cyhalothrin and Malaria--Falciparum

cyhalothrin has been researched along with Malaria--Falciparum* in 6 studies

Trials

4 trial(s) available for cyhalothrin and Malaria--Falciparum

ArticleYear
Impact of lambdacyhalothrin capsule suspension treated bed nets on malaria in tribal villages of Malkangiri district, Orissa, India.
    The Indian journal of medical research, 2008, Volume: 128, Issue:3

    Insecticide treated mosquito nets are increasingly being used in malaria control programmes. One of the problems with the treatment of bed nets with conventional formulations of insecticides was that regular washing of treated nets diminish insecticidal effect. Lambdacyhalothrin 2.5 capsule suspension (CS) (2.5% a.i., w/v), a new water-based microencapsulated formulation is reported to have wash-resistant property and longer persistence on the netting material than other formulations. We evaluated the impact of the use of nylon bed nets treated with lambdacyhalothrin 2.5 CS at 10 mg (a.i.)/m(2) in comparison to untreated nets and no nets on malaria in tribal villages in Orissa.. Nine foothill villages, highly endemic for falciparum malaria, from the Primary Health Centre (PHC) areas of Khairput and Kudumulugumma of Malkangiri district, Orissa, were divided into three groups, each with a population of about 500 and allocated randomly for treated (TN) and untreated nets (UN) and no nets (NN). Bed nets were distributed in September 2001 and retreatment was done in June 2002. The impact was assessed based on the changes in vector density, parous rate, malaria incidence and parasite rates. Indoor-resting collections of Anopheles fluviatilis and An. culicifacies were made at fortnightly intervals from fixed human dwellings. Mass blood surveys before and after distribution of nets and fortnightly active surveillance were carried out to assess the change in parasite rates and malaria incidence. Bioassays were conducted at fortnightly intervals on the bed nets supplied to the villagers.. The reductions in indoor resting catches of An. fluviatilis and An. culicifacies were 96 and 38 per cent in villages with treated nets and 2.6 and 23 per cent in villages with untreated nets respectively compared to no net villages. For six months following treatment, 100 per cent mortality of An. fluviatilis was observed on the unwashed nets and on the nets washed once or twice. After re-treatment, 100 per cent mortality of An. fluviatilis or An. culicifacies was observed for nine months even after two washes. Usage rates of treated and untreated nets varied seasonally; 58.9 and 46.3 per cent in rainy season, 48.6 and 37.1 per cent in winter season and 38.1 and 31.6 per cent in summer season respectively. Reductions in malaria parasite rates were about 65 per cent in the treated net villages and 39 per cent in the untreated net villages compared to no net villages. About 75 per cent of treated nets and 60 per cent of untreated nets were in usable condition 19 months after distribution.. The estimated protection factor based on malaria incidence was 86 per cent for the treated nets during both post-treatment and post-retreatment periods and 34 and 51 per cent for untreated nets for the corresponding periods compared to no nets. The results of the study showed that the use of bed nets treated nets with CS formulation of lambdacyhalothrin at 10 mg (a.i.)/m(2) was acceptable to the community and re-treatment of nets at nine-monthly intervals can significantly reduce density and survival of An. fluviatilis and incidence of falciparum malaria.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Animals; Anopheles; Beds; Child, Preschool; Communicable Disease Control; Endemic Diseases; Female; Humans; Incidence; India; Infant; Insecta; Insecticides; Malaria, Falciparum; Male; Middle Aged; Mosquito Control; Nitriles; Nylons; Pyrethrins; Water; Young Adult

2008
Community-randomized trial of lambdacyhalothrin-treated hammock nets for malaria control in Yanomami communities in the Amazon region of Venezuela.
    Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH, 2007, Volume: 12, Issue:3

