152 results on '"Gompel, A."'
Search Results
2. Autoantibodies against the melanoma differentiation–associated protein 5 in patients with dermatomyositis target the helicase domains.
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Gompel, Eveline Van, Demirdal, Deniz, Fernandes-Cerqueira, Catia, Horuluoglu, Begum, Galindo-Feria, Angeles, Wigren, Edvard, Gräslund, Susanne, Langhe, Ellen De, Benveniste, Olivier, Notarnicola, Antonella, Chemin, Karine, and Lundberg, Ingrid E
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DERMATOMYOSITIS , *MELANOMA , *RESEARCH funding , *AUTOANTIBODIES , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INTERFERONS , *WESTERN immunoblotting - Abstract
Objectives Clinical observations in patients with dermatomyositis (DM) and autoantibodies against the melanoma differentiation–associated protein 5 (MDA5) suggest that the autoantibodies contribute to the pathogenesis of MDA5(+) DM. To gain insight into the role of the anti-MDA5 autoantibodies, we aimed to identify their binding sites on the different domains of the MDA5 protein. Methods We developed an in-house ELISA to assess the reactivity against the MDA5 domains (conformational epitopes) in plasma (n = 8) and serum (n = 24) samples from MDA5(+) patients with varying clinical manifestations and disease outcomes. The reactivities were also assessed using western blot (linearized epitopes). An ELISA-based depletion assay was developed to assess cross-reactivity among the different MDA5 domains. Results All eight plasma samples consistently showed reactivity towards conformational and linearized epitopes on the helicase domains of the MDA5 protein. The ELISA-based depletion assay suggests that anti-MDA5 autoantibodies specifically target each of the three helicase domains. Twenty-two of the 24 serum samples showed reactivity in the in-house ELISA and all 22 displayed reactivity towards the helicase domains of the MDA5 protein. Conclusions Our data revealed that the main immunogenic targets of anti-MDA5 autoantibodies from MDA5(+) patients are the helicase domains. Considering that the helicase domains are responsible for the enzymatic activity and subsequent triggering of an inflammatory response, our findings suggest that binding of anti-MDA5 autoantibodies could alter the canonical activity of the MDA5 protein and potentially affect the downstream induction of a pro-inflammatory cascade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Lower Cranial Nerve Schwannomas: Cohort Study and Systematic Review.
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Carlstrom, Lucas P., Bauman, Megan M. J., Oushy, Soliman, Perry, Avital, Brown, Paul D., Peris-Celda, Maria, Van Gompel, Jamie J., Graffeo, Christopher S., and Link, Michael J.
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- 2024
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4. Temporo-Parietal Extraventricular Approach for Deep Brain Stimulation Targeting the Anterior Nucleus of the Thalamus: Institutional Experience.
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Parisi, Veronica, Gregg, Nicholas M., Lundstrom, Brian N., Alcala-Zermeno, Juan Luis, Worrell, Gregory, Kerezoudis, Panagiotis, Grewal, Sanjeet S., Brinkmann, Benjamin H., Middlebrooks, Erik H., and Van Gompel, Jamie J.
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- 2023
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5. A comparison of passive and active dust sampling methods for measuring airborne methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in pig farms.
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Rittscher, Anne E, Vlasblom, Abel A, Duim, Birgitta, Scherpenisse, Peter, Schothorst, Isabella J van, Wouters, Inge M, Gompel, Liese Van, and Smit, Lidwien A M
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AIR analysis ,AIR microbiology ,DUST ,AGRICULTURE ,SWINE ,METHICILLIN-resistant staphylococcus aureus ,OCCUPATIONAL exposure ,INHALATION injuries ,RNA ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,STAPHYLOCOCCAL diseases ,RESEARCH funding ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Methicillin-resistant strains of Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are resistant to most β-lactam antibiotics. Pigs are an important reservoir of livestock-associated MRSA (LA-MRSA), which is genetically distinct from both hospital and community-acquired MRSA. Occupational exposure to pigs on farms can lead to LA-MRSA carriage by workers. There is a growing body of research on MRSA found in the farm environment, the airborne route of transmission, and its implication on human health. This study aims to directly compare two sampling methods used to measure airborne MRSA in the farm environment; passive dust sampling with electrostatic dust fall collectors (EDCs), and active inhalable dust sampling using stationary air pumps with Gesamtstaubprobenahme (GSP) sampling heads containing Teflon filters. Paired dust samples using EDCs and GSP samplers, totaling 87 samples, were taken from 7 Dutch pig farms, in multiple compartments housing pigs of varying ages. Total nucleic acids of both types of dust samples were extracted and targets indicating MRSA (femA, nuc, mecA) and total bacterial count (16S rRNA) were quantified using quantitative real-time PCRs. MRSA could be measured from all GSP samples and in 94% of the EDCs, additionally MRSA was present on every farm sampled. There was a strong positive relationship between the paired MRSA levels found in EDCs and those measured on filters (Normalized by 16S rRNA; Pearson's correlation coefficient r = 0.94, Not Normalized; Pearson's correlation coefficient r = 0.84). This study suggests that EDCs can be used as an affordable and easily standardized method for quantifying airborne MRSA levels in the pig farm setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Glucocorticoid withdrawal syndrome following surgical remission of endogenous hypercortisolism: a longitudinal observational study.
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Zhang, Catherine D., Dingfeng Li, Singh, Sumitabh, Suresh, Malavika, Thangamuthu, Karthik, Nathani, Rohit, Achenbach, Sara J., Atkinson, Elizabeth J., Van Gompel, Jamie J., Young, William F., and Bancos, Irina
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GLUCOCORTICOIDS ,CUSHING'S syndrome ,POSTOPERATIVE care - Abstract
Objective: Glucocorticoid withdrawal syndrome (GWS) is a scarcely studied phenomenon that complicates the recovery following surgical remission of hypercortisolism. We aimed to characterize the presence and trajectory of glucocorticoid withdrawal symptoms in the postoperative period and to determine presurgical predictors of GWS severity. Design: Longitudinal observational study. Methods: Glucocorticoid withdrawal symptoms were prospectively evaluated weekly for the first 12 weeks following surgical remission of hypercortisolism. Quality of life (CushingQoL and Short-Form-36) and muscle function (hand grip strength and sit-to-stand test) were assessed at the baseline and at 12 weeks after surgery. Results: Prevalent symptoms were myalgias and arthralgias (50%), fatigue (45%), weakness (34%), sleep disturbance (29%), and mood changes (19%). Most symptoms persisted, while myalgias, arthralgias, and weakness worsened during weeks 5-12 postoperatively. At 12 weeks after surgery, normative hand grip strength was weaker than at baseline (mean Z-score delta -0.37, P = .009), while normative sit-tostand test performance improved (mean Z-score delta 0.50, P = .013). Short-Form-36 Physical Component Summary score worsened (mean delta -2.6, P = .015), but CushingQoL score improved (mean delta 7.8, P < .001) at 12 weeks compared to baseline. Cushing syndrome (CS) clinical severity was predictive of postoperative GWS symptomology. Conclusion: Glucocorticoid withdrawal symptoms are prevalent and persistent following surgical remission of hypercortisolism with baseline CS clinical severity predictive of postoperative GWS symptom burden. Differential changes observed in muscle function and quality of life in the early postoperative period may reflect the competing influences of GWS and recovery from hypercortisolism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Determinants of muscle function and health-related quality of life in patients with endogenous hypercortisolism: a cross-sectional study.
