87 results on '"Alain Autret"'
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2. D'où viennent les troubles psychosomatiques ?
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Alain Autret
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General Medicine - Published
- 2019
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3. Carence en vitamine B12, ataxie cérébelleuse et troubles cognitifs
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Karl Mondon, Alain Autret, A. Gochard, and B. de Toffol
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Gynecology ,B vitamins ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Vitamin deficiency ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Nutritional status ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.disease - Abstract
Resume Introduction La carence en vitamine B12 est frequemment associee a des manifestations neurologiques dont la degenerescence combinee de la moelle est la forme la plus classique. Observation Nous rapportons le cas d’une patiente qui presenta une ataxie cerebelleuse, une deterioration cognitive associee a une leucoencephalopathie a l’IRM cerebrale secondaire a une carence en vitamine B12 dans un contexte de maladie de Biermer. Une supplementation vitaminique a initialement ameliore la symptomatologie, mais son interruption a conduit a un etat grabataire irreversible malgre la reprise du traitement. Conclusion Une carence en vitamine B12 doit etre recherchee devant toute symptomatologie neurologique centrale progressive inexpliquee, une supplementation precoce permettant de limiter les sequelles irreversibles.
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- 2009
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4. Création d’une filière neuro-vasculaire régionale : évaluation de la prise en charge à 18 mois
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Bruno Giraudeau, I. Bonnaud, J.-L. Gigot, Alain Autret, Séverine Debiais, B. de Toffol, Dominique Perrotin, and D. Saudeau
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Resume Introduction La prise en charge des patients ayant un accident vasculaire cerebral (AVC) dans les unites neuro-vasculaires (UNV) diminue la proportion de deces et de handicap, independamment de l’acces aux traitements d’urgence comme la thrombolyse intraveineuse. Au CHU de Tours, une filiere d’accueil direct des patients atteints d’AVC permettant l’utilisation du traitement par thrombolyse intraveineuse a ete mise en place en juin 2003. Methodes Nous avons conduit une etude prospective pendant 18 mois, pour evaluer le fonctionnement de la filiere neuro-vasculaire, en recueillant les donnees de prise en charge et de devenir de tous les patients qui y etaient admis. Dans un second temps, ces donnees ont ete comparees a celles recueillies pendant 6 mois aux urgences en 2002, pour les patients suspects d’AVC. Nous avons egalement etudie les conditions d’utilisation du traitement par thrombolyse intraveineuse. Resultats Trois cent soixante-quatre patients ont ete inclus dans l’etude. La creation de la filiere s’est accompagnee d’une diminution significative des delais d’admission des patients et des delais d’imagerie, et d’une plus grande implication des services de transport d’urgence (SAMU). La proportion de patients ayant une mauvaise evolution est moindre dans la filiere, cette diminution ne restant significative apres ajustement que pour les patients ayant un AVC hemorragique. Les conditions d’utilisation du traitement thrombolytique dans notre centre sont comparables a celles de la litterature en terme de securite et d’efficacite. Conclusion Cette etude montre que la creation d’une filiere neuro-vasculaire d’accueil direct et de thrombolyse s’est globalement accompagnee d’une amelioration de la qualite des soins, avant meme la creation d’une unite neuro-vasculaire repondant aux recommandations.
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- 2007
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5. Epilepsy and Language Development: The Continuous Spike-Waves during Slow Sleep Syndrome
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Catherine Barthélémy, Bertrand de Toffol, Cécile Monjauze, Amedh Khomsi, Séverine Debiais, Marie-Anne Barthez, Alain Autret, Laurie Tuller, Julien Praline, and Caroline Hommet
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Adult ,Male ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Comorbidity ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,Language Development ,Developmental psychology ,Epilepsy ,Language assessment ,Communication disorder ,medicine ,Humans ,Language disorder ,Child ,Slow-wave sleep ,Cerebral Cortex ,Intelligence Tests ,Language Disorders ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Neuropsychology ,Syndrome ,medicine.disease ,Language development ,Neurology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology - Abstract
Summary: Background: Continuous spike-waves during slow sleep syndrome (CSWSS) is a rare epileptic syndrome occurring in children, which is characterized by the association of epilepsy, neuropsychological disorders, and abnormal paroxysmal electroencephalographic (EEG) discharges activated by sleep. Language can be affected but, to date, language disorders and their long-term outcome have been documented only rarely. Purposes: Description of language impairment in patients with the CSWSS. Methods: We performed a detailed language testing in 10 right-handed children and adolescents with the CSWSS. Their pragmatic performance was compared to that of a control population of 36 children aged 6—10 years. Results: Patients with CSWSS had lower scores in tests measuring their lexical, morphosyntactic, and pragmatic skills compared to controls. Comprehension remains unaffected. In addition, language impairment was found to be just as severe in patients in remission as those still in an active phase. Conclusions: We found severe language impairments in lexical and syntactic skills. The language profile is different from that observed in the Landau‐Kleffner syndrome. Moreover patients in remission and those in an active phase of the CSWSS have the same language impairment profiles. This confirms the poor long-term neuropsychological prognosis. Our results raise points about the relationship between epileptic activity and language development. This pilot study underscores the need to assess language, and especially pragmatic skills, and to study long-term outcome in such childhood epileptic syn
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- 2007
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6. EEG d'urgence : indications réelles et résultats
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Caroline Prunier, Caroline Hommet, B. Lucas, P. Corcia, Julien Praline, Karl Mondon, B. de Toffol, and Alain Autret
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Electrodiagnosis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,business - Abstract
Resume Objectifs. – L'utilite de l'electroencephalogramme (EEG) dans differentes situations cliniques d'urgence a ete precisee par une conference de consensus (Tours, mai 1996). Afin d'etudier la place de l'EEG en urgence en pratique clinique, les demandes concretes d'EEG dans le cadre de l'astreinte d'electroencephalographie du CHU de Tours ont ete confrontees aux recommandations de la reunion de Tours de 1996. Materiel et methode. – Realisee de maniere retrospective, l'analyse portait sur les indications et les resultats de tous les traces EEG consecutifs sur une periode d'astreinte de six mois. Resultats et conclusion. – Les indications les plus frequentes etaient : la presomption de mort cerebrale (13%) ; la prise en charge des etats de mal epileptiques (12,1%) ; la suspicion d'etat de mal non convulsif (10,6%). Plus d'un tiers des demandes (38,6 %) n'etaient pas conformes aux conclusions de la conference de consensus. L'utilite de l'EEG est optimale quand les criteres cliniques consensuels sont appliques, notamment pour la prise en charge des etats de mal epileptiques, pour rechercher un etat de mal larve ou un etat de mal non convulsif. En revanche, l'EEG urgent n'a pas d'utilite devant une perte de connaissance breve ou un deficit focal transitoire ou constitue non febrile.
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- 2004
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7. Outcome at Adulthood of the Continuous Spike-waves During Slow Sleep and Landau-Kleffner Syndromes
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Bertrand de Toffol, Julien Praline, Catherine Billard, Florence Brault, Alain Autret, D. Perrier, Grégoire Du Passage, Julie Bonnard, Caroline Hommet, B. Lucas, and Marie-Anne Barthez
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Dysexecutive syndrome ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Landau–Kleffner syndrome ,Neuropsychology ,Cognition ,Executive functions ,medicine.disease ,Epilepsy ,Neurology ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Young adult ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Slow-wave sleep - Abstract
Summary: Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine the clinical, social, and/or professional and cognitive outcomes in adulthood of the continuous spike–waves during slow sleep (CSWS) and Landau–Kleffner syndromes, which are two rare epileptic syndromes occurring in children. Methods: We enrolled seven young adults, five who had a CSWS syndrome, and two, a Landau–Kleffner syndrome in childhood. We evaluated their intellectual level as well as their oral and written language and executive functions. Results: This study confirmed that the epilepsy associated with these syndromes has a good prognosis. Only one patient still had active epilepsy. However, the neuropsychological disorders particular to each syndrome persisted. Only two patients had followed a normal pathway in school. Three of the five patients with a CSWS syndrome during childhood remained globally and nonselectively mentally deficient. We found no evidence of the persistence of a dysexecutive syndrome in this study group. The intellectual functions of the two patients with Landau–Kleffner syndrome were normal; however, their everyday lives were disrupted by severe, disabling language disturbances. We discuss the role of some prognostic factors such as the location of the interictal electric focus and the age at onset of CSWS. Conclusions: These two epileptic syndromes of childhood are very similar in many respects, but their clinical outcomes in adulthood are different.