    We conducted a community-randomized controlled trial in an area of moderate malaria transmission in the Amazon region, southern Venezuela, home of the Yanomami indigenous ethnic group. The aim was to compare the malaria incidence rate in villages with lambdacyhalothrin-treated hammock nets (ITHN) or with placebo-treated hammock nets (PTHN). In both arms of the study, intensive surveillance for early case detection was maintained and prompt malaria treatment was administered. Baseline data were collected before the intervention and a population of around 924 Yanomami was followed for 2 years. Despite the recent introduction of nets in the Yanomami villages and the adverse natural conditions in the area, the nets were accepted enthusiastically by the study population, used conscientiously and looked after carefully. The malaria incidence rate per thousand person-years at risk was 114.6 in the IHTN group and 186.8 in the PTHN group. The adjusted rate ratios indicated that ITHN prevent 56% [IRR: 0.44, 95% confidence interval (CI): 52-59%] of new malaria cases. ITHN reduced the prevalence of parasitaemia by 83% [relative risks (RR): 0.17, 95% CI: 47-100%], according to a cross-sectional survey carried out during the high transmission season. The prevalence of splenomegaly and anaemia was too low to detect any possible reduction as a result of ITHN. The main conclusion of the present study is that ITHN can reduce malaria incidence in the area and it is the most feasible method for malaria control in a forested area where indigenous villages are scattered over a large territory. This is the first community-level epidemiological trial to show that ITHN are highly effective against malaria transmitted by Anopheles darlingi.

    Topics: Animals; Anopheles; Bedding and Linens; Cross-Sectional Studies; Hemoglobins; Humans; Incidence; Indians, South American; Insect Vectors; Insecticides; Malaria; Malaria, Falciparum; Malaria, Vivax; Nitriles; Plasmodium falciparum; Plasmodium malariae; Plasmodium vivax; Prevalence; Pyrethrins; Rural Health; Single-Blind Method; Splenomegaly; Venezuela

2007
Protective efficacy of lambda-cyhalothrin treated nets in Anopheles gambiae pyrethroid resistance areas of Côte d'Ivoire.
    The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 2005, Volume: 73, Issue:5

    The efficacy of nets treated with lambda-cyhalothrin, a pyrethroid insecticide, on malaria infection and disease was assessed for the first time at the community level in Anopheles gambiae pyrethroid resistance areas. The study was carried out in northern Côte d'Ivoire, which is an area of kdr resistance. Four pairs of villages were selected and matched according to demographic, sociological, and ecological criteria. Among each pair, a village was randomly allocated to receive mosquito nets. More than 80% of beds were covered with nets treated with lambda-cyhalothrin and retreated after 6 months. In each village, 54 children aged 0-59 months were randomly selected and clinically monitored for 8 periods of 7 days throughout the year. Results showed that the efficacy of treated nets was maintained with a reduction of the prevalence of asymptomatic malaria infection by 12% and an estimated protective efficacy against malaria disease of 56%.

    Topics: Animals; Anopheles; Bedding and Linens; Child, Preschool; Cote d'Ivoire; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Insecticide Resistance; Insecticides; Malaria, Falciparum; Male; Mosquito Control; Nitriles; Permethrin; Pyrethrins

2005
A controlled trial of lambda-cyhalothrin-impregnated bed nets and/or dapsone/pyrimethamine for malaria control in Sierra Leone.
    The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 1998, Volume: 58, Issue:1

    A randomized controlled trial investigated the impact of community-wide use of mosquito nets impregnated with lambda-cyhalothrin alone or with dapsone/pyrimethamine (d/p) prophylaxis on clinical malaria due to perennially transmitted Plasmodium falciparum in children in the Bo district of Sierra Leone. The 17 study communities were pair-matched and randomly allocated to receive treated mosquito nets or no nets and the children (age range = 3 months-6 years) in each community were randomly allocated to receive d/p or placebo individually every two weeks. This resulted in each of the approximately 2,000 children recruited being in one of four study groups (impregnated mosquito nets and d/p prophylaxis, impregnated mosquito nets, d/p prophylaxis, and controls). The intervention phase of the study lasted 12 months. A total of 1,800 children attended more than 25% of the 48 total weekly morbidity surveillance surveys and were included in the analysis. The effects of the exclusive use of either treated mosquito nets or d/p prophylaxis on protection against clinical malaria due to P. falciparum was significantly similar (49% and 42%, respectively), while in combination this protective efficacy was significantly increased to 72% (95% confidence interval = 67-76%). Children in the control group had an average of 1.3 clinical malaria episodes per child annually compared with 0.65 episodes or 0.78 episodes for those using treated mosquito nets and d/p, respectively. Children using both treated mosquito nets and d/p prophylaxis had an average of 0.37 episodes per child. The interventions significantly reduced spleen rates and increased hematocrit values, and reduced the duration of episodes of clinical malaria.

