83 results on '"Philippe Clapuyt"'
Search Results
2. RF16 | PSUN203 Deep Characterization of Pancreas Volume of New-Onset Type 1 Diabetes Patients Reveals Puberty-Specific Patterns and New Topographic Correlations with Pancreatic Functions
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Olivier Polle, Antoine Delfosse, Nicolas Michoux, Frank Peeters, Gaetan Duchene, Thierry Mouraux, Philippe Clapuyt, Jacques Louis, Inge Gies, Marieke den Brinker, Marie-christine Lebrethon, Nicole Seret, and Philippe Lysy
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Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism - Abstract
There is a current understanding of type 1 diabetes (T1D) as being the result of a heterogeneous disease of whole pancreas. So far, descriptions of pancreas alterations suggested a global involvement of inflammation throughout the organ, characterized by abnormal age-specific patterns (i.e. > or 0.05) decrease of PI (0.6±0.2 vs 1.1±0.3 mL/kg, p0.05). PVTAIL positively correlated with CPEPEST and CPEPBASAL at Δ+3 months (R=0.55, p=0.002; R=0.47, p0.05). PVBODY did not correlate with any pancreatic function. Finally, we identified multivariate models that included PV and predicted pancreatic endocrine function at Δ+6 and +12 months (i.e. IDAA1C, HbA1C). MRI performed early after T1D onset helped us define specific pancreas alterations and demonstrate for the first time: (1) the increased pancreas atrophy in prepubertal children; (2) correlations between pancreatic subregion volumes and their respective residual functions early after diagnosis and (3) the improvement of endocrine function prediction models by adding PV estimates as predictors. (1) Wentworth et al. 2019;62(1): 33–40 Presentation: Sunday, June 12, 2022 12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m., Sunday, June 12, 2022 1:00 p.m. - 1:05 p.m.
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- 2022
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3. Involution of a liver hemangioma (RICH), an unknown cause of ascites
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Emmy Hoornaert, Philippe Clapuyt, Dana Dumitriu, Olivier Niel, Sophie Huybrechts, Isabelle Scheers, Etienne Sokal, Raymond Reding, and Xavier Stéphenne
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Involution of a rapidly involuting congenital hemangioma is an unknown cause of neonatal ascites. As involution phase is completed by 14 months after birth, conservative management with diuretics and drainage is possible and may avoid surgical resection.
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- 2022
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4. Antenatal diagnosis of CHARGE syndrome: Prenatal ultrasound findings and crucial role of fetal dysmorphic signs. About a series of 10 cases and review of literature
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Pamela Baldin, Yves Sznajer, Philippe Clapuyt, Valérie Benoit, Stéphanie Payrat, Catherine Barrea, Pierre Bernard, Benedicte Van Grambezen, and Jean-Marc Biard
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Polyhydramnios ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prenatal diagnosis ,Choanal atresia ,030105 genetics & heredity ,Ultrasonography, Prenatal ,03 medical and health sciences ,CHARGE syndrome ,Fetus ,Temporal bone ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Genetics ,Medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Testing ,Genetics (clinical) ,Exome sequencing ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,DNA Helicases ,Infant, Newborn ,General Medicine ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,Agenesis ,Atresia ,Karyotyping ,Female ,CHARGE Syndrome ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Although the prognosis of CHARGE syndrome can be highly variable from mild until severe, final diagnosis is difficult to establish in utero. The aim of our study is to compare antenatal and postnatal findings in a retrospective cohort of 10 successive patients with a positive CHD7 gene variant in order to identify the specific prenatal features for CHARGE syndrome diagnosis. Fetal ultrasound, follow-up and supplementary investigations are collected and compared to postnatal findings. Congenital heart defect (7/10), choanal atresia (7/10) and tracheoesophageal atresia (4/10) are the most frequent fetal anomalies found. Inner and external ear anomalies appear as the keystone (constant features) for prenatal diagnosis of CHARGE syndrome in fetuses with multiple anomalies and normal microarray karyotype. External ear malformations are identified in all cases by 3D ultrasound when carefully evaluated. MRI and temporal bone CT-Scan are second line useful tools to assess the diagnosis when looking for semicircular canal agenesis, arhinencephaly and/or choanal atresia. Before availability of prenatal exome sequencing in clinical routine, present findings lead to the recommendation that fetuses, with congenital heart defect (mainly septal and conotruncal), cleft lip/palate or unexplained polyhydramnios should carefully be screened for clues suggesting CHARGE syndrome using 2D and 3D ultrasound, MRI and temporal bone CT-Scan. When CHARGE syndrome is suspected with normal molecular karyotype, CHD7 gene sequencing must be offered.
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- 2020
5. Epilepsy with Myoclonic Absence in a Patient with COL4A1-Related Disorder: A Case Report
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Marie-Cécile Nassogne, C. Gobert, Philippe Clapuyt, Y. Snazjer, P. Vrielynck, and E. Nicolai
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Epilepsy ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Related disorder ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2018
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6. Liver and systemic hemodynamics in children with cirrhosis: Impact on the surgical management in pediatric living donor liver transplantation
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Francis Zech, Thierry Pirotte, Thierry Sluysmans, Dana Dumitriu, Catherine De Magnee, Christine Sempoux, Xavier Stéphenne, Francis Veyckemans, Isabelle Leclercq, Karlien Carbonez, Philippe Clapuyt, Renaud Menten, Catherine Barrea, Raymond Reding, UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale, UCL - SSS/IREC/CHEX - Pôle de chirgurgie expérimentale et transplantation, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'anesthésiologie, UCL - SSS/IREC/PEDI - Pôle de Pédiatrie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de cardiologie pédiatrique, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, UCL - SSS/IREC/GAEN - Pôle d'Hépato-gastro-entérologie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de gastro-entérologie et hépatologie pédiatrique, and UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale
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Liver Cirrhosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hemodynamics ,030230 surgery ,Doppler echocardiography ,Liver transplantation ,Severity of Illness Index ,Gastroenterology ,End Stage Liver Disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Liver disease ,Hepatic Artery ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biliary Atresia ,Biliary atresia ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,Living Donors ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Prospective cohort study ,Transplantation ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Portal Vein ,business.industry ,Infant ,Heart ,Ultrasonography, Doppler ,medicine.disease ,Echocardiography, Doppler ,Liver Transplantation ,Liver ,Child, Preschool ,Blood Circulation ,Preoperative Period ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Surgery ,business ,Vascular Surgical Procedures - Abstract
Cirrhosis in adults is associated with modifications of systemic and liver hemodynamics, whereas little is known about the pediatric population. The aim of this work was to investigate whether alterations of hepatic and systemic hemodynamics were correlated with cirrhosis severity in children. The impact of hemodynamic findings on surgical management in pediatric living donor liver transplantation (LT) was evaluated. Liver and systemic hemodynamics were studied prospectively in 52 children (median age, 1 year; 33 with biliary atresia [BA]). The hemodynamics of native liver were studied preoperatively by Doppler ultrasound and intraoperatively using invasive flowmetry. Portosystemic gradient was invasively measured. Systemic hemodynamics were studied preoperatively by Doppler transthoracic echocardiography and intraoperatively by using transpulmonary thermodilution. Hemodynamic parameters were correlated with Pediatric End-Stage Liver Disease (PELD) score and the histological degree of fibrosis (collagen proportionate area [CPA]). Cirrhosis was associated with a 60% reduction of pretransplant total liver flow (n = 46; median, 36 mL/minute/100 g of liver) compared with noncirrhotic livers (n = 6; median, 86 mL/minute/100 g; P = 0.002). Total blood flow into the native liver was negatively correlated with PELD (P
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- 2017
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7. 'Serpentine-like syndrome'–A very rare multiple malformation syndrome characterised by brachioesophagus and vertebral anomalies
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Pierre Bernard, Philippe Clapuyt, Christian Debauche, Yves Sznajer, Catheline Hocq, Patricia Steenhaut, and Ana Beleza-Meireles
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Adult ,Heart Defects, Congenital ,Rachischisis ,Short neck ,Biology ,Vertebral anomalies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Diaphragmatic hernia ,Connective Tissue Diseases ,Median cleft lip ,Genetics (clinical) ,Infant, Newborn ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Spine ,Natural history ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Gestation ,Female ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,Hernias, Diaphragmatic, Congenital ,Digestive System Abnormalities ,Intestinal Volvulus - Abstract
“Serpentine-like syndrome” is a severe and rare association of multiple congenital malformations, characterised by brachioesophagus, secondary intrathoracic stomach, and vertebral anomalies. Other associated anomalies have been described, such as malposition and herniation of abdominal organs. We report the natural history of a baby girl born at 29 weeks of gestation with intra uterine growth restriction, short neck, large rachischisis from cervical to thoracic spine, a very short oesophagus, thoracic stomach associated with a midline diaphragmatic hernia, malrotated gut and median cleft lip. Most of these anomalies were detected antenatally. Molecular karyotype was normal. She died at age 12 days. To our knowledge, the present patient represents the 8th report of a case of “Serpentine-like syndrome”. Brachioesophagus and congenital vertebral anomalies, in particular rachischisis, are the cardinal features of this condition. All reported cases have been sporadic and the cause is still unknown. We believe that the specificity of the presentation as well as the similarities between available descriptions of patients suggests a common, yet to identify, molecular cause, possibly involving a developmental “toolkit”/homeobox gene or related pathways.