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- 2003
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8. Abnormal SMN1 gene copy number is a susceptibility factor for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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Philippe Corcia, Véronique Mayeux-Portas, Jawad Khoris, Bertrand de Toffol, Alain Autret, Jean-Pierre Müh, William Camu, Christian Andres, and null the French ALS Research Group
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,SMN1 ,Biology ,Motor neuron ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Central nervous system disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Atrophy ,Degenerative disease ,Neurology ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Copy-number variation ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis - Abstract
The etiology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis remains unknown in the majority of cases. Homozygous SMN1 (survival motor neuron) gene deletion causes spinal muscular atrophy, and SMN2 gene deletions are possible risk factors in lower motor neuron disease. We studied SMN1 and SMN2 genes copy numbers in 167 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients and in 167 matched controls. We noted that 16% of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients had an abnormal copy number of the SMN1 gene (1 or 3 copies), compared with 4% of controls. An abnormal SMN1 gene locus may be a susceptibility factor for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
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- 2002
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9. MRI Morphometric Study and Correlation with Cognitive Functions in Young Adults Shunted for Congenital Hydrocephalus Related to Spina bifida
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D. Sirinelli, Caroline Hommet, Catherine Billard, B. De Toffol, Philippe Bertrand, Alain Autret, D. Perrier, P. Gillet, and Jean-Philippe Cottier
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Adult ,Male ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Corpus callosum ,Verbal learning ,Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt ,Cerebral Ventricles ,Corpus Callosum ,Central nervous system disease ,Lateral ventricles ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Spinal Dysraphism ,education.field_of_study ,Spina bifida ,Brain ,Anatomy ,Verbal Learning ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Frontal Lobe ,nervous system diseases ,Hydrocephalus ,Surgery ,Neurology ,Space Perception ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Occipital Lobe ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cognition Disorders ,Occipital lobe ,Psychology - Abstract
We studied the morphometric MRI findings and their correlation with cognitive functions in a population of 10 young adults shunted for congenital hydrocephalus related to spina bifida. Morphometric MRI analysis included measurement of the ventricular dilatation index, frontal and occipital parenchymal thickness and the size of the corpus callosum. The neuropsychological status was evaluated, notably to look for a discrepancy between verbal and performance skills, a finding which has previously been described in hydrocephalic children. We also investigated whether there was a correlation between cognitive function and cerebral morphometric indexes. In each case, MRI demonstrated the structural changes associated with the Chiari II malformation. The size of the lateral ventricles varied, ranging from important dilatation to small ventricles. Six patients had only partial development of the corpus callosum. All patients had a normal global IQ. In our population of young adults, we did not observe any discrepancy between verbal and visuospatial performances as has been described in children with hydrocephalus. We found no relationship between cognitive function and ventricle dilatation or parenchymal thickness or between the size of the corpus callosum and callosal transfer.
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- 2002
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10. Quantitative analysis of striatal dopamine D2 receptors with 123I-iodolisuride SPECT in degenerative extrapyramidal diseases
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Denis Guilloteau, Sylvie Chalon, J. C. Besnard, B. De Toffol, Jean-Philippe Cottier, Bruno Giraudeau, Jean-Louis Baulieu, Alain Autret, F. Tranquart, Caroline Prunier, and F. Chossat
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Striatum ,Gastroenterology ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Iodine Radioisotopes ,Central nervous system disease ,Degenerative disease ,Basal Ganglia Diseases ,Parkinsonian Disorders ,Dopamine ,Internal medicine ,Dopamine receptor D2 ,Extrapyramidal disorder ,medicine ,Humans ,False Positive Reactions ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Lisuride ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Receptors, Dopamine D2 ,business.industry ,Dopaminergic ,Binding potential ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Parkinson Disease ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Multiple System Atrophy ,medicine.disease ,Corpus Striatum ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Supranuclear Palsy, Progressive ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
123I-Iodolisuride has high specific affinity for binding on dopamine D2 receptors in the striatum and has been used in a few single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) studies of extrapyramidal disorders. The diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) is very difficult in the first 5 years of evolution, with 15-25% false positive diagnoses. The aim of this study was therefore to determine the value of iodolisuride SPECT in discriminating Parkinson's from the most frequent Parkinson-plus syndromes (PPS). Seventeen patients with an extrapyramidal syndrome had a SPECT examination 1 h after injection of 180-185 MBq of 23 I-iodolisuride They were followed under dopaminergic treatment for at least 2 years. After 2 years, they were separated in two groups according to specific clinical criteria and sensitivity to dopaminergic treatment: nine patients had PD (age = 59.8 ± 8.8 years; Hoehn and Yahr = 1.8 ± 0.7; evolution = 4.3 ± 3 years) and eight had PPS (age = 71.6 ± 7.3 years; Hoehn and Yahr = 2.9 ± 2.0; evolution = 4.1 ± 1.5 years). The binding potential of iodolisuride in the striatum was assessed by considering the striatum (S)/occipital lobe (O) ratio at the pseudo-equilibrium 1 h after injection. The S/O ratio was statistically different between PD and PPS (1.97 ± 0.3 vs 1.65 ± 0.2 (P < 0.02)). Iodolisuride SPECT could differentiate both groups with a sensitivity of 88.8% and a specificity of 75%. Iodolisuride is a good specific D2 receptor ligand for SPECT and complements specific clinical criteria for the diagnosis of Parkinson's disease and differentiation between different extrapyramidal disorders.
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- 2001
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11. Localisation des centres du langage par l'analyse quantifiée de l'EEG (versus test de Wada) dans l'épilepsie temporale chez le droitier
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B de Toffol, Caroline Hommet, P. Corcia, and Alain Autret
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Neurology ,Electrodiagnosis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Physiology (medical) ,Philosophy ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,Complex partial epilepsy ,Humanities - Abstract
Resume L'analyse quantifiee de l'EEG a ete utilisee chez neuf patients epileptiques temporaux droitiers inclus dans une procedure prechirurgicale pour tenter de predire la localisation des centres du langage. Ce travail avait pour but de valider un protocole d'etude des variations de la puissance spectrale de l'alpha dans un paradigme d'activation precedemment developpe chez des sujets sains droitiers : la diminution significative de la puissance spectrale du rythme alpha sur l'hemisphere gauche au cours d'une tâche d'ecriture de la main droite par rapport aux valeurs de repos, et/ou la diminution de la puissance spectrale du rythme alpha sur l'hemisphere droit au cours d'une tâche de reconnaissance de formes de la main gauche par rapport aux valeurs de repos, etaient considerees comme un marqueur electrophysiologique de la specialisation hemispherique gauche pour le langage. Dans ce travail, la localisation du langage obtenue par l'etude des variations spectrales chez les patients etait comparee aux resultats du test de Wada considere comme la technique de reference. Parmi les neuf sujets, huit avaient l'hemisphere gauche dominant pour le langage (pour un hemisphere droit) au test de Wada. Six patients avaient une diminution significative de la puissance de l'alpha en accord avec les resultats du test de Wada ; pour les trois patients restant (incluant le patient dont l'hemisphere droit etait dominant pour le langage), les variations spectrales etaient non significatives. La diminution de la puissance spectrale du rythme alpha sur l'hemisphere actif au cours d'un paradigme d'activation cerebrale semble statistiquement liee a la specialisation hemispherique gauche des centres du langage. Cependant, pour un patient epileptique donne, l'etude des seules variations spectrales ne permet pas de definir de maniere cliniquement pertinente la lateralisation des centres du langage.
