View clinical trials related to Malaria.
Filter by:The main purpose of this study is to compare the drug levels of artesunate and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine found in pregnant women with malaria to those drug levels found in non-pregnant women from other studies. In addition the efficacy and safety of the study drugs will be determined for pregnant women and their babies.
The purpose of this study was to assess the safety and efficacy of Cotrifazid to treat uncomplicated resistant malaria and to compare the outcome with mefloquine or quinine+sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine (SP)
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) versus artemether-lumefantrine (Coartem) when administered to HIV+ and HIV- patients with uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria. Patients will be randomised to one of the 2 treatment and followed up (until day 14 actively) for 45 days.
Malaria remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality particularly among children < 5 years in Uganda. Due to inaccessibility many children die before they reach the health facility. The Home Based Management of Fever (HBMF) strategy was adopted in Uganda as a mean to improve access to early and appropriate treatment of fever at community level. Pre-packed chloroquine with sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (HOMAPAK) is provided through Community Drug Distributors(CDDs). Initial evaluation showed underutilization of the CDDs (15%). This cast doubt on community acceptability, accessibility as well as its feasibility and cost effectiveness. This 3-year project intends to compare community acceptability and cost effectiveness of two HOMAPAK distribution methods. The current CDD-based HOMAPAK distribution versus home-based HOMAPAK distribution. The study hypothesis is that "home-based HOMAPAK distribution is more acceptable to the community and more cost effective than the CDD based HOMAPAK A non randomised community study will be conducted in two sub-counties of Mukono district. In the control arm, HOMAPAKs will be distributed through the CDDs while in the intervention arm, HOMAPAKs will be directly distributed to the caretakers in the homes. The study population are caretakers and their children < 5 years. At baseline a survey (Phase 1) with a sample size 657 in each study area will assess the common drugs stocked at home to treat malaria and the health seeking behaviour for malaria for children < 5 years and to determine the prevalence of malaria parasitaemia and anaemia among children < 5 years. Phase 2 includes the intervention. The villages will be assigned to either the control or intervention arm. Anaemia and malaria parasitaemia among children with fever will be assessed through active case finding. The impact of either distribution system on accessibility, acceptability, sustainability, compliance, cost effectiveness and malaria morbidity will be assessed during the evaluation phase. Health education messages on malaria prevention and treatment will be given to both communities. Drug misuse will be limited by distributing HOMAPAKs according to the number of children <5years in each household. HOMAPAK will only be replenished after the caretaker returns a used packet to the CDD.
The purpose of this study is to learn more about vivax malaria in very young children, how the growth of children is affected by malaria infections, and how inherited traits protect children from getting malaria. Participants will be 266 children 24 months of age or younger who live in certain villages in East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea, where malaria is very common. The study also will find out how malaria spreads in the area. By learning how and when a child develops resistance to vivax malaria, researchers can try to find ways to help people from getting it. And, they can get a better understanding of how inherited traits influence all types of malaria infections. In this study, the parent and child will be visited by the study team or health workers every week to check health and bednet use. Every 2 weeks, the study team will take a small blood sample to check for malaria and take measurements to study the child's growth. Participants will be followed for up to 2 years.
The primary objectives of this study is to identify a safe, tolerable dose of pentoxifylline in children with cerebral malaria and to establish an acceptable pentoxifylline dosage regimen for use in multi center Phase II and Phase III studies.
BCG has marked immune stimulatory effects in both animal and human studies and observational studies suggest that BCG is associated with a non-specific reduction in mortality in areas with high infant and child mortality. The specific objective of the study is to examine the effect of revaccination for purified protein derivative of tuberculin (PPD) reaction, scar size, morbidity and mortality in a randomised prospective study of revaccination versus no revaccination among children 19 months of age in Guinea-Bissau. The hypothesis is that revaccination with BCG reduces childhood mortality after 19 months of age by 30%.
The primary objective is to confirm the hypothesis that azithromycin (optimal dose once daily for three days) plus chloroquine is non-inferior to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine plus chloroquine for the treatment of uncomplicated, symptomatic malaria due to P. falciparum.