Wednesday, July 22, 2009

River blindness can be stopped by drugs: WHO


River blindness may be eradicated through long-term ivermectin use.



New studies, published Tuesday in the journal PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, suggest river blindness can be wiped out with a long enough course of ivermectin. The World Health Organization (WHO) said the studies demonstrated that treatment with the drug ivermectin stopped further infections and transmission of the disease in three areas of Africa in Mali and Senegal.

The drug ivermectin, developed in 1987 by Merck, kills the larvae of the parasite that causes the disease, but not the adult worms, so scientists thought treatments were needed every six months or year to keep it under control. Researchers found, however, that after 15 to 17 years of regular treatment, only a few infections remained after treatment was stopped in...three test areas, leading them to conclude that river blindness can be wiped out with a long enough course of ivermectin. AFP notes that main funding for the studies came from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

BBC News reports that currently, at least 37 million people are infected with the disease, which causes sufferers to lose their sight and also to develop painful skin complaints. River blindness is endemic in many parts of Africa, primarily in poor, rural communities. The disease is caused by a parasite that is transmitted to people through the bite of the black fly. The worms spread through the body and when they eventually die, our immune system reacts fiercely. That reaction destroys living tissue -- especially the eye. While doctors have known for years that drugs can control the disease, they now believe it can be eliminated.

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