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- 1999
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12. Indication urgente de l'EEG. Déficit neurologique focal et crise d'épilepsie partielle chez l'adulte
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P. Corcia, Caroline Hommet, Alain Autret, and B de Toffol
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,business.industry ,Physiology (medical) ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,business - Abstract
Resume Un deficit neurologique focal peut se definir comme le temoignage clinique d'une perturbation, structurelle ou fonctionnelle, transitoire ou durable, localisee a une region particuliere de l'encephale. Dans ce contexte, nous resumons ainsi les indications urgentes de l'EEG: (i) l'EEG n'a pas d'indications en urgence pour le diagnostic, le pronostic ou le traitement d'un accident ischemique transitoire ou d'une migraine ; (ii) en cas de crise partielle complexe, un EEG realise dans les 24 heures est utile, mais pas toujours indispensable au diagnostic positif d'epilepsie. Il a une signification pronostique et therapeutique encore incertaine; (iii) l'interet de l'EEG comme element pronostique a la phase aigue d'un AVC ischemique a ete suggere, mais pas clairement demontre; (iiii) l'EEG est indique en urgence dans les deficits focaux febriles, dans lesquels il presente un interet diagnostique et pronostique specifique et irremplacable.
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- 1997
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13. Neuromyopathie toxique induite par la ciclosporine
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Y. Lebranchu, A. Al-Najjar, P. Corcia, A.-M. Guennoc, A. M. Bergemer-Fouquet, B. de Toffol, and Alain Autret
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Resume Introduction La ciclosporine est un medicament immunosuppresseur majeur dans la prevention de rejet des greffes et dans certaines affections auto-immunes. La prescription de cette molecule est limitee par de nombreux effets parmi lesquels on note des cas de neuropathies et de myopathies, rapportees notamment lorsque la ciclosporine est associee a des medicaments inhibant la co-enzyme A reductase. Observation Nous rapportons le cas d’une patiente de 67 ans qui a developpe quelques mois apres une greffe renale un deficit sensitivo-moteur rapidement evolutif en rapport avec une neuromyopathie. Bien que la ciclosporine fut prescrite seule dans les taux therapeutiques, l’elimination des autres etiologies responsables d’un tel tableau conduisait a privilegier l’hypothese d’une toxicite induite exclusivement par la ciclosporine. Cette hypothese fut confirmee par l’amelioration de l’etat neurologique apres arret de cette prescription. Conclusion Cette observation souligne donc la neurotoxicite potentielle de la ciclosporine meme lorsqu’elle est prescrite en monotherapie aux taux therapeutiques.
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- 2005
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14. Adult onset ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency: an unusual cause of semantic disorders
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Caroline Hommet, J. P. Cottier, F. Labarthe, D. Perrier, Alain Autret, A. Legras, F Maillot, S Rimbaux, and L Lemarcis
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Urea cycle disorder ,Short Report ,Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase Deficiency Disease ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Humans ,Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Coma ,Hemodynamics ,Neuropsychology ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Differential diagnosis ,Cognition Disorders ,Psychology - Abstract
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD) is the most common urea cycle disorder. This condition usually presents in neonates or children. This report describes the clinical case of a 21 year old woman who was diagnosed in adulthood during the course of an unexplained coma. After recovery from the coma, she presented very unusual neuropsychological disorders involving memory and the meaning of certain words, suggesting a semantic deficit. The discovery of OTCD in adulthood is rare and the neuropsychological consequences may be unique.
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- 2004
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15. Study of unilateral hemisphere performance in children with developmental dysphasia
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M. L. Loisel, C. Billard, C. Duvelleroy-Hommet, Alain Autret, P. Gillet, Marie Anne Barthez, and J.-J. Santini
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Functional Laterality ,Lateralization of brain function ,Dichotic Listening Tests ,Task (project management) ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Aphasia ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Child ,Dichotic listening ,Brain ,Developmental dysphasia ,Mean age ,Verbal Learning ,Normal children ,Finger tapping ,Female ,sense organs ,Psychology ,Child Language ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Hemisphere specialization for language was studied in 10 children with expressive developmental dysphasia (DD) (mean age 10 years 4 months) submitted to a dichotic listening task (in a word free-recall task and forced-attention task) and a finger tapping/vocalization dual-task paradigm. A nonsense shape dichaptic task was also introduced to control right hemispheric processing. Performances of dysphasic children were compared to those obtained from 15 normal children. The results showed that controls had a right ear advantage in free-recall (words) dichotic listening task and a significant right ear advantage in forced-right-attention task, with a change in ear asymmetry as a consequence of instruction. In the dysphasic group we observed a significant right ear advantage in the free-recall dichotic listening task and no change in ear asymmetry during forced right or forced left condition. Results in time sharing paradigm and nonsense dichaptic task are more difficult to interpret, because there was no interaction between group and condition. These results cannot support a complete left hemisphere dysfunction in developmental dysphasia.
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- 1995
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16. Les agrypnies
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Lucas B, de Toffol B, Henry-Le Bras F, Duvelleroy-Hommet C, and Alain Autret
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Fatal familial insomnia ,business.industry ,Chorea ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Pons ,Organic insomnia ,Lesion ,Neurology ,Physiology (medical) ,mental disorders ,medicine ,GABAergic ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Raphe nuclei ,business ,Neuroscience ,Thalamic lesions - Abstract
The word agrypnia, ie, organic insomnia, was first used to describe a patient with a Morvan fibrillary chorea, which is an ill-delineated syndrome. This review considers the experimental insomnia created by raphe nuclei, anterior hypothalamic, or thalamic lesions. There are some papers reporting REM and non-REM sleep reduction in man after vascular, traumatic or degenerative lesion of the pons. There is only one case of agrypnia due to a bilateral stereotatic thalamic injury. Infectious agrypnia (trypanosomiasis, Von Economo) may exist but has not been documented by polygraphic means. Fatal familial insomnia induces a precocious agrypnia and leads to death with vegetative and motor disturbances. It is associated with an abnormal prion-protein which may interfere with gabaergic synapses. Finally agrypnia in humans corresponds to either lesionnal or infra microscopic synaptic prion linked disorders.
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- 1995
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17. Influence du sommeil sur les mouvements anormaux de la veille
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B. Lucas, Alain Autret, F Henry, B de Toffol, and D. Saudeau
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Involuntary movement ,Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,business.industry ,Physiology (medical) ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,business ,Abnormal movements - Abstract
Resume Le sommeil reduit considerablement la survenue des mouvements anormaux observes au cours de la veille dans les affections degeneratives du systeme extrapyramidal. Neanmoins, les enregistrements electrophysiologiques montrent que les contractions musculaires n'ont pas totalement disparu. Cette reduction est parallele a la diminution de la veille qui semble, ainsi, agir comme un systeme d'amplification non specifique. On note neanmoins que le sommeil fait disparaitre les caracteres specifiques du tremblement parkinsonien et que certaines myoclonies du voile perdurent durant le sommeil.
