Is it possible to build up malaria and dengue resistance?

Is it possible to build up malaria and dengue resistance? - Selective Focus Photography Cement

I have heard that in countries where malaria or dengue fever are endemic, local residents have built up resistance to the diseases so that contracting them is rare or impossible. Is this true, and is it possible for long-term travelers or expatriates to build up resistance?



Best Answer

While I have not heard of any resistance to dengue being developed, there have been studies done over years on genetic resistance to malaria. Note that this is genetic resistance that builds up over many generations, and has been observed in specific tribes or ethnic groups. You aren't going to develop resistance simply by travelling a lot and it would be unwise to forego standard precautions.

That said, what I think you're really referring to is general 'resistance' to mosquito bites (from normal, non malarial / dengue vector mosquitoes) that you'll develop if you travel / stay in those regions long enough. You learn to live with it.




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Can you develop immunity to dengue?

In humans recovery from infection by one dengue virus provides lifelong immunity against that particular virus serotype. However this immunity confers only partial and transient protection against subsequent infection by the other three serotypes of the virus.

Can a person have both malaria and dengue?

It is no doubt that in a tropical country, the high prevalence of malaria and dengue can be seen. However, concurrent malaria and dengue infection is not common. Concurrent malaria and dengue infection is a scenario that both malaria and dengue exists in a patient at the same time.

Are people resistant to dengue?

"We found that some people's immune systems respond to dengue infection by producing elevated levels of these pathogenic antibodies, which make them more vulnerable to a severe secondary dengue infection," says Wang, who is now an assistant professor at Stanford School of Medicine.

How can malaria and dengue be prevented?

Preventive Measures for Malaria
  • Cover your arms and legs.
  • Wear light-colored clothes.
  • Avoid traveling to areas with outbreaks of any one or all these three diseases.
  • Use mosquito repellents.
  • Fix mesh on windows and doors of the house to keep mosquitoes out.
  • Use mosquito nets over the beds to avoid bites.




  • Identifying Genes Enabling Malaria \u0026 Dengue Fever Resistance l Protocol Preview




    More answers regarding is it possible to build up malaria and dengue resistance?

    Answer 2

    Anecdotal evidence I have been told by various friends and acquaintances who had dengue in the past several years in Mexico is that dengue gets worse each time you catch it leading to dengue haemorrhagic fever when you get it the third time.

    I'm pretty sure this is not accurate scientifically though. Read up and ask a doctor to be sure.

    In any case you can catch it multiple times and it won't get milder each time.

    As for malaria there are multiple species (and probably strains) of the parasite which vary greatly in their severity and risk of relapse so I would assume that having contracted one would not give you immunity to the others as the very minimum. I would suggest again reading up online and asking a doctor if this is a risk you are likely to actually face.

    The only time I was in a malaria area was on the coast of Honduras about five years ago and I seem to remember the (very poor) locals telling me they also have to take antimalarials in the dangerous season. Since it turned out I was not there during the dangerous season I did not use most of my medicine. But that's just me - don't copy me!

    Again I am not an expert on mosquito borne diseases. This is mostly stuff I've heard from people in my travels with a bit of Googling to back some of it up. For real advice check with a health professional.

    Answer 3

    You write that there's no vaccine for dengue. Well, that's not true. A dengue vaccine exists. It has been developed by the Sanofi Pasteur laboratories. It's called Dengvaxia (CYD-TDV). It has already been licensed and has proved efficient in countries where it has been tested, see WHO and The Borgen Project. It took about 20 years to be developed.

    Answer 4

    Malaria is a serious and sometimes fatal disease transmitted by mosquitoes and causes symptoms that typically include fever, fatigue, vomiting and headaches. In severe cases it can cause yellow skin, seizures, coma or death.

    People living in the areas of Malaria high risk (who have recently survived an infection), re-infection typically causes milder symptoms, however partial resistance disappears over months to years if there is no ongoing exposure to malaria.

    However due to the high levels of mortality and morbidity caused by malaria—especially the P. falciparum (most deadly) species—it has placed the greatest selective pressure on the human genome in recent history.

    Sources:

    Answer 5

    I can't address dengue fever but with malaria it's possible for it to lie dormant in the body and then come back. If infection gave immunity this wouldn't happen.

    I've come down with it three times this way (I haven't been in the malaria zone since the initial infection) and each time has been about the same (albeit quite mild.)

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Rodolfo Quirós, Pixabay, Pixabay, David Besh