42 results on '"Baude, M."'
Search Results
2. Ten‐a‐day: Bumblebee pollen loads reveal high consistency in foraging breadth among species, sites and seasons.
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Timberlake, T. P., de Vere, N., Jones, L. E., Vaughan, I. P., Baude, M., and Memmott, J.
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- 2024
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3. Intensité et rééducation motrice dans la parésie spastique
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Meimoun, M., Bayle, N., Baude, M., and Gracies, J.-M.
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- 2015
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4. Massively Introduced Managed Species and Their Consequences for Plant–Pollinator Interactions
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Geslin, B., primary, Gauzens, B., additional, Baude, M., additional, Dajoz, I., additional, Fontaine, C., additional, Henry, M., additional, Ropars, L., additional, Rollin, O., additional, Thébault, E., additional, and Vereecken, N.J., additional
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- 2017
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5. Landscape scale drivers of pollinator communities may depend on land use configuration
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Gillespie, MAK, Baude, M, Biesmeijer, J, Boatman, N, Budge, GE, Crowe, A, Davies, N, Evans, R, Memmott, J, Morton, RD, Moss, E, Murphy, M, Pietravalle, S, Potts, SG, Roberts, SPM, Rowland, C, Senapathi, D, Smart, SM, Wood, C, and Kunin, WE
- Abstract
Research into pollinators in managed landscapes has recently combined approaches of pollination- and landscape ecology, because key stressors are likely to interact across wide areas. While laboratory and field experiments are valuable for furthering understanding, studies are required to investigate the interacting drivers of pollinator health and diversity across a broader range of landscapes and a wider array of taxa. Here we use a network of 96 study landscapes in six topographically diverse regions of Britain, to test the combined importance of honey bee density, insecticide loadings, floral resource availability, and habitat diversity to pollinator communities. We also explore the interactions between these drivers and the cover and proximity of semi-natural habitat. We found that among our four drivers, only honey bee density was positively related to wild pollinator abundance and diversity, and the positive association between abundance and floral resources depended on insecticide loadings and habitat diversity. By contrast, our exploratory models including habitat composition metrics revealed a complex suite of interactive effects. These results demonstrate that improving pollinator community composition and health is unlikely to be achieved with general resource enhancements only. Rather, local land-use context should be considered in fine-tuning pollinator management and conservation.
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- 2022
6. Degree of praxis of command for facial muscles in healthy individuals to develop a new clinical scale for facial motor function in peripheral facial paresis
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Baude, M., primary, Lagnau, P., additional, Gault-Colas, C., additional, and Gracies, J.M., additional
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- 2018
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7. Threats to an ecosystem service: pressures on pollinators
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Vanbergen, AJ, Baude, M, Biesmeijer, JC, Britton, NF, Brown, MJF, Bryden, J, Budge, GE, Bull, JC, Carvell, C, Challinor, AJ, Connolly, CN, Evans, DJ, Feil, EJ, Garratt, MP, Greco, MK, Heard, MS, Jansen, VAA, Keeling, MJ, Kunin, WE, Marris, GC, Memmott, J, Murray, JT, Nicolson, SW, Osborne, JL, Paxton, RJ, Pirk, CWW, Polce, C, Potts, SG, Priest, NK, Raine, NE, Roberts, S, Ryabov, EV, Shafir, S, Shirley, MDF, Simpson, SJ, Stevenson, PC, Stone, GN, Termansen, M, and Wright, GA
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fungi - Abstract
Insect pollinators of crops and wild plants are under threat globally and their decline or loss could have profound economic and environmental consequences. Here, we argue that multiple anthropogenic pressures – including land-use intensification, climate change, and the spread of alien species and diseases – are primarily responsible for insect-pollinator declines. We show that a complex interplay between pressures (eg lack of food sources, diseases, and pesticides) and biological processes (eg species dispersal and interactions) at a range of scales (from genes to ecosystems) underpins the general decline in insect-pollinator populations. Interdisciplinary research on the nature and impacts of these interactions will be needed if human food security and ecosystem function are to be preserved. We highlight key areas that require research focus and outline some practical steps to alleviate the pressures on pollinators and the pollination services they deliver to wild and crop plants.