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- 1994
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18. SMN1 gene study in three families in which ALS and spinal muscular atrophy co-exist
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Veronique Mayeux-Portas, Philippe Corcia, Jawad Khoris, J. P. Muh, William Camu, E. Bieth, Christian R. Andres, B. de Toffol, Alain Autret, and Philippe Couratier
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gene Dosage ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,SMN1 ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Muscular Atrophy, Spinal ,Central nervous system disease ,Superoxide Dismutase-1 ,Degenerative disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Cyclic AMP Response Element-Binding Protein ,Family Health ,Genetics ,Mutation ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Infant ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,SMN Complex Proteins ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,Middle Aged ,Motor neuron ,medicine.disease ,SMA ,Survival of Motor Neuron 1 Protein ,Pedigree ,nervous system diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by SMN1 gene deletions or mutations, and ALS is the most frequent motor neuron condition in adults. The authors describe three families in which ALS and SMA coexist. The authors found that no SOD1 mutation was found within these families; all three ALS cases had at least two SMN1 copies; and an abnormal SMN1 gene locus did not explain the co-occurrence of these two motor neuron disorders in these families.
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- 2002
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19. A Note on the Occurrence of Unusual Electroencephalographic Sleep Patterns in Selected Normal Children
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Catherine Billard, E. Degiovanni, Alain Autret, B. Lucas, and B. de Toffol
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Rapid eye movement sleep ,Sleep, REM ,Sleep spindle ,Audiology ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,03 medical and health sciences ,Child Development ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,030225 pediatrics ,Unihemispheric slow-wave sleep ,medicine ,Humans ,Theta Rhythm ,Wakefulness ,Child ,Slow-wave sleep ,Electroencephalography ,Sleep patterns ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Normal children ,Female ,Sleep Stages ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Polysomnographic recordings were performed in 50 children free from any familial or personal history of seizure or neurologic diseases to evaluate the frequency of epileptiform and unusual electroencephalographic patterns in a normal population. A 9-year-old boy exhibited focal spikes that became bilateral with a density of 24% to 32% during slow wave sleep, and another boy showed a few spikes during slow wave sleep. In seven cases, 14- and 6-Hz rhythms were recorded, mostly in rapid eye movement sleep. A right rhythmic and temporal discharge was observed in one girl. Epileptiform electroencephalographic patterns are not infrequent, and 14- and 6-Hz rhythms during rapid eye movement sleep are common in normal children. (J Child Neurol 1992;7:422-426).
- Published
- 1992
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20. Influence of lateral gaze on electroencephalographic spectral power
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Bertrand Gaymard, E. Degiovanni, Alain Autret, and B. De Toffol
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,Functional Laterality ,Lateralization of brain function ,Cognition ,Alpha rhythm ,medicine ,Humans ,Alpha frequency band ,Vision, Ocular ,Communication ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Gaze ,Alpha Rhythm ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Eye closure ,Psychology ,Alpha power - Abstract
The effects of maintaining lateral gaze (as opposed to looking straight ahead) on electroencephalographic spectral power were tested in 12 right handed male subjects during eye opening (EO) and eye closure (EC). Our working hypothesis, based on Kinsbourne's paradigm, was that maintaining right lateral gaze activates the left hemisphere while maintaining left lateral gaze activates the right hemisphere, this activation resulting in a reduction in the spectral power over the hemisphere in question. Results showed that the variations in spectral power involved mainly the alpha frequency band. In the EC condition, the results were consistent with our working hypothesis: right lateral gaze produced a marked reduction in left hemispheric spectral power. In the EO condition, alpha power was constantly higher in the right hemisphere whether lateral gaze was maintained to the right or to the left. This can be possibly be due to an attentional effect. Results are discussed with regard of the type of alpha rhythm and of the activation of cortical oculmotor censtres. They shed light on the controversy concerning the existence of specific EEG correlates of cognitive activity, which preferentially involve each of the cerebral hemispheres.
- Published
- 1992
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21. The FHM1 mutation S218L: a severe clinical phenotype? A case report and review of the literature
- Author
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S Rimbaux, Caroline Hommet, Séverine Debiais, I. Bonnaud, Alain Autret, M.-A. Barthez, and F Riant
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Migraine with Aura ,Mutation, Missense ,Severity of Illness Index ,Epilepsy ,Young Adult ,Pregnancy ,Chromosome 19 ,Severity of illness ,Medicine ,Missense mutation ,Humans ,Familial hemiplegic migraine ,Coma ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Migraine with aura ,Surgery ,Phenotype ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Calcium Channels ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 19 - Abstract
Familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) is a rare autosomal dominant subtype of migraine with aura that is characterized by motor weakness during attacks. FHM1 is associated with mutations in the CACNA1A gene located on chromosome 19. We report a severe, prolonged HM attack in a young pregnant patient who had the S218L FHM1. This CACNA1A mutation has been associated with HM, delayed cerebral oedema and coma following minor head trauma. The case history we report suggests a specific, severe phenotype and the co-occurrence of HM and epilepsy related to the S218L FHM1 mutation.
- Published
- 2009
22. Influence of lateralized sensorimotor and neuropsychological activities on electroencephalographic spectral power
- Author
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S. Markabi, B. De Toffol, Alain Autret, and S. Roux
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Form analysis ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,Functional Laterality ,Lateralization of brain function ,Developmental psychology ,Rhythm ,medicine ,Humans ,Asymmetry Index ,Right hemisphere ,Mathematics ,Analysis of Variance ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Motor Cortex ,Neuropsychology ,Somatosensory Cortex ,Cerebral activity ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
In order to test the effect of ‘lateralized’ sensorimotor and neuropsychological activities on EEG spectral power (P), we recorded EEGs over the right and left central regions with 3 different derivations C5P3/C6P4, C5Cz/C6Cz, and C5 ears-linked (EL)/C6EL in 14 young, right-handed men who underwent ten 2 min sequences including 4 during rest (3 with eyes closed (EC), 1 with eyes open (EO)), and 6 during tasks reputed to involved preferentially the left (Le) or the right (Ri) hemisphere, i.e., pure left and pure right motor activity of the hand (EC), pure neuropsychological tasks consisting in lexical followed by spatial form analysis and finally mixed (neuropsychological and motor) EC tasks consisting in writing followed by left hand object recognition. Three spectral parameters P, log P and asymmetry index AI = (P Ri − P Le)/(P Ri + P Le) were calculated in 5 frequency bands θ, α1, α2, α3 and β1. We observed a relationship between task complexity and P reduction on both hemispheres which was greater during rest, less during motor activity and least during mixed motor and neuropsychological activities; during EC activities more specifically involving the left hemisphere, only the comparison between rest and mixed sequences was signigicant. During EC activities involving the right hemisphere, both motor and mixed sequences were significantly different from rest sequences. In addition, during the EO sequences, P was usually greater than during rest. As compared to rest conditions, the AI increased during sequences preferentially involving the left hemisphere and decreased during preferentially right hemisphere activities. The number of rhythms involved varied according to the lead type and the parameter chosen. Therefore, this report supports the hypothesis that in the frequency bands studied, P decreases according to the complexity of the cerebral activity, being even lower on the hemisphere directly implicated in the task.
- Published
- 1990
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23. Reversible Nuclear Oculomotor Nerve Paralysis
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Alain Autret, Pierre Larmande, B. De Toffol, and Bertr Gaymard
- Subjects
medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Right hemiparesis ,Computed tomography ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Oculomotor nucleus ,Resorption ,Midbrain ,Hematoma ,Weber's syndrome ,nervous system ,Neurology ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Oculomotor Nerve Paralysis - Abstract
A patient presented with a right hemiparesis and a left nuclear third nerve syndrome. The CT scan showed a hematoma of the left mesencephalon, near the oculomotor nucleus. After resorption of the hema
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Visual recognition memory differentiates dementia with Lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia
- Author
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B. De Toffol, Aurélie Marqué, Karl Mondon, Vincent Camus, Caroline Prunier, D. Beauchamp, D Jacobi, A. Gochard, Alain Autret, A Armand, and Caroline Hommet
- Subjects
Lewy Body Disease ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parkinson's disease ,Visual perception ,genetic structures ,Short Report ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Visual memory ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Recognition memory ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Memory Disorders ,Dementia with Lewy bodies ,Cognition ,Parkinson Disease ,Recognition, Psychology ,Executive functions ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,nervous system ,Visual Perception ,Surgery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Cognition Disorders - Abstract
To compare cognitive impairments in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD), to discriminate between the two entities.10 DLB and 12 PDD consecutive patients performed a neuropsychological battery designed to assess several cognitive domains: verbal and visual memory (Delayed Matching to Sample (DMS)-48), language, gnosia, praxia and executive functions.DLB patients had poorer performances in orientation (p0.05), Trail Making Test A (p0.05) and reading of names of colours in the Stroop Test (p0.05). Their scores were also lower in the visual object recognition memory test (DMS-48), in both immediate (p0.05) and delayed recognition (p0.05). No differences were observed in the other tests.Despite global similarities in cognitive performances between DLB and PDD patients, we observed important differences: in particular, DMS-48, a test of visual object recognition memory and visual storage capacity, was poorer in DLB patients.