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- 2017
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8. Phenotype description in KIF5C gene hot-spot mutations responsible for malformations of cortical development (MCD)
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Marie-Cécile Nassogne, Katrien Stouffs, Philippe Clapuyt, Yves Sznajer, Sophie Duquesne, UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience, UCL - SSS/IONS/NEUR - Clinical Neuroscience, UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - SSS/IREC/SLUC - Pôle St.-Luc, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, UCL - (SLuc) Centre de génétique médicale UCL, UCL - (SLuc) Service de pédiatrie générale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de neurologie pédiatrique, Clinical sciences, Medical Genetics, and Reproduction and Genetics
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0301 basic medicine ,Intellectual disability ,Lissencephaly ,Kinesins ,030105 genetics & heredity ,Biology ,Gene mutation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,Genotype ,Genetics ,medicine ,Cortical malformations ,Humans ,Child ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) ,Pachygyria ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Kinesin ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,KIF5C gene ,Malformations of Cortical Development ,030104 developmental biology ,Clinical diagnosis ,Mutation ,Female - Abstract
Malformations of cortical development (MCD) represent a large group of brain cortical anomalies characterized by distinctive MRI findings. This 'radiologically-based' classification required re evaluation over time on identified underlying mechanisms (cytogenetic and/or molecular). The understanding of genotype findings (nature of cytogenetic/molecular mutation, cellular pathways consequences, timing, …) draw line of evidence on these distinctive group of conditions whereas sometimes precise and constant recurrent genotype/phenotype correlation may not be present. The clinical diagnosis of MCD is often difficult due to variability and rarity of individual types of malformations. Recent studies have established a relationship between lissencephaly and pathogenic variants in genes involved in the kinesin/tubulin pathways, as the KIF5C gene. Pathogenic variants in the KIF5C gene are a more recently discovered cause of severe developmental delay with epilepsy, characterized by specific malformation of cortical development such as pachygyria. Only seven children have been described to date. We report the natural history of a sixteen years old patient identified carrier of a KIF5C gene mutation who developed infantile epilepsy. We then gather phenotype description and molecular results of all reported patients so far in order to better define this entity.
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- 2019
9. Phase I/II Trial of Liver-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Pediatric Liver-based Metabolic Disorders: A Prospective, Open Label, Multicenter, Partially Randomized, Safety Study of One Cycle of Heterologous Human Adult Liver-derived Progenitor Cells (HepaStem) in Urea Cycle Disorders and Crigler-Najjar Syndrome Patients
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Joanna Pawłowska, Ana Isabel Lopes, Pierre Broué, Stephanie Grunewald, Mustapha Najimi, Danièle Pariente, Françoise Smets, Diana Kamińska, Dries Dobbelaere, Etienne Sokal, Patrick J. McKiernan, Giuliano Torre, Nathalie Belmonte, Riki Shapiro, Marc Yudkoff, Paul Gissen, François Eyskens, Hanna Mandel, Philippe Clapuyt, Beatrice de Vos, Isabel S. Gonçalves, Joelle Thonnard, Emmanuel Jacquemin, Eyal Shteyer, Carlo Dionisi-Vici, Maria Mercedes Binda, Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa, UCL - SSS/IREC/PEDI - Pôle de Pédiatrie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de gastro-entérologie et hépatologie pédiatrique, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie
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Oncology ,Male ,Time Factors ,Crigler–Najjar syndrome ,medicine.medical_treatment ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,030230 surgery ,Liver transplantation ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Treatment outcome ,Child ,Urea Cycle Disorders, Inborn ,Crigler-Najjar Syndrome ,Stem cell transplantation ,Age Factors ,Liver regeneration ,Europe ,Treatment Outcome ,Liver ,Urea cycle ,Child, Preschool ,Urea cycle disorders, inborn ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,Stem cell ,Transplantation, heterologous ,Age factors ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Child, preschool ,Adolescent ,Transplantation, Heterologous ,Heterologous ,Crigler-Najjar syndorme ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Progenitor cell ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Time factors ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Liver Regeneration ,Liver Transplantation ,Human medicine ,business ,Prospective studies ,Stem Cell Transplantation - Abstract
Copyright © 2019 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited, Regenerative medicine using stem cell technology is an emerging field that is currently tested for inborn and acquired liver diseases. Objective. This phase I/II prospective, open label, multicenter, randomized trial aimed primarily at evaluating the safety of Heterologous Human Adult Liver–derived Progenitor Cells (HepaStem) in pediatric patients with urea cycle disorders (UCDs) or Crigler-Najjar (CN) syndrome 6 months posttransplantation. The secondary objective included the assessment of safety up to 12 months postinfusion and of preliminary efficacy. Methods. Fourteen patients with UCDs and 6 with CN syndrome were divided into 3 cohorts by body weight and intraportally infused with 3 doses of HepaStem. Clinical status, portal vein hemodynamics, morphology of the liver, de novo detection of circulating anti– human leukocyte antigen antibodies, and clinically significant adverse events (AEs) and serious adverse events to infusion were evaluated by using an intent-to-treat analysis. Results. The overall safety of HepaStem was confirmed. For the entire study period, patient-month incidence rate was 1.76 for the AEs and 0.21 for the serious adverse events, of which 38% occurred within 1 month postinfusion. There was a trend of higher events in UCD as compared with CN patients. Segmental left portal vein thrombosis occurred in 1 patient and intraluminal local transient thrombus in a second patient. The other AEs were in line with expectations for catheter placement, cell infusion, concomitant medications, age, and underlying diseases. Conclusions. This study led to European clinical trial authorization for a phase II study in a homogeneous patient cohort, with repeated infusions and intermediate doses.
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- 2019
10. Prise en charge des anomalies vasculaires chez l’enfant
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Anne-Christine Bataille, Philippe Clapuyt, Anass Elajmi, Frank Hammer, Laurence M. Boon, and Benoît Lengelé
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Anamnesis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Fast flow ,Biological classification ,030230 surgery ,medicine.disease ,Angioma ,Hemangioma ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Vascular Tumors ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Vascular Neoplasm ,Surgery ,Doppler ultrasound ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
Vascular anomalies, which are broadly identified as "angiomas", are rare entities and often unknown by the medical sphere. They are divided in two different categories which carry different prognosis and management: "vascular tumors" and "vascular malformations". Their precise identification is crucial and involves a good knowledge of the biological classification published by Mulliken and Glowacki and that has recently been updated by the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA). Vascular tumors are benign, common, inborn or not and most of the time disappear with growth. Vascular malformations are always congenital and growth with the child. They can involve type of vessels solely or combined with others. A rheologic differentiation between slow and fast flow malformations is essential in order to characterize the seriousness of the lesion. Frequently, their diagnosis is clinically established and the anamnesis is conducted to answer three questions that are the time of revelation of the lesion ("When?"), its aspect ("What?") and its evolution ("How?"). Further investigations are usually not required but a non-invasive imaging technique such as Doppler ultrasound could be useful if a doubt exists. Surgery is not mandatory and must always be well thought because its consequences might be disastrous. It must be left to cosmetic sequelae of these lesions or to lesions that are totally resectable without causing any unacceptable deformation.
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- 2016
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11. Ultrasound of the duodenum in children
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Philippe Clapuyt, Dana Dumitriu, and Renaud Menten
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Duodenum ,Normal anatomy ,business.industry ,General surgery ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Ultrasound ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Duodenal Diseases ,Child ,business ,Ultrasonography ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
Ultrasound is well suited for examining the pediatric duodenum, given the small size of the patients, the lack of ionizing radiation and high-resolution imaging potential. Technical considerations, normal anatomy, congenital and acquired pathology of the duodenum, and the advantages and limitations of US are discussed and illustrated in this review.
