Publications by authors named "P A Diagne"

Introduction: Senegal is a leprosy low-endemic country with nine villages known to be hyperendemic with a leprosy incidence rate above 1,000 per million inhabitants. We aim to implement a door-to-door screening strategy associated with the administration of a single-dose-rifampicin (SDR) as post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) to household and social contacts in these villages and to identify spatial clustering and assess the risk of leprosy in population according to the physical distance to the nearest index-case.

Methods: From October/2020 to February/2022 active door-to-door screening for leprosy was conducted in nine villages.

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Female genital schistosomiasis (FGS) caused by is a neglected chronic parasitic disease. Diagnosis relies mainly on a colposcopy, which reveals non-specific lesions. This study aimed to assess the performance of two sampling methods for the molecular diagnosis of FGS in the uterine cervix.

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Thymic hyperplasia is an anterior mediastinal mass with a variable clinical presentation. It causes differential diagnostic problems in the pediatric age group and there is no consensus on the therapeutic approach. We here report the case of a 1-month-old infant treated for respiratory distress syndrome.

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The purpose is to study the short- and medium-term morbidity and mortality linked to the implantation of an aortic prosthesis during cardiac surgery. This is a longitudinal, retrospective and descriptive study which takes place over a period from January 2017 to March 2020 (38 months) at the level of the thoracic and cardiovascular surgery clinic of the university Hospital Center of Fann in Dakar. All patients who underwent aortic valve replacement during this period were included in the study.

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Peri-urban Senegal lies outside the influence of both the nation's historic public mental health model and contemporary global mental health. This paper examines how cultural logics in this underserved region spill over from social domains to widen the therapeutic sphere of psychoses and epilepsy. Observations and 60 carer and/or patient interviews concerning 36 patients afflicted by one or both conditions illustrate how the "crisis of the uncanny", a spectacular eruption of psychoses and seizures into the everyday, triggers trajectories across these domains.

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