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- 2013
8. Comparative shortening of different muscles in patients with chronic hemiparesis treated in guided self-rehabilitation contracts
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Bignami, B., primary, Baude, M., additional, Vielotte, J., additional, Loche, C.M., additional, Colas, C., additional, Pradines, M., additional, and Gracies, J.M., additional
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- 2015
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9. Daily static and eccentric self-stretching program and changes in muscle functional length in chronic spastic paresis after one year of Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract's practice
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Pradines, M., primary, Baude, M., additional, Mardale, V., additional, Hutin, E., additional, and Gracies, J.M., additional
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- 2015
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10. Intra- and inter-raters reliabilities of a stepped clinical assessment of chronic spastic paresis in adults
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Baude, M., primary, Loche, C.M., additional, Gault-Colas, C., additional, Pradines, M., additional, and Gracies, J.M., additional
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- 2015
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11. A bidimensional system of facial movement analysis: Conception and validation
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Baude, M., primary, Hutin, E., additional, and Gracies, J.M., additional
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- 2014
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12. Validation of the maximal frequency of small rapid alternating movements as a marker of functional impairment from upper limb tremor
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Mardale, V., primary, Benhegar, A., additional, Baude, M., additional, and Gracies, J.-M., additional
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- 2012
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13. Programme d’autorééducation en séries fatigantes de contractions maximales dans la parésie faciale périphérique chronique
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Baude, M., primary, Hutin, E., additional, Behnegar, A., additional, and Gracies, J.-M., additional
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- 2012
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14. Validation de la fréquence maximale de petits mouvements alternatifs comme marqueur du retentissement fonctionnel du tremblement hypermétrique du membre supérieur
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Mardale, V., primary, Benhegar, A., additional, Baude, M., additional, and Gracies, J.-M., additional
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- 2012
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15. Self-rehabilitation program of fatiguing series of maximal contraction exercises in chronic peripheral facial paresis
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Baude, M., primary, Hutin, E., additional, Behnegar, A., additional, and Gracies, J.-M., additional
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- 2012
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16. Chapter Four - Massively Introduced Managed Species and Their Consequences for Plant-Pollinator Interactions.
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Geslin, B., Gauzens, B., Baude, M., Dajoz, I., Fontaine, C., Henry, M., Ropars, L., Rollin, O., Thébault, E., and Vereecken, N. J.
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POLLINATION , *PLANT species , *ANIMAL species , *MUTUALISM (Biology) , *BIOLOGICAL invasions - Abstract
Since the rise of agriculture, human populations have domesticated plant and animal species to fulfil their needs. With modern agriculture, a limited number of these species has been massively produced over large areas at high local densities. Like invasive species, these Massively Introduced Managed Species (MIMS) integrate local communities and can trigger cascading effects on the structure and functioning of ecosystems. Here, we focus on plant and insect MIMS in the context of plant-pollinator systems. Several crop species such as mass flowering crops (e.g. Brassica napus) and domesticated pollinating insects (e.g. Apis mellifera, Bombus terrestris) have been increasingly introduced worldwide and their impact on natural communities is addressed by an increasing number of scientific studies. First, we review the impacts of major insect and plant MIMS on natural communities by identifying how they affect other species through competition (direct and apparent competition) or facilitation (attraction, spillover). Second, we show how MIMS can alter the structure of plant-pollinator networks. We specifically analysed the position of A. mellifera from 63 published plant-pollinator webs to illustrate that MIMS can occupy a central position in the networks, leading to functional consequences. Finally, we present the features of MIMS in sensitive environments ranging from oceanic islands to protected areas, as a basis to discuss the impacts of MIMS in urban context and agrosystems. Through the case study of MIMS in plant-pollinator interactions, we thus provide here a first perspective of the role of MIMS in the functioning of ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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17. Does spastic myopathy determine active movement and ambulation speed in chronic spastic paresis?-A cross-sectional study on plantar flexors.