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Dingfeng Li, Zhang, Catherine D., Saini, Jasmine, Singh, Sumitabh, Nathani, Rohit, Thangamuthu, Karthik, Suresh, Malavika, Atkinson, Elizabeth J., Achenbach, Sara J., Van Gompel, Jamie, Young, William F., and Bancos, Irina
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MUSCLE strength ,QUALITY of life ,CUSHING'S syndrome - Abstract
Objective: Prospective data on determinants of muscle strength impairment and quality of life in patients with various subtypes and severity of endogenous hypercortisolism are lacking. Design: Single-center cross-sectional study, 2019 to 2022. Methods: Patients with Cushing syndrome (CS) and mild autonomous cortisol secretion (MACS) were assessed with clinical and biochemical severity scores, muscle function (nondominant hand grip strength and sit-to-stand test), and quality of life (Short Form-36 [SF36] and CushingQoL). Referent subjects were recruited from the local population undergoing abdominal imaging for reasons other than suspected adrenal disorder. Results: Of 164 patients, 81 (49%) had MACS, 14 (9%) had adrenal CS, 60 (37%) had pituitary CS, and 9 (5%) had ectopic CS. Median age was 53 years (interquartile range: 42-63 years), and 126 (77%) were women. The SF36 mental component score was similarly low in patients with MACS vs CS, but physical component score was lower in CS when compared to MACS (mean of 34.0 vs 40.5, P = .001). Compared to MACS, patients with CS had lower scores on the standardized CushingQoL (mean of 47.1 vs 34.2, P < .001). Compared to referent subjects, patients with MACS demonstrated reduced muscle strength, similar to patients with CS (mean sit to stand Z-score of -0.47 vs -0.54, P = .822). Clinical severity (r = -0.22, P = .004) but not biochemical severity was associated with sit-to-stand test performance. Conclusions: Both patients with overt CS and MACS demonstrate reduced muscle strength and low quality of life. The clinical severity score utilized is associated with both physical and psychosocial components of CushingQoL and with the physical component of SF36. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Microsurgical Obliteration of Craniocervical Junction Dural Arteriovenous Fistulas: Multicenter Experience.
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Salem, Mohamed M., Srinivasan, Visish M., Tonetti, Daniel A., Ravindran, Krishnan, Taussky, Philipp, Yang, Kaiyun, Karahalios, Katherine, Raygor, Kunal P., Naylor, Ryan M., Catapano, Joshua S., Tavakoli-Sabour, Samon, Abdelsalam, Ahmed, Chen, Stephanie H., Grandhi, Ramesh, Jankowitz, Brian T., Baskaya, Mustafa K., Mascitelli, Justin R., Van Gompel, Jamie J., Cherian, Jacob, and Couldwell, William T.
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- 2023
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9. Withdrawal of bevacizumab is associated with rebound growth of vestibular schwannomas in neurofibromatosis type 2-related schwannomatosis patients.
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Webb, M J, Neth, Bryan J, Webb, Lauren M, Gompel, Jamie J Van, Link, Michael J, Neff, Brian A, Carlson, Matthew L, Driscoll, Colin L, Dornhoffer, Jim, Ruff, Michael W, Anderson, Kelsey A, Kizilbash, Sani H, Campian, Jian L, Uhm, Joon H, Lane, Jack I, Benson, John C, Blezek, Daniel J, Mehta, Parv M, Bathla, Girish, and Sener, Ugur T
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- 2023
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10. Genomic markers of recurrence risk in atypical meningioma following gross total resection.
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Vaubel, Rachael A, Kumar, Rahul, Weiskittel, Taylor M, Jenkins, Sarah, Dasari, Surendra, Uhm, Joon H, Lachance, Daniel H, Brown, Paul D, Gompel, Jamie J Van, Jenkins, Robert B, Kipp, Benjamin R, Sukov, William R, Giannini, Caterina, Johnson, Derek R, and Raghunathan, Aditya
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- 2023
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11. Antimicrobial resistance genes aph(3')-III, erm(B), sul2 and tet(W) abundance in animal faeces, meat, production environments and human faeces in Europe.
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Yang, Dongsheng, Heederik, Dick J J, Scherpenisse, Peter, Gompel, Liese Van, Luiken, Roosmarijn E C, Wadepohl, Katharina, Skarżyńska, Magdalena, Heijnsbergen, Eri Van, Wouters, Inge M, Greve, Gerdit D, Jongerius-Gortemaker, Betty G M, Tersteeg-Zijderveld, Monique, Portengen, Lützen, Juraschek, Katharina, Fischer, Jennie, Zając, Magdalena, Wasyl, Dariusz, Wagenaar, Jaap A, Mevius, Dik J, and Smit, Lidwien A M
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MEAT ,CATTLE ,POULTRY ,CROSS-sectional method ,ANIMAL experimentation ,ANTI-infective agents ,RNA ,SWINE ,FECES ,GENES ,RESEARCH funding ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,ANTIBIOTICS ,ANIMALS ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background: Real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) is an affordable method to quantify antimicrobial resistance gene (ARG) targets, allowing comparisons of ARG abundance along animal production chains.Objectives: We present a comparison of ARG abundance across various animal species, production environments and humans in Europe. AMR variation sources were quantified. The correlation of ARG abundance between qPCR data and previously published metagenomic data was assessed.Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in nine European countries, comprising 9572 samples. qPCR was used to quantify abundance of ARGs [aph(3')-III, erm(B), sul2, tet(W)] and 16S rRNA. Variance component analysis was conducted to explore AMR variation sources. Spearman's rank correlation of ARG abundance values was evaluated between pooled qPCR data and earlier published pooled metagenomic data.Results: ARG abundance varied strongly among animal species, environments and humans. This variation was dominated by between-farm variation (pigs) or within-farm variation (broilers, veal calves and turkeys). A decrease in ARG abundance along pig and broiler production chains ('farm to fork') was observed. ARG abundance was higher in farmers than in slaughterhouse workers, and lowest in control subjects. ARG abundance showed a high correlation (Spearman's ρ > 0.7) between qPCR data and metagenomic data of pooled samples.Conclusions: qPCR analysis is a valuable tool to assess ARG abundance in a large collection of livestock-associated samples. The between-country and between-farm variation of ARG abundance could partially be explained by antimicrobial use and farm biosecurity levels. ARG abundance in human faeces was related to livestock antimicrobial resistance exposure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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12. Risk factors for the abundance of antimicrobial resistance genes aph(3')-III, erm(B), sul2 and tet(W) in pig and broiler faeces in nine European countries.
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Yang, Dongsheng, Heederik, Dick J. J., Mevius, Dik J., Scherpenisse, Peter, Luiken, Roosmarijn E. C., Gompel, Liese Van, Skarżyńska, Magdalena, Wadepohl, Katharina, Chauvin, Claire, Heijnsbergen, Eri Van, Wouters, Inge M., Greve, Gerdit D., Jongerius-Gortemaker, Betty G. M., Tersteeg-Zijderveld, Monique, Zając, Magdalena, Wasyl, Dariusz, Juraschek, Katharina, Fischer, Jennie, Wagenaar, Jaap A., and Smit, Lidwien A. M.
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Objectives: The occurrence and zoonotic potential of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in pigs and broilers has been studied intensively in past decades. Here, we describe AMR levels of European pig and broiler farms and determine the potential risk factors.Methods: We collected faeces from 181 pig farms and 181 broiler farms in nine European countries. Real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) was used to quantify the relative abundance of four antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) [aph(3')-III, erm(B), sul2 and tet(W)] in these faeces samples. Information on antimicrobial use (AMU) and other farm characteristics was collected through a questionnaire. A mixed model using country and farm as random effects was performed to evaluate the relationship of AMR with AMU and other farm characteristics. The correlation between individual qPCR data and previously published pooled metagenomic data was evaluated. Variance component analysis was conducted to assess the variance contribution of all factors.Results: The highest abundance of ARG was for tet(W) in pig faeces and erm(B) in broiler faeces. In addition to the significant positive association between corresponding ARG and AMU levels, we also found on-farm biosecurity measures were associated with relative ARG abundance in both pigs and broilers. Between-country and between-farm variation can partially be explained by AMU. Different ARG targets may have different sample size requirements to represent the overall farm level precisely.Conclusions: qPCR is an efficient tool for targeted assessment of AMR in livestock-related samples. The AMR variation between samples was mainly contributed to by between-country, between-farm and within-farm differences, and then by on-farm AMU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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13. Approach to the Patient With New-Onset Secondary Amenorrhea: Is This Primary Ovarian Insufficiency?
