DAKAR, Senegal (AP) - Ndeye Lam visits the cemetery often, praying and gently touching the seashells laid out across her daughter's gravesite.
Rare diseases often go undiagnosed or untreated in parts of Africa. A project seeks to change that
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) - Ndeye Lam visits the cemetery often, praying and gently touching the seashells laid out across her daughter's gravesite.
"Mariama will always be here," she said, stepping away from the grave and onto a path that winds through rows of monuments outlined with white tile, stone and sand.
At home, Lam and her husband Pathé smiled over an old video clip of their daughter beaming as she celebrated her 13th birthday with cake and sparklers. When the girl was little, she loved to play. By 13, her muscles had weakened, her spine had curved and stiffened and in her last months, she struggled increasingly to breathe.
She visited Fann hospital in Dakar, where neurologist Dr. Pedro Rodriguez measured her lung capacity. He suspects Mariama had SELENON-related myopathy, a muscular dystrophy that causes severe respiratory compromise. A new BiPAP machine might have helped to ease her breathing, but it was too late.