
Who's online
There are currently 1 user and 203 guests online.
Online users
- Inga
News Flash
Latest Jobs
Events 2010
Recent blog posts
- Job: Postdoctoral Fellow: Malaria transmission-blocking research (Entomologist/Malariologist)
- Job: ACT Consortium Policy Liaison Officer
- Harnessing Immunity Genes Against Plasmodium: The Series
- We thought we were down to 655.000 deaths in 2010, right?
- Job: Postdoctoral Fellow: Malaria resistance research
- Let the sun shine
- Postdoctoral Fellows: Malaria research
- Guest Editorial: Don't fake it!
- Loop mediated amplification question
- Criticism, Ideas and the Maya example
The haplotype 7 which is the typical Asian profile is likely well-adapted to high drug pressure in this area and may constitute a good genetic marker to evaluate the dissemination of QNR in this part of the world.
We compare alternative hypotheses concerning the origin of this pattern. The observed data deviate from the expectations based on a single-panmictic population with or without growth, or a stable but spatially structured population.
In rural communities in north central Vietnam, malaria transmission was maintained by a number of anopheline species which though collected feeding on humans were predominantly zoophilic, this behaviour allows for low level but persistent malaria transmission.
This study showed stable levels of P. falciparum sensitivity to artemisinin compounds in the two sites over a ten-year period.
The results suggest the existence of a cryptic species in northern Vietnam that is morphologically similar to, but phylogenetically distant from both An. dirus and An. takasagoensis.