Intermittent Preventive Treatment in Pregnant Women Is Associated with Increased Risk of Severe Malaria in Their Offspring
Whitney E. Harrington(Seattle Children's Hospital), Patrick E. Duffy(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases)
Cited by 42
Related Papers
Intermittent Treatment to Prevent Pregnancy Malaria Does Not Confer Benefit in an Area of Widespread Drug Resistance
|Clinical Infectious Diseases|2011|154
Decreased Susceptibility to<i>Plasmodium falciparum</i>Infection in Pregnant Women with Iron Deficiency
|The Journal of Infectious Diseases|2008|117
NSR-seq transcriptional profiling enables identification of a gene signature of Plasmodium falciparum parasites infecting children
|Journal of Clinical Investigation|2011|82
Maternal peripheral blood level of IL-10 as a marker for inflammatory placental malaria
|Malaria Journal|2008|81