Same here, but how much depth. Obviously what the dot point says, but for 'transmission' are you going to know the whole life cycle of the thing? Like sporozoites in blood circulation, then form merozoites etc. etc.
I learnt all of that from Ahmad Shah revised edited perfected notes, yeh.
For transmission
The Anopheles mosquitoes are the hosts that transmit the disease to humans during the blood-sucking process. When an Anopheles mosquito bites an infected person, a small amount of blood infected with microscopic malaria parasites is taken
as it sucks the gametocytes (the sexual forms of the parasite), along with blood. The parasite grows and matures in the mosquito's gut for a week or more.
The gametocytes continue the sexual phase of the cycle, which produced and the immature form of plasmodium known as sporozoites. These then travels to the mosquito's salivary glands. When the mosquito next takes a blood meal, these parasites mix with the saliva, are injected with the bite, when this female mosquito bites the man for a blood meal, which it needs to nourish its eggs, it inoculates the parasites into human blood stream, thus spreading the infection and malaria transmission is complete.
Once in the blood, the parasites travel to the liver and enter liver cells, to grow and multiply. After as few as seven days or as long as several years, the parasites leave the liver cells and enter red blood cells, which normally carry oxygen in the blood to tissues that need it.
Once in the red blood cells, the malaria parasites continue to grow and multiply. After they mature, the infected red blood cells rupture, freeing the parasites to attack and enter other red blood cells. Toxins released when the red cells burst are what cause the typical symptoms of malaria
The red i would only mention if it was like a 6 marker or something
obviously i would cut down my response in the exam as well.