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Stuenkel, Cynthia A., Gompel, Anne, Davis, Susan R., Pinkerton, JoAnn V., Lumsden, Mary Ann, and Santen, Richard J.
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MENSTRUAL cycle ,AMENORRHEA - Abstract
Menstrual cyclicity is a marker of health for reproductively mature women. Absent menses, or amenorrhea, is often the initial sign of pregnancy--an indication that the system is functioning appropriately and capable of generating the intended evolutionary outcome. Perturbations of menstrual regularity in the absence of pregnancy provide a marker for physiological or pathological disruption of this well-orchestrated process. New-onset amenorrhea with duration of 3 to 6 months should be promptly evaluated. Secondary amenorrhea can reflect structural or functional disturbances occurring from higher centers in the hypothalamus to the pituitary, the ovary, and finally, the uterus. Amenorrhea can also be a manifestation of systemic disorders resulting in compensatory inhibition of reproduction. Identifying the point of the breakdown is essential to restoring reproductive homeostasis to maintain future fertility and reestablish reproductive hormonal integrity. Among the most challenging disorders contributing to secondary amenorrhea is primary ovarian insufficiency (POI). This diagnosis stems from a number of possible etiologies, including autoimmune, genetic, metabolic, toxic, iatrogenic, and idiopathic, each with associated conditions and attendant medical concerns. The dual assaults of unanticipated compromised fertility concurrently with depletion of the normal reproductive hormonal milieu yield multiple management challenges. Fertility restoration is an area of active research, while optimal management of estrogen deficiency symptoms and the anticipated preventive benefits of hormone replacement for bone, cardiovascular, and neurocognitive health remain understudied. The state of the evidence for an optimal, individualized, clinical management approach to women with POI is discussed along with priorities for additional research in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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14. Anterior Nucleus of the Thalamus Deep Brain Stimulation with Concomitant Vagus Nerve Stimulation for Drug-Resistant Epilepsy.
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Parisi, Veronica, Lundstrom, Brian Nils, Kerezoudis, Panagiotis, Zermeno, Juan Luis Alcala, Worrell, Gregory A, and Gompel, Jamie J Van
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- 2021
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15. Next Generation Sequencing Should Be Proposed to Every Woman With "Idiopathic" Primary Ovarian Insufficiency.
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Eskenazi, Sarah, Bachelot, Anne, Hugon-Rodin, Justine, Plu-Bureau, Genevieve, Gompel, Anne, Catteau-Jonard, Sophie, Molina-Gomes, Denise, Dewailly, Didier, Dodé, Catherine, Christin-Maitre, Sophie, and Touraine, Philippe
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PREMATURE ovarian failure ,DNA sequencing ,PHENOTYPES - Abstract
Context Primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) affects 1% of women under 40 years of age. POI is idiopathic in more than 70% of cases. Though many candidate genes have been identified in recent years, the prevalence and pathogenicity of abnormalities are still difficult to establish. Objective Our primary objective was to evaluate the prevalence of gene variations in a large prospective multicentric POI cohort. Our secondary objective was to evaluate the correlation between phenotype and genotype. Methods Two hundred and sixty-nine well-phenotyped POI patients were screened for variants of 18 known POI genes (BMP15 , DMC1 , EIF2S2 , FIGLA , FOXL2 , FSHR , GDF9 , GPR3 , HFM1 , LHX8 , MSH5 , NOBOX , NR5A1 , PGRMC1 , STAG3 , XPNPEP2 , BHLB , and FSHB) by next generation sequencing (NGS). Abnormalities were classified as "variant" or "variant of unknown signification" (VUS) according to available functional tests or algorithms (SIFT, Polyphen-2, MutationTaster). Results One hundred and two patients (38%) were identified as having at least 1 genetic abnormality. Sixty-seven patients (25%) presented at least 1 variant. Forty-eight patients presented at least 1 VUS (18%). Thirteen patients (5%) had combined abnormalities. NOBOX variants were the most common gene variants involved in POI (9%). Interestingly, we saw no significant differences in the previous family history of POI, ethnic origin, age at onset of POI, primary amenorrhea, or secondary menstrual disturbances between the different genotypes. Conclusion In our study, a high percentage of patients presented gene variants detected by NGS analysis (38%). Every POI patient should undergo NGS analysis to improve medical cares of the patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Associations between antimicrobial use and the faecal resistome on broiler farms from nine European countries.
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Luiken, Roosmarijn E C, Gompel, Liese Van, Munk, Patrick, Sarrazin, Steven, Joosten, Philip, Dorado-García, Alejandro, Hansen, Rasmus Borup, Knudsen, Berith E, Bossers, Alex, Wagenaar, Jaap A, Aarestrup, Frank M, Dewulf, Jeroen, Mevius, Dik J, Heederik, Dick J J, Smit, Lidwien A M, Schmitt, Heike, consortium, EFFORT, Van Gompel, Liese, Borup Hansen, Rasmus, and EFFORT consortium
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GENE clusters , *FARMS , *LACTAMS , *TETRACYCLINES , *RECORD collecting , *PEPTIDE antibiotics , *BIOSECURITY , *TETRACYCLINE - Abstract
Objectives: To determine associations between farm- and flock-level antimicrobial usage (AMU), farm biosecurity status and the abundance of faecal antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) on broiler farms.Methods: In the cross-sectional pan-European EFFORT study, conventional broiler farms were visited and faeces, AMU information and biosecurity records were collected. The resistomes of pooled faecal samples were determined by metagenomic analysis for 176 farms. A meta-analysis approach was used to relate total and class-specific ARGs (expressed as fragments per kb reference per million bacterial fragments, FPKM) to AMU (treatment incidence per DDD, TIDDDvet) per country and subsequently across all countries. In a similar way, the association between biosecurity status (Biocheck.UGent) and the resistome was explored.Results: Sixty-six (38%) flocks did not report group treatments but showed a similar resistome composition and roughly similar ARG levels to antimicrobial-treated flocks. Nevertheless, we found significant positive associations between β-lactam, tetracycline, macrolide and lincosamide, trimethoprim and aminoglycoside antimicrobial flock treatments and ARG clusters conferring resistance to the same class. Similar associations were found with purchased products. In gene-level analysis for β-lactams and macrolides, lincosamides and streptogramins, a significant positive association was found with the most abundant gene clusters blaTEM and erm(B). Little evidence was found for associations with biosecurity.Conclusions: The faecal microbiome in European broilers contains a high diversity of ARGs, even in the absence of current antimicrobial selection pressure. Despite this, the relative abundance of genes and the composition of the resistome is positively related to AMU in European broiler farms for several antimicrobial classes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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17. Dynamics of faecal shedding of ESBL- or AmpC-producing Escherichia coli on dairy farms.