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Pradines M, Jabouille F, Fontenas E, Baba Aissa I, Gault-Colas C, Baude M, Guihard M, Gros K, and Gracies JM
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Aged, Muscle Spasticity physiopathology, Chronic Disease, Stroke physiopathology, Stroke complications, Torque, Biomechanical Phenomena, Range of Motion, Articular, Muscle, Skeletal physiopathology, Muscle, Skeletal diagnostic imaging, Paresis physiopathology, Walking Speed physiology
- Abstract
Background: Functional correlates of spastic myopathy, the muscle disorder of spastic paresis, are unknown., Objective: To explore reciprocal relationships between clinical and structural parameters of plantar flexors with i) ambulation speed, ii) dorsiflexion and plantarflexion torques in chronic hemiparesis., Methods: Cross-sectional trial in chronic stroke-induced hemiparesis (>6 months). Plantar flexors were quantified through i) the Five Step Assessment: maximal extensibility (XV1), active range of dorsiflexion (XA); ii) ultrasonography: fascicle length (Lf) and thickness (Th) of medial gastrocnemius (GAS) and soleus (SOL), knee extended in an isokinetic ergometer, ankle at 80% XV1-GAS. Maximal isometric torques in plantar flexion (PF) and dorsiflexion (DF) and maximal barefoot 10-meter ambulation speed were collected. Relationships between structural, biomechanical, clinical and functional parameters were explored using non-parametric testing (Spearman)., Results: Twenty-one subjects (age 58.0±8.4, mean±SD, time since lesion 7.8±5.7 years) were recruited, with the following characteristics: ambulation speed, 0.77±0.37m/sec; XV1-SOL 92.7±10.3°; XV1-GAS 91.3±9.6°; XA-SOL 86.9±10.0°; XA-GAS 7676±14.2°; LfGAS, 58.2±18.3mm; ThGAS, 17.1±3.6 mm; LfSOL, 36.0±9.6 mm; ThSOL, 13.8±3.3mm; PF peak-torque 46.5±34.1Nm, DF peak-torque, 20.1±19.1Nm. XA-SOL and XA-GAS strongly correlated with XV1-SOL and XV1-GAS respectively (ρ = 0.74, p = 4E-04; resp ρ = 0.60, p = 0.0052). Ambulation speed moderately correlated with LfGAS (ρ = 0.51, p = 0.054), ThGAS (ρ = 0.58, p = 0.02) and LfSOL (ρ = 0.63, p = 0.009). DF and PF peak-torques both correlated with LfGAS (ρ = 0.53, p = 0.04) a; resp. ρ = 0.71, p = 0.0015)., Conclusion: In chronic hemiparesis, active dorsiflexion is mostly determined by plantar flexor extensibility. Plantar flexor fascicle shortening is associated with reduced ambulation speed and ankle torques. Attempts to restore plantar flexor extensibility might be important objectives for gait rehabilitation in chronic hemiparesis., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Pradines 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.)
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- 2024
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18. Exceptional improvement in chronic stroke through Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract: a case report study.
