8 results on '"Louise Ghesquière"'
Search Results
2. Endovascular ultrasound renal denervation to lower blood pressure in young hypertensive women planning pregnancy: study protocol for a multicentre randomised, blinded and sham controlled proof of concept study
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Laurence Amar, Hélène Bouvaist, Anne Blanchard, Guillaume Lamirault, Didier Riethmuller, Loïc Sentilhes, Philippe Gosse, Louise Ghesquière, Pascal Delsart, Marc Sapoval, Patrice Guérin, Michel Azizi, Rosa Maria Bruno, Romain Boulestreau, Julien Doublet, Julie Gaudissard, Antoine Cremer, Vassilis Tsatsaris, Claire Mounier Vehier, Guillaume Ledieu, Benjamin Longere, Olivier Ormezzano, Charlotte Casser, Yannick Neuder, Mathieu Rodiere, Béatrice Duly-Bouhanick, Paul Guerby, Hervé Rousseau, and Robert Winer
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction A major issue confronting clinicians treating hypertension in pregnancy is the limited number of pharmacological options. Endovascular catheter-based renal denervation (RDN) is a new method to lower blood pressure (BP) in patients with hypertension by reducing the activity of the renal sympathetic nervous system. Drugs that affect this system are safe in pregnant women. So there is reasonable evidence that RDN performed before pregnancy should not have deleterious effects for the fetus. Because the efficacy of RDN may be greater in younger patients and in women, we may expect a larger proportion of BP normalisation in young hypertensive women, but this remains to be proven. Our primary objective is to quantify the proportion of BP normalisation with RDN in this population.Methods and analysis WHY-RDN is a multicentre randomised sham-controlled trial conducted in six French hypertension centres that will include 80 women with essential hypertension treated or untreated, who are planning a pregnancy in the next 2 years and will be randomly assigned to RDN or classic renal arteriography and sham RDN in a ratio of 1:1. The primary outcome is the normalisation of 24-hour BP (
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- 2023
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3. Heart rate markers for prediction of fetal acidosis in an experimental study on fetal sheep
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Louise Ghesquière, C. Ternynck, D. Sharma, Y. Hamoud, R. Vanspranghels, L. Storme, V. Houfflin-Debarge, J. De Jonckheere, and C. Garabedian
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract To overcome the difficulties in interpreting fetal heart rate (FHR), several tools based on the autonomic nervous system and heart rate variability (HRV) have been developed. The objective of this study was to use FHR and HRV parameters for the prediction of fetal hypoxia. It was an experimental study in the instrumented fetal sheep. Repeated umbilical cord occlusions were performed to achieve severe acidosis. Hemodynamic parameters, ECG, and blood gases were analyzed. The variables used were heart rate baseline, HRV analysis (RMSSD, SDNN, LF, HF, HFnu, Fetal Stress Index (FSI), …), and morphological analysis of decelerations. The gold standard used to classify hypoxia was the fetal arterial pH (pH
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- 2022
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4. Early heart rate variability changes during acute fetal inflammatory response syndrome: An experimental study in a fetal sheep model.
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Geoffroy Chevalier, Charles Garabedian, Jean David Pekar, Anne Wojtanowski, Delphine Le Hesran, Louis Edouard Galan, Dyuti Sharma, Laurent Storme, Veronique Houfflin-Debarge, Julien De Jonckheere, and Louise Ghesquière
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
IntroductionFetal infection during labor with fetal inflammatory response syndrome (FIRS) is associated with neurodevelopmental disabilities, cerebral palsy, neonatal sepsis, and mortality. Current methods to diagnose FIRS are inadequate. Thus, the study aim was to explore whether fetal heart rate variability (HRV) analysis can be used to detect FIRS.Material and methodsIn chronically instrumented near-term fetal sheep, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was injected intravenously to model FIRS. A control group received saline solution injection. Hemodynamic, blood gas analysis, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and 14 HRV indices were recorded for 6 h. In both groups, comparisons were made between the stability phase and the 6 h following injection (H1-H6, respectively) and between LPS and control groups.ResultsFifteen lambs were instrumented. In the LPS group (n = 8), IL-6 increased significantly after LPS injection (p < 0.001), confirming the FIRS model. Fetal heart rate increased significantly after H5 (p < 0.01). In our FIRS model without shock or cardiovascular decompensation, five HRV measures changed significantly after H2 until H4 in comparison to baseline. Moreover, significant differences between LPS and control groups were observed in HRV measures between H2 and H4. These changes appear to be mediated by an increase of global variability and a loss of signal complexity.ConclusionAs significant HRV changes were detected before FHR increase, these indices may be valuable for early detection of acute FIRS.
