There are many ways of preventing Malaria. You can also take medicine to cure Malaria. Besides indoor residual spraying for eliminating mosquitoes & use of mosquito nets coated with insecticides during night sleep and insecticide coated bed cloths give good results. Use of DDT in the endemic areas & DDT-spraying the interior walls of living spaces, where mosquitoes land, is an effective control. A new approach, announced in Science on June 10, 2005, uses spores of the fungus Beauveria bassiana, sprayed on walls and bed nets, to kill mosquitoes. While some mosquitoes have developed resistance to chemicals, they have not been found to develop a resistance to fungal infections. Use of prophylactic drugs can be another option: - Currently available anti-malarial drugs include:
· Artemether-lumefantrine (Therapy only, commercial names Coartem® and Riamet®)
· Artesunate-amodiaquine (Therapy only)
· Artesunate-mefloquine (Therapy only)
· Artesunate-Sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine (Therapy only)
· Atovaquone-proguanil, trade name Malarone (Therapy and prophylaxis)
· Quinine (Therapy only)
· Chloroquine (Therapy and prophylaxis; usefulness now reduced due to resistance)
· Cotrifazid (Therapy and prophylaxis)
· Doxycycline (Therapy and prophylaxis)
· Mefloquine, trade name Lariam (Therapy and prophylaxis)
· Primaquine (Therapy in P. vivax and P. ovale only; not for prophylaxis)
· Proguanil (Prophylaxis only)
· Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (Therapy; prophylaxis for semi-immune pregnant women in
endemic countries as "Intermittent Preventive Treatment" - IPT)
· Hydroxychloroquine, trade name Plaquenil (Therapy and prophylaxis)
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