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Gault-Colas C, Pradines M, Baude M, and Gracies JM
- Abstract
A 44-year-old woman suffered a carotid dissection causing a deep and superficial right middle cerebral artery stroke in October 2013, despite undergoing thrombolysis and thrombectomy. Sixteen months later, massive left upper extremity impairment persisted. She then agreed to embark upon a guided self-rehabilitation contract (GSC). This GSC is a moral contract where the physician or therapist identifies specific muscles, particularly hypo-extensible and disabling that act as antagonists to functional activities. The physician or therapist then teaches and prescribes quantified daily high-load self-stretch postures for these muscles, alternating with repeated maximal amplitude movement exercises against their resistance. In turn, the patient commits to practicing the prescribed program and to delivering a diary of the stretch postures and alternating movement exercises performed each day. Over 4 years of GSC, the patient practiced upon prescription against a total of seven upper limb antagonists to common functional movements: shoulder extensors, shoulder internal rotators, elbow flexors, elbow pronators, wrist and finger flexors, and interossei muscles. She manually filled up her diary 99% of the days. Each day, she practiced an average of 20 min of high-load static self-stretch per muscle, alternating with about 50 maximal active efforts against the resistance of each targeted muscle's resistance. Overall, her mean static self-stretch time was 81 ± 2 (mean ± SEM) min/day, and her mean number of active maximal efforts was 285 ± 78/day, for a total daily self-rehabilitation time of over 2 h a day. Five years after her stroke, she had recovered all left upper extremity use in daily activities and resumed her previous job as a nurse's aide. She now spontaneously uses her left hand in most tasks. Functional MRI (March 2020) demonstrated bilateral primary motor and motor supplementary area activation upon left-hand exercise. Prolonged static self-stretch increased muscle extensibility (muscle plasticity) while maximal amplitude, alternating movement training reduced co-contraction in these muscles (neural plasticity). The Modified Frenchay Scale assessment was video-recorded by the clinician at each visit, allowing qualitative and quantitative evaluation of the functional capacities. The two videos of the first and last clinic visits have been uploaded and are available., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The authors declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (© 2024 Gault-Colas, Pradines, Baude and Gracies.)
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- 2024
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19. Use of Botulinum Toxin in Upper-Limb Tremor: Systematic Review and Perspectives.
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Motavasseli D, Delorme C, Bayle N, Gracies JM, Roze E, and Baude M
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- Humans, Botulinum Toxins, Type A administration & dosage, Botulinum Toxins, Type A adverse effects, Neuromuscular Agents administration & dosage, Neuromuscular Agents adverse effects, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Treatment Outcome, Tremor drug therapy, Upper Extremity
- Abstract
Background: Tremor is the most common movement disorder, with significant functional and psychosocial consequences. Oral medications have been disappointing or limited by side effects. Surgical techniques are effective but associated with risks and adverse events. Botulinum toxin (BT) represents a promising avenue but there is still no double-blind evidence of efficacy on upper limb function. A systematic review on the effects of BT in upper-limb tremor was conducted., Methods: A systematic search of the literature was conducted up to July 2023, including the keywords "botulinum toxin" and "tremor". All randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and open-label studies were analyzed. Independent reviewers assessed their methodological quality., Results: There were only eight published RCTs and seven published open-label studies, with relatively small sample sizes. This review suggests that BT is more effective when injections are patient-tailored, with analyses based on clinical judgement or kinematics. Subjective and objective measures frequently improve but transient weakness may occur after injections, especially if wrist or fingers extensors are targeted. A number of studies had methodological limitations., Conclusions: The authors discuss how to optimize tremor assessments and effects of BT injection. Controlled evidence is still lacking but it is suggested that distal "asymmetric" BT injections (targeting flexors/pronators while sparing extensors/supinators) and proximal injections, involving shoulder rotators when indicated, may avoid excessive weakness while optimizing functional benefit.
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- 2024
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20. Neglecting non-bee pollinators may lead to substantial underestimation of competition risk among pollinators.