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Hordijk, Joost, Fischer, Egil A J, Werven, Tine van, Sietsma, Steven, Gompel, Liese Van, Timmerman, Arjen J, Spaninks, Mirlin P, Heederik, Dick J J, Nielen, Mirjam, Wagenaar, Jaap A, Stegeman, Arjan, van Werven, Tine, and Van Gompel, Liese
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ESCHERICHIA coli ,DAIRY farms ,MOLTING ,ANTI-infective agents ,FECES ,BETA lactamases ,CATTLE microbiology ,BACTERIAL protein metabolism ,ANIMAL experimentation ,ANTIBIOTICS ,BACTERIAL proteins ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,GENES ,HYDROLASES ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,CROSS-sectional method ,GENOTYPES ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Objectives: To explore the dynamics of faecal ESBL/AmpC shedding in dairy cattle and farmers, a study was conducted to examine changes in shedding by individual animals, as well as environmental exposure, and to study the association between antimicrobial use (AMU) and ESBL/AmpC shedding.Methods: The study comprised a cross-sectional survey of 20 farms and a 1 year follow-up of 10 farms. Faecal samples were cultured by both direct inoculation on MacConkey agar + 1 mg/L cefotaxime (MC+) and enrichment in LB-broth + 1 mg/L cefotaxime with subsequent inoculation on MC+. Dust samples were collected using electrostatic dustfall collectors (EDCs). Human faecal samples were collected by the farmers. Presence of ESBL/AmpC genes was screened for by PCR and sequencing. Using mixed effects logistic regression, ORs were determined and population-attributable fractions (PAFs) calculated subsequently.Results: In Phase 1, 8/20 farms were positive for ESBL/AmpC and, with 2 negative farms, were selected for Phase 2. Transient shedding of dominant allele variants was observed in the animals. EDCs and human faecal samples did not reflect what was observed in the animals. AMU was related to shedding of ESBLs in the next sampling moment [OR 14.6 (95% CI 3.0-80.0)] and the PAF of AMU was 0.36 (95% CI 0.08-0.77). Calves fed with colostrum from cows on dry-off therapy was not a risk factor [OR 1.7 (95% CI 0.7-4.9, P = 0.28)].Conclusions: The presence of ESBL/AmpC could only be partly explained by AMU. No link was shown between shedding in cattle and humans or the environment. Interventions should focus on prevention of introduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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18. The antimicrobial resistome in relation to antimicrobial use and biosecurity in pig farming, a metagenome-wide association study in nine European countries.
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Gompel, Liese Van, Luiken, Roosmarijn E C, Sarrazin, Steven, Munk, Patrick, Knudsen, Berith E, Hansen, Rasmus B, Bossers, Alex, Aarestrup, Frank M, Dewulf, Jeroen, Wagenaar, Jaap A, Mevius, Dik J, Schmitt, Heike, Heederik, Dick J J, Dorado-García, Alejandro, Smit, Lidwien A M, Van Gompel, Liese, and EFFORT consortium
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ANTI-infective agents , *BIOSECURITY , *GENOMES , *MACROLIDE antibiotics , *ESCHERICHIA coli , *DRUG utilization statistics , *RESEARCH , *AGRICULTURE , *CROSS-sectional method , *ANIMAL experimentation , *RESEARCH methodology , *SWINE , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *FECES , *BIOINFORMATICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *GENES , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms , *BIOTIC communities - Abstract
Objectives: Previous studies in food-producing animals have shown associations between antimicrobial use (AMU) and resistance (AMR) in specifically isolated bacterial species. Multi-country data are scarce and only describe between-country differences. Here we investigate associations between the pig faecal mobile resistome and characteristics at the farm-level across Europe.Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 176 conventional pig farms from nine European countries. Twenty-five faecal samples from fattening pigs were pooled per farm and acquired resistomes were determined using shotgun metagenomics and the Resfinder reference database, i.e. the full collection of horizontally acquired AMR genes (ARGs). Normalized fragments resistance genes per kilobase reference per million bacterial fragments (FPKM) were calculated. Specific farm-level data (AMU, biosecurity) were collected. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed by country, relating farm-level data to relative ARG abundances (FPKM).Results: Total AMU during fattening was positively associated with total ARG (total FPKM). Positive associations were particularly observed between widely used macrolides and tetracyclines, and ARGs corresponding to the respective antimicrobial classes. Significant AMU-ARG associations were not found for β-lactams and only few colistin ARGs were found, despite high use of these antimicrobial classes in younger pigs. Increased internal biosecurity was directly related to higher abundances of ARGs mainly encoding macrolide resistance. These effects of biosecurity were independent of AMU in mutually adjusted models.Conclusions: Using resistome data in association studies is unprecedented and adds accuracy and new insights to previously observed AMU-AMR associations. Major components of the pig resistome are positively and independently associated with on-farm AMU and biosecurity conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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19. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of antimicrobial usage patterns in 180 selected farrow-to-finish pig farms from nine European countries based on single batch and purchase data.
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Sarrazin, Steven, Joosten, Philip, Gompel, Liese Van, Luiken, Roosmarijn E C, Mevius, Dik J, Wagenaar, Jaap A, Heederik, Dick J J, Dewulf, Jeroen, Van Gompel, Liese, and EFFORT consortium
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ANTI-infective agents ,PENICILLIN ,POLYMYXIN ,ANTIBACTERIAL agents ,DRUG administration - Abstract
Objectives: Farm-level quantification of antimicrobial usage (AMU) in pig farms.Methods: In a cross-sectional study, AMU data on group treatments administered to a single batch of fattening pigs from birth to slaughter (group treatment data) and antimicrobials purchased during 1 year (purchase data) were collected at 180 pig farms in nine European countries. AMU was quantified using treatment incidence (TI) based on defined (DDDvet) and used (UDDvet) daily doses and defined (DCDvet) and used (UCDvet) course doses.Results: The majority of antimicrobial group treatments were administered to weaners (69.5% of total TIDDDvet) followed by sucklers (22.5% of total TIDDDvet). AMU varied considerably between farms with a median TIDDDvet of 9.2 and 7.1 for a standardized rearing period of 200 days based on group treatment and purchase data, respectively. In general, UDDvet and UCDvet were higher than DDDvet and DCDvet, respectively, suggesting that either the defined doses were set too low or that group treatments were often dosed too high and/or administered for too long. Extended-spectrum penicillins (31.2%) and polymyxins (24.7%) were the active substances most often used in group treatments, with the majority administered through feed or water (82%). Higher AMU at a young age was associated with higher use in older pigs.Conclusions: Collecting farm-level AMU data of good quality is challenging and results differ based on how data are collected (group treatment data versus purchase data) and reported (defined versus used daily and course doses). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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20. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of antimicrobial usage at farm and flock level on 181 broiler farms in nine European countries.
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Joosten, Philip, Sarrazin, Steven, Gompel, Liese Van, Luiken, Roosmarijn E C, Mevius, Dik J, Wagenaar, Jaap A, Heederik, Dick J J, Dewulf, Jeroen, Van Gompel, Liese, and EFFORT consortium
- Subjects
DRUG resistance ,ANTI-infective agents ,BROILER chickens ,FLUOROQUINOLONES ,POULTRY farms - Abstract
Objectives: To control the emerging threat of antimicrobial resistance, international policy appeals for appropriate monitoring of antimicrobial usage (AMU) at supranational, species and farm level. The aim of this study was to quantify AMU in broilers at farm and flock level in nine European countries.Methods: Antimicrobial treatment data of one flock and purchased antimicrobials over one year were collected at 181 European broiler farms. Afterwards AMU was quantified using treatment incidence (TI) per 100 days based on Defined Daily Dose (DDDvet), Defined Course Dose (DCDvet) or Used Daily Dose (UDDvet) values. Total AMU at flock level was obtained by summing the TIDDDvet of all treatments in the sampled flock (TIDDDvetFl*).Results: The median TIDDDvetFl* was 9.0 (95% CI 5.5-10.8), meaning that broilers were treated with antimicrobials during 9% of their rearing period. TIDDDvetFl* varied considerably within and between countries. However, in every country at least one untreated flock was present. Average TIDDDvetFl* at country level ranged from 3.3 to 36.7. Polymyxins, extended-spectrum aminopenicillins and fluoroquinolones were the most used antimicrobials, accounting for 26%, 26% and 18% of total AMU, respectively. Twenty-six percent of the farms started a treatment on day 1 of production, and 49% of overall AMU was administered within the first week.Conclusions: Results show that rearing broilers without AMU is feasible. However, a huge variation in AMU in terms of amount, moment of administration and antimicrobial classes was observed. This shows that there is still ground to be covered when it comes to AMU on broiler farms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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21. Approach to Managing a Postmenopausal Patient.
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Santen, Richard J., Heitjan, Daniel F., Gompel, Anne, Lumsden, Mary Ann, Pinkerton, JoAnn V., Davis, Susan R., and Stuenkel, Cynthia A.