- Published
- 2007
25. Emergent EEG in clinical practice
- Author
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Philippe Corcia, Bertrand de Toffol, Julien Praline, Caroline Hommet, B. Lucas, Jéléna Grujic, and Alain Autret
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Emergency Medical Services ,Adolescent ,Critical Care ,Status epilepticus ,Neurological disorder ,Electroencephalography ,Epilepsy ,Status Epilepticus ,Seizures ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Emergency medical services ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Psychiatry ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Referral and Consultation ,Aged ,Coma ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Wakefulness ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
Objective Emergency situations require a rapid and precise diagnostic approach. However, the exact role and value of the electroencephalogram (EEG) in emergent conditions have yet to be clearly defined. Our objective was to determine why clinicians order an emergency EEG, to assess to what extent it helps establish a correct diagnosis and to evaluate the result it has on subsequent patient management. Methods We studied all successive emergency EEGs ordered during a 3-month period in our institution. We analyzed the reasons why each EEG was ordered and interviewed the prescribing clinicians in order to determine the impact the result of the EEG had on the diagnosis and subsequent therapeutic management. Results We prospectively studied a total of 111 consecutive recordings. The main reasons for ordering an emergent EEG were: suspected cerebral death (21%), non-convulsive status epilepticus (19.7%), subtle status epilepticus (14%) and follow-up of convulsive status epilepticus (11.2%). In 77.5% of the cases the clinicians considered that the EEG contributed to making the diagnosis and that it helped confirm a clinically-suspected diagnosis in 36% of the cases. When subtle status epilepticus (SSE) or non-convulsive status epilepticus (NCSE) was suspected, the diagnosis was confirmed in 45% and 43.3% of the cases, respectively. In 22.2% of the requests involving follow-up of convulsive status epilepticus after initial treatment, the EEG demonstrated persistent status epilepticus. It resulted in a change in patient treatment in 37.8% of all the cases. When the EEG helped establish the diagnosis, patient treatment was subsequently modified in 46.6% of the cases. Conclusions This prospective study confirms the value of an emergent EEG in certain specific clinical contexts: the management of convulsive status epilepticus following initial treatment or to rule out subtle status epilepticus. An emergent EEG can also be ordered if one suspects the existence of non-convulsive status epilepticus when a patient presents with mental confusion or altered wakefulness after first looking for the specific signs suggesting this diagnostic hypothesis. Significance After 50 years of development and use in daily practice, the EEG remains a dependable, inexpensive and useful diagnostic tool in a number of clearly-defined emergency situations.
- Published
- 2006
26. Troubles de l'équilibre et neuropathie associée à une activité sérique anti-Mag
- Author
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Alain Autret, J.P. Renard, Caroline Hommet, P. Corcia, and B. De Toffol
- Subjects
Central nervous system disease ,Myelin ,Peripheral neuropathy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Immunopathology ,Central nervous system ,Gastroenterology ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,business ,Molecular biology - Abstract
Resume Nous rapportons le cas d'un homme de 65 ans atteint d'une neuropathie dysglobulinemique associee a une activite serique anti-Mag. La discussion porte sur l'etiologie centrale (cerebelleuse) ou peripherique (proprioceptive) du trouble de l'equilibre.
- Published
- 1997
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27. Comorbidité psychiatrique au cours des événements non épileptiques : étude rétrospective dans un centre de vidéo-EEG
- Author
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W. El Hage, B. de Toffol, Philippe Gaillard, Karl Mondon, Julien Praline, C. Receveur, Alain Autret, Université de Tours, Imagerie et cerveau (iBrain - Inserm U1253 - UNIV Tours ), Université de Tours-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Université de Tours (UT), Université de Tours (UT)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), El-Hage, Wissam, and Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université de Tours (UT)
- Subjects
03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neurology ,[SDV.MHEP.PSM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Psychiatrics and mental health ,[SDV.MHEP.PSM] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Psychiatrics and mental health ,Neurology (clinical) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,030227 psychiatry - Abstract
Resume Introduction Les evenements non epileptiques (ENE) regroupent un ensemble de manifestations comportementales paroxystiques qui peuvent evoquer un diagnostic de crise d’epilepsie, mais qui ne s’accompagnent pas d’anomalies concomitantes sur l’electroencephalogramme. L’origine retenue est primitivement psychologique. Patients et methodes Nous rapportons les resultats d’une etude retrospective precisant le diagnostic des troubles mentaux portes par les psychiatres chez des patients (n = 37) suspects d’ENE, ayant eu un enregistrement video-EEG dans notre laboratoire. Resultats Suivant l’axe I du DSM-IV, 70 p. 100 des patients avaient au moins un trouble mental caracterise au moment de leur evaluation. Les diagnostics retenus etaient, par ordre decroissant de frequence, les etats de stress post-traumatique, les autres troubles anxieux, les troubles somatoformes, les troubles dissociatifs, les troubles de l’humeur. Conclusion La forte association des ENE avec la pathologie psychotraumatique est discutee. Les resultats de cette etude plaident en faveur d’une prise en charge systematique de la comorbidite psychiatrique.
- Published
- 2005
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28. Atypical language impairment in two siblings: relationship with electrical status epilepticus during slow wave sleep
- Author
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M.-A. Barthez, Séverine Debiais, Alain Autret, Julien Praline, Bertrand de Toffol, Anne-Gaëlle Piller, Caroline Hommet, B. Lucas, Catherine Billard, Pierre Castelnau, and Brigitte De Becque
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Writing ,Neurological disorder ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Speech Disorders ,Developmental psychology ,Dyslexia ,Epilepsy ,Status Epilepticus ,Communication disorder ,Orientation ,medicine ,Humans ,Language disorder ,Language Development Disorders ,Sibling ,Child ,Slow-wave sleep ,Psychomotor learning ,Learning Disabilities ,Siblings ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Temporal Lobe ,Sleep Disorders, Intrinsic ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Epilepsy, Tonic-Clonic ,Psychomotor Disorders ,Psychology ,Sleep - Abstract
We report the case of a young girl who presented severe learning disabilities in oral and written language related to a continuous spike-waves during slow sleep (CSWS) syndrome. A sleep EEG recording obtained in her younger brother, who presented a clinical pattern suggesting developmental dysphasia, also showed a CSWS syndrome. These two clinical cases underscore the need to look for this syndrome in the siblings of an affected child when learning difficulties appear in a child who previously had normal psychomotor development.