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Requier F, Abdelli M, Baude M, Genoud D, Gens H, Geslin B, Henry M, and Ropars L
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Due to the increasing pressures on bees, many beekeepers currently wish to move their managed livestock of Apis mellifera into little disturbed ecosystems such as protected natural areas. This may, however, exert detrimental competitive effects upon local wild pollinators. While it appears critical for land managers to get an adequate knowledge of this issue for effective wildlife conservation schemes, the frequency of this competition is not clear to date. Based on a systematic literature review of 96 studies, we assessed the frequency of exploitative competition between honey bees and wild pollinators. We found that 78% of the studies highlighted exploitative competition from honey bees to wild pollinators. Importantly, these studies have mostly explored competition with wild bees, while only 18% of them considered other pollinator taxa such as ants, beetles, bugs, butterflies, flies, moths, and wasps. The integration of non-bee pollinators into scientific studies and conservation plans is urgently required as they are critical for the pollination of many wild plants and crops. Interestingly, we found that a majority (88%) of these studies considering also non-bee pollinators report evidence of competition. Thus, neglecting non-bee pollinators could imply an underestimation of competition risks from honey bees. More inclusive work is needed to estimate the risks of competition in its entirety, but also to apprehend the context-dependency of competition so as to properly inform wildlife conservation schemes., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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21. Validity and reliability of the chronic composite XA, an upper limb motor assessment using Active Range of Motion in patients with chronic stroke.
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Jamal K, Butet S, Maitre B, Gracies JM, Hameau S, Leveque LE Bras É, Baude M, Cordillet S, and Bonan I
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Aged, Chronic Disease, Muscle Spasticity physiopathology, Muscle Spasticity etiology, Muscle Spasticity rehabilitation, Disability Evaluation, Paresis physiopathology, Paresis etiology, Paresis rehabilitation, Psychometrics, Stroke physiopathology, Stroke complications, Range of Motion, Articular physiology, Upper Extremity physiopathology, Stroke Rehabilitation methods
- Abstract
Background: Upper limb (UL) spastic paresis has been classically evaluated with assessments of passive movements with limited functional validity. The aim of this study was to assess whether a composite measure of active range of motion (AROM, or X
A ) is valid and reliable in chronic post-stroke spastic paresis., Aim: The primary objective was to investigate the validity and reliability of a composite score, comprising multiple XA measurements, to assess UL spastic paresis in patients in chronic stages post-stroke. In addition to this, an exploratory analysis was conducted to identify which muscles should be optimally included in this composite score., Design: A psychometric proprieties study., Setting: Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine Department., Population: twenty-eight chronic post-stroke participants with spastic paresis., Methods: Composite UL XA measurement in twenty-eight chronic post-stroke participants (age=59±11 years; delay post-stroke=29±37 months) with spastic paresis was repeated twice about 40 days apart in a standardized body position. Concurrent and construct validity was evaluated exploring correlation with the Fugl-Meyer Assessment Upper Extremity (FMA-UE), Action Research Arm Test (ARAT), and grip strength (JAMAR™). Reliability was assessed by calculating intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). Regarding the exploratory analysis, a linear regression analysis was performed to examine the value of including various muscles., Results: Composite XA against the resistance of elbow, wrist and finger flexors showed strong correlation with FMA-UE and ARAT (r=0.88; P<0.001 and r=0.82; P<0.001 respectively) and a weak association with grip strength (r=0.43; P=0.03). Test-retest reliability was excellent (ICC=0.92). However, the most effective regression model also included XA against the resistance of shoulder adductors as well as forearm pronator (adjusted R2 =0.85; AIC=170)., Conclusions: The present study provided satisfactory psychometric data for the upper limb composite active movement (CXA ), derived from the Five Step Assessment. For overall measurement of UL mobility after stroke, we strongly recommend including shoulder and forearm muscles to the score., Clinical Rehabilitation Impact: Composite XA is a valid and reliable measure of upper limb motor function in chronic post-stroke patients and could be used in clinical practice and research.- Published
- 2024
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22. Quantifying the production of plant pollen at the farm scale.
