Abstract

William Harvey wrote about malaria, snake bite and rabies, three diseases now having their greatest impact in tropical developing coun- tries. Global malarial mortality has not declined for 50 years. The most effective control measure would be a vaccine. Temporary immunity in humans, through hundreds of bites by irradiated infected mosquitoes, was achieved in the 1970s. A promising current strategy is effector T-cell vaccination directed at infected hepatocytes. RTS,S/(SB)AS02, an adjuvanted fusion protein, produced transient protection in 70% of vac- cines. Prime (DNA vaccine) boost (poxvirus recombinant) is particularly immunogenic. Pyrethroid-treated bed nets reduce childhood mortality and deplete the mosquito population, interrupting transmission. Chlorproguanil- dapsone is more effective than pyrimethamine- sulfadoxine in treating uncomplicated chloro- quine-resistant malaria. Artemisinin derivatives are as effective as quinine in severe disease. Snake bite is an underestimated and neglected cause of morbidity and mortality in rural commu- nities in tropical countries. Sutherland's pressure- immobilisation technique is recommended first- aid for victims of neurotoxic elapid snakes. Rabies post-exposure prophylaxis, using new generation cell culture vaccines, is now feasible in devel- oping countries, employing an economical 8-site intradermal regimen. This Harveian Oration, the first in 350 years to be devoted to tropical medicine, emphasises the importance of this spe- ciality in the twenty-first century.

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