For a few parasites more: Inoculum size, vector control and strain-specific immunity to malaria

1992 
Abstract What precipitates malaria illness in an area o f intense transmission? Greenwood, Marsh and Snow 1 and Marsh 2 have discussed the hypothesis that the severity of malaria depends on the size of the inoculum, that is, on the number of sporozoites inoculated at one time 3 . According to these authors, this is suggested by the results o f vector control trials in which parasite prevalence remained the same but episodes of disease were reduced. This is clearly an important observation, but Jo Lines and Jo Armstrong interpret it differently. They see the primary implication of these results as being that natural immunity to malaria must be largely strain specific, andonlyif there isstrain specificity can inoculum size be important. Here they present arguments to support this view,and point out that, if there is strain specific immunity, then short-term evaluation o f vector control is likely to overestimate its long-term benefit.
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