1.Malaria vaccines: looking back and lessons learnt.
Veronique LORENZ ; Panagiotis KARANIS
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine 2011;1(1):74-78
The current status of malaria vaccine approaches has the background of a long and arduous path of malaria disease control and vaccine development. Here, we critically review with regard to unilateral interventional approaches and highlight the impact of socioeconomic elements of malaria endemicity. The necessity of re-energizing basic research of malaria life-cycle and Plasmodium developmental biology to provide the basis for promising and cost-effective vaccine approaches and to reach eradication goals is more urgent than previously believed. We closely analyse the flaws of various vaccine approaches, outline future directions and challenges that still face us and conclude that the focus of the field must be shifted to the basic research efforts including findings on the skin stage of infection. We also reflect on economic factors of vaccine development and the impact of public perception when it comes to vaccine uptake.
Biomedical Research
;
Humans
;
Malaria
;
prevention & control
;
Malaria Vaccines
2.A Case of Coenurosis in a Wild Rabbit (Lepus sinensis) Caused by Taenia serialis Metacestode in Qinghai Tibetan Plateau Area, China
Xue Yong ZHANG ; Ying Na JIAN ; Li Qing MA ; Xiu Ping LI ; Panagiotis KARANIS
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2018;56(2):195-198
Six cystic metacestodes were found in the abdominal muscles of a wild rabbit, Lepus sinensis, in China. The coenurus contained one or more scolices armed with hooklets. Mitochondrial cox1 (1,623 bp) confirmed 98% homology with cox1 of Taenia serialis. This is the first report of T. serialis infection in an intermediate host in the Qinghai Tibetan Plateau Area, China.
Abdominal Muscles
;
Arm
;
China
;
Hares
;
Taenia