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- 2016
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12. Novel insights into the assessment of risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding in decompensated cirrhotic children
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Dana Dumitriu, Caroline Pregardien, Francis Veyckemans, Stéphane Eeckhoudt, Cedric Hermans, Philippe Clapuyt, Thibault Helleputte, Raymond Reding, Thierry Detaille, Thierry Pirotte, Isabelle Scheers, Nicolas Bonnet, Renaud Menten, Jérôme Paul, Françoise Smets, Etienne Sokal, Xavier Stéphenne, Sharat Varma, UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience, UCL - SSS/IONS/CEMO - Pôle Cellulaire et moléculaire, UCL - SSS/IREC/PEDI - Pôle de Pédiatrie, UCL - SSS/IREC/CHEX - Pôle de chirgurgie expérimentale et transplantation, UCL - SSS/IREC/CARD - Pôle de recherche cardiovasculaire, UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - SSS/IREC/SLUC - Pôle St.-Luc, UCL - (SLuc) Service de gastro-entérologie et hépatologie pédiatrique, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'anesthésiologie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de soins intensifs, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de biologie hématologique, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'hématologie, UCL - (SLuc) Centre de thérapie tissulaire et cellulaire, and UCL - (SLuc) Centre de malformations vasculaires congénitales
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Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,Platelet Aggregation ,Waiting Lists ,030232 urology & nephrology ,030230 surgery ,Esophageal varices ,Chronic liver disease ,Esophageal and Gastric Varices ,Gastroenterology ,End Stage Liver Disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Hypertension, Portal ,medicine ,Coagulopathy ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Blood Coagulation ,Upper gastrointestinal bleeding ,Transplantation ,Hemostasis ,business.industry ,Fibrinogen ,Infant ,Endoscopy ,Gastric varices ,medicine.disease ,Liver Transplantation ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,business ,Varices ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,Platelet dysfunction - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Cirrhotic children wait-listed for liver transplant are prone to bleeding from gastrointestinal varices. Grade 2-3 esophageal varices, red signs, and gastric varices are well-known risk factors. However, the involvement of hemostatic factors remains controversial because of the rebalanced state of coagulation during cirrhosis. METHODS: Children suffering from decompensated cirrhosis were prospectively included while being on waitlist. Portal hypertension was assessed by ultrasound and endoscopy. Coagulopathy was evaluated through conventional tests, thromboelastometry, and platelet function testing. The included children were followed up until liver transplantation, and all bleeding episodes were recorded. Children with or without bleeding were compared according to clinical, radiological, endoscopic, and biological parameters. In addition, validation of a predictive model for risk of variceal bleeding comprising of grade 2-3 esophageal varices, red spots, and fibrinogen level
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- 2018
13. Sirolimus is efficacious in treatment for extensive and/or complex slow-flow vascular malformations: a monocentric prospective phase II study
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Philippe Clapuyt, Frank Hammer, Emmanuel Seront, Caroline Chopinet, Laurence M. Boon, Miikka Vikkula, Steven Duez, Jennifer Hammer, Claire Hoyoux, Sophie Dupont, Sandra Schmitz, An Van Damme, and UCL - SSS/DDUV/GEHU - Génétique
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Vascular Malformations ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Phases of clinical research ,lcsh:Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Venous malformation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sclerotherapy ,Mucositis ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Dosing ,Rapamycin ,Lymphatic malformation ,Adverse effect ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Genetics (clinical) ,Sirolimus ,business.industry ,Complex vascular malformation ,Research ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Extensive vascular anomaly ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Child, Preschool ,Slow-flow anomaly ,Female ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Extensive and complex vascular malformations often cause chronic pain and severe functional restraint. Conventional treatments, such as surgery and/or sclerotherapy, are rarely curative, underscoring the great need for new therapeutic modalities. Recent preclinical and clinical data demonstrated that sirolimus could offset the progression of vascular malformations and significantly improve quality of life of patients through inhibition of the Phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT/mammalian Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. The purpose of this prospective study was to assess the efficacy and safety of this treatment in patients with extensive or complex slow-flow vascular malformations. Methods Sirolimus was administered orally on a continuous dosing schedule with pharmacokinetic-guided target serum concentration level of 10 to 15 ng/ml. Patients were seen every month for the first three months and subsequently every three months. The primary endpoints were safety and efficacy, based on clinical, biological and radiological evaluations, as well as a quality of life questionnaire. Results Nineteen patients, from 3 to 64 years old, with lymphatic (LM), venous (VM) or complex slow-flow malformations, refractory to standard care, were enrolled and received sirolimus continuously. After 12 months of follow-up, 16 patients were available for assessment of efficacy and safety: all had a significant and rapid improvement of their symptoms and quality of life. In two patients, sirolimus treatment permitted sclerotherapy and surgery, initially evaluated unfeasible. Sirolimus was well tolerated, with mucositis as the most common (10% of patients) grade 3 adverse event. Conclusions Sirolimus was efficient in extensive LM, VM and/or complex malformations that were refractory to conventional treatments and was well tolerated.
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- 2018
14. Living Donor Liver Transplantation in Children
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Laurence Annet, Dana Dumitriu, Jan Lerut, Renaud Menten, Christine Sempoux, Pierre-François Laterre, Catherine De Magnee, Michael Gurevich, Raymond Reding, Francis Veyckemans, Dominique Latinne, Thierry Detaille, Etienne Sokal, Xavier Stéphenne, Jean-Luc Balligand, Philippe Clapuyt, Françoise Smets, Chantal Lefebvre, Magdalena Janssen, Thierry Pirotte, Stéphan Clément de Cléty, Vanessa Guy-Viterbo, Etienne Danse, UCL - SSS/IREC - Institut de recherche expérimentale et clinique, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de soins intensifs
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Adult ,Graft Rejection ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Portal vein ,ABO Blood-Group System ,Young Adult ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,ABO blood group system ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,parasitic diseases ,Living Donors ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Portal Vein ,business.industry ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Liver Transplantation ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,surgical procedures, operative ,Blood Group Incompatibility ,Child, Preschool ,Donation ,Female ,Living donor liver transplantation ,business - Abstract
To evaluate the outcome of pediatric living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) regarding portal vein (PV) reconstruction, ABO compatibility, and impact of maternal donation on graft acceptance.LDLT and ABO-mismatched transplantation constitute feasible options to alleviate organ shortage in children. Vascular complications of portal hypoplasia in biliary atresia (BA) and acute rejection (AR) are still major concerns in this field.Data from 250 pediatric LDLT recipients, performed at Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc between July 1993 and June 2012, were collected retrospectively. Results were analyzed according to ABO matching and PV complications. Uni- and multivariate analyses were performed to study the impact of immunosuppression, sex matching, and maternal donation on AR rate.Overall, the 10-year patient survival rate was 93.2%. Neither patient or graft loss nor vascular rejection, nor hemolysis, was encountered in the ABO nonidentical patients (n = 58), provided pretransplant levels of relevant isoagglutinins were below 1/16. In BA recipients, the rate of PV complications was lower after portoplasty (4.6%) than after truncal PV anastomosis (9.8%) and to jump graft interposition (26.9%; P = 0.027). In parental donation, maternal grafts were associated with higher 1-year AR-free survival (55.2%) than paternal grafts (39.8%; P = 0.041), but only in BA patients.LDLT, including ABO-mismatched transplantation, constitutes a safe and efficient therapy for liver failure in children. In BA patients with PV hypoplasia, portoplasty seems to constitute the best technique for PV reconstruction. Maternal donation might be a protective factor for AR.
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- 2015
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15. Risk factors and surgical management of anastomotic biliary complications after pediatric liver transplantation
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Philippe Clapuyt, Tom Darius, Christophe Bourdeaux, Magdalena Janssen, Catherine De Magnee, Quirino Lai, Jairo Rivera, Raymond Reding, and Fabio Fusaro
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Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Retrospective cohort study ,Liver transplantation ,Anastomosis ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Surgery ,Cholestasis ,medicine ,Risk factor ,Biliary Tract Surgical Procedures ,business - Abstract
Biliary complications (BCs) still remain the Achilles heel of liver transplantation (LT) with an overall incidence of 10% to 35% in pediatric series. We hypothesized that (1) the use of alternative techniques (reduced size, split, and living donor grafts) in pediatric LT may contribute to an increased incidence of BCs, and (2) surgery as a first treatment option for anastomotic BCs could allow a definitive cure for the majority of these patients. Four hundred twenty-nine primary pediatric LT procedures, including 88, 91, 47, and 203 whole, reduced size, split, and living donor grafts, respectively, that were performed between July 1993 and November 2010 were retrospectively reviewed. Demographic and surgical variables were analyzed, and their respective impact on BCs was studied with univariate and multivariate analyses. The modalities of BC management were also reviewed. The 1- and 5-year patient survival rates were 94% and 90%, 89% and 85%, 94% and 89%, and 98% and 94% for whole, reduced size, split, and living donor liver grafts, respectively. The overall incidence of BCs was 23% (n = 98). Sixty were anastomotic complications [47 strictures (78%) and 13 fistulas (22%)]. The graft type was not found to be an independent risk factor for the development of BCs. According to a multivariate analysis, only hepatic artery thrombosis and acute rejection increased the risk of anastomotic BCs (P
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- 2014
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16. Postendoscopic duodenal hematoma in children: Ultrasound diagnosis and follow-up
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Dana Dumitriu, Françoise Smets, Renaud Menten, and Philippe Clapuyt
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,medicine.disease ,Endoscopy ,Duodenal Diseases ,Surgery ,Hematoma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biopsy ,Duodenum ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical history ,Radiology ,Differential diagnosis ,business - Abstract
Intramural duodenal hematomas have most frequently been reported in children in a traumatic setting. We present two cases of duodenal hematoma that occurred after upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy with biopsy in children without significant prior medical history. The diagnosis was made by ultrasound, in correlation with the clinical presentation. Because the patients were hemodynamically stable, they were treated conservatively and the regression of the hematoma was followed up with ultrasound until its complete resolution. These cases demonstrate the risks of endoscopy, which are not to be neglected even in children without impaired coagulation, and the manner in which ultrasound can provide the correct diagnosis and follow-up.