    Topics: Anti-Infective Agents; Bedding and Linens; Child; Child, Preschool; Dapsone; Humans; Infant; Insecticides; Malaria, Falciparum; Mosquito Control; Nitriles; Pyrethrins; Recurrence; Sierra Leone; Spleen

1998

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for cyhalothrin and Malaria--Falciparum

ArticleYear
Impact of single round of indoor residual spray with lambda-cyhalotrin 10% WP on Plasmodium falciparum infection in Akola district, Maharashtra State.
    The Journal of communicable diseases, 2000, Volume: 32, Issue:3

    Lambda-cyhalothrin 10% WP (ICON 10WP) was sprayed from 5th November 1997 at a dose of 25 mg/m2 as indoor residual spray in 74 high risk villages. The spray was completed within 10 days in most of the villages. The monthly entomological monitoring showed nil density of Anopheles culicifacies and Aedes and very low density of non-vector Anopheles and Culex. The impact of Lambda-cyhalothrin spray was discernible right in the month of November 1997 showing 52% reduction in P. falciparum cases as compared to the same month of preceding year. The reduction of P. falciparum cases in three months post-spray period was 77% (from 47 cases to 11 cases) as compared to similar months of preceding year and overall reduction of total malaria cases was 50% during the same period. Since the major part of transmission of P. vivax infection was over by the time Lambda-cyhalothrin spray was taken up, obviously the impact on P. vivax infection was not markedly high as compared to P. falciparum infection. Neither cerebral malaria cases nor deaths due to malaria were recorded in the sprayed villages.

    Topics: Animals; Arthropod Vectors; Culicidae; Humans; Incidence; India; Insecticides; Malaria, Falciparum; Nitriles; Population Density; Pyrethrins; Rural Population; Seasons

2000
A field trial with Lambda-cyhalothrin (ICON) for the intradomiciliary control of malaria transmitted by Anopheles darlingi root in Rondonia, Brazil.
    Acta tropica, 1995, Volume: 60, Issue:1

    A two stage field trial comparing the effects of Lambdacyhalothrin (ICON) and DDT when used as residual sprays on the inside surfaces of houses, was conducted in the Machadinho and Jaru areas of Rodonia, Brazil, in 1987 and 1988. In 1987 houses along two 16 km contiguous stretches of a main and a side road were sprayed and the effects on malaria vectors monitored for the succeeding year. In the second stage approximately 55,000 houses in both districts were sprayed with ICON and the effect on malaria incidence measured by passive case detection. Of the eleven species of Anopheles caught in indoor and peridomiciliary collections A. darlingi was the commonest and is recognised as the most important vector in Brazil. ICON at either of two concentrations in bioassays killed more mosquitoes than DDT at each test from seven to twelve months after spraying. A rise in the number of A. darlingi collected eight months after spraying with DDT was not so marked in the ICON areas. Side effects of the insecticide were limited. The number of reported Plasmodium falciparum cases in the second phase declined 76% in Machadinho after spraying with ICON to 2851 cases. In Jaru there was a 28% reduction. The observed efficacy of the insecticide, its ready acceptance by the local populace, and its cost effectiveness make it a more useful insecticide for anti-malaria campaigns than DDT.

    Topics: Adult; Animals; Anopheles; Brazil; Child; DDT; Housing; Humans; Insect Vectors; Insecticides; Malaria, Falciparum; Mosquito Control; Nitriles; Population Density; Pyrethrins

1995