Results 181 to 190 of about 78,708 (218)
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Frontiers in Bioscience, 2007
More than 120 years after Alphonse Laveran's discovery of the blood-stage malaria parasite, there is no licensed malaria vaccine and malaria remains the world's most serious parasitic disease. Efforts to develop a vaccine have been thwarted by the complexity of the parasite's life cycle and the ability of the parasite to suppress and evade the immune ...
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More than 120 years after Alphonse Laveran's discovery of the blood-stage malaria parasite, there is no licensed malaria vaccine and malaria remains the world's most serious parasitic disease. Efforts to develop a vaccine have been thwarted by the complexity of the parasite's life cycle and the ability of the parasite to suppress and evade the immune ...
openaire +2 more sources
New England Journal of Medicine, 2015
To ensure efficacy against wild poliovirus, Jonas Salk methodically classified circulating polio strains before choosing three to use in his inactivated vaccine.1 Several other successful vaccines against viruses and bacteria have likewise included immunogen variants that were selected through careful assessments of pathogen genetic diversity and ...
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To ensure efficacy against wild poliovirus, Jonas Salk methodically classified circulating polio strains before choosing three to use in his inactivated vaccine.1 Several other successful vaccines against viruses and bacteria have likewise included immunogen variants that were selected through careful assessments of pathogen genetic diversity and ...
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Public Health, 1985
Abstract With the failure of eradication programmes and an exponential rise in the number of persons infected, a malaria vaccine has become a main solution to the control of malaria infection. Early work with birds, rodents and non-human primates gave encouraging results for the development of stage-specific vaccines.
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Abstract With the failure of eradication programmes and an exponential rise in the number of persons infected, a malaria vaccine has become a main solution to the control of malaria infection. Early work with birds, rodents and non-human primates gave encouraging results for the development of stage-specific vaccines.
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Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine, 2008
With about 2.2 billion of the world' s population at risk, malaria remains as one of the most infectious disease globally. The failure of existing control strategies necessitates the need for vaccine development. Our efforts have been geared on the development of an effective vaccine using SE36 protein based from the N-terminal domain of Serine Repeat ...
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With about 2.2 billion of the world' s population at risk, malaria remains as one of the most infectious disease globally. The failure of existing control strategies necessitates the need for vaccine development. Our efforts have been geared on the development of an effective vaccine using SE36 protein based from the N-terminal domain of Serine Repeat ...
openaire +2 more sources
Integrative oncology: Addressing the global challenges of cancer prevention and treatment
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022Jun J Mao,, Msce +2 more
exaly

