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. 2000 Nov-Dec;94(6):625-8.
doi: 10.1016/s0035-9203(00)90211-6.

The potential of ivermectin to control the malaria vector Anopheles farauti

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The potential of ivermectin to control the malaria vector Anopheles farauti

D H Foley et al. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 2000 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

We investigated mortality in Anopheles farauti mosquitoes, a major coastal malaria vector in the south-west Pacific, fed on a volunteer who had taken a 250 micrograms/kg dose of ivermectin. High mortality was recorded in mosquitoes feeding during the first week after treatment of the volunteer, for instance 100-80% failed to survive 3 days. A long-term residual effect of ivermectin in the blood was indicated by a small but significantly higher mortality in mosquitoes fed 6 weeks after ivermectin was taken. These effects were included in malaria transmission models that incorporated host choice and host-induced mortality parameters. For the zoophilic An. farauti, ivermectin treatment of animals resulted in a greater reduction in malaria than ivermectin treatment of humans alone, whereas for an anthropophilic vector, treatment of humans was more important. This suggests that ivermectin treatment of animals could have an important role in malaria control where An. farauti is the vector. Improvement in the health of humans and domestic animals through control of parasitic worms and mites might encourage community participation in strategies involving ivermectin.

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