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- 2014
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17. RASA1Mutations and Associated Phenotypes in 68 Families with Capillary Malformation-Arteriovenous Malformation
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Marc Abramowicz, Felicity Collins, Philippe Clapuyt, Christine Léauté-Labrèze, Brid O'Donnell, Julie Désir, Eulalia Baselga, María Antonia González-Enseñat, Antonella Mendola, Nicola Brunetti-Pierri, Yim Dwight, Nicole Revencu, Victoria R. Barrio, David J.E. Lord, Lesley C. Adès, David J. Amor, Mariarosaria Cozzolino, Orli Wargon, Shelagh Joss, Frank Hammer, Susan J. Bayliss, Josée Dubois, Didier Bessis, María del Carmen Boente, Leona Fishman, Wendy K. Chung, Miikka Vikkula, Oon T. Tan, Yolanda Gilaberte, Laurence M. Boon, Cheryl Cytrynbaum, Juliette Mazereeuw-Hautier, Carol A. Gardiner, Patricia E. Burrows, Sarah A. Sandaradura, Fred Ghali, Maria R. Cordisco, Alan D. Irvine, Asunción Vicente, Catheline Vilain, John B. Mulliken, Aicha Salhi, Francine Blei, Loreto Martorell, Anne Dompmartin, Janine Smith, Ashley Wilson, S. Syed, Sarah L. Chamlin, Ana Martín-Santiago, Marie Ange Delrue, Reed E. Pyeritz, Revencu, N, Boon, Lm, Mendola, A, Cordisco, Mr, Dubois, J, Clapuyt, P, Hammer, F, Amor, Dj, Irvine, Ad, Baselga, E, Dompmartin, A, Syed, S, Martin Santiago, A, Ades, L, Collins, F, Smith, J, Sandaradura, S, Barrio, Vr, Burrows, Pe, Blei, F, Cozzolino, M, BRUNETTI PIERRI, Nicola, Vicente, A, Abramowicz, M, D?sir, J, Vilain, C, Chung, Wk, Wilson, A, Gardiner, Ca, Dwight, Y, Lord, Dj, Fishman, L, Cytrynbaum, C, Chamlin, S, Ghali, F, Gilaberte, Y, Joss, S, Boente Mdel, C, L?aut? Labr?ze, C, Delrue, Ma, Bayliss, S, Martorell, L, Gonz?lez Ense?at, Ma, Mazereeuw Hautier, J, O'Donnell, B, Bessis, D, Pyeritz, Re, Salhi, A, Tan, Ot, Wargon, O, Mulliken, Jb, and Vikkula, M.
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Capillary malformation ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Port-Wine Stain ,Sturge–Weber syndrome ,arteriovenous malformation ,P120 GTPase Activating Protein ,Sturge-Weber syndrome ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Arteriovenous Malformations ,Gene Order ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Allele ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genetics (clinical) ,Retrospective Studies ,Mutation ,capillary malformation ,p120 GTPase Activating Protein ,Arteriovenous malformation ,medicine.disease ,Parkes Weber syndrome ,Capillaries ,Glomuvenous malformation ,Phenotype ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Female ,RASA1 - Abstract
Capillary malformation-arteriovenous malformation (CM-AVM) is an autosomal-dominant disorder, caused by heterozygous RASA1 mutations, and manifesting multifocal CMs and high risk for fast-flow lesions. A limited number of patients have been reported, raising the question of the phenotypic borders. We identified new patients with a clinical diagnosis of CM-AVM, and patients with overlapping phenotypes. RASA1 was screened in 261 index patients with: CM-AVM (n=100), common CM(s) (port-wine stain; n=100), Sturge-Weber syndrome (n=37), or isolated AVM(s) (n=24). Fifty-eight distinct RASA1 mutations (43 novel) were identified in 68 index patients with CM-AVM and none in patients with other phenotypes. A novel clinical feature was identified: cutaneous zones of numerous small white pale halos with a central red spot. An additional question addressed in this study was the second-hit hypothesis as a pathophysiological mechanism for CM-AVM. One tissue from a patient with a germline RASA1 mutation was available. The analysis of the tissue showed loss of the wild-type RASA1 allele. In conclusion, mutations in RASA1 underscore the specific CM-AVM phenotype and the clinical diagnosis is based on identifying the characteristic CMs. The high incidence of fast-flow lesions warrants careful clinical and radiologic examination, and regular follow-up. (C) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2013
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18. Sonographic assessment of the retroperitoneal position of the third portion of the duodenum: an indicator of normal intestinal rotation
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Philippe Clapuyt, Raymond Reding, Renaud Menten, Dana Ioana Dumitriu, and Véronique Godding
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,medicine.disease ,Superior mesenteric vessels ,Surgery ,Position (obstetrics) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Intestinal malrotation ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Duodenum ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiology ,Single institution ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
The diagnosis of intestinal malrotation is based on an upper gastrointestinal contrast series (UGI), which is considered the imaging reference standard. It may however be challenging even for experienced paediatric radiologists. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the agreement between UGI and US in assessing the position of the third portion of the duodenum (D3) and to show that a retroperitoneal duodenum indicates normal forgut rotation. In a prospective study, US assessment of the duodenum and the superior mesenteric vessels was performed in consecutive children who were referred for clinically indicated UGI at a single institution. Eighty-five children, 5 months to 14 years old, were studied. In 82/85 (96%), both US and UGI suggested normal forgut rotation. In three children, US demonstrated a normal position of the D3 whereas UGI showed an abnormal position of the duodeno-jejunal junction. US is a non-invasive, easily performed technique for excluding malrotation. UGI may be reserved for situations where US does not demonstrate a normal position of the D3.
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- 2012
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19. Antibiotics induce remission in pediatric PSC-AIH overlap syndrome allowing corticosteroid-free therapy
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Etienne Sokal, Sharat Varma, Philippe Clapuyt, Pauline Sambon, and Mina Komuta
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,medicine.drug_class ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Antibiotics ,medicine ,Corticosteroid ,Overlap syndrome ,Intensive care medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2017
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20. Transient elastography in patients with cystic fibrosis
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Alexandra Cristina Nicolae, Patrick Lebecque, Anissa Leonard, Pierre Vincke, Renaud Menten, and Philippe Clapuyt
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Cystic Fibrosis ,Biliary cirrhosis ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Cystic fibrosis ,Young Adult ,Liver disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Child ,Ultrasonography ,Neuroradiology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Liver Diseases ,Ultrasound ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Liver ,Child, Preschool ,Liver biopsy ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Radiology ,Elastography ,Transient elastography ,business - Abstract
Hepatic involvement is frequent in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), with focal biliary cirrhosis being the pathognomonic hepatic manifestation. In around one-quarter of CF patients, it results in CF-associated liver disease (CFLD). This occurs as a relatively early complication with the majority of patients presenting in childhood or their early teens. However, a normal US does not preclude significant liver fibrosis and liver biopsy is an invasive procedure that is hampered by potential sampling errors. Transient elastography (TE) (Fibroscan) is a non-invasive, user-friendly and quick technique that provides an objective and reproducible measure of liver stiffness. This is accomplished with a device using an US probe mounted in the axis of a vibrator. Vibrations are transmitted by the transducer, inducing an electronic shear wave that propagates through the underlying tissue.We aimed to prospectively compare TE and transabdominal US scanning in children and adults attending a CF clinic.A total of 134 consecutive patients with documented CF were prospectively studied. In each case, transient elastography measurement was performed immediately after the routine annual US evaluation of the liver. Sonographic appearance of the liver was classified from 1 to 5. Ten validated TE measurements were performed in each patient with the result expressed in kilopascals (kPa). The median value was considered representative of the elastic modulus of the liver.Measurements were performed in 59 CF adults, 75 CF children and 31 control children. There was no relationship between age and liver stiffness in either the control group or CF patients. Elasticity values of controls, CF pancreatic sufficient (PS) patients and pancreatic insufficient (PI) CF patients with a US score3 were comparable and significantly lower than in CF patients with a US scoreor = 3 (all PI) (P0.002). Median elasticity in CF patients was significantly higher in males (4.7 kPa) than in females (3.9 kPa) (P = 0.0013).Considering the limitations of US and the low risk-benefit rate of liver biopsy in most CF patients, this preliminary study suggests that TE is an attractive non-invasive way to assess and follow-up liver disease in these patients.
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- 2010
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21. Development of renal and iliac aneurysms in a child with generalized infantile myofibromatosis
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Thierry Sluysmans, Philippe Clapuyt, Bénédicte Brichard, Christophe Chantrain, Nathalie Godefroid, Sophie Dupont, Benoit Brasseur, Renaud Menten, Christiane Vermylen, and Christine Anslot
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Nephrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Biopsy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Infantile myofibromatosis ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Fibromuscular dysplasia ,Renal Artery Obstruction ,Renovascular hypertension ,Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation ,Renal Artery ,Aneurysm ,Renal Dialysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Iliac Aneurysm ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Soft tissue ,Myofibromatosis ,medicine.disease ,Radiography ,Treatment Outcome ,Hypertension ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,business - Abstract
Infantile myofibromatosis is a rare disorder characterized by the formation of tumors in the skin, soft tissues, bone, and viscera. We report the case of a 3-week-old girl who presented with severe hypertension due to generalized infantile myofibromatosis including renal involvement. The infant was treated by chemotherapy and showed progressive regression of the tumors. However, her evolution was marked by the development of aneurismal dilations of the renal and iliac arteries as observed in fibromuscular dysplasia. We discuss the possibility of a link between these two mesenchymal disorders.
