Maitland K, Williams T N, Newbold C I
Institute of Molecular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Parasitol Today. 1997 Jun;13(6):227-31. doi: 10.1016/s0169-4758(97)01061-2.
The question of whether infection of humans with one species of malaria parasite alters the course of infection with another has been largely ignored because no such interaction was found during studies of induced malaria in patients with neurosyphilis. However, in animal model systems some degree of cross-species interaction is the rule rather than the exception. Furthermore, recent epidemiological observations in Vanuatu in the South Pacific have suggested a biological interaction between the dominant species, Plasmodium vivax, and P. falciparum. Kathryn Maitland, Tom Williams and Chris Newbold here speculate on the basis of these observations and other published findings that infection with P. vivax may result in the development of immunity sufficient to ameliorate the clinical course of subsequent infections with the potentially lethal parasite P. falciparum.
人类感染一种疟原虫是否会改变感染另一种疟原虫的病程这一问题在很大程度上被忽视了,因为在对患有神经梅毒的患者进行诱发疟疾研究期间未发现此类相互作用。然而,在动物模型系统中,某种程度的跨物种相互作用是普遍现象而非例外。此外,南太平洋瓦努阿图最近的流行病学观察表明,主要疟原虫物种间日疟原虫和恶性疟原虫之间存在生物学相互作用。凯瑟琳·梅特兰、汤姆·威廉姆斯和克里斯·纽博尔德在此根据这些观察结果及其他已发表的研究结果推测,间日疟原虫感染可能会产生足以改善后续感染潜在致命寄生虫恶性疟原虫临床病程的免疫力。