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- 2023
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5. Midterm complications after primary obstetrical anal sphincter injury repair in France
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Marine Lallemant, Stéphanie Bartolo, Louise Ghesquiere, Chrystèle Rubod, Alessandro Ferdinando Ruffolo, Yohan Kerbage, Emmanuel Chazard, and Michel Cosson
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Wound complication ,Anal sphincter repair ,Wound breakdown ,Wound infection ,Perineal trauma ,Perineal care ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 - Abstract
Abstract Background Incidence of complications following obstetrical anal sphincter injury (OASI) during vaginal delivery are poorly defined. They are only studied in high level maternities, small cohorts, all stages of perineal tear or in low-income countries. The aim of our study was to describe complications after primary OASI repair following a vaginal delivery in all French maternity wards at short and midterm and to assess factors associated with complication occurrence. Methods We conducted a historical cohort study using the French nationwide claim database (PMSI) from January 2013 to December 2021. All women who sustained an OASI repair following a vaginal delivery were included and virtually followed-up for 2 years. Then, we searched for OASIS complications. Finally, we evaluated factors associated with OASIS complication repaired or not and OASIS complication repairs. Results Among the 61,833 included women, 2015 (2.8%) had an OASI complication and 842 (1.16%) underwent an OASI complication repair. Women were mainly primiparous (71.6%) and 44.3% underwent an instrumental delivery. During a follow-up of 2 years, 0.6% (n = 463), 0.3% (n = 240), 0.2% (n = 176), 0.1% (n = 84), 0.06% (n = 43) and 0.01% (n = 5) of patients underwent second surgery for a perineal repair, a fistula repair, a sphincteroplasty, a perineal infection, a colostomy and a sacral nervous anal stimulation, respectively. Only one case of artificial anal sphincter was noticed. Instrumental deliveries (OR = 1.56 CI95%[1.29;1.9]), private for-profit hospitals (OR = 1.42 [1.11;1.82], reference group “public hospital”), obesity (OR = 1.36 [1;1.84]), stage IV OASIS (OR = 2.98 [2.4;3.72]), perineal wound breakdown (OR = 2.8 [1.4;5.48]), ages between 25 and 29 years old (OR = 1.59 [1.17;2.18], refence group “age between 13 and 24 years old”) and 30 and 34 years old (OR = 1.57 [1.14; 2.16], refence group “age between 13 and 24 years old”) were factors associated with OASIS complication repairs. Conclusions Maternal age, stage IV OASIS, obesity, instrumental deliveries and private for-profit hospitals seemed to predict OASIS complications. Understanding factors associated with OASIS complications could be beneficial for the patient to inform them and to influence the patient’s follow-up in order to prevent complications, repairs and maternal distress.