- Published
- 2009
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22. Determinants of Early Atherosclerosis in Obese Children and Adolescents
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Sonia Brichard, Marc Maes, Philippe Clapuyt, Francis Zech, Véronique Beauloye, Hiep Tran Thi Mong, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'endocrinologie et de nutrition, UCL - MD/GYPE - Département de gynécologie, d'obstétrique et de pédiatrie, UCL - MD/FSIO - Département de physiologie et pharmacologie, UCL - MD/RAIM - Département de radiologie et d'imagerie médicale, UCL - MD/MINT - Département de médecine interne, UCL - (SLuc) Unité d'endocrinologie pédiatrique, UCL - (SLuc) Service de médecine interne générale, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Type 2 diabetes ,Biochemistry ,Childhood obesity ,Body Mass Index ,Endocrinology ,Insulin resistance ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Insulin ,Medicine ,Carotid Stenosis ,Resistin ,Obesity ,Child ,Ultrasonography ,Dyslipidemias ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Adiponectin ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,Atherosclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,C-Reactive Protein ,Hypertension ,Homeostatic model assessment ,Biological Markers ,Female ,Insulin Resistance ,business ,Lipid profile ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Body mass index ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Context: Obesity in childhood is associated with an increased mortality due to cardiovascular (CV) diseases in adulthood, independent of adult weight. Recent studies in children indicate that the atherosclerosis process starts at an early age and is linked to obesity. Objective: The aim of the study was to investigate determinants of increased carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), an early marker of atherosclerosis, in obese children. Design: A total of 104 obese children [age, 12.7 ± 0.2 yr; body mass index (BMI)-z-score, 2.8 ± 0.7] underwent an oral glucose tolerance test. Fasting levels of glucose, insulin, C-reactive protein and adhesion molecules (sICAM, sVCAM, sE-selectin), lipid profile, adiponectin, and resistin were determined. IMT was measured by ultrasound. Insulin resistance was estimated by the homeostatic model assessment index. Baseline measurements of blood parameters were obtained from 93 nonobese children (age, 13.0 ± 0.2 yr; BMI-z-score, −0.2 ± 0.9), and IMT was measured in 23 other control children with similar characteristics. Results: Univariate analysis showed a significant positive correlation between IMT and relative BMI, the degree of systolic hypertension, fasting insulin levels, homeostatic model assessment-R index, and resistin concentrations, whereas an inverse correlation with adiponectin levels was found. No correlation was obtained between IMT and classical CV risk factors such as positive familial history of type 2 diabetes or precocious CV disease, visceral obesity, or the lipid profile. C-reactive protein and adhesion molecule levels were not associated with IMT in our obese population. When controlled for sex, Tanner stage, and relative BMI, only adiponectin levels remained an independent determinant of IMT. Conclusion: Adiponectin more than conventional CV risk factors and inflammation status may be related to early atherosclerosis in obese children.
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- 2007
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23. 2005 PRETEXT: a revised staging system for primary malignant liver tumours of childhood developed by the SIOPEL group
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Margaret Childs, Giorgio Perilongo, Kieran McHugh, Philippe Clapuyt, Frédéric Gauthier, Jean-Bernard Otte, Jean de Ville de Goyet, Øystein E. Olsen, Rudolf Maibach, Derek J. Roebuck, Gordon A. MacKinlay, Piotr Czauderna, Jack Plaschkes, Danièle Pariente, Daniel C. Aronson, UCL - MD/RAIM - Département de radiologie et d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, UCL - (SLuc) Centre de malformations vasculaires congénitales, UCL - (SLuc) Centre du cancer, UCL - MD/CHIR - Département de chirurgie, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie et transplantation abdominale
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Hepatoblastoma ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Staging ,Internationality ,Liver tumor ,CHILDREN ,Review ,Pediatrics ,Liver Neoplasms ,Neoplasm Staging ,Humans ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Child ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health ,Children ,Staging system ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Liver tumours ,Settore MED/20 - Chirurgia Pediatrica e Infantile ,medicine.disease ,TUMORS ,Surgery ,Liver ,Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Pretext ,Tumour ,business - Abstract
Over the last 15 years, various oncology groups throughout the world have used the PRETEXT system for staging malignant primary liver tumours of childhood. This paper, written by members of the radiology and surgery committees of the International Childhood Liver Tumor Strategy Group (SIOPEL), presents various clarifications and revisions to the original PRETEXT system.
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- 2006
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24. Tumeurs et malformations vasculaires, classification anatomopathologique et imagerie
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Romain Vanwijck, G. Magalon, M. Wassef, Laurence M. Boon, and Philippe Clapuyt
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Nosology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Anatomical pathology ,Histogenesis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Angioma ,Hemangioma ,Maffucci syndrome ,Medicine ,Congenital Hemangioma ,business - Abstract
The understanding of vascular anomalies (vascular tumours and vascular malformations) was obscured, for a long time, by confusion and uncertainties in nosology and terminology. The International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA) recently adopted a classification scheme, clearly separating vascular tumours (hemangiomas of different types) which result from active cell proliferation, from vascular malformations, which are inborn defects in vascular morphogenesis. These two types of lesions have different clinical behaviour and require different diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. The most frequent vascular tumour is infantile hemangioma. Its clinical aspects and evolution are well-known. New data have been recently obtained concerning the phenotype of tumour cells and its histogenesis. Of the numerous new vascular tumours, which have been recently described, only the congenital hemangiomas, the vascular tumours associated with the Maffucci syndrome and the tumours that may be complicated by a profound thrombocytopenia (Kasabach and Merritt phenomenon) will be considered. Vascular malformations can be classified according to the vessel(s) types they are composed of. A classification table is presented, separating the malformations of vascular trunks from tissular malformations which are more intimately embedded in the surrounding tissues. The different syndromes associated with vascular anomalies take also place in this table. The clinical, imaging and histological aspects of the most frequent malformations (capillary, venous, lymphatic and arteriovenous) are presented. This classification intend to clarify the nosology and terminology of the complex field of vascular tumours and malformation and to offer a common language to the different physicians and specialists contributing, preferably with a interdisciplinary approach, to the diagnosis and treatment of these difficult lesions.
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- 2006
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25. Reconstructive surgery in the management of a patient with CLOVES syndrome
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Pascal Brouillard, Laurence M. Boon, Frank Hammer, Ali Modarressi, Philippe Clapuyt, Axel Feyaerts, Fanny Ballieux, Pierre-Louis Docquier, Miikka Vikkula, and Catherine Godfraind
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Reconstructive surgery ,ddc:617 ,business.industry ,medicine ,Surgery ,medicine.disease ,business ,CLOVES syndrome - Published
- 2013
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26. Ostéomyélite subaiguë de l’acétabulum
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Frédéric Lecouvet, J P Staelens, G Delronge, Jean-Jacques Rombouts, Philippe Clapuyt, and D. Viejo-Fuertes
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musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Coxa valga ,Radiography ,General Medicine ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Acetabulum ,Pharyngitis ,Surgery ,Bone Infection ,Orthopedic surgery ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Femur ,Osteitis ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
A 15-months-old girl presented an excentration of the hip associated with a defect image of the acetabulum. Arthrography revealed a communication between the hip joint and the acetabular defect. Bacteriological specimens of the articular fluid were negative. The radiographic images were compatible with subacute osteomyelitis. Relative immobilization using an Atlanta abduction devise was undertaken. No medical treatment was prescribed for this adolescent who had received antibiotics for polymicrobial urinary tract infections and for pharyngitis prior to detection of the orthopedic disorder. Outcome was satisfactory with progressive filling of the acetabular defect but also with development of a subluxating coxa valga which required varus osteotomy of the femur. This case appears to illustrate a particular form of subacute osteomyelitis which is not described in earlier classifications.
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- 2004
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27. Erratum to: Spondyloenchondrodysplasia Due to Mutations in ACP5: A Comprehensive Survey
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Moshe Frydman, Sébastien Héritier, Brigitte Bader-Meunier, David Coman, Kannan Baskar, Carine Wouters, Philippe Clapuyt, Agnès Linglart, Ericka Okenfuss, David Levitt, Marina Vivarelli, Tracy A Briggs, Nicole Revencu, Sabine Scholl-Bürgi, Yanick J. Crow, Vincent Navarro, Anne Puel, M. L. Kulkarni, Navid Adib, Yael Finezilber, Véronique Baudouin, Gillian I. Rice, Stephane Barete, Pierre Lebon, Martine Le Merrer, Daniela Karall, Lesley C. Adès, Lien De Somer, Ayşe Nurcan Cebeci, Ayla Güven, and John H. Livingston
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0303 health sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,0302 clinical medicine ,business.industry ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,business ,030304 developmental biology ,030215 immunology ,3. Good health - Abstract
The online version of the original article can be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10875-016-0252-y .
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- 2016
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28. Un traitement médicamenteux pour les malformations vasculaires
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Miikka Vikkula, Frank Hammer, Emmanuel Seront, A. Van Damme, J. Hammer, S. Duez, Laurence M. Boon, and Philippe Clapuyt
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Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Les malformations veineuses se caracterisent par des ectasies veineuses avec une deficience relative en muscle lisse. Elles sont souvent responsables de deformation, douleur, coagulopathie et saignement. Malgre des sclerotherapies recidivantes et des resections chirurgicales, les recidives sont frequentes. La rapamycine est un inhibiteur de mTor qui cible la cause des malformations veineuses, a savoir la voie de signalisation PI3K-AKT. Les resultats initiaux demontrent que cette nouvelle therapie diminue la douleur, les saignements et la coagulopathie, et ameliore la qualite de vie des patients. Une etude multicentrique europeenne de phase 3 (VASE) a ete mise en route en janvier 2016 pour objectiver les benefices et risques de cette pathologie et determiner quelles malformations sont les plus a meme de repondre positivement a cette medication. Actuellement, pres de 40 patients ont deja ete inclus avec des resultats toujours aussi satisfaisants au niveau de la symptomatologie meme si le volume de la malformation ne diminue pas beaucoup.