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Wright EK, Timberlake TP, Baude M, Vaughan IP, and Memmott J
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- Farms, Flowers physiology, Seasons, Pollination physiology, Ecosystem, Pollen physiology, Plant Nectar
- Abstract
Plant pollen is rich in protein, sterols and lipids, providing crucial nutrition for many pollinators. However, we know very little about the quantity, quality and timing of pollen availability in real landscapes, limiting our ability to improve food supply for pollinators. We quantify the floral longevity and pollen production of a whole plant community for the first time, enabling us to calculate daily pollen availability. We combine these data with floral abundance and nectar measures from UK farmland to quantify pollen and nectar production at the landscape scale throughout the year. Pollen and nectar production were significantly correlated at the floral unit, and landscape level. The species providing the highest quantity of pollen on farmland were Salix spp. (38%), Filipendula ulmaria (14%), Rubus fruticosus (10%) and Taraxacum officinale (9%). Hedgerows were the most pollen-rich habitats, but permanent pasture provided the majority of pollen at the landscape scale, because of its large area. Pollen and nectar were closely associated in their phenology, with both peaking in late April, before declining steeply in June and remaining low throughout the year. Our data provide a starting point for including pollen in floral resource assessments and ensuring the nutritional requirements of pollinators are met in farmland landscapes., (© 2024 The Authors New Phytologist © 2024 New Phytologist Foundation.)
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- 2024
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23. Reliability of the Modified Frenchay Scale for the Assessment of Upper Limb Function in Adults With Hemiparesis.
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Laclergue Z, Ghédira M, Gault-Colas C, Billy L, Gracies JM, and Baude M
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- Humans, Adult, Female, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Hand, Paresis, Upper Extremity, Stroke complications
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the reliability of the Modified Frenchay Scale (MFS) in adults with hemiparesis., Design: Prospective analysis of videos., Setting: Study conducted in a Neurorehabilitation Unit of a University Hospital., Participants: Fifty-one patients (17 women [33%], age 46±15, time since injury 5.2±6.7 years) with hemiparesis secondary to stroke (N=47), tumor (N=3), or spinal cord injury (N=1) were enrolled., Intervention: The MFS measures active upper limb function in spastic hemiparesis based on a video recording of 10 daily living tasks, each rated from 0 to 10. Six tasks are bimanual and 4 are unimanual with the paretic hand. MFS videos performed in routine care of patients with hemiparesis between 2015 and 2021 were collected. After a 3-hour group training session, each MFS video was assessed twice, 1 week apart by 4 rehabilitation professionals with various levels of experience in using the scale., Main Outcome Measures: Internal consistency was determined using Cronbach's alpha. Intra- and inter-rater reliability was measured using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC, mean [95% CI]), mean differences between ratings and minimal detectable change (MDC). Bland-Altman plots were also performed for inter-rater assessments., Results: The mean overall MFS score was 4.95±1.20 with no floor or ceiling effect. Cronbach's α was 0.97. For the overall MFS score, intra- and inter-rater ICCs were 0.99[0.99;1.00] and 0.97[0.95;0.98], respectively; mean intra- and inter-rater differences were 0.10±0.04 and 0.24±0.12, respectively; and MDC were 0.17 and 0.37, respectively., Conclusions: The MFS is an internally consistent and reliable scale to assess upper limb function in adults with hemiparesis., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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24. Where is the zero of Tardieu for proximal trans-joint lower limb muscles? The relevance for the estimation of muscle shortening and weakness.
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Pradines M, Poitou T, Gál O, Hoskovcová M, Bayle N, Baude M, and Gracies JM
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Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2023
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25. Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract vs conventional therapy in chronic peripheral facial paresis: VISAGE, a multicenter randomized controlled trial.