- Published
- 2005
29. A spinal cord intravascular lymphomatosis with exceptionally good outcome
- Author
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Jean-Philippe Cottier, Christophe Destrieux, B. de Toffol, Séverine Debiais, F. Arbion, I. Bonnaud, Lotfi Benboubker, Alain Autret, and D. Saudeau
- Subjects
Central Nervous System ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lumen (anatomy) ,Vascular occlusion ,Methylprednisolone ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Dysuria ,Humans ,Spinal Cord Neoplasms ,Aged ,Teniposide ,Paraplegia ,business.industry ,Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin ,Hypoesthesia ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord ,Carmustine ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hypotonia ,Lymphoma ,Capillaries ,Conus medullaris ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Methotrexate ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Intravascular lymphomatosis (IVL) is a rare form of high-grade malignant non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, characterized by the proliferation of neoplastic lymphoid cells within the lumen of small-caliber blood vessels, producing localized vascular occlusion. CNS involvement is found in 75 to 85% of cases.1,2⇓ The clinical presentation is variable and can mimic other neurologic conditions.3 We report a patient with IVL presenting with an isolated, rapidly progressive spinal cord syndrome. A 71-year-old retired woman was admitted because of rapidly progressive paraparesis, accompanied by dysuria and urinary incontinence. At admission, neurologic examination revealed paraparesis with a pyramidal syndrome, T12 hypoesthesia, and anal hypotonia. The rest of the examination was normal. Laboratory studies showed an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein. Spinal MRI revealed an increase in the size of the conus medullaris and a high signal in T2-weighted sequences. There was no gadolinium enhancement in T1-weighted sequences. Spinal ischemia was diagnosed. Cardiac and aortic ultrasonography were normal and a spinal arteriography …
- Published
- 2004
30. Night terrors associated with thalamic lesions
- Author
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Fabio Sebastiano, Addolorata Mascia, Alain Autret, Pier Paolo Quarato, Giancarlo Di Gennaro, and Paolo Onorati
- Subjects
Night Terrors ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polysomnography ,Thalamus ,Neurological disorder ,Arousal ,Thalamic Diseases ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Circadian rhythm ,Slow-wave sleep ,Sleep disorder ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Sensory Systems ,Surgery ,Neurology ,Cardiology ,Female ,Television ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sleep Stages ,Psychology ,Sleep - Abstract
Objective : To describe a case with night terrors (NT) symptomatic of a thalamic lesion. Methods : Videopolysomnography and brain MRI were used to study a 48 year old woman with a recent onset of brief episodes, occurring exclusively during nocturnal sleep, where she suddenly sat up in bed, screamed and appeared to be very frightened. Results : Videopolysomnography recorded an episode suggestive of NT. Sleep fragmentation with frequent brief arousals or microarousals was also evident mainly during slow wave sleep. The brain MRI showed increased T2 signal from the right thalamus suggestive of a low-grade tumor. Conclusions : Our case suggests that NT starting in adulthood can, rarely, be symptomatic of neurological disease, and warrant further investigation with MRI. Significance: A thalamic dysfunction, disrupting at this level the arousal system, may play a role in provoking NT.
- Published
- 2004
31. Recurrence of spontaneous subdural haematoma revealing acquired haemophilia
- Author
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I. Bonnaud, Alain Autret, Bertrand de Toffol, and D. Saudeau
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Subdural haematoma ,Factor VIIa ,medicine.disease ,Hemophilia A ,Surgery ,Central nervous system disease ,Hematoma ,Hematoma, Subdural ,Neurology ,Recurrence ,Acquired haemophilia ,medicine ,Etiology ,Coagulopathy ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Aged - Published
- 2003
32. Ictal bradycardia followed by cardiac asystole: a case report
- Author
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Karl, Mondon, Bernard, Charbonnier, Caroline, Hommet, Philippe, Corcia, Alain, Autret, and Bertrand, de Toffol
- Subjects
Male ,Electrocardiography ,Pacemaker, Artificial ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,Seizures ,Bradycardia ,Hemodynamics ,Humans ,Electroencephalography ,Middle Aged ,Heart Arrest - Abstract
We report on a patient with a 30-year history of left temporal lobe epilepsy who presented with ictal bradycardia followed by cardiac asystole. The EEG during the ictal period was documented and analyzed. Clinical features and therapeutic considerations are discussed.
- Published
- 2003
33. Sleep and brain lesions: a critical review of the literature and additional new cases
- Author
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Alain Autret, B. de Toffol, Ph Corcia, Karl Mondon, Caroline Hommet, B. Lucas, and D. Saudeau
- Subjects
Sleep Wake Disorders ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Neurology ,Polysomnography ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Physiology (medical) ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Insomnia ,Animals ,Humans ,Sleep disorder ,Brain Diseases ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Modafinil ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Stroke ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,K-complex ,Sleep ,Neuroscience ,Narcolepsy ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We present a comprehensive review of sleep studies performed in patients with brain lesions complemented by 16 additional personal selected cases and by discussion of the corresponding animal data. The reader is cautioned about the risk of establishing an erroneous correlation between abnormal sleep and a given disorder due to the important inter and intra variability of sleep parameters among individuals. Salient points are stressed : the high frequency of post-stroke sleep breathing disorders is becoming increasingly recognised and may, in the near future, change the way this condition is managed. Meso-diencephalic bilateral infarcts induce a variable degree of damage to both waking and non-REM sleep networks producing and abnormal waking and sometimes a stage 1 hypersomnia reduced by modafinil or bromocriptine, which can be considered as a syndrome of cathecholaminergic deficiency. Central pontine lesions induce REM and non-REM sleep insomnia with bilateral lateral gaze paralysis. Bulbar stroke leads to frequent sleep breathing disorders. Polysomnography can help define the extent of involvement of various degenerative diseases. Fragmented sleep in Parkinson’s disease may be preceded by REM sleep behavioural disorders. Multiple system atrophies are characterised by important sleep disorganisation. Sleep waking disorganisation and a specific ocular REM pattern are often seen in supra-nuclear ophtalmoplegia. In Alzheimer patients, sleep perturbations parallel the mental deterioration and are possibly related to cholinergic deficiency. Fronto-temporal dementia may be associated with an important decrease in REM sleep. Few narcoleptic syndromes are reported to be associated with a tumour of the third ventricle or a multiple sclerosis or to follow a brain trauma ; all these cases raise the question whether this is a simple coincidence, a revelation of a latent narcolepsy or, as in non- DR16 /DQ5 patients, a genuine symptomatic narcolepsy. Trypanosomiasis and the abnormal prion protein precociously alter sleep patterns. Polysomnography is a precious tool for evaluating brain function provided it is realised under optimal conditions in stable patients and interpreted with caution. Several unpublished cases are presented: one case of pseudohypersomnia due to a bilateral thalamic infarct and corrected by modafinil, four probable late-onset autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxias without sleep pattern anomalies, six cases of fronto-temporal dementia with strong reduction in total sleep time and REMS percentage on the first polysomnographic night, one case of periodic hypersomnia associated with a Rathke’s cleft cyst and four cases of suspected symptomatic narcolepsy with a DR16-DQ5 haplotype, three of which were post-traumatic without MRI anomalies, and one associated with multiple sclerosis exhibiting pontine hyper signals on MRI.