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- 2017
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29. Meso-Rex shunt for immediate portal revascularization in pediatric liver transplantation: First report
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Philippe Clapuyt, Fabio Fusaro, Catherine De Magnee, Jairo Rivera, and Raymond Reding
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Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anastomosis ,Liver transplantation ,Revascularization ,medicine.disease ,Shunt (medical) ,Surgery ,surgical procedures, operative ,Biliary atresia ,Jugular vein ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Radiology ,Superior mesenteric vein ,business - Abstract
Rivera J, Fusaro F, de Magnee C, Clapuyt P, Reding R. Meso-Rex shunt for immediate portal revascularization in pediatric liver transplantation: First report. Pediatr Transplantation 2011. © 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Abstract: We describe the case of a 13-month-old girl transplanted for biliary atresia with PV hypoplasia. She received the left liver lobe of her mother and presented intraoperative portal thrombosis. Because of technical reasons, the opportunity to have conventional PV reconstruction using the donor left PV stump was lost. Immediate conversion to a meso-Rex shunt, using the recipient jugular vein as a bridge between the superior mesenteric vein and the graft Rex recessus, allowed excellent portal revascularization of the transplant. We suggest that synchronous meso-Rex shunt may constitute a valid alternative to truncal PV anastomosis during pediatric LT.
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- 2011
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30. Spontaneous meso-portal shunt following orthotopic liver transplantation in a child
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Philippe Clapuyt, Renaud Menten, Raymond Reding, and Grégory Vannevel
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Orthotopic liver transplantation ,business.industry ,Portal venous pressure ,medicine.disease ,Liver Transplantation ,Surgery ,Portal vein thrombosis ,Shunt (medical) ,Hepatic Artery ,Mesenteric Veins ,Extrahepatic portal hypertension ,Biliary tract ,Arteriovenous Fistula ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Humans ,Portal shunt ,Female ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiology ,Child ,business ,Ultrasonography ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
Post-transplant children are regularly followed by colour Doppler US exam. Liver parenchyma, biliary tract and portal, subhepatic and arterial vascularisation are checked. We observed a post-transplant child with spontaneous meso-portal bypass after portal vein thrombosis (PVT). After orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), PVT is frequently observed. When it occurs early (before 3 weeks), it has been identified as a cause of graft failure. On the other hand, late PVT (after 3 weeks) can be extremely well-tolerated, with cavernous transformation of the portal vein and formation of hepatopetal collaterals that deliver blood to the liver. However, extrahepatic portal hypertension (EHPH) and its related complications can develop. Cavernoma transformation is usually seen, but spontaneous shunt is not yet described in transplant patients. Distinction from the classic cavernoma can be achieved by the depiction of a single transcapsular vessel. This bypass partially corrects the EHPH. However it was decided to completely prevent shunt development by performing a surgical mesenterico-left portal vein bypass.
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- 2010
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31. Early occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma in biliary atresia treated by liver transplantation
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Philippe Clapuyt, Zephyrin Feruzi, Caroline Fervaille, Andrea Brunati, Françoise Smets, Raymond Reding, Jean de Ville de Goyet, Etienne Sokal, and Serge Gosseye
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Liver transplantation ,Gastroenterology ,Biliary Atresia ,Biliary atresia ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Medicine ,neoplasms ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Infant, Newborn ,Immunosuppression ,Settore MED/20 - Chirurgia Pediatrica e Infantile ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Liver Transplantation ,Treatment Outcome ,Biliary tract ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,alpha-Fetoproteins ,business ,Liver cancer ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
A case of liver transplantation for HCC complicating BA in an eight-month old infant is reported. HCC in BA is extremely rare. Screening of AFP and ultrasonographic examination should be performed regularly in patients with secondary biliary cirrhosis for early detection of HCC.
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- 2007
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32. Mesenteric whirlpool sign detected at color doppler ultrasound: Diagnostic value in adults
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Vincent Baudrez, T. Puttemans, Roger Detry, Jacques Pringot, André-Noël Dardenne, Etienne Danse, Bernard E. Van Beers, Abdul El Gariani, and Philippe Clapuyt
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute leukemia ,business.industry ,Color doppler ultrasound ,Whirlpool ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Volvulus ,Bowel obstruction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Emergency Medicine ,medicine ,Mesenteric lymph nodes ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,Radiology ,business ,Sign (mathematics) - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic value of the “whirlpool sign” detected at color Doppler sonography in adults complaining of acute abdominal pain. During a 2-year period, the whirlpool sign was systematically looked for with color Doppler sonography in all patients admitted in the emergency room for acute abdominal pain. The whirlpool sign was observed in 13 patients: 2 cases of surgically proven primary volvulus of the small bowel, 10 cases of proven or suspected small bowel obstruction secondary to adhesions, and 1 case of acute leukemia with enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes. In the first 12 cases, the whirlpool sign was associated with radiologic (N=9) and sonographic (N=12) signs of small bowel obstruction. In the last case, no sign of obstruction was observed. In patients who had the whirlpool sign and who underwent operations (N=6), primary or secondary volvulus was present in 3 cases but was absent in the other 3 cases. The whirlpool configuration detected with color Doppler sonography has to be considered as a sign of limited value, because it may be observed in various conditions, including primary or secondary volvulus, postsurgical adhesions without volvulus, and acute abdominal diseases without obstruction.
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- 1997
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33. Hirschsprung's disease: A 20-year experience
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Jean de Ville de Goyet, Raymond Reding, Philippe Clapuyt, Jean-Bernard Otte, Etienne Sokal, Serge Gosseye, Paul Gibbs, and Jean-Paul Buts
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Autopsy ,Gastroenterology ,Ileostomy ,Postoperative Complications ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Hirschsprung Disease ,education ,Hirschsprung's disease ,Retrospective Studies ,Enterocolitis ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Colostomy ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Morbidity ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Complication ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
During the period from 1972 to 1992, 59 children received surgical treatment at the University of Louvain Medical School for biopsy-proven Hirschsprung's disease (HD). The extent of aganglionosis was as follows: short segment restricted to the rectosigmoid or descending colon (n = 44, 75%); long segment (n = 9,15%); ultra-short segment (n = 3, 5%); unknown length because of death without autopsy (n = 3, 5%). The median age at operation was 7 months for short-segment disease compared with 14 months for those with long-segment disease. Surgical procedures used for short-segment disease were Swenson with colostomy (n = 16), Swenson-Pellerin without colostomy (n = 27), Duhamel (n = 1), and for long-segment disease were Martin (n = 3), Swenson-Deloyers (n = 2), Swenson-Boley (n = 2) and ileostomy only in = 2). Lynn's sphincteromyotomy was performed in the three ultra-short cases. There were six deaths (10%) at a median age of 86 days (range, 28 to 1545 days), three had long-segment disease, and the others were not classified because of death before curative surgery. Enterocolitis (EC) was the most common cause of death (five cases) and was also the major source of morbidity after curative surgery (12 of 44, 27%) in short-segment patients, three of seven (43%) in long-segment patients. The functional success of the procedure was evaluated in 70% of the surviving patients (37 of 53; mean follow-up, 8.7 years; range, 1.2 to 21.5), using a novel semiquantitative scoring system, specifically designed for children who have HD. This system assesses normal stool evacuation, abdominal distention, soiling, and severe incontinence. The results were compared with those from a population of 39 healthy children and adolescents and demonstrated progressive improvement in function during childhood and adolescence (P = .04) for patients treated for short-segment disease. However, function was found to be consistently poorer in all age groups when compared with healthy controls (5 to 10 years, P.01; 10 to 15 years, P.05;15 years, P.01).
- Published
- 1997
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34. Planispheric multiplanar reformatted CT: a new method for evaluation of paediatric congenital spine abnormalities
- Author
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Maryline Mousny, C. Saint-Martin, Philippe Clapuyt, and Renaud Menten
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Radiographic imaging ,Reconstruction method ,Spine ,Spine ct ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Medicine ,Spinal Diseases ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiology ,Tomography ,Child ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Ct reconstruction ,Congenital scoliosis ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
We describe an original reconstruction method for spine CT performed in four patients with single or multiple congenital spine abnormalities. Conventional radiographic imaging is at the forefront of diagnosis and follow-up of congenital scoliosis, but is frequently difficult to interpret. Three-dimensional CT reconstruction facilitates visualization of complex anatomic structures, but does not give a reliable assessment of failures of segmentation. Mental three-dimensional reconstruction of the information displayed by classical multiplanar reformatted CT remains difficult. Planispheric reformatted imaging allows the visualization of all deformities in a single plane.
