生物学と医学の症例報告

抽象的な

Management of toxoplasmic embryo-fetopathy at the teaching university hospital of Grand Yoff in Dakar: A case report and literature review.

Mama Sy Diallo, Cherif Mouhamed Dial, Henriette Poaty

 Background: Congenital toxoplasmosis is an embryofoetopathy due to transplacental contamination of

a parasite, Toxoplasma gondii. The disease may be undetected during pregnancy and this entity is rarely described in our regions despite high seroprevalence among pregnant women. Lesions caused to the fetus can be fatal or cause neurological or ophthalmologic sequelae detected at birth and much later in life. Case presentation: We report through this study a case of congenital toxoplasmosis detected during the ultrasound of the 2nd trimester of gestation. The fetus presented a bilateral ventriculomegaly and foci of cerebral calcifications. PCR on amniotic fluid confirmed the Diagnosis of congenital toxoplasmosis. The prognosis was poor despite the start of therapy with the occurrence of fetal death in utero in a context of hydrocephalus at 28 weeks of gestation. Conclusion: Congenital toxoplasmosis can be responsible for severe brain lesions. The lack of guidelines and adapted prevention policy in our regions make this embryo-fetopathy being a neglected disease that is probably underestimated in our practice.

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