Thursday 23 February 2012

Life Belt

The First-ever vaccine

to prevent kala azar, the world’s second largest parasitic killer after malaria, has been developed and clinical trials to test it are being planned in India, the epicentre of the disease, along with the US.
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) or black fever affects 500,000 people each year in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Sudan, and Brazil and is also called the “parasitic version of HIV.”
             According to the National Vector-borne Disease Control programme, more than 25,000 cases had been reported in 2010 in India with 73 deaths.
The vaccine, which took researchers more than two decades to develop, entered Phase I trials in recent weeks, according to the Vaccine’s developer Steve Reed, founder of the Infectious Disease Research Institute (IDRI).
             
         “Vaccines can do what medicines can’t — prevent the disease from even occurring,” said Dr N. K. Ganguly, a biotechnology professor and former Director General of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).
“Only with an effective vaccine can we expect to control leishmaniasis in South Asia.”
              VL affects vital organs and bone marrow, destroying white and red blood cells.
It will, VL attacks the immune system, it has been called the parasitic version of HIV/AIDS.


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