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- 2005
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35. Risk factors and surgical management of anastomotic biliary complications after pediatric liver transplantation
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Tom, Darius, Jairo, Rivera, Fabio, Fusaro, Quirino, Lai, Catherine, de Magnée, Christophe, Bourdeaux, Magdalena, Janssen, Philippe, Clapuyt, and Raymond, Reding
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Male ,Adolescent ,Incidence ,Graft Survival ,Infant ,Thrombosis ,Cholestasis, Intrahepatic ,Liver Transplantation ,Alagille Syndrome ,End Stage Liver Disease ,Biliary Tract Surgical Procedures ,Hepatic Artery ,Treatment Outcome ,Biliary Atresia ,Risk Factors ,Child, Preschool ,Multivariate Analysis ,Living Donors ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Biliary complications (BCs) still remain the Achilles heel of liver transplantation (LT) with an overall incidence of 10% to 35% in pediatric series. We hypothesized that (1) the use of alternative techniques (reduced size, split, and living donor grafts) in pediatric LT may contribute to an increased incidence of BCs, and (2) surgery as a first treatment option for anastomotic BCs could allow a definitive cure for the majority of these patients. Four hundred twenty-nine primary pediatric LT procedures, including 88, 91, 47, and 203 whole, reduced size, split, and living donor grafts, respectively, that were performed between July 1993 and November 2010 were retrospectively reviewed. Demographic and surgical variables were analyzed, and their respective impact on BCs was studied with univariate and multivariate analyses. The modalities of BC management were also reviewed. The 1- and 5-year patient survival rates were 94% and 90%, 89% and 85%, 94% and 89%, and 98% and 94% for whole, reduced size, split, and living donor liver grafts, respectively. The overall incidence of BCs was 23% (n = 98). Sixty were anastomotic complications [47 strictures (78%) and 13 fistulas (22%)]. The graft type was not found to be an independent risk factor for the development of BCs. According to a multivariate analysis, only hepatic artery thrombosis and acute rejection increased the risk of anastomotic BCs (P0.001 and P = 0.003, respectively). Anastomotic BCs were managed primarily with surgical repair in 59 of 60 cases with a primary patency rate of 80% (n = 47). These results suggest that (1) most of the BCs were anastomotic complications not influenced by the type of graft, and (2) the surgical management of anastomotic BCs may constitute the first and best therapeutic option.
- Published
- 2013
36. Isolated bilateral transverse agenesis of the distal segments of the lower limbs at the level of the knee joint in a human fetus
- Author
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Philippe Clapuyt, Catherine Nyssen-Behets, Yves Gillerot, Antonella Mendola, Pierre M. L. Deprez, Mustapha Amyere, Antoine Christiaens, Pierre Bernard, Benoît Lengelé, Catherine Godfraind, Miikka Vikkula, UCL - SSS/IREC/MORF - Pôle de Morphologie, UCL - SSS/DDUV/GECE - Génétique cellulaire, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'obstétrique, UCL - (SLuc) Centre de génétique médicale UCL, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Apical ectodermal ridge ,Adult ,Male ,Knee Joint ,transverse limb anomaly ,Limb Deformities, Congenital ,absence anomaly of limbs ,Autopsy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fetus ,Genetics ,Limb development ,Medicine ,Humans ,genetics ,Genetics (clinical) ,congenital abnormalities ,business.industry ,lower limb deformities ,Aborted Fetus ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,030104 developmental biology ,Lower Extremity ,Agenesis ,embryonic structures ,Gestation ,Female ,business - Abstract
Congenital limb anomalies occur in Europe with a prevalence of 3.81/1,000 births and can have a major impact on patients and their families. The present study concerned a female fetus aborted at 23 weeks of gestation because she was affected by non-syndromic bilateral absence of the zeugopod (leg) and autopod (foot). Autopsy of the aborted fetus, X-ray imaging, MRI, and histochemical analysis showed that the distal extremity of both femurs was continued by a cartilage-like mass, without joint cavitation. Karyotype was normal. Moreover, no damaging variant was detected by exome sequencing. The limb characteristics of the fetus, which to our knowledge have not yet been reported in humans, suggest a developmental arrest similar to anomalies described in chicks following surgical experiments on the apical ectodermal ridge of the lower limbs.
- Published
- 2013
37. Liver engraftment and repopulation by in vitro expanded adult derived human liver stem cells in a child with ornithine carbamoyltransferase deficiency
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Philippe Clapuyt, Nawal Jazouli, Chris Ottolenghi, Mustapha Najimi, Pascale de Lonlay, Florence Lacaille, Françoise Smets, Etienne Sokal, and Xavier Stéphenne
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urea cycle disorder ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Cryopreservation ,Article ,Transplantation ,Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Stem cell ,Progenitor cell ,business ,Immunostaining - Abstract
A 3-year-old girl suffering from ornithine carbamoyltransferase (OTC) deficiency was poorly equilibrated under conventional diet and scavenger treatment. Following unsuccessful cryopreserved hepatocyte transplantation, she received two infusions of Adult Derived Human Liver Stem/Progenitor Cells (ADHLSCs) expanded in vitro under GMP settings, the quantity being equivalent to 0.75% of her calculated liver mass. Using FISH immunostaining for the Y chromosome, the initial biopsy did not detect any male nuclei in the recipient liver. Two liver biopsies taken 100 days after ADHLSC transplantation showed 3% and 5% of male donor cells in the recipient liver, thus suggesting repopulation by donor cells. Although limited follow-up did not allow us to draw conclusions on long-term improvement, these results provide a promising proof of concept that this therapy is feasible in an OTC patient.
- Published
- 2013
38. Isolated bilateral zeugo-autopodal segments agenesis of the lower limb: unusual malformation case report
- Author
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Philippe Clapuyt, Antonella Mendola, Miikka Vikkula, Pierre Bernard, Antoine Christiaens, Yves Gillerot, Catherine Nyssen-Behets, Pierre M. L. Deprez, and Benoît Lengelé
- Subjects
business.industry ,Agenesis ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,business ,medicine.disease ,Lower limb - Published
- 2013
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39. Postendoscopic duodenal hematoma in children: ultrasound diagnosis and follow-up
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Dana, Dumitriu, Renaud, Menten, Françoise, Smets, and Philippe, Clapuyt
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Diagnosis, Differential ,Male ,Hematoma ,Duodenum ,Humans ,Female ,Duodenal Diseases ,Child ,Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal ,Follow-Up Studies ,Ultrasonography - Abstract
Intramural duodenal hematomas have most frequently been reported in children in a traumatic setting. We present two cases of duodenal hematoma that occurred after upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy with biopsy in children without significant prior medical history. The diagnosis was made by ultrasound, in correlation with the clinical presentation. Because the patients were hemodynamically stable, they were treated conservatively and the regression of the hematoma was followed up with ultrasound until its complete resolution. These cases demonstrate the risks of endoscopy, which are not to be neglected even in children without impaired coagulation, and the manner in which ultrasound can provide the correct diagnosis and follow-up.
- Published
- 2013
40. ORIGINAL EXTRAHILAR APPROACH FOR HEPATIC PORTAL REVASCULARIZATION AND RELIEF OF EXTRAHEPATIC PORTAL HYPERTENSION RELATED TO LATE PORTAL VEIN THROMBOSIS AFTER PEDIATRIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATION
- Author
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Raymond Reding, Etienne Sokal, J de Ville de Goyet, Paul Gibbs, Philippe Clapuyt, and Jean-Bernard Otte
- Subjects
Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Portal Vein ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Portal venous pressure ,Budd-Chiari Syndrome ,Liver transplantation ,medicine.disease ,Revascularization ,Thrombosis ,Liver Transplantation ,Portal vein thrombosis ,Surgery ,Mesenteric Veins ,Extrahepatic portal hypertension ,Child, Preschool ,Hypertension, Portal ,Humans ,Medicine ,Portal hypertension ,Radiology ,business ,Liver Circulation - Published
- 1996
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41. Pnematosis Intestinalis and Portal Venous Gas in Pediatric Liver Transplant Recipient
- Author
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Dana Dumitriu, Françoise Smets, Philippe Clapuyt, Etienne Sokal, Xavier Stéphenne, and Sharat Varma
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Portal Vein ,business.industry ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Gastroenterology ,030230 surgery ,Liver Transplantation ,Surgery ,Intestines ,Liver transplant recipient ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,business ,Pneumatosis Cystoides Intestinalis - Published
- 2016
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42. LIVING-RELATED LIVER TRANSPLANTATION AND VENA CAVA RECONSTRUCTION AFTER TOTAL HEPATECTOMY INCLUDING THE VENA CAVA FOR HEPATOBLASTOMA1
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Jan Lerut, Magdalena Janssen, Philippe Clapuyt, Christophe Chardot, Bénédicte Brichard, André Gilles, Jean-Bernard Otte, Christine Saint Martin, Etienne Sokal, and Raymond Reding
- Subjects
Transplantation ,Hepatoblastoma ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Total Hepatectomy ,Liver transplantation ,medicine.disease ,Inferior vena cava ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine.vein ,cardiovascular system ,medicine ,Hepatectomy ,Vein ,business ,Internal jugular vein - Abstract
BACKGROUND: In most cases of total hepatectomy (TH) required for hepatoblastoma (HB), the retrohepatic inferior vena cava (IVC) has to be removed with the native liver for complete tumor excision. Because the liver graft procured by living donation has no IVC, a reconstruction of the recipient IVC is needed. We report our experience with living-related liver transplantation (LRLT) and IVC replacement in such cases. METHODS: Between May 1998 and December 1999, four children underwent TH, including IVC and LRLT with IVC replacement for otherwise irresectable HB after chemotherapy (SIOPEL 2 and 3 protocols). IVC reconstruction used an allogenic iliac vein procured from a cadaveric donor (bank graft) in two cases and an internal jugular vein procured from the donor parent in two cases. Median age and weight at surgery were 17 months (range 10-60) and 9.6 kg (range 8.3-17.9). RESULTS: In the living donors, there were two complications of the procurement: one intra-abdominal biliary collection and one subcutaneous abscess. In all four children, complete excision of the tumor could be achieved without any intra-operative complication. One patient died 5 months after LRLT due to lung metastases. Three patients were alive and well with no evidence of tumor recurrence 13-24 months after surgery. Reconstructed IVC was patent in two patients, and asymptomatic thrombosis occurred 2 years after operation in one patient. CONCLUSION: Total hepatectomy including the retrohepatic IVC is not a technical obstacle to LRLT. Therefore, scheduled surgery, at the best time after chemotherapy, can be considered in all patients with otherwise irresectable HBs.