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CLIMACTERIC ,MENSTRUATION ,MENARCHE ,HORMONE therapy for menopause - Abstract
Case and Principles Of Management: The case of a symptomatic, postmenopausal woman is presented and a full discussion of the approach to her management is discussed. Pertinent guidelines and scientific evidence are emphasized as support for the recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
22. Occupational Exposure and Carriage of Antimicrobial Resistance Genes (tetW, ermB) in Pig Slaughterhouse Workers.
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Gompel, Liese Van, Dohmen, Wietske, Luiken, Roosmarijn E C, Bouwknegt, Martijn, Heres, Lourens, Heijnsbergen, Eri van, Jongerius-Gortemaker, Betty G M, Scherpenisse, Peter, Greve, Gerdit D, Tersteeg-Zijderveld, Monique H G, Wadepohl, Katharina, Duarte, Ana Sofia Ribeiro, Muñoz-Gómez, Violeta, Fischer, Jennie, Skarżyńska, Magdalena, Wasyl, Dariusz, Wagenaar, Jaap A, Urlings, Bert A P, Dorado-García, Alejandro, and Wouters, Inge M
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FECAL analysis , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms , *FOOD industry , *GENES , *MACROLIDE antibiotics , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SWINE , *TETRACYCLINE , *OCCUPATIONAL hazards , *ENVIRONMENTAL exposure , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Objectives Slaughterhouse staff is occupationally exposed to antimicrobial resistant bacteria. Studies reported high antimicrobial resistance gene (ARG) abundances in slaughter pigs. This cross-sectional study investigated occupational exposure to tetracycline (tetW) and macrolide (ermB) resistance genes and assessed determinants for faecal tetW and ermB carriage among pig slaughterhouse workers. Methods During 2015–2016, 483 faecal samples and personal questionnaires were collected from workers in a Dutch pig abattoir, together with 60 pig faecal samples. Human dermal and respiratory exposure was assessed by examining 198 carcass, 326 gloves, and 33 air samples along the line, next to 198 packed pork chops to indicate potential consumer exposure. Samples were analyzed by qPCR (tetW , ermB). A job exposure matrix was created by calculating the percentage of tetW and ermB positive carcasses or gloves for each job position. Multiple linear regression models were used to link exposure to tetW and ermB carriage. Results Workers are exposed to tetracycline and macrolide resistance genes along the slaughter line. Tetw and ermB gradients were found for carcasses, gloves, and air filters. One packed pork chop contained tetW , ermB was non-detectable. Human faecal tetW and ermB concentrations were lower than in pig faeces. Associations were found between occupational tetW exposure and human faecal tetW carriage, yet, not after model adjustments. Sampling round, nationality, and smoking were determinants for ARG carriage. Conclusion We demonstrated clear environmental tetracycline and macrolide resistance gene exposure gradients along the slaughter line. No robust link was found between ARG exposure and human faecal ARG carriage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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23. Skull Base Manifestations of Erdheim-Chester Disease: A Case Series and Systematic Review.
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Marinelli, John P, Peters, Pierce A, Vaglio, Augusto, Van Gompel, Jamie J, Lane, John I, and Carlson, Matthew L
- Published
- 2019
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24. Diagnosis and Outcome of Biopsies of Indeterminate Lesions of the Cavernous Sinus and Meckel's Cave: A Retrospective Case Series in 85 Patients.
- Author
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Hughes, Joshua D, Kapurch, Joseph, Gompel, Jamie J Van, Meyer, Fredric B, Pollock, Bruce E, Atkinson, John, and Link, Michael J
- Published
- 2018
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25. Dr Albert L. Rhoton Jr's Time at the Mayo Clinic: The Beginnings of a Remarkable Career.
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Rayan, Tarek, Carlson, Matthew L, Piepgras, David G, Link, Michael J, and Gompel, Jamie J Van
- Published
- 2018
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26. Evidence for verbal memory enhancement with electrical brain stimulation in the lateral temporal cortex.
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Kucewicz, Michal T., Berry, Brent M., Miller, Laura R., Khadjevand, Fatemeh, Ezzyat, Youssef, Stein, Joel M., Kremen, Vaclav, Brinkmann, Benjamin H., Wanda, Paul, Sperling, Michael R., Gorniak, Richard, Davis, Kathryn A., Jobst, Barbara C., Gross, Robert E., Lega, Bradley, Van Gompel, Jamie, Stead, S. Matt, Rizzuto, Daniel S., Kahana, Michael J., and Worrell, Gregory A.
- Subjects
SENSORY perception ,VERBAL memory ,BRAIN ,BRAIN-computer interfaces ,BRAIN diseases ,APHASIA ,MEMORY ,T-test (Statistics) ,TEMPORAL lobe ,DEEP brain stimulation ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Direct electrical stimulation of the human brain can elicit sensory and motor perceptions as well as recall of memories. Stimulating higher order association areas of the lateral temporal cortex in particular was reported to activate visual and auditory memory representations of past experiences (Penfield and Perot, 1963). We hypothesized that this effect could be used to modulate memory processing. Recent attempts at memory enhancement in the human brain have been focused on the hippocampus and other mesial temporal lobe structures, with a few reports of memory improvement in small studies of individual brain regions. Here, we investigated the effect of stimulation in four brain regions known to support declarative memory: hippocampus, parahippocampal neocortex, prefrontal cortex and temporal cortex. Intracranial electrode recordings with stimulation were used to assess verbal memory performance in a group of 22 patients (nine males). We show enhanced performance with electrical stimulation in the lateral temporal cortex (paired t-test, P = 0.0067), but not in the other brain regions tested. This selective enhancement was observed both on the group level, and for two of the four individual subjects stimulated in the temporal cortex. This study shows that electrical stimulation in specific brain areas can enhance verbal memory performance in humans.awx373media15704855796001. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Congress of Neurological Surgeons Systematic Review and Evidence-Based Guidelines on Surgical Resection for the Treatment of Patients With Vestibular Schwannomas.
- Author
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Hadjipanayis, Constantinos G., Carlson, Matthew L., Link, Michael J., Rayan, Tarek A., Parish, John, Atkins, Tyler, Asher, Anthony L., Dunn, Ian F., Corrales, C. Eduardo, Van Gompel, Jamie J., Sughrue, Michael, and Olson, Jeffrey J.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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28. Hereditary angioedema with normal C1 inhibitor and factor XII mutation: a series of 57 patients from the French National Center of Reference for Angioedema.
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Deroux, A., Boccon‐Gibod, I., Fain, O., Pralong, P., Ollivier, Y., Pagnier, A., Djenouhat, K., Du‐Thanh, A., Gompel, A., Faisant, C., Launay, D., and Bouillet, L.
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ANGIONEUROTIC edema ,RARE diseases ,GENETIC mutation ,ENZYME inhibitors ,MEDICAL registries ,HEALTH surveys ,GENETICS - Abstract
Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare disease associated with either a quantitative or qualitative deficiency in C1-inhibitor (C1-INH) or normal C1-INH. HAE with normal C1-INH is associated in 20% of cases with mutations in the gene for factor XII (FXII) or FXII-HAE. A recent review described 41 families, including 14 German and 15 Spanish families. We have constructed a register of French patients and their characteristics. A national survey was launched through the French National Center of Reference for Angioedema (CREAK) to study the clinical, biological and therapeutic characteristics of patients with HAE linked to a mutation of FXII gene. Fifty-seven patients were identified from 24 different families. In most cases they were young women (mean age at diagnosis: 31 years, mean age at first symptom: 21 years, female/male ratio: 76%). Twenty-one per cent of the patients experienced angioedema attacks only during pregnancy or when on oestrogen contraception. Sixty-three per cent had attacks at all times, but they were more severe during these same periods. Male carriers of the mutation were more frequently asymptomatic than females ( P = 0·003). C1-INH concentrate and icatibant were both effective for treating attacks. The prophylactic use of tranexamic acid led to a 64% decrease in the number of attacks. This is one of the largest series reported of HAE patients with FXII mutation. The therapeutic management appeared to be identical to that of HAE with C1-INH deficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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29. What happens in vagus: a case of recurrent paraganglioma with malignant transformation and an updated treatment algorithm.
