Manuscript: The within-host dynamics of malaria infection with immune response.

The within-host dynamics of malaria infection with immune response.

  • Yilong Li
  • Shigui Ruan
  • Dongmei Xiao
Math Biosci Eng 2011; 8 (4): 999
Abstract
Malaria infection is one of the most serious global health problems of our time. In this article the blood-stage dynamics of malaria in an infected host are studied by incorporating red blood cells, malaria parasitemia and immune effectors into a mathematical model with nonlinear bounded Michaelis-Menten-Monod functions describing how immune cells interact with infected red blood cells and merozoites. By a theoretical analysis of this model, we show that there exists a threshold value R0, namely the basic reproduction number, for the malaria infection. The malaria-free equilibrium is global asymptotically stable if R0 < 1. If R0 > 1, there exist two kinds of infection equilibria: malaria infection equilibrium (without specific immune response) and positive equilibrium (with specific immune response). Conditions on the existence and stability of both infection equilibria are given. Moreover, it has been showed that the model can undergo Hopf bifurcation at the positive equilibrium and exhibit periodic oscillations. Numerical simulations are also provided to demonstrate these theoretical results.
Model Organism Tissue Process type
li2 Homo sapiens whole body