Sporozoa, Parasitic ProtozoansAll sporozoa are parasiticThere are several species of Plasmodium, all causing malaria in birds or mammals. They have complicated life cycles involving two hosts; with sexual stages in a mosquito and asexual stages in mammalian or avian blood. Sporozoa pass from host to host in protective capsules called spores.The Sporozoa are parasitic protozoans that lack locomotor organs. They have no cilia, no flagella, no pseudopods. At some state in their life histories, they are usually intracellular parasites. They usually pass from host to host in protective capsules called spores which enclose zygotes or juvenile states; however, those species that are transmitted by blood-sucking vectors, like mosquitoes, lack true spores. The Sporozoa is a very large and diverse class with at least four subclasses and many thousands of species. They cause disease in a wide variety of animals from earthworms and rats to silkworms (the disease called pebrine) and fish. Malaria is easily the most important sporozoan disease, especially for humans. Coccidiosis, which afflicts poultry and cattle is second. Some sporozoans, like the malarial organism, live primarily in the blood cells; others, like Coccidia, live in the epithelial cells lining the intestine. Still others live in muscles, kidneys, and other organs. Malaria, after centuries of existence and torment, scientists finally determine its true origin!Mankind entered a new medical era when the cause of malaria and its mode of transmission were discovered. Descriptions of the disease are found in ancient Chinese and Indian medical writings. There is good evidence that malaria played an important part in the decline of classical Greece. During the Middle Ages, the rise and fall of human populations in and around Rome appears to have been correlated with the prevalence or absence of malaria. Even today more people are suffering from malaria than from any other single disease; especially in Africa. Yet, within the lifetime of many men now living, malaria was supposed to be due, as its name implies, to bad air, especially some vague noxious miasma that arose from swamps. The story of how the cause of malaria was at long last discovered well illustrates the way in which science advances by the cumulative efforts of many individuals. It should be part of the cultural inheritance of every modern man. A good point of departure is the arrival in London of Ronald Ross, a young army surgeon form India. he went to the famous old St. Bartholomew's Hospital determined to find out all he could about malaria. It was there that he learned the varied facts that had been uncovered and which he later drew together with new ones of his own into a convincing explanation of the true cause of this really great scourge.
Ross returned to India and, fortified with all this knowledge, was able to make new discoveries that showed conclusively how malaria is transmitted from one person to the next.
Various workers soon demonstrated the transmission of human malaria by mosquitoes. An unpleasant controversy arose as to who really first discovered the cause of malaria. The report of an international commission resulted in a Nobel prize for Ross; but the controversy illustrates the fact that often when a scientific problem is ready for solution, i.e., when the factual and theoretical background has been built up, several people reach a solution at about the same time.
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