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Ertz-Archambault, Natalie M., Van Gompel, Jamie J., Neff, Brian A., Kasperbauer, Jan L., and Shamoun, Fadi E.
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- *
MATHEMATICAL models in medicine ,VAGUS nerve diseases - Abstract
Paragangliomas (PGLs) are rare, extra-adrenal tumors, originating fromneural crest cells and can occur anywhere fromthe skull base to the pelvic floor. Although these tumors are often benign, a fraction of malignant cases exist. Few isolated cases of malignant head and neck PGL are reported in the literature. Treatment algorithms rely heavily on retrospective case studies and institutional experience. We report an unusual case of an extensive, hereditary PGL, with invasive characteristics, that was refractory to radiation therapy. An operative approach was selected for recurrent disease in the setting of critical neurovascular structure compromise. Six months postoperatively, the patient was recovering as expected and had no evidence of recurrent disease. We propose a modified treatment algorithm based on an updated literature review that encompasses the spectrum of PGL, from benign and asymptomatic to invasive and malignant disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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30. Higher-Resolution Magnetic Resonance Elastography in Meningiomas to Determine Intratumoral Consistency.
- Author
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Hughes, Joshua D., Fattahi, Nikoo, Van Gompel, J., Arani, Arvin, Meyer, Fredric, Lanzino, Giuseppe, Link, Michael J., Ehman, Richard, and Huston, John
- Published
- 2015
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31. Can Preoperative Imaging Predict Tumor Involvement of the Anterior Clinoid in Clinoid Region Meningiomas?
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Copeland, William R., Van Gompel, Jamie J., Giannini, Caterina, Eckel, Laurence J., Koeller, Kelly K., and Link, Michael J.
- Published
- 2015
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32. Letter: Home-Turf Advantage? The Neurosurgery Residency Match During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
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Riviere-Cazaux, Cecile, Antezana, Luis A, Xie, Katherine Z, and Gompel, Jamie J Van
- Published
- 2021
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33. Changing epidemiological and clinical aspects of imported malaria in Belgium.
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Van den Ende J, Morales I, Van den Abbeele K, Clerinx J, Colebunders R, Kager P, Lynen L, Van Gompel A, Van der Planken M, Vervoort T, Van den Ende, J, Morales, I, Van den Abbeele, K, Clerinx, J, Colebunders, R, Kager, P, Lynen, L, Van Gompel, A, Van der Planken, M, and Vervoort, T
- Abstract
Background: In the early nineties the increase of imported malaria in some European countries was temporarily halted, but it resumed in 1994. More Africans, more European travelers, and fewer long-term residents were counted amongst patients. A shift towards more subacute disease has been noted. This study intends to assess whether the same trends were observed in Belgium.Methods: Clinical and epidemiological data of 128 patients treated for malaria in 1997 at the Institute of Tropical Medicine and the University Hospital of Antwerp were compared with 209 malaria patients treated in 1988/1989. Risk factors for clinical presentation and parasitemia were analysed.Results: In Belgium the number of reported imported malaria cases remained almost stable between 1988 and 1997. In 1997, there were more African patients, less infections from Central Africa, and 50% less residents. Less patients reported prophylaxis use. The causative agent shifted from Plasmodium falciparum to other species. Subacute and atypical malaria became less frequent. In both years, there were no deaths, and severe malaria did not increase significantly. Mefloquine disappeared almost as a curative treatment, and was replaced by quinine, with or without a long acting agent, or by halofantrine. The ethnic origin, nor the use of chemoprophylaxis, influenced disease characteristics. In 1988, malaria attacks in the previous months predisposed to subacute disease; longer residence, and attacks in the previous months, protected against high parasitemia; longer symptom duration correlated with absence of fever, and with splenomegaly. None of these risk factors was correlated with severe malaria.Conclusion: The incidence of subacute malaria dropped significantly in the last decade. Although this presentation is almost limited to residents, the decline in malaria can not be explained by an overall shorter duration of stay, since the decline in this particular clinical presentation of malaria was also spectacular in residents. Apparently, insufficient treatment of malaria attacks in the previous months is the only independent risk factor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2001
34. Congress of Neurological Surgeons Systematic Review and Evidence-Based Guidelines on Emerging Therapies for the Treatment of Patients With Vestibular Schwannomas.
- Author
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Van Gompel, Jamie J., Agazzi, Siviero, Carlson, Matthew L., Adewumi, Dare A., Hadjipanayis, Constantinos G., Uhm, Joon H., and Olson, Jeffrey J.
- Published
- 2018
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35. Epidemiology of hormonal contraceptives-related venous thromboembolism.
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Hugon-Rodin, Justine, Gompel, Anne, and Plu-Bureau, Genevieve
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CONTRACEPTIVES , *THROMBOEMBOLISM , *SEX hormones , *LEVONORGESTREL , *CYPROTERONE acetate , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of estradiol , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
For many years, it has been well documented that combined hormonal contraceptives increase the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE). The third-generation pill use (desogestrel or gestodene (GSD)) is associated with an increased VTE risk as compared with second-generation (levonorgestrel) pill use. Other progestins such as drospirenone or cyproterone acetate combined with ethinyl-estradiol (EE) have been investigated. Most studies have reported a significant increased VTE risk among users of these combined oral contraceptives (COCs) when compared with users of second-generation pills. Non-oral combined hormonal contraception, such as the transdermal patch and the vaginal ring, is also available. Current data support that these routes of administration are more thrombogenic than second-generation pills. These results are consistent with the biological evidence of coagulation activation. Overall, the estrogenic potency of each hormonal contraceptive depending on both EE doses and progestin molecule explains the level of thrombotic risk. Some studies have shown a similar increased VTE risk among users of COCs containing norgestimate (NGM) as compared with users of second-generation pill. However, for this combination, biological data, based on quantitative assessment of sex hormone-binding globulin or haemostasis parameters, are not in agreement with these epidemiological results. Similarly, the VTE risk associated with low doses of EE and GSD is not biologically plausible. In conclusion, newer generation formulations of hormonal contraceptives as well as non-oral hormonal contraceptives seem to be more thrombogenic than second-generation hormonal contraceptives. Further studies are needed to conclude on the combinations containing NGM or low doses of EE associated with GSD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
36. Serious Altitude Illness in Travelers Who Visited a Pre-Travel Clinic.
- Author
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Croughs, Mieke, Van Gompel, Alfons, Rameckers, Sarah, and Van den Ende, Jef
- Subjects
- *
TRAVEL hygiene , *CEREBRAL edema , *PULMONARY edema , *MOUNTAIN sickness , *ACETAZOLAMIDE , *ACCLIMATIZATION - Abstract
Background Few data are available on the incidence and predictors of serious altitude illness in travelers who visit pre-travel clinics. Travel health consultants advise on measures to be taken in case of serious altitude illness but it is not clear if travelers adhere to these recommendations. Methods Visitors to six travel clinics who planned to travel to an altitude of ≥3,000 m were asked to complete a diary from the first day at 2,000 m until 3 days after reaching the maximum sleeping altitude. Serious altitude illness was defined as having symptoms of serious acute mountain sickness (AMS score ≥ 6) and/or cerebral edema and/or pulmonary edema. Results The incidence of serious altitude illness in the 401 included participants of whom 90% reached ≥4,000 m, was 35%; 23% had symptoms of serious AMS, 25% symptoms of cerebral edema, and 13% symptoms of pulmonary edema. Independent predictors were young age, the occurrence of dark urine, travel in South America or Africa, and lack of acclimatization between 1,000 and 2,500 m. Acetazolamide was brought along by 77% of the responders of whom 41% took at least one dose. Of those with serious altitude illness, 57% had taken at least one dose of acetazolamide, 20% descended below 2,500 m on the same day or the next, and 11% consulted a physician. Conclusions Serious altitude illness was a very frequent problem in travelers who visited pre-travel clinics. Young age, dark urine, travel in South America or Africa, and lack of acclimatization nights at moderate altitude were independent predictors. Furthermore, we found that seriously ill travelers seldom followed the advice to descend and to visit a physician. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Tranexamic acid as maintenance treatment for non-histaminergic angioedema: analysis of efficacy and safety in 37 patients.
