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Title: Enhanced activity of mefloquine and artesunic acid against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro and P. berghei in mice by combination with ciprofloxacin. Author: Andrade AA, de Pilla Varotti F, de Freitas IO, de Souza MV, Vasconcelos TR, Boechat N, Krettli AU. Journal: Eur J Pharmacol; 2007 Mar 08; 558(1-3):194-8. PubMed ID: 17214980. Abstract: The antimalarial activity of combinations of mefloquine or artesunic acid with ciprofloxacin and other synthetic fluoroquinolone was tested in vitro against Plasmodium falciparum using a strain (BHz26/86) partially resistant to chloroquine and a resistant clone (W2); both are sensitive to mefloquine. Inhibition of parasite growth was measured in relation to controls without drugs, either by counting parasitemia in Giemsa-stained blood smears or by measuring the reduction in [(3)H]-hypoxanthine uptake. Combinations containing artesunic acid or mefloquine with ciprofloxacin had significant in vitro activity, inhibiting by more than 90% of the growth of both strains of P. falciparum at doses significantly lower than those of the antimalarials alone. When tested in mice inoculated with P. berghei chloroquine-sensitive parasites (NK65 strain), ciprofloxacin was inactive, whereas mefloquine and artesunic acid were active (IC(50)=2.5 and 4.2 mg/kg, respectively); combinations containing mefloquine at an equivalent dose of 0.5 mg/kg reduced parasitemia by 59% and artesunic acid activity was also improved by ciprofloxacin. Our data support the idea that ciprofloxacin in combination with antimalarials may be useful in the treatment of chloroquine-resistant human malaria, allowing the use of lower doses of these drugs.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]