Antimalarial Drugs
Antimalarial Drugs
Antimalarial Drugs
S.RAVINDRA BABU
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
• Human malaria is causes by four species of
Plasmodia.
• Plasmodium falciparum
• Plasmodium vivax
• Plasmodium malariae
• Plasmodium ovale
P falciparum is responsible for the majority
of serious complications and deaths. Drug
resistance is most notably with P
falciparum.
1) A female Anopheles mosquito injects the parasites
in the form of sporozoites into the bloodstream.
The sporozoites travel to the liver and invade liver
cells.
2) Over 5-16 days*, the sporozoites grow, divide,
and produce tens of thousands of merozoites.
Some malaria parasite species remain dormant for
extended periods in the liver, causing relapses
weeks or months later.
3) The merozoites exit the liver cells and re-enter the
bloodstream, beginning a cycle of invasion of red
blood cells, asexual replication, and release of
newly formed merozoites from the red blood cells
repeatedly over 1-3 days*. This multiplication can
result in thousands of parasite-infected cells in the
bloodstream, leading to illness and complications of
malaria .
4) Some of the merozoite-infected blood cells leave
the cycle and develop into sexual forms of the
parasite, called male and female gametocytes, that
circulate in the bloodstream.
5) When a mosquito bites an infected human, it ingests the
gametocytes. In the mosquito gut, the infected human
blood cells burst, releasing the gametocytes, which
develop into mature sex cells called gametes. Male and
female gametes fuse to form zygotes, which develop into
ookinetes into the mosquito gut wall and form oocysts.
• Other actions
1 Entamoeba histolytica and Giardia Iamblia also.
2 It has antiinflammatory, local irritant and local
anaesthetic (on injection)
Pharmacokinetics
• Oral absorption of chloroquine is excellent.
D.I
• Absorption may be blocked by aluminum
containing antacids.
• Quinine can raise plasma levels of warfarin and
digoxin.
Uses
Malaria: Quinine is used orally for uncomplicated
chloroquine-resistant malaria, and i.v. for
complicated/ cerebral malaria.
Adverse effects
• Mefloquine is bitter in taste;
• Common reaction is dizziness, nausea, vomiting,
diarrhoea, abdominal pain and sinus bradycardia.
• hemolysis
USES
1) The primary use is for radical cure of relapsing
(vivax) malaria
3 Gametocidal action
Artemisinin
• Artemisinin is isolated from the plant Artemisia
annua.
• administration of artemisinin
compounds with terfenadine, asternizole,
antiarrhythmics, tricyclic antidepressants
and phenothiazines may increase the risk of
cardiac conduction defects.
Adverse effects
• Mild:
nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, itching
and drug fever.
Abnormal bleeding, dark urine, S-T segment
changes, Q-T prolongation, first degree A-
Vblock, and leucopenia have been noted but
subside when the drug is stopped.
Clinical Uses
• Artemisinin-based combination therapy is
now for the treatment of uncomplicated
falciparum malaria.
• The WHO recommends five artemisinin-
based combinations for the treatment of
uncomplicated falciparum malaria .
• Their gametocidal action cuts down
transmission and spread of resistant P.
falciparum.
Clinical Uses
• Severe and complicated falciparum malaria:
Parenteral artemisinins are higly effective.
i.v. artesunate offers several advantages:
1) It causes faster parasite clearance than i.v
quinine.
2) It is safer and better tolerated than i.v.
quinine.
3) Its dosing schedule is simpler.
4) Recent evidence indicates higher efficacy
and lower mortality.
PYRIMETHAMINE
• It is a inhibitor of plasmoidal DHFRase.
USES
• Use Pyrimethamine is used only in combination
• with a sulfonamide (S/P) or dapsone for treatment
of falciparum malaria.
SULFONAMIDE-PYRIMETHAMINE (S/P)
COMBINATION