- Author
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Wintenberger, C., Boccon‐Gibod, I., Launay, D., Fain, O., Kanny, G., Jeandel, P. Y., Martin, L., Gompel, A., and Bouillet, L.
- Subjects
TRANEXAMIC acid ,HISTAMINERGIC mechanisms ,ANGIONEUROTIC edema ,DRUG efficacy ,MEDICATION safety ,DISEASE relapse ,BRADYKININ ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Angioedema ( AE) is a clinical syndrome characterized by localised swelling lasting several hours. The swelling is often recurring and can be lethal if it is located in the laryngeal region. Much progress has been made recently in the treatment of acute episodes, but no consensus has been reached on maintenance treatment. We have performed a national retrospective observational study to assess the use of tranexamic acid ( TA) as maintenance treatment for non-histaminergic AE [hereditary AE ( HAE) or idiopathic non-histaminergic AE]. Records for 64 cases were collected from 1 October 2012 to 31 August 2013; 37 of these were included (12 HAE with C1-inhibitor deficiency, six with HAE with normal C1-inhibitor and 19 idiopathic non-histaminergic AE). When treated with TA over six months, the number of attacks was reduced by 75% in 17 patients, 10 patients showed a lower level of reduction and 10 had the same number of attacks. In no instances were symptoms increased. No thromboembolic events were observed, and the main side effects were digestive in nature. Thus, TA, which is well tolerated and inexpensive, appears to be an effective maintenance treatment for some patients with HAE or idiopathic non-histaminergic AE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Antiretroviral treatment and travel to developing countries.
- Author
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Colebunders, Robert, Nachega, Jean, Gompel, Alfons, Colebunders, R, Nachega, J, and Van Gompel, A
- Published
- 1999
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39. Acute Schistosomiasis in Travelers Returning From Mali.
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Colebunders, Robert, Verstraeten, Tom, Gompel, Alfons, Ende, Jozef, Roo, Ann, Polderman, Anton, Visser, Leo, Colebunders, R, Verstraeten, T, Van Gompel A, Van den Ende J, De Roo A, Polderman, A, and Visser, L
- Published
- 1995
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40. In Reply: Anterior Nucleus of the Thalamus Deep Brain Stimulation With Concomitant Vagus Nerve Stimulation for Drug-Resistant Epilepsy.
- Author
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Parisi, Veronica and Van Gompel, Jamie J.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Surgical Management of Trigeminal Neuralgia.
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Sivakanthan, Sananthan, Van Gompel, Jamie J., Alikhani, Puya, van Loveren, Harry, Chen, Ren, and Agazzi, Siviero
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Stereotactic Radiosurgical Salvage Treatment for Locally Recurrent Esthesioneuroblastoma.
- Author
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Van Gompel, Jamie J., Carlson, Matthew L., Pollock, Bruce E., Moore, Eric J., Foote, Robert L., and Link, Michael J.
- Published
- 2013
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43. Ulipristal acetate does not impact human normal breast tissue.
- Author
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Communal L, Vilasco M, Hugon-Rodin J, Courtin A, Mourra N, Lahlou N, Dumont S, Chaouat M, Forgez P, and Gompel A
- Published
- 2012
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44. Acute Mountain Sickness in Travelers Who Consulted a Pre-Travel Clinic.
- Author
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Croughs, Mieke, Van Gompel, Alfons, and Van den Ende, Jef
- Subjects
- *
MOUNTAIN sickness , *ACETAZOLAMIDE , *TRAVEL hygiene , *CEREBRAL edema , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Background. The main objective of this study was to investigate the incidence and predictors of acute mountain sickness (AMS) in travelers who consulted a pre-travel clinic and the compliance with advices concerning this condition. Methods. A post-travel questionnaire was sent to clients of five travel clinics who planned to climb above 2,000 m. Results. The response was 77% and the data of all 744 respondents who stayed above 2,500 m were used for the analysis. Eighty-seven percent (646) read and understood the written advices on AMS. The incidence of AMS was 25% (184), and the predictors were previous AMS [odds ratio (OR) 2.2], female sex (OR 1.6), age (OR 0.98 per year), maximum sleeping altitude (OR 1.2 per 500 m), and the number of nights between 1,500 and 2,500 m (OR 0.9 per night). Eighty-seven percent of respondents understood the written advices about AMS but 21% did not read or understand the use of acetazolamide. Forty percent spent less than two nights between 1,500 and 2,500 m and 43% climbed more than 500 m/d once above 2,500 m. Acetazolamide was brought along by 541 respondents (72%) and 116 (16%) took it preventively. Of those with AMS 62 (34%) took acetazolamide treatment and 87 (47%) climbed higher despite AMS symptoms. The average preventive dose of acetazolamide was 250 mg/d, while the average curative dose was 375 mg/d. We found no relation between acetazolamide prevention and AMS ( p = 0.540). Conclusions. The incidence of AMS in travelers who stayed above 2,500 m was 25%. Predictors were previous AMS, female sex, age, maximum overnight altitude, and the number of nights between 1,500 and 2,500 m. Only half of these travelers followed the preventive and curative advices and 21% did not read or understand the use of acetazolamide. We found no preventive effect of a low dose of acetazolamide in this retrospective observational study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
45. Catamenial pneumothorax and endometriosis-related pneumothorax: clinical features and risk factors.
- Author
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Rousset-Jablonski, Christine, Alifano, Marco, Plu-Bureau, Geneviève, Camilleri-Broet, Sophie, Rousset, Pascal, Regnard, Jean-François, and Gompel, Anne
- Subjects
PNEUMOTHORAX ,ENDOMETRIOSIS ,INFERTILITY ,PERIMENOPAUSE ,PELVIC surgery ,CHEST pain ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
BACKGROUND Catamenial pneumothorax and thoracic endometriosis (TE) are still under diagnosed. The purpose of this study is to increase the diagnostic accuracy for these conditions in patients with spontaneous pneumothorax and to identify their risk factors. METHODS We conducted a retrospective study on all consecutive women of reproductive age referred to our Centre for surgical treatment of spontaneous pneumothorax between July 2000 and January 2009. RESULTS The study population comprised 156 premenopausal women of whom 49 (31.4%) had catamenial and/or TE-related pneumothorax. Over a quarter of these 49 patients had a previous history of recurrent thoracic or scapular catamenial pain. They experienced their first pneumothorax episode at an older age (mean ± SD) (34.0 years ± 6.7) than women with idiopathic pneumothorax (28.7 ± 6.1 years, P < 0.001). Pelvic endometriosis was found in 51% of women with catamenial and/or TE-related pneumothorax. After adjustment for confounding factors by multiple logistic regression analysis, the results show that, infertility [odd ratio (OR) = 4.21, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.28–13.88] and a history of pelvic surgery with a uterine procedure and/or uterine scraping (OR = 2.85, 95% CI = 1.12–7.26) were the strongest predictors of catamenial and/or TE-related pneumothorax. CONCLUSIONS Infertility and uterine procedures are significantly associated with catamenial and/or TE-related pneumothorax. Scapular or thoracic pain during menses often precedes the occurrence of pneumothorax and is highly specific for the diagnosis of TE. Our results suggest that in women with pelvic endometriosis, these symptoms should be systematically investigated for an earlier diagnosis of TE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Hormonal contraception and risk of cancer.
- Author
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Cibula, D., Gompel, A., Mueck, A. O., La Vecchia, C., Hannaford, P. C., Skouby, S. O., Zikan, M., and Dusek, L.
