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Rhumatologue

Docteur JEAN-PIERRE DEDET

RPPS 10002928132
📊 Reconnaissance scientifique : 46/100📝 185 articles publiés📚 HAL (8)🎓 6 thèses dirigées🏆 1 DU/DIU

Diplômes

🎓 DES & spécialité ordinale

  • Rhumatologie (SM)

📚 CES (Certificat d'Études Spéciales)

  • CES Médecine appliquée aux sports

🎯 Capacités

  • Médecine appliquée aux sports (C)

🎓 Diplômes

  • DE Docteur en médecine

Source : Annuaire Santé ANS (FHIR Practitioner.qualification) · Mises à jour quotidiennes.

Direction de thèses

🎓 6 thèses dirigées

Source theses.fr — signal de direction d'équipe / statut PU-PH (à confirmer via le site universitaire).

Activité de recherche & publications

Source : bases de données publiques (OpenAlex, PubMed).

h-index

46

h articles cités ≥ h fois chacun. Un h de 46 = 46 publications avec 46+ citations.

Citations

6 856

Publications

185

i10-index

119

Thématiques principales

  • Research on Leishmaniasis Studies ×128
  • Trypanosoma species research and implications ×80
  • Parasites and Host Interactions ×26
  • Malaria Research and Control ×10
  • Mosquito-borne diseases and control ×8

Affiliations FR : Université de Montpellier · Agropolis International · Maladies Infectieuses et Vecteurs: Écologie, Génétique, Évolution et Contrôle

Source : OpenAlex (CC0, OurResearch). Indicateurs académiques agrégés sur 250 M+ d'œuvres.

Bibliographie

Source : HAL — archive ouverte CCSD/CNRS (couvre articles, chapitres EMC, communications congrès, thèses).

Lieu de consultation

Tarifs & secteur de conventionnement

Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).

Prendre rendez-vous & contact

Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).

Articles de presse (4)

Source : Google News (recherche par nom complet — homonymes possibles, vérifier le contenu).

Top publications · les plus citées

  • 1
    The relationship between leishmaniasis and AIDS: the second 10 years

    Clinical microbiology reviews · 2008

    📚 618 citations🎯 RCR 21.43Top 1% NIH🔓 Open Access
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    SUMMARYTo date, most Leishmania and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) coinfection cases reported to WHO come from Southern Europe. Up to the year 2001, nearly 2,000 cases of coinfection were identified, of which 90% were from Spain, Italy, France, and Portugal. However, these figures are misleading because they do not account for the large proportion of cases in many African and Asian countries that are missed due to a lack of diagnostic facilities and poor reporting systems. Most cases of coinfection in the Americas are reported in Brazil, where the incidence of leishmaniasis has spread in recent years due to overlap with major areas of HIV transmission. In some areas of Africa, the number of coinfection cases has increased dramatically due to social phenomena such as mass migration and wars. In northwest Ethiopia, up to 30% of all visceral leishmaniasis patients are also infected with HIV. In Asia, coinfections are increasingly being reported in India, which also has the highest global burden of leishmaniasis and a high rate of resistance to antimonial drugs. Based on the previous experience of 20 years of coinfection in Europe, this review focuses on the management of Leishmania-HIV-coinfected patients in low-income countries where leishmaniasis is endemic.

  • 2
    Evolutionary and geographical history of the Leishmania donovani complex with a revision of current taxonomy

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America · 2007

    📚 314 citations🎯 RCR 10.19Top 2% NIH🔓 Open Access
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    Leishmaniasis is a geographically widespread severe disease, with an increasing incidence of two million cases per year and 350 million people from 88 countries at risk. The causative agents are species of Leishmania , a protozoan flagellate. Visceral leishmaniasis, the most severe form of the disease, lethal if untreated, is caused by species of the Leishmania donovani complex. These species are morphologically indistinguishable but have been identified by molecular methods, predominantly multilocus enzyme electrophoresis. We have conducted a multifactorial genetic analysis that includes DNA sequences of protein-coding genes as well as noncoding segments, microsatellites, restriction-fragment length polymorphisms, and randomly amplified polymorphic DNAs, for a total of ≈18,000 characters for each of 25 geographically representative strains. Genotype is strongly correlated with geographical (continental) origin, but not with current taxonomy or clinical outcome. We propose a new taxonomy, in which Leishmania infantum and L. donovani are the only recognized species of the L. donovani complex, and we present an evolutionary hypothesis for the origin and dispersal of the species. The genus Leishmania may have originated in South America, but diversified after migration into Asia. L. donovani and L. infantum diverged ≈1 Mya, with further divergence of infraspecific genetic groups between 0.4 and 0.8 Mya. The prevailing mode of reproduction is clonal, but there is evidence of genetic exchange between strains, particularly in Africa.

  • 3
    Spread of vector-borne diseases and neglect of Leishmaniasis, Europe

    Emerging infectious diseases · 2008

    📚 278 citations🎯 RCR 10.67Top 2% NIH🔓 Open Access📄 PDF gratuit ↗

Publications scientifiques (50) — classées par pathologie

Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).

Transversal42

Génétique6

Recommandations1

Revue générale1

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