Interferon in Malaria

  1. MICHAEL WEINTRAUB, M.D.
  1. U.C.L.A. Center for the Health Sciences
    Los Angeles, Calif. 90024

    Excerpt

    To the editor: In the recent NIH Conference report, Malaria: Host-Defense Mechanisms and Complications, presented in the August 1970 ANNALS, Dr. John N. Sheagren discussed several types of defense mechanisms, such as antibodies, immunoglobulins, complement, cellular immune factors, and phagocytosis.

    There is some early experimental evidence in animals that another aspect of host response, interferon, may play a role in malarial infections.

    Jahiel and his co-workers (1, 2) and Huang and his associates (3, 4) have worked on simultaneous arbovirus and plasmodia infections. Various interferon inducers (Newcastle disease virus, Statolan, and polyriboninosinic acid) were shown by Jahiel and colleagues (1)

    This 100-word excerpt has been provided in the absence of an abstract.

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