- Published
- 2002
34. Severe toxic neuropathy due to fibrates
- Author
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A P Jonville-Bera, P. Corcia, Alain Autret, B. De Toffol, and Caroline Hommet
- Subjects
medicine.drug_class ,Biopsy ,Neural Conduction ,Fibrate ,Pharmacology ,Coronary artery disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical history ,Adverse effect ,Letters to the Editor ,Molecular Biology ,Neurologic Examination ,Fenofibrate ,business.industry ,Peripheral Nervous System Diseases ,medicine.disease ,Atenolol ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Blood pressure ,Anesthesia ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Isosorbide dinitrate ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The main adverse effects of lipid lowering agents in the fibrate family involve the gut, the skin, the liver, the blood, and the muscular system. Some of these complications are more frequent when renal failure exists.1 Here we report a case of neuropathy secondary to long term treatment with fenofibrate in a patient without renal failure taking recommended doses. A 60 year old man was seen in September 1996 complaining of leg pain for 6 months. His relevant medical history included coronary artery disease treated for 10 years with 6 mg molsidomine/ day and 60 mg isosorbide dinitrate/ day, high blood pressure and hyperlipidaemia treated respectively with 100 mg atenolol/ day and 200 mg fenofibrate/day for the past …
- Published
- 1999
35. COGNITIVE SYNDROME OF THE THALAMUS: A MISLEADING DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
- Author
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Alain Autret, Karl Mondon, Emilie Beaufils, Danièle Perrier, Bertrand de Toffol, Thierry Constans, and Caroline Hommet
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Thalamus ,Medicine ,Cognition ,Disease ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Differential diagnosis ,business ,Psychiatry - Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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36. Abrupt onset of disturbed vigilance, bilateral third nerve palsy and masturbating behaviour: a rare presentation of stroke
- Author
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Karl Mondon, D. Saudeau, Paul Brunault, I. Bonnaud, Alain Autret, Bertrand de Toffol, and Séverine Debiais
- Subjects
Brain Infarction ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Nerve palsy ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Emergency Casebook ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Thalamus ,Mesencephalon ,Oculomotor Nerve Diseases ,Humans ,Medicine ,media_common ,business.industry ,Cranial nerves ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Masturbation ,Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological ,Anesthesia ,Emergency Medicine ,Abrupt onset ,Female ,Arousal ,business ,Vigilance (psychology) - Abstract
The clinical presentation of stroke usually includes sensory–motor impairment, cranial nerve palsies, or cognitive dysfunction. Disorders in behaviour are less frequently seen. The case of a patient with a very disturbing presentation, which included a disturbance in vigilance, bilateral third nerve palsy and masturbating behaviour, is presented. The topography of the lesions and its implications on the deficits observed are discussed.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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37. Internal Carotid Artery Dissection after Tonsillectomy in an Adult Woman
- Author
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Bertrand de Toffol, D. Saudeau, Karl Mondon, Alain Autret, Séverine Debiais, Jean-Philippe Cottier, and I. Bonnaud
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Internal carotid artery dissection ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,Carotid Artery, Internal, Dissection ,Middle Aged ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cerebral Angiography ,Tonsillectomy ,Surgery ,Neurology ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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38. Bilateral olivary hypertrophy and palatal myoclonus
- Author
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Caroline Hommet, Alain Autret, Jean-Philippe Cottier, and Bertrand de Toffol
- Subjects
Male ,Myoclonus ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurological disorder ,Olivary Nucleus ,Muscle hypertrophy ,Diagnosis, Differential ,medicine ,Humans ,Palatal myoclonus ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Brain Neoplasms ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Anatomy ,Hypertrophy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Olivary hypertrophy ,Brainstem ,medicine.symptom ,Differential diagnosis ,Palate, Soft ,business ,Brain Stem - Abstract
We report on a case of palatal myoclonus associated with olivary hypertrophy on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a 63-year-old man. This rare radiological finding must be differentiated from a brainstem tumor.
- Published
- 1998
39. Sleep and the epilepsies
- Author
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Caroline Hommet, B. Lucas, B. de Toffol, P. Corcia, and Alain Autret
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Epilepsy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Neuropsychology ,medicine.disease ,Stereoelectroencephalography ,Rolandic epilepsy ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,K-complex ,Psychology ,Sleep ,Vigilance (psychology) ,media_common ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
To review the numerous works concerning sleep and epilepsy, this review considers the effects of sleep, firstly on seizures and secondly on paroxysmal interictal EEG activity (PA), in the different types of epilepsy according to the International League against Epilepsy classification. Apart from the exceptions of the definite nocturnal preponderance of seizures in idiopathic rolandic epilepsy and of the mostly nocturnal occurrence of seizures in some types of familial or sporadic frontal-lobe epilepsy, assessing a seizure according to the time of day it occurs is of no diagnostic or predictive value. In generalised idiopathic epilepsy, as in partial symptomatic or cryptogenic epilepsy, only about 20% of the patients had a sleep increase in PA. This percentage is higher (75%) in idiopathic partial epilepsy. Stereoelectroencephalography demonstrates a relative stability of spiking within the focus across the states of vigilance and an increase in transmitted discharges during stages 3 and 4. In the Landau and Kleffner syndrome, as in the syndromes of continuous spike-waves during sleep, there is a huge, unexplained increase in PA during sleep. The neuropsychological consequences of this PA have some relationship with their localisation and the patient's age at the time of occurrence. Sleep PA has also been reported in several groups of non-epileptic subjects. As regards the effect of epilepsy on sleep, sleep may be lighter and abnormally discontinuous in the absence of seizures, particularly in temporal-lobe epilepsy.
- Published
- 1997
40. Sleep and neurological diseases
- Author
-
Alain Autret
- Subjects
Sleep disorder ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nervous System Diseases ,business ,Psychiatry ,Sleep ,Neuroradiology - Published
- 1997
41. Paraneoplastic opsoclonus associated with cancer of the gall bladder
- Author
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D. Saudeau, B. De Toffol, Caroline Hommet, Alain Autret, and P. Corcia
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fatal outcome ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Opsoclonus ,medicine.disease ,Hemangioma ,Ocular Motility Disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine ,Adenocarcinoma ,Gall ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Gallbladder Neoplasm ,business ,Research Article - Published
- 1997
42. Migraine and angina pectoris by coronary artery spasm
- Author
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Christian Even, Bertrand de Toffol, Catherine Lafitte, Francoise Henry-Lebras, and Alain Autret
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Chest Pain ,Migraine Disorders ,Coronary Vasospasm ,Chest pain ,Angina Pectoris ,Angina ,Central nervous system disease ,Electrocardiography ,medicine ,Humans ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Migraine ,Anesthesia ,Coronary vasospasm ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Artery - Abstract
A migrainous patient who experienced chest pain attributed to angina pectoris by coronary artery spasm during a migraine attack is reported. Previous reports have already mentioned the association of these two conditions and suggested that it might be the manifestation of a generalized vasospastic disorder. This new report offers an opportunity to review and discuss the available data on such an association.
- Published
- 1996
43. Subject Index Vol. 49, 2003
- Author
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K. Van Laere, Moshe Nussinovitch, M. Gioulis, J. De Reuck, T. Takeshima, Branca Perunovic, B. Rossillion, F. Romi, A. Bava, R.M. Antonello, G. Cazzato, Rainer Dziewas, P. Torre, M. Kusumi, Jacob Amir, Giovanni B. Frisoni, P. Santens, Samantha Galluzzi, Florian Stögbauer, K. Ishizaki, P.R. Burkhard, Daniella Harel, L. Capus, Felix Schlachetzki, Bertrand de Toffol, Gerhard F. Hamann, Petra Milz, Y. Adachi, Frank Winkler, Markus Müller, Cristina Geroldi, F. Sakai, S. Zambito Marsala, S. Gallati, Malcolm J. Campbell, K. Nakashima, T. de Corte, Denis Saudeau, Joachim Velden, Isabelle Bonnaud, Tali Eidlitz-Markus, R. Dierckx, J.E. Varhaug, F. Tezzon, Henry Houlden, Anousha Rahimi, J.-M. Burgunder, R. Sztajzel, Cristina Testa, R. Nardone, F. Joncourt, L. Chen, Samden D. Lhatoo, A. Myking, T. Landis, M. Sinnreich, H. Kowa, Martin A. Ritter, J.A. Aarli, Christof Klötzsch, Orazio Zanetti, N.E. Gilhus, Benjamin Volovitz, Klaus Seelos, Alain Autret, D. Lang, Erwin Stolz, X.W. Ran, Peter Lüdemann, Dirk W. Droste, R. Moretti, G. Vingerhoets, Seth Love, and Michael Freund
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Index (economics) ,Neurology ,Subject (documents) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Contents Vol. 49, 2003
- Author
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Petra Milz, F. Tezzon, H. Kowa, S. Zambito Marsala, X.W. Ran, Moshe Nussinovitch, Erwin Stolz, Orazio Zanetti, Dirk W. Droste, S. Gallati, M. Gioulis, F. Sakai, Seth Love, B. Rossillion, J.-M. Burgunder, K. Nakashima, Joachim Velden, L. Chen, Christof Klötzsch, Florian Stögbauer, L. Capus, T. de Corte, Giovanni B. Frisoni, Isabelle Bonnaud, Denis Saudeau, M. Kusumi, Gerhard F. Hamann, Anousha Rahimi, Malcolm J. Campbell, Rainer Dziewas, M. Sinnreich, A. Bava, G. Cazzato, R. Sztajzel, Frank Winkler, F. Joncourt, T. Takeshima, Markus Müller, N.E. Gilhus, Cristina Testa, R. Nardone, Tali Eidlitz-Markus, R. Moretti, G. Vingerhoets, D. Lang, K. Ishizaki, R.M. Antonello, A. Myking, F. Romi, Jacob Amir, K. Van Laere, Alain Autret, T. Landis, P.R. Burkhard, Felix Schlachetzki, Samden D. Lhatoo, J. De Reuck, Martin A. Ritter, Cristina Geroldi, Bertrand de Toffol, P. Torre, Branca Perunovic, J.A. Aarli, Daniella Harel, Michael Freund, Henry Houlden, Benjamin Volovitz, Klaus Seelos, R. Dierckx, Y. Adachi, Peter Lüdemann, P. Santens, Samantha Galluzzi, and J.E. Varhaug
- Subjects
Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. La biocéramique fait-elle mieux dormir ?
