Abstract

Chloroquine, artemether and dioncophylline B efficacy against Plasmodium chabaudi was compared. One intraperitoneal injection (10 mg/kg body weight) was given daily over 3 consecutive days to OF1 mice when they were predominantly bearing ring, trophozoite and schizont forms. The parasitaemia was monitored every 2 h during two schizogonic cycles and daily thereafter until parasites were cleared. Chloroquine was more efficient at the trophozoite stage, while artemether was effective against all erythrocytic stages, with a marked efficacy against the trophozoite stage. Chloroquine-treated and artemether-treated parasites displayed a pigment-clumping morphology and lowered the parasitaemia faster than dioncophylline B. Dioncophylline B was effective at trophozoite and schizont stages, but completely ineffective at the ring stage. These results demonstrate that a better timing of drug administration increases the efficacy of common and new antimalarial drugs and provides a model for antimalarial-action monitoring. Drug-induced changes in infected erythrocyte morphology are presented.

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