- Published
- 2002
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43. Meso-Rex shunt for immediate portal revascularization in pediatric liver transplantation: first report
- Author
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Jairo, Rivera, Fabio, Fusaro, Catherine, de Magnée, Philippe, Clapuyt, and Raymond, Reding
- Subjects
Venous Thrombosis ,Portal Vein ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Graft Survival ,Infant ,Equipment Design ,Liver Transplantation ,Treatment Outcome ,Liver ,Biliary Atresia ,Living Donors ,Humans ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Female ,Jugular Veins ,Intraoperative Complications - Abstract
We describe the case of a 13-month-old girl transplanted for biliary atresia with PV hypoplasia. She received the left liver lobe of her mother and presented intraoperative portal thrombosis. Because of technical reasons, the opportunity to have conventional PV reconstruction using the donor left PV stump was lost. Immediate conversion to a meso-Rex shunt, using the recipient jugular vein as a bridge between the superior mesenteric vein and the graft Rex recessus, allowed excellent portal revascularization of the transplant. We suggest that synchronous meso-Rex shunt may constitute a valid alternative to truncal PV anastomosis during pediatric LT.
- Published
- 2011
44. Hemihypertrophy, bilateral Wilms' tumor, and clear-cell adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix in a young girl
- Author
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Jean-Philippe Stalens, Pierre Maton, Serge Gosseye, Jacques Ninane, and Philippe Clapuyt
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Monosomy ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Wilms Tumor ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Clear-cell adenocarcinoma ,Cervix ,Hemihypertrophy ,Leg ,business.industry ,fungi ,Neoplasms, Second Primary ,Wilms' tumor ,Hypertrophy ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Neoplasms ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Facial Asymmetry ,Oncology ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Clear cell carcinoma ,Adenocarcinoma ,Female ,business ,Adenocarcinoma, Clear Cell ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
We report the case of a young girl who had hemihypertrophy and developed Wilms' tumor in both kidneys and clear-cell adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix with no maternal history of stilbestrol ingestion during pregnancy. Karyotype on the second Wilms' tumor showed monosomy 22. The link between hemihypertrophy and Wilms' tumor is well known, but their association with clear-cell carcinoma of the cervix has not been previously described. (C) 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 1993
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45. Primary cerebral arteritis in a young girl: an unusual cause of acute recurrent neurological deterioration
- Author
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Jean-Jacques de Bruycker, Catherine Godfraind, Marie-Cécile Nassogne, Bouchra El M’Kaddem, Philippe Clapuyt, Christian Raftopoulos, and Bernard Lauwerys
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Encephalopathy ,Disorders of Excessive Somnolence ,Speech Disorders ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived ,Recurrence ,Azathioprine ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Vasculitis, Central Nervous System ,Cyclophosphamide ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Brain biopsy ,Primary central nervous system lymphoma ,Wechsler Scales ,Brain ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,General Medicine ,Cerebral Arteries ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Acute Disease ,Rituximab ,Ataxia ,Female ,Steroids ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sarcoidosis ,business ,Vasculitis ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,medicine.drug ,Cerebral vasculitis - Abstract
Primary angiitis of the central nervous system (PACNS) is an idiopathic, usually recurrent vasculitis confined to the brain. PACNS has been reported rarely in children, although the disease is probably underdiagnosed.: We report the clinical history of a 3-year-old girl who presented subacute neurological deterioration characterised by headache, speech regression, and altered level of consciousness. Brain MRI revealed severe inflammatory lesions involving both grey and white matters. All blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tests for inflammatory or infectious processes were negative. Over the next 10 years, the patient relapsed eight times. Brain biopsy confirmed lesions suggestive of cerebral vasculitis. Based on histopathological features and due to the absence of systemic vasculitis, the patient was considered to have PACNS. She developed partial epilepsy, and clinical stabilisation was finally achieved via continuous oral corticosteroids and immunosuppressive agents.PACNS may be the cause of subacute and relapsing inflammatory encephalopathy in children after excluding other diagnoses, such as multiple sclerosis, sarcoidosis, recurrent acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), and primary central nervous system lymphoma. Brain biopsy is necessary to confirm the diagnosis of PACNS and exclude diseases with similar symptoms. Neurological outcome remains poor.
- Published
- 2010
46. Preoperative Chemotherapy of Cellular Congenital Mesoblastic Nephroma in a 5-Month-Old Infant
- Author
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Jean-Philippe Stalens, Jacques Ninane, Philippe Clapuyt, and Serge Gosseye
- Subjects
Male ,Surgical resection ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Congenital Mesoblastic Nephroma ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mesoblastic nephroma ,Wilms Tumor ,Cellular Congenital Mesoblastic Nephroma ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Humans ,Medicine ,Preoperative chemotherapy ,Ifosfamide ,Ultrasonography ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Infant ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Surgery ,Oncology ,Vincristine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Dactinomycin ,business - Abstract
Cellular (or atypical) congenital mesoblastic nephroma (CMN) is a potentially aggressive form of the benign classical congenital mesoblastic nephroma. We report here a case of cellular CMN in a 5-month-old boy treated preoperatively with chemotherapy with an excellent response allowing a complete surgical resection.
- Published
- 1992
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47. URACHAL TUMOR: An Unusual Presentation of Neuroblastoma
- Author
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Philippe Clapuyt, Guy Cornu, N Myant, François-Xavier Wese, Serge Gosseye, Christiane Vermylen, and Bénédicte Brichard
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Neuroblastoma ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Medicine ,Hematology ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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48. Elevated D-dimer level in the differential diagnosis of venous malformations
- Author
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Laurence M. Boon, Franck Hammer, Philippe Clapuyt, Anne Dompmartin, Fanny Ballieux, Pascal Thibon, Miikka Vikkula, Daniel Labbé, M.-T. Barrellier, Agnès Lequerrec, and Cédric Hermans
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber Syndrome ,Adolescent ,Vascular Malformations ,Dermatology ,Risk Assessment ,Sampling Studies ,Veins ,Arteriovenous Malformations ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products ,Young Adult ,Sex Factors ,Belgium ,Nevus, Blue ,D-dimer ,Coagulopathy ,medicine ,Confidence Intervals ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Lymphatic Diseases ,Probability ,Analysis of Variance ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Age Factors ,Ultrasonography, Doppler ,General Medicine ,Blood Coagulation Disorders ,medicine.disease ,Parkes Weber syndrome ,Confidence interval ,Glomuvenous malformation ,Surgery ,Capillaries ,Female ,Radiology ,France ,Differential diagnosis ,business ,Biomarkers ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate if elevated D-dimer level is specific for venous malformations (VMs) and thus useful for differential diagnosis, which can be problematic even in specialized interdisciplinary centers. Localized intravascular coagulopathy, characterized by elevated D-dimer levels, has been observed in approximately 40% of patients with VMs. Design: Prospective convenience sample accrued from 2 interdisciplinary sites. Setting: Two interdisciplinary centers for vascular anomalies in Brussels, Belgium, and Caen, France Participants: The study population comprised 280 patients with clinical data, Doppler ultrasonograms (for 251 patients), and coagulation parameter measurements. Main Outcome Measure: Measurement of D-dimer levels. Results: A VM was diagnosed in 195 of 280 patients (69.6%), and 83 of them had elevated D-dimer levels; the sensitivity of D-dimer dosage was 42.6% (95% confidence interval, 35.6%-49.5%). Among the 85 patients without VM, D-dimer levels were elevated only in 3 patients; the specificity of the dosage was 96.5% (95% confidence interval, 92.5%-100%). Conclusions: Elevated D-dimer level is highly specific for VMs (pure, combined, or syndromic), and therefore this easy and inexpensive biomarker test should become part of the clinical evaluation of vascular anomalies. It can detect hidden VMs and help differentiate glomuvenous malformation (normal D-dimer levels) from other multifocal venous lesions. Elevated D-dimer level also differentiates a VM from a lymphatic malformation. Moreover, slow-flow Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome (capillaro-lymphatico-venous malformation with limb hypertrophy) can be distinguished from fast-flow Parkes Weber syndrome (capillary malformation with underlying multiple microfistulas and limb hypertrophy). For these reasons, D-dimer level measurement is a useful complementary tool for diagnosing vascular anomalies in everyday practice.
- Published
- 2009
49. Rapamycin as Novel Treatment for Refractory-to-Standard-Care Slow-Flow Vascular Malformations
- Author
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Laurence M. Boon, Frank Hammer, Miikka Vikkula, Jennifer Hammer, Philippe Clapuyt, Sophie Dupont, and Emmanuel Seront
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Text mining ,Refractory ,Standard care ,business.industry ,medicine ,Surgery ,Intensive care medicine ,Slow Flow ,business - Published
- 2015
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50. Early cord degeneration in bifocal SCIWORA: a case report
- Author
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SC de Clety, Jf. Gadisseux, Philippe Clapuyt, Guy Cosnard, Y De Merlier, and Thierry Duprez
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cord ,business.industry ,Plain film ,Degeneration (medical) ,Spinal cord ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Spinal cord degeneration ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiology ,business ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
We report the MR features of very early spinal cord degeneration in a 2-year-old boy who had bifocal cord injury and normal plain films.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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