- Author
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V. Roubeau, H. Salhi, Nadège Limousin, B. Lucas, Alain Autret, and Philippe Bertrand
- Subjects
Behavioral Neuroscience ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Physiology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Transient global amnesia caused by painless aortic dissection
- Author
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Alain Autret, Claire Bléchet, D Elaroussi, Karl Mondon, B De Toffol, A. Gochard, Caroline Hommet, and Franck Fetissof
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Amnesia ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Article ,Death, Sudden ,Emergency Casebook ,Aneurysm ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Stroke ,Aged ,Aortic dissection ,Cerebral infarction ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Amnesia, Anterograde ,medicine.disease ,Aortic Aneurysm ,Surgery ,Aortic Dissection ,Cardiothoracic surgery ,Acute Disease ,Emergency Medicine ,Cardiology ,cardiovascular system ,Transient global amnesia ,Female ,Emergencies ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Neurological syndromes secondary to acute aortic dissection (AAD) are uncommon and usually consist of focal deficits after an embolic cerebral infarction. This article reports the observation of an AAD with the chief complaint of transient acute memory impairment—that is, a non‐usual stroke‐like symptom.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Influence of lateralized neuropsychological activities with and without sensorimotor components on EEG spectral power (alpha-rhythm)
- Author
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Alain Autret and B. de Toffol
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Handwriting ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,Lateralization of brain function ,Functional Laterality ,Rhythm ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Neuropsychology ,Cognition ,Neurophysiology ,Electrophysiology ,Alpha Rhythm ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Laterality ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Spectral analysis of the EEG (∝-rhythm) was studied in 8 young right-handed men who underwent 6 experimental tasks which were compared with rest, and included two pure motor activities using only the right and then the left hand, two pure neuropsychological tasks, and two “mixed” tasks with both neurophysiological and motor activities. The electrophysiological parameters studied were the log of spectral power and an asymmetry index (RP-LP)/(RP + LP). In order to demonstrate lateralization of the EEG, one must associate lateralized motor and neuropsychological tasks (which are supposed to preferentially involve one of the cerebral hemispheres). These results may reconcile apparently divergent views published in the literature with respect to lateralized EEG modifications associated with cognitive activities.
- Published
- 1991
48. Two mesencephalic lacunar infarcts presenting as Claude's syndrome and pure motor hemiparesis
- Author
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Alain Autret, B. De Toffol, Bertrand Gaymard, D. Saudeau, and P Larmande
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Red nucleus ,Pyramidal Tracts ,Hemiplegia ,Lesion ,Midbrain ,Mesencephalon ,medicine ,Oculomotor Nerve Diseases ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Red Nucleus ,Cerebral infarction ,business.industry ,Cerebral peduncle ,Claude's syndrome ,Anatomy ,Cerebral Infarction ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Lacunar Infarcts ,Hemiparesis ,Neurology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Two exceptional cases of mesencephalic lacunar infarcts located both in the anterior vascular territory are reported. In patient 1, the infarct selectively involved the red nucleus, thus resulting in a Claude’s syndrome. In patient 2, the lesion was limited to the external 2/3 of the cerebral peduncle, and was responsible for a pure motor hemiplegia (PMH). CT scan easily demonstrated the lesion in both cases. Claude’s syndrome is very unusual, and PMH has only been reported once before in a mesencephalic infarct. The reasons why these lesions are so uncommon are discussed.
- Published
- 1991
49. Are frequent spike-waves during non-REM sleep in relation with an acquired neuro-psychological deficit in epileptic children?
- Author
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J.J. Santini, Catherine Billard, B. Lucas, B de Toffol, Alain Autret, P. Gillet, and E. Degiovanni
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Intelligence ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Developmental psychology ,Epilepsy ,Physiology (medical) ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Child ,education.field_of_study ,Mental deterioration ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Neuropsychology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,El Niño ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Sleep - Abstract
Summary In a population of 11 children with frequent spike waves during non REM sleep who had no neurological symptoms between birth and their first symptom, 3 groups were compared according to their neuropsychological performances. In the first group, the children had no intellectual deficit, in the second group, they had an acquired aphasia as in the Landau — Kleffner syndrome and in the third they had severe behavioural disorder and mental deterioration. The non REM sleep paroxystic activity density tended to be highest in the third group, variable in the second group and moderate in the first group, and their topography was always generalized in the acute phase in groups II and III but asymmetrical in group I. The EEG anomalies disappeared during adolescence but in group II and III children a moderate to severe delay in school work persisted.
- Published
- 1990
50. The influence of vigilance states on paroxysmal EEG activities and clinical seizures in children
- Author
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S. Markabi, B. Lucas, E. Degiovanni, B. De Toffol, Catherine Billard, Philippe Bertrand, J.J. Santini, and Alain Autret
- Subjects
Childhood epilepsy ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Statistics as Topic ,Sleep, REM ,Nocturnal seizures ,Electroencephalography ,Epilepsy ,Seizures ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Partial epilepsy ,media_common ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Paroxysmal dyskinesia ,medicine.disease ,Anesthesia ,Child, Preschool ,Benign epilepsy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Epilepsies, Partial ,business ,Vigilance (psychology) - Abstract
We studied the relationships between clinical variables and those related to the states of vigilance in 18 cases of benign partial epilepsy with centro-temporal spike-waves, 22 cases of definite symptomatic partial epilepsy, and 16 cases of undetermined partial epilepsy. The time of day during which the seizures appeared and the paroxysmal activity densities during non-REM and REM sleep are not distributed differently among the 3 electro-clinical types. However, the benign epilepsy with centro-temporal spikes group had more patients with sleep-sensitive paroxysmal activities. Patients who mainly had nocturnal seizures were found to have more frequent generalized seizures and a greater sleep-sensitive paroxysmal activity. Three cases demonstrated continuous spike-waves during sleep. The patients who had little or no paroxysmal activity during sleep were the youngest. This study illustrates that sleep-sensitive seizures and paroxysmal activities are not specific to benign childhood epilepsy with centro-temporal spikes, and that seizures and paroxysmal activities are two manifestations associated with epilepsy, affected in different ways by states of vigilance.
- Published
- 1990
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