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- 2024
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6. Fetal brain response to worsening acidosis: an experimental study in a fetal sheep model of umbilical cord occlusions
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Laure Lacan, Charles Garabedian, Julien De Jonckheere, Louise Ghesquiere, Laurent Storme, Dyuti Sharma, and Sylvie Nguyen The Tich
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Perinatal anoxia remains an important public health problem as it can lead to hypoxic–ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) and cause significant neonatal mortality and morbidity. The mechanisms of the fetal brain’s response to hypoxia are still unclear and current methods of in utero HIE prediction are not reliable. In this study, we directly analysed the brain response to hypoxia in fetal sheep using in utero EEG. Near-term fetal sheep were subjected to progressive hypoxia induced by repeated umbilical cord occlusions (UCO) at increasing frequency. EEG changes during and between UCO were analysed visually and quantitatively, and related with gasometric and haemodynamic data. EEG signal was suppressed during occlusions and progressively slowed between occlusions with the increasing severity of the occlusions. Per-occlusion EEG suppression correlated with per-occlusion bradycardia and increased blood pressure, whereas EEG slowing and amplitude decreases correlated with arterial hypotension and respiratory acidosis. The suppression of the EEG signal during cord occlusion, in parallel with cardiovascular adaptation could correspond to a rapid cerebral adaptation mechanism that may have a neuroprotective role. The progressive alteration of the signal with the severity of the occlusions would rather reflect the cerebral hypoperfusion due to the failure of the cardiovascular adaptation mechanisms.
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- 2023
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7. Intact cord resuscitation in newborns with congenital diaphragmatic hernia: insights from a lamb model
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Baptiste Teillet, Florian Manœuvrier, Céline Rougraff, Capucine Besengez, Laure Bernard, Anne Wojtanowski, Louise Ghesquieres, Laurent Storme, Sébastien Mur, Dyuti Sharma, and Kévin Le Duc
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pulmonary hypoplasia ,congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) ,lamb model ,pulmonary hypertension ,respiratory—mechanics ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
IntroductionCongenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is a rare condition characterized by pulmonary hypoplasia, vascular dystrophy, and pulmonary hypertension at birth. Validation of the lamb model as an accurate representation of human CDH is essential to translating research findings into clinical practice and understanding disease mechanisms. This article emphasizes the importance of validating the lamb model to study CDH pathogenesis and develop innovative therapeutics.Material and methodsAt 78 days of gestation, the fetal lamb's left forelimb was exposed through a midline laparotomy and hysterotomy, and a supra diaphragmatic thoracotomy was performed to allow the digestive organs to ascend into the thoracic cavity. At 138 ± 3 days of gestation, lambs were delivered via a cesarean section; then, with umbilical cord intact during 1 hour, the lambs were mechanically ventilated with gentle ventilation in a pressure-controlled mode for 2 h.ResultsCDH lambs exhibited a lower left lung-to-body weight ratio of 5.3 (2.03), p
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- 2023
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8. Outcomes of the use of different vulvar flaps for reconstruction during surgery for vulvar cancer.
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Stéphanie, Tock, Jennifer, Wallet, Marine, Belhadia, Delphine, Hudry, Louise, Ghesquière, Fabrice, Narducci, and Eric, Leblanc
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VULVAR cancer ,ONCOLOGIC surgery ,SURGICAL complications ,HEALING ,REOPERATION ,FREE flaps - Abstract
Vulvar carcinoma is a rare cancer, accounting for 3–5% of all gynecological cancers. Surgery is the standard treatment for patients with early stage vulvar cancer and vulvar reconstruction can be performed for these patients. The present study aimed to compare three different flap and to analyze the outcomes of vulvar surgery. We performed a single-center retrospective study between October 2001 and December 2015. We compare patients who underwent radical surgery for vulvar cancer combined with three different vulvar flap reconstructions (GTF, gluteal thigh flap; RF, rhomboid flap; VYF, V-Y flap). We collected data on the operating time, length of hospital stay, reoperation rate, and postoperative complications. We reviewed 179 patients who underwent radical vulvar surgery and 61 (34%) of these underwent additional reconstruction. There were no significant differences in clinical characteristics between the three groups. The median hospital stay was significantly longer for the GTF group (24 days) than RF (17 days) and than VYF (14 days) (p = 0.002). No significant differences were found concerning the operating time. Regarding postoperative complications, reoperation rates of 69%, 41%, and 25% were noted in the GTF, RF, and VYF group, respectively (p = 0.04); partial necrosis was the most common postoperative complication. The overall and recurrence-free survivals were comparable between the three groups. When the defect is too large, VYF seems to be the procedure of choice for ensuring healing without a prolonged hospital stay compared to RF and GTF. Moreover, VYF was associated with a lower reoperation rate within 60 days compared to RF and GTF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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