Question:
Pyrimethamine
Author: SuzukiAnswer:
The antifolate agent pyrimethamine is frequently employed to effect a radical cure as a blood schizonticide. It also acts as a strong sporonticide in the mosquito’s gut when the mosquito ingests it with the blood of the human host. Pyrimethamine inhibits plasmodial dihydrofolate reductase3 at much lower concentrations than those needed to inhibit the mammalian enzyme. The inhibition deprives the protozoan of tetrahydrofolate, a cofactor required in the de novo biosynthesis of purines and pyrimidines and in the interconversions of certain amino acids. Pyrimethamine alone is effective against P. falciparum. In combination with a sulfonamide, it is also used against P. malariae and Toxoplasma gondii. If megaloblastic anemia occurs with pyrimethamine treatment, it may be reversed with leucovorin.
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