Humans and other animals can contract the infectious illness malaria, which is spread by mosquitoes. Frequent signs of malaria include fever, exhaustion, nausea, and headaches. In extreme circumstances, it may result in coma, jaundice, convulsions, or even death. Ten to fifteen days after being bitten by an infected mosquito, symptoms often start to manifest. People may experience recurrences of the illness months after receiving inadequate treatment. People who have recently recovered from an illness typically experience lesser symptoms when reinfected. If the individual does not continue to be exposed to malaria, this partial resistance vanishes over the course of months to years. Plasmodium-group single-celled microorganisms are the primary cause of malaria. It only spreads by mosquito bites from infected Anopheles species. The parasites from the mosquito's saliva enter a person's bloodstream through a mosquito bite.
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