Undercurrent has reported
before on malaria and problems
with Lariam, the most widely
used malaria prophylaxis. Most
problems concern the drug’s
neuropsychiatric side effects, but
now Undercurrent reader, Dr. Jose
Miguel Duran, has written us with
a different Lariam tale.
**********
Dear Ben,
“My wife and I were diving in
Irian Jaya for two weeks last year.
Like we have done before in other
tropical destinations, we took Lariam
(mefloquine) for two weeks before
our trip, during the trip, and for
four weeks afterwards. We also used
lots of one hundred percent DEET.
“Two months after our return I fell ill with 104-105° F fever,
severe chills, muscle and joint
pains, and severe weakness. After
three days I thought it could be
malaria (symptoms worsened
every forty-eight hours) and,
indeed, one of my infectious diseases
colleagues confirmed
Plasmodium falciparum malaria.
“I took two weeks of quinine
and doxycycline and felt well,
although quite weak, until, to my
surprise, I had another attack
three months later. This time I
had a different parasite:
Plasmodium vivax.
“Double infections are quite
rare; either I was bitten by two
mosquitoes or a very
promiscuous one. For
now I am well again,
at least until the next
time, as my colleague
encouragingly puts it.
The moral is: by all
means use mosquito
precautions, repellants,
and take a prophylaxis
as recommended by the
Centers for Disease Control
(www.cdc.gov) or your doctor
when traveling to a malaria
endemic region (the whole
world except USA, Canada and
Europe, according to the WHO
map). Keep a high index of suspicion
and have your physician
rule out malaria if you come up
with an acute febrile illness even
months after your return from
one of those regions. I know of
two other patients with P. vivax
malaria (acquired in Kenya and
India) who went undiagnosed for
seven to eighteen months while
they were checked and unsuccessfully
treated for everything
from Lyme disease to typhus.”
Malaria kills three million people
each year, including one
child every thirty seconds. The
tropical disease is caused by the
parasite Plasmodium, spread
through the bite of an infected
female mosquito. Victims may
suffer feverish attacks, flu-like
symptoms, fatigue, diarrhea,
and/or a whole range of other
symptoms that may not appear
for many months after the parasite
enters one’s blood stream.
Traveling divers need to know
where it appears and what to do
about it. The U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) recommends malariafighting
drugs for Americans traveling
to all or parts of many diving
venues: Belize, Costa Rica,
Honduras, Mexico, Venezuela,
the Dominican Republic, Papua
New Guinea, the Solomon
Islands, Vanuatu, Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, and
Egypt. CDC’s recommendations
are updated frequently, so it’s
best to check their Web site
(www.cdc.gov) when planning a
trip to any tropical destination.
The physical side effects of Larium
can mimic the symptoms of
decompression sickness. |
Lariam (mefloquine) is often
prescribed for high- risk regions
where mosquitoes are resistant to
chloroquine, the drug long used
as the primary weapon against
malarial parasites. It’s been
known to produce neuropsychiatric
side effects ranging from
confusion, dizziness, and problems
with vision, to anxiety,
insomnia, nightmares, panic
attacks, delirium, hallucinations,
and even suicidal behavior.
Physical side effects can also
include peripheral numbness
and tingling — mimicking the
symptoms of decompression sickness,
according to Joel
Dovenbarger, vice president of
medical services for Divers Alert
Network. He points out that no
one knows who will have adverse
reactions to the drug until they occur.
The Consumers Union has
reported the case of an American
woman who spent a month in a
psychiatric hospital following a bad
Lariam trip in Kenya. The U.S. Army
is studying the possibility that Lariam
may be linked to the recent series of
domestic killings and suicides at Fort
Bragg, N.C. UPI reports that three
of the four soldiers involved in the
killings had been given Lariam in
Afghanistan. According to the Wall
Street Journal, Hoffmann-La Roche,
manufacturer of Lariam, is sending
notices to health care professionals
warning that some people have
committed suicide after taking it.
So, divers ought
to avoid Lariam and
select CDC-recommended
alternatives,
depending on location.
The newest,
Malarone, has been
found to have fewer
adverse effects than
Lariam or chloroquine,
according to the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
More help may be on the way.
Researchers have had some encouraging
results with a vaccine made
from the milk of genetically engineered
mice, which prevents monkeys
from developing malaria. The
genetic manipulation technique has
allowed goats to produce the malaria
vaccine in their milk. Scientists
believe that the same vaccine, massproduced
in goats’ milk, could protect
millions from malaria.
Scientists at North Carolina State
University have patented a compound
from tomatoes that could be
a safer and more effective mosquito
repellant than DEET, the chemical
in many commercial insect repellents.
A product containing the
extract will be on the market by the
end of the year. Lab experiments at
Iowa State University also suggest
that the oil in the catnip plant is ten
times more effective at repelling mosqui-toes than DEET. Catnip
has yet to be tested on humans,
but it’s unlikely that it would be
harmful in repellent sprays or
creams. Researchers also believe
it would only work at short range,
like DEET, but it still might be
unwise to wear it while while hiking
in the Belize Jaguar Preserve.
— Ben Davision