4 results on '"Poirey S"'
Search Results
2. First-line infertility treatment in normal or subnormal sperm: Interest of a simplified pre-IMSI test.
- Author
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Sigala J, Poirey S, Robert J, Pouget O, Mura T, Huberlant S, and Rougier N
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Pregnancy, Female, Adult, Semen Analysis methods, Pregnancy Rate, Retrospective Studies, Fertilization in Vitro methods, Spermatozoa, Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic methods, Infertility, Male therapy, Infertility, Male diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: In the field of male infertility, when sperm is normal/subnormal, a few "add-on" routine tests can complete the basic semen examination., Objectives: The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate a faster, simplified motile sperm organelle morphology examination (MSOME) technique for selected infertile patients with apparently normal/subnormal sperm and, in their background: failure of two or three intrauterine insemination (IUI) cycles, repeatedly fragmented embryos, embryonic development to blastocyst-stage failures, repeated miscarriages, a long period of infertility or 2 or more IVF attempts without pregnancy. Our test results were correlated with IUI, conventional in vitro fertilization (IVF), intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) and intracytoplasmic morphologically selected sperm injection (IMSI) outcomes., Materials and Methods: We validated an adapted version of the MSOME analysis called the pre-IMSI test (PIT), based on vacuole evaluation alone. 248 infertile patients from our assisted reproductive technology (ART) Center were retrospectively selected and split into three PIT score subgroups (patients with ≤8% (score I), 9 to 15% (score II) and ≥16% normal spermatozoa (score III)) based on the correlation between PIT results and each ART technique outcome. The choice of one or another of these ART techniques had been made according to the usual clinico-biological criteria., Results: Clinical outcomes for each of the three PIT subgroups were compared individually for the different ART techniques. For ICSI, the effect of the PIT score subgroup was significant for clinical pregnancies (p = 0.0054) and presented a trend for live births (p = 0.0614). Miscarriage rates of IVF attempts were statistically different depending on the PIT score (p = 0.0348). Furthermore, the odds ratios of clinical pregnancy rates were significantly different according to PIT score subgroup when comparing ICSI vs. IMSI or IVF vs. ICSI attempts., Discussion: IMSI appears to be recommended when sperm belongs to PIT score I, ICSI when it belongs to PIT score II and IVF or IUI when sperm is of PIT score III quality in selected infertile couples. The lack of statistical power in these PIT subgroups means that we must remain cautious in interpreting results., Conclusion: Our results support the interest of this simplified test for certain couples with normal/subnormal sperm to help choose the most efficient ART technique, even as first-line treatment., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Sigala et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A novel genomic signature with translational significance for human idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
- Author
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Bauer Y, Tedrow J, de Bernard S, Birker-Robaczewska M, Gibson KF, Guardela BJ, Hess P, Klenk A, Lindell KO, Poirey S, Renault B, Rey M, Weber E, Nayler O, and Kaminski N
- Subjects
- Animals, Bleomycin metabolism, Disease Models, Animal, Epithelial Cells metabolism, Gene Expression physiology, Genomics, Humans, Lung metabolism, Protein Biosynthesis, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Epithelial Cells pathology, Fibroblasts metabolism, Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis genetics, Lung pathology, Signal Transduction genetics
- Abstract
The bleomycin-induced rodent lung fibrosis model is commonly used to study mechanisms of lung fibrosis and to test potential therapeutic interventions, despite the well recognized dissimilarities to human idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Therefore, in this study, we sought to identify genomic commonalities between the gene expression profiles from 100 IPF lungs and 108 control lungs that were obtained from the Lung Tissue Research Consortium, and rat lungs harvested at Days 3, 7, 14, 21, 28, 42, and 56 after bleomycin instillation. Surprisingly, the highest gene expression similarity between bleomycin-treated rat and IPF lungs was observed at Day 7. At this point of maximal rat-human commonality, we identified a novel set of 12 disease-relevant translational gene markers (C6, CTHRC1, CTSE, FHL2, GAL, GREM1, LCN2, MMP7, NELL1, PCSK1, PLA2G2A, and SLC2A5) that was able to separate almost all patients with IPF from control subjects in our cohort and in two additional IPF/control cohorts (GSE10667 and GSE24206). Furthermore, in combination with diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide measurements, four members of the translational gene marker set contributed to stratify patients with IPF according to disease severity. Significantly, pirfenidone attenuated the expression change of one (CTHRC1) translational gene marker in the bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis model, in transforming growth factor-β1-treated primary human lung fibroblasts and transforming growth factor-β1-treated human epithelial A549 cells. Our results suggest that a strategy focused on rodent model-human disease commonalities may identify genes that could be used to predict the pharmacological impact of therapeutic interventions, and thus facilitate the development of novel treatments for this devastating lung disease.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Plasma amino acid concentrations in elderly patients with protein energy malnutrition.
- Author
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Polge A, Bancel E, Bellet H, Strubel D, Poirey S, Peray P, Carlet C, and Magnan de Bornier B
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alanine blood, Amino Acids, Branched-Chain blood, Amino Acids, Essential blood, Body Height, Body Weight, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Female, Glutamic Acid blood, Glutamine blood, Humans, Male, Amino Acids blood, Protein-Energy Malnutrition blood
- Abstract
Objective: to compare amino acid concentrations in healthy and malnourished elderly patients., Method: plasma amino acid concentrations were examined in 24 men and women (80-100 years of age) with protein energy malnutrition (PEM) and compared with those of 44 healthy, similarly-aged controls. Plasma samples were determined by using cation exchange columns with ninhydrin detection in an high performance liquid chromatography system., Results: essential amino acid and non-essential amino acid plasma concentrations were significantly decreased in PEM (0.01 < P < 0.0001). Branched-chain amino acids and urea cycle amino acid plasma concentrations fell significantly (P < 0.0001). Plasma concentrations of alanine and glutamic acid + glutamine were also significantly reduced (P < 0.0001)., Conclusions: in underweight elderly patients, the plasma amino acid pattern reflects the severity of the metabolic disturbance.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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