver abscess. A systemically active drug (tissue amoebicide) effective against trophozoites must be used, e.g. dehydroemetine, metronidazole, tinidazole. In severe cases of amoebic dysentery, tetracycline lessens the risk of opportunistic infection, perforation, and peritonitis when it is given in addition to the systemic amoebicide.
  • 28. Dehydroemetine (from Ipecacuanha), less toxic than the parent emetine, is claimed to be the most effective tissue amoebicide. Dehydroemetine inhibits protein synthesis. It is reserved for dangerously ill patients, but these are more likely to be vulnerable to its cardiotoxic effects. When dehydroemetine is used to treat amoebic liver abscess, chloroquine should also be given. Metronidazole, a nitroimidazole, is the drug of choice in the treatment of extraluminal amebiasis. It kills trophozoites but not cysts of E. histolytica and effectively eradicates intestinal and extraintestinal tissue infections. It has anaerobic antibacterial activity and antihelicobacater activity too. It is an enzyme inhibitor. Tinidazole appears to have similar activity and a better toxicity profile than metronidazole, and it offers simpler dosing regimens.
  • 29. 3. African trypanosomiasis (sleeping disease)3. African trypanosomiasis (sleeping disease) It is caused by the hemoflagellates Trypanosoma bru- cei rhodesiense and Trypanosoma brucei gambiense. The organisms are transmitted by bites of tsetse flies (genus Glossina), which inhabit shaded areas along streams and rivers. The largest number of cases is in the Congo. Annual incidence estimates are about 100 000 cases and 48 000 deaths. American Trypanosomiasis (Chagas’ Disease) is caused by Trypanosoma cruzi.
  • 30. African trypanosomiasis – treatment: Suramin or pentamidine is effective during the early stages but not for the later neurological manifestations for which melarsoprol should be used. Eflornithine is effective for both early and late stages. American Trypanosomiasis – treatment: Prolonged (1–3 months) treatment with benznidazole or nifurtimox may be effective.
  • 31. 4. Leishmaniasis4. Leishmaniasis is a zoonosis. •Visceral leishmaniasis (kala azar) is caused mainly by Leishmania donovani in the Indian subcontinent and East Africa. Treatment: Sodium stibogluconate or meglumine antimoniate; resistant cases may benefit from combining antimonials with allopurinol, pentamidine, paromomycin, or amphotericin B.
  • 32. •(Muco-) Cutaneous leishmaniasis is caused mainly by Leishmania tropica, L. major, and L. donovani. Treatment: Mild lesions heal spontaneously, antimonials may be injected intralesionally.
  • 33. 5. Toxoplasmosis5. Toxoplasmosis T. gondii, an obligate intracellular protozoan, is found worldwide in humans and in many species of animals and birds. The definitive hosts are cats. Humans are infected after ingestion of cysts in raw or under- cooked meat, ingestion of oocysts in food or water contaminated by cats, transplacental transmission of trophozoites or, rarely, direct inoculation of trophozoites via blood transfusion or organ transplantation.
  • 34. Life cycle ofLife cycle of Toxoplasma gondiiToxoplasma gondii
  • 35. Most infections are self-limited in the immunologically normal patient. Pyrimethamine with sulfadiazine is used for treat- tement of chorioretinitis, and active toxoplasmosis in immunodeficient patients; folinic acid is used to counteract the fatal megaloblastic anaemia. Alternatives include pyrimethamine with clindamycin or clarithromycin or azithromycin. Spiramycin is for treeatment of primary toxoplasmosis in pregnant women. Expert advice is essential.
  • 36. 6. Human Trichomoniasis6. Human Trichomoniasis (Metronidazole or tinidazole is effective) Human trichomoniasis caused by Tr. vaginalis, seen in both females and males. It is usually trans- mitted by coitus and is sometimes asymptomatic. The symptomatic condition in females may take the form of a severe vaginitis associated with discharge, burning, and pruritus. In males it may produce urethritis, enlargement of the prostate, and epididymitis.
  • 37. 7. Giardiasis7. Giardiasis It is a common infection of the human small intestine with the protozoan Giardia lamblia, spread via contaminated food or water, or by direct person-to-person contact. Treatment: Metronidazole, mepacrine, or tinidazole
  • 38. 8. Pneumocystis8. Pneumocystis Pneumocystis carinii, the causative agent of interstitial plasma cell pneumonia, which can also cause extrapulmonary disease in immunocompromised patients (AIDS, etc) . Treatment: Co-trioxazole: i.v./p.o. in high daily doses