Topic Overview
What is malaria?
Malaria is a serious disease that causes a high fever and chills.
You can get it from a bite by an infected mosquito. Malaria is rare in Canada.
It is most often found in Africa, Southern Asia, Central America, and South
America.
What causes malaria?
Malaria is caused by a bite from a mosquito infected with certain
germs called
parasites. In very rare cases, people can get malaria
if they come into contact with infected blood. An unborn baby (fetus) may get
the disease from its mother. You cannot get malaria just by being near a person
who has the disease.
What are the symptoms?
Most malaria infections cause symptoms like the flu, such as a high
fever, chills, and muscle pain. Symptoms tend to come and go in cycles. One
type of malaria may cause more serious problems, such as damage to the heart,
lungs, kidneys, or brain. It can even be deadly.
How is malaria diagnosed?
Your doctor will order a blood test to check for the malaria
parasite in your blood.
How is it treated?
Medicines usually can treat the illness. But some malaria parasites
may survive because they are in your liver or they are
resistant to the medicine.
Call a doctor right away if you have been in an area where malaria
is present, were exposed to mosquitoes, and get symptoms that are like the flu.
These include a high fever, chills, and muscle pain.
How is malaria prevented?
You may be able to prevent malaria by taking medicine before,
during, and after travel to an area where malaria is present. But using
medicine to prevent malaria doesn't always work. This is partly due to the
parasites being
resistant to some medicines in some parts of the
world.
Frequently Asked Questions
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