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Quartan malaria infects the liver, spleen, and stomach, causing the victim intense pain.
Hartung believed that he had an eye ailment known as trachoma, but also had quartan malaria.
Plasmodium malariae (the cause of benign quartan malaria)
One complication of quartan malaria occasionally seen around Francis's time is known as purpura, a purple hemorrhage of blood into the skin.
Hence the disease may be called quotidian malaria, in concert with designation of tertian malaria and quartan malaria.
P. brasilianum, P. inui and P. rodhaini are similar to P. malariae (quartan malaria group)
P. malariae causes fevers that recur at approximately three-day intervals (a quartan fever), longer than the two-day (tertian) intervals of the other malarial parasites, hence its alternate names quartan fever and quartan malaria.
- their trust that their little boy will recover from the quartan fever.
Several treatments are listed for quartan fever (quartanis, probably malaria).
Quartan fever (72 hour periodicity), typical of Plasmodium malariae malaria.
If the cholery, or the quartan fever, didn't carry me off from that, then I needn't worry over any little mist in London."
Worst of all, on 22 December, Cardinal Cervini left the Conclave, suffering from a quartan fever.
Iollas had died soon after he got home from Asia, of a quartan fever picked up in the Babylonian swamps; he had gone down quickly, showing little fight.
When Peripatetic philosopher Eudemus became ill with Quartan fever, Galen felt obliged to treat him "since he was my teacher and I happened to live nearby."
Alexander Jannaeus died, according to Josephus, of quartan fever and alcoholism, which has been compared to the references to "disease" and "drunkenness" of the Wicked Priest.
At the age of four, he fell ill with a life-threatening "quartan fever", but, despite occasional illnesses and poor eyesight, he enjoyed generally good health until the last six months of his life.
After Sir Robert Cotton's death in 1631 James remained in the service of his son, Sir Thomas, at whose house in Westminster he died early in December 1638 of a quartan fever.
In this sense, the word has been used by medicine of more recent times; in the 16th through the 18th centuries, it often refers to the day on which a fever was thought to break (see quartan fever, quintan fever).
P. malariae is the only human malaria parasite that causes fevers that recur at approximately three-day intervals (therefore occurring evey fourth day, a quartan fever), longer than the two-day (tertian) intervals of the other malarial parasites.
He studied the life cycle of Plasmodium and related the timing of tertian and quartan fevers seen in malaria with the life cycle of the organisms now named Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium malariae, respectively.
I am told by the Trader from whom I procured Jesuit Bark that the Indians use a Plant called Gallberry, which rivals the Bark of Cinchona for bitterness and is thought capital for Use in tertian and quartan Fevers.
Word of his grave condition had spread far and wide, and the country through which he traveled was liberally bedewed with his clients (not wanting to fall genuinely ill with a tertian or a quartan fever, he chose the inland, far healthier Via Latina route).
The classic symptom of malaria is paroxysm-a cyclical occurrence of sudden coldness followed by rigor and then fever and sweating, occurring every two days (tertian fever) in P. vivax and P. ovale infections, and every three days (quartan fever) for P. malariae.
The nature of the medicines is not specified, so it is impossible to know what ailments were troubling her until, later in 1287 while she was in Gascony with Edward, a letter to England from a member of the royal entourage states that the queen had a double quartan fever, probably a strain of malaria.