- Subjects
- *
CONTRACEPTION , *HORMONES , *CANCER risk factors , *OVARIAN cancer , *CERVICAL cancer , *LEGAL compliance - Abstract
BACKGROUND Fear from increased cancer risk is one of the most significant reasons for low acceptance of reliable contraceptive methods and low compliance. METHODS In this review, we included all cohort and case–control studies published in English up to December 2008. They were identified through a search of the literature using Pubmed and EMBASE. RESULTS Data about breast cancer risk indicate a slightly increased risk among current users of oral contraceptives (OC), an effect which disappears 5–10 years after stopping. Combined OC have a significant protective effect on the risk of ovarian cancer, and the protection increases with duration of use (relative risk decreased by 20% for each 5 years of use). The significant risk reduction has been confirmed for BRCA 1 and 2 mutation carriers. The risk of endometrial cancer is reduced by about 50% in ever users, a benefit which is greater with increasing duration of use. An association has been found between increased risk of cervical cancer and long-term OC use. Current OC use has been associated with an excess risk of benign liver tumours and a modest increased risk of liver cancer. None of large prospective cohort studies with prolonged follow-up has observed an increased overall risk of cancer incidence or mortality among ever users of OC, indeed several have suggested important long-term benefits. Specifically, protective effect of OC can be used as chemoprevention in young women who are BRCA mutation carriers. CONCLUSIONS Women wishing to use combined OC can be reassured that their decision is unlikely to place them at higher risk of developing cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
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47. Vaccinations in patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases.
- Author
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Rahier, Jean-François, Moutschen, Michel, Gompel, Alfons Van, Ranst, Marc Van, Louis, Edouard, Segaert, Siegfried, Masson, Pierre, and De Keyser, Filip
- Subjects
VACCINATION ,INFLAMMATION ,IMMUNOLOGIC diseases ,IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents ,IMMUNOLOGICAL adjuvants - Abstract
Patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMID) such as RA, IBD or psoriasis, are at increased risk of infection, partially because of the disease itself, but mostly because of treatment with immunomodulatory or immunosuppressive drugs. In spite of their elevated risk for vaccine-preventable disease, vaccination coverage in IMID patients is surprisingly low. This review summarizes current literature data on vaccine safety and efficacy in IMID patients treated with immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory drugs and formulates best-practice recommendations on vaccination in this population. Especially in the current era of biological therapies, including TNF-blocking agents, special consideration should be given to vaccination strategies in IMID patients. Clinical evidence indicates that immunization of IMID patients does not increase clinical or laboratory parameters of disease activity. Live vaccines are contraindicated in immunocompromized individuals, but non-live vaccines can safely be given. Although the reduced quality of the immune response in patients under immunotherapy may have a negative impact on vaccination efficacy in this population, adequate humoral response to vaccination in IMID patients has been demonstrated for hepatitis B, influenza and pneumococcal vaccination. Vaccination status is best checked and updated before the start of immunomodulatory therapy: live vaccines are not contraindicated at that time and inactivated vaccines elicit an optimal immune response in immunocompetent individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
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48. Implementation of Adherence Support for Patients With Hypertension Despite Antihypertensive Therapy in General Practice: A Cluster Randomized Trial.
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van de Steeg-van Gompel, Caroline H. P .A., Wensing, Michel, and De Smet, Peter A. G. M.
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HYPERTENSION ,ANTIHYPERTENSIVE agents ,PATIENT compliance ,BLOOD pressure ,CONTROL groups ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
BackgroundUncontrolled hypertension despite treatment is highly prevalent among hypertension patients. Electronic monitoring of medication adherence has been proven to be effective in improving blood pressure. The aim of the study was to compare the effectiveness of intensive support for implementation of this tool in community pharmacies with minimal implementation support.MethodsIn a cluster randomized trial, 25 control pharmacies received a manual and 32 experimental pharmacies received intensive support to enhance implementation of electronic monitoring. Primary outcome: the number of patients included for electronic monitoring. Secondary outcomes included mean change in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and percentage of patients with adequate SBP control.ResultsThe experimental group yielded consistently higher scores on all the steps of the implementation process than the control group, but none of these differences were significant. The mean number of patients per pharmacy included for electronic monitoring in a 3–9-months period was 1.6 in the experimental group vs. 1.0 in the control group (difference = 0.7, 95% confidence interval = −0.4; 1.7). The following patient outcomes were pooled because there were no differences between the experimental and the control group. Mean change of SBP/diastolic blood pressure (DBP) was −12 and −6 mm Hg, respectively, SBP dropped <140 mm Hg in 20.9% of all patients. In 13.6% of all patients control of SBP was achieved without treatment intensification.ConclusionThe intensive implementation program enhanced pharmacist performance, but appeared insufficient to overcome all problems with the implementation of electronic monitoring. The major restrictive factors concerned general practitioner (GP) involvement and the identification of eligible patients.American Journal of Hypertension 2010; doi:10.1038/ajh.2010.63 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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49. Microseizures and the spatiotemporal scales of human partial epilepsy.
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Stead, Matt, Bower, Mark, Brinkmann, Benjamin H., Lee, Kendall, Marsh, W. Richard, Meyer, Fredric B., Litt, Brian, Van Gompel, Jamie, and Worrell, Greg A.
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EPILEPSY ,SPASMS ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,PHARMACOLOGY ,ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Focal seizures appear to start abruptly and unpredictably when recorded from volumes of brain probed by clinical intracranial electroencephalograms. To investigate the spatiotemporal scale of focal epilepsy, wide-bandwidth electrophysiological recordings were obtained using clinical macro- and research microelectrodes in patients with epilepsy and control subjects with intractable facial pain. Seizure-like events not detectable on clinical macroelectrodes were observed on isolated microelectrodes. These ‘microseizures’ were sparsely distributed, more frequent in brain regions that generated seizures, and sporadically evolved into large-scale clinical seizures. Rare microseizures observed in control patients suggest that this phenomenon is ubiquitous, but their density distinguishes normal from epileptic brain. Epileptogenesis may involve the creation of these topographically fractured microdomains and ictogenesis (seizure generation), the dynamics of their interaction and spread. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2010
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50. Trends of Norfloxacin and Erythromycin Resistance of Campylobacter jejuni/Campylobacter coli Isolates Recovered From International Travelers, 1994 to 2006.
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Vlieghe, Erika R., Jacobs, Jan A., Van Esbroeck, Marjan, Koole, Olivier, and Van Gompel, Alfons
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NORFLOXACIN ,ERYTHROMYCIN ,DRUG resistance ,CAMPYLOBACTER jejuni ,DIARRHEA ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Background. Campylobacter sp. is a major cause of bacterial enterocolitis and travelers’ diarrhea. Empiric treatment regimens include fluoroquinolones and macrolides. Methods. Over the period 1994 to 2006, 724 Campylobacter jejuni/ Campylobacter coli isolates recovered from international travelers at the outpatient clinic of the Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium, were reviewed for their susceptibility to norfloxacin and erythromycin. Results. Norfloxacin resistance increased significantly over time in isolates from travelers returning from Asia, Africa, and Latin America. For the years 2001 to 2006, norfloxacin resistance rates were 67 (70.5%) of 95 for Asia, 20 (60.6%) of 33 for Latin America, and 36 (30.6%) of 114 for Africa. The sharpest increase was noted for India, with no resistance in 1994, but 41 (78.8%) of 52 resistant isolates found during 2001 to 2006. Erythromycin resistance was demonstrated in 20 (2.7%) isolates, with a mean annual resistance of 3.1% ± 2.8%; resistance increased over time, with up to 3(7.5%) of 40 and 3 (8.6%) of 35 resistant isolates in 2004 and 2006, respectively ( p < 0.05); there was no apparent geographic association. Combined resistance to norfloxacin and erythromycin was observed in five isolates. Conclusions. The high resistance rates to fluoroquinolones warrant reconsideration of their use as drugs of choice in patients with severe gastroenteritis when Campylobacter is the presumed cause. Continued monitoring of the incidence and the spread of resistant Campylobacter isolates is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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