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Baude M, Guihard M, Gault-Colas C, Bénichou L, Coste A, Méningaud JP, Schmitz D, Natella PA, Audureau E, and Gracies JM
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- Adult, Humans, Treatment Outcome, Quality of Life, Single-Blind Method, Prospective Studies, Facial Paralysis
- Abstract
Background: One year after persistent peripheral facial paresis (PFP), prescriptions of conventional rehabilitation are often downgraded into maintenance rehabilitation or discontinued, the patient entering what is seen as a chronic stage. This therapeutic choice is not consistent with current knowledge about behavior-induced plasticity, which is available all life long and may allow intense sensorimotor rehabilitation to remain effective. This prospective, randomized, multicenter single-blind study in subjects with chronic unilateral PFP evaluates changes in facial motor function with a Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract (GSC) vs. conventional therapy alone, carried out for six months., Methods: Eighty-two adult subjects with chronic unilateral PFP (> 1 year since facial nerve injury) will be included in four tertiary, maxillofacial surgery (2), otolaryngology (1) and rehabilitation (1) centers to be randomized into two rehabilitation groups. In the experimental group, the PM&R specialist will implement the GSC method, which for PFP involves intensive series of motor strengthening performed daily on three facial key muscle groups, i.e. Frontalis, Orbicularis oculi and Zygomatici. The GSC strategy involves: i) prescription of a daily self-rehabilitation program, ii) teaching of the techniques involved in the program, iii) encouragement and guidance of the patient over time, in particular by requesting a quantified diary of the work achieved to be returned by the patient at each visit. In the control group, participants will benefit from community-based conventional therapy only, according to their physician's prescription. The primary outcome measure is the composite score of Sunnybrook Facial Grading System. Secondary outcome measures include clinical and biomechanical facial motor function quantifications (Créteil Scale and 3D facial motion analysis through the Cara system), quality of life (Facial Clinimetric Evaluation and Short-Form 12), aesthetic considerations (FACE-Q scale) and mood representations (Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale). Participants will be evaluated every three months by a blinded investigator, in addition to four phone calls (D30/D60/D120/D150) to monitor compliance and tolerance to treatment., Discussion: This study will increase the level of knowledge on the effects of intense facial motor streng- Facial paralysisthening prescribed through a GSC in patients with chronic peripheral facial paresis., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04074018 . Registered 29 August 2019., Protocol Version: Version N°4.0-04/02/2021., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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26. A large-scale dataset reveals taxonomic and functional specificities of wild bee communities in urban habitats of Western Europe.
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Fauviau A, Baude M, Bazin N, Fiordaliso W, Fisogni A, Fortel L, Garrigue J, Geslin B, Goulnik J, Guilbaud L, Hautekèete N, Heiniger C, Kuhlmann M, Lambert O, Langlois D, Le Féon V, Lopez Vaamonde C, Maillet G, Massol F, Michel N, Michelot-Antalik A, Michez D, Mouret H, Piquot Y, Potts SG, Roberts S, Ropars L, Schurr L, Van Reeth C, Villalta I, Zaninotto V, Dajoz I, and Henry M
- Subjects
- Humans, Bees, Animals, Cities, Population Density, Europe, Biodiversity, Urbanization, Ecosystem
- Abstract
Wild bees are declining, mainly due to the expansion of urban habitats that have led to land-use changes. Effects of urbanization on wild bee communities are still unclear, as shown by contrasting reports on their species and functional diversities in urban habitats. To address this current controversy, we built a large dataset, merging 16 surveys carried out in 3 countries of Western Europe during the past decades, and tested whether urbanization influences local wild bee taxonomic and functional community composition. These surveys encompassed a range of urbanization levels, that were quantified using two complementary metrics: the proportion of impervious surfaces and the human population density. Urban expansion, when measured as a proportion of impervious surfaces, but not as human population density, was significantly and negatively correlated with wild bee community species richness. Taxonomic dissimilarity of the bee community was independent of both urbanization metrics. However, occurrence rates of functional traits revealed significant differences between lightly and highly urbanized communities, for both urbanization metrics. With higher human population density, probabilities of occurrence of above-ground nesters, generalist and small species increased. With higher soil sealing, probabilities of occurrence of above-ground nesters, generalists and social bees increased as well. Overall, these results, based on a large European dataset, suggest that urbanization can have negative impacts on wild bee diversity. They further identify some traits favored in urban environments, showing that several wild bee species can thrive in cities., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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27. Some bee-pollinated plants provide nutritionally incomplete pollen amino acid resources to their pollinators.
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Jeannerod L, Carlier A, Schatz B, Daise C, Richel A, Agnan Y, Baude M, and Jacquemart AL
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- Animals, Bees, Flowers chemistry, Plant Nectar chemistry, Plants, Pollen chemistry, Amino Acids analysis, Pollination
- Abstract
For pollinators such as bees, nectar mainly provides carbohydrates and pollen provides proteins, amino acids, and lipids to cover their nutritional needs. Here, to examine differences in pollinator resources, we compared the amino acid profiles and total amino acid contents of pollen from 32 common entomophilous plants in seven families. Our results showed that the amino acid profiles and contents in pollen samples differed according to the plant family and the chromatography method used, i.e., high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) versus ion exchange chromatography (IEX). Pollen from Boraginaceae species had the highest total amino acid contents (361.2-504 μg/mg) whereas pollen from the Malvaceae family had the lowest total amino acid contents (136-243.1 μg/mg). Calculating an amino acid score (AAS) that reflects pollen nutritional quality showed that slightly less than half of the species (19 out of 32) had the maximum nutritional score (AAS = 1) and offered high nutritional quality pollen amino acids for bee pollinators. Though they had high total amino acid contents, the amino acid composition of the studied Boraginaceae species and several members of the Fabaceae was not optimal, as their pollen was deficient in some essential amino acids, resulting in suboptimal amino acid scores (AAS < 0.7). Except for cysteine, the measured amino acid contents were higher using IEX chromatography than using HPLC. IEX chromatography is more robust and is to be preferred over HPLC in future amino acid analyses. Moreover, our observations show that some bee-pollinated species fail to provide complete amino acid resources for their pollinators. Although the implications for pollinator behavior remain to be studied, these deficiencies may force pollinators to forage from different species to obtain all nutritionial requirements., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2022
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28. Phylogenetic, functional and taxonomic responses of wild bee communities along urbanisation gradients.
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Villalta I, Bouget C, Lopez-Vaamonde C, and Baude M
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees, Cities, Ecosystem, Phenotype, Phylogeny, Biodiversity, Urbanization
- Abstract
Increasing urbanisation is one of the primary drivers of land-use change that threaten biodiversity. Wild bee communities have been reported with contrasting responses to urbanisation, with varying effects on abundance and taxonomical diversity. The suite of functional traits exhibited by wild bee species might determine their persistence in urban areas. Urbanisation thus can impose an environmental filter with potential consequences on the functional and phylogenetical diversity of wild bee communities. Here, we sampled 2944 wild bee specimens from 156 species in 29 sites located along an urbanisation gradient using a replicated design in three mid-sized cities in the Loire valley (France). We show that urban landscape cover has a negative effect on overall species richness and taxonomical diversity indices, while total abundance remains constant. Species loss was taxon dependent, mainly driven by Andrenidae and Halictidae. Only a few species, especially of the genus Lasioglossum, were positively affected by the urban landscape cover. Urban and peri-urban areas differed in their composition of bee assemblages. Species turnover was the main component of beta diversity, driving community dissimilarities through the urban gradient. Urbanisation favours bees with small body sizes, social structure and extended flight periods but did not affect the phylogenetic or the functional diversity of communities. Our findings have implications for understanding the factors involved in the environmental filter exerted through the urban gradient on bee communities helping to implement conservation measures and managing urban spaces for bees., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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29. Landscape-scale drivers of pollinator communities may depend on land-use configuration.
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Gillespie MAK, Baude M, Biesmeijer J, Boatman N, Budge GE, Crowe A, Davies N, Evans R, Memmