Publications by authors named "Maurice Boda"

Introduction: Dengue is one of the most serious and rapidly spreading major mosquito borne diseases in the world. Despite many acute febrile illnesses in Tchad, the burden of illness due to dengue in the country is largely unknown. Hence, the present study aimed to determine the seroprevalence of dengue viral (DENV) infection and its association with hematological parameters.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the prevalence and risk factors of Group A Rotaviruses (RVA) in children under five years old in N'Djamena, Chad, where there is currently no RVA immunization or surveillance program.
  • - A cross-sectional study conducted in four hospitals found a 12.76% prevalence of RVA infections among hospitalized children, with higher rates in males and those under 12 months old, revealing significant malnutrition and severity among cases.
  • - A retrospective analysis of hospitalization records from 2016 to 2018 indicated that 37.81% of gastroenteritis cases were linked to various diarrhoeagenic pathogens, with a majority of cases showing no identified pathogens (62.19%).
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Background: Despite the global roll-out of rotavirus vaccines (RotaTeq/Rotarix / ROTAVAC/Rotasiil), mortality and morbidity due to group A rotavirus (RVA) remains high in sub-Saharan Africa, causing 104,000 deaths and 600,000 hospitalizations yearly. In Cameroon, Rotarix™ was introduced in March 2014, but, routine laboratory diagnosis of rotavirus infection is not yet a common practice, and vaccine effectiveness studies to determine the impact of vaccine introduction have not been done. Thus, studies examining RVA prevalence post vaccine introduction are needed.

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The aqueous extract of Enantia chlorantha Oliver (Annonaceae) stem bark, a plant widely used in Cameroon for the traditional treatment of gastritis and stomach problems, was assessed for in vitro and in vivo anti-Helicobacter/Campylobacter properties using the well diffusion assay, agar dilution assay, and killing rate determination. The in vitro activity was dose-dependent, and the same antimicrobial parameters (MAQ = 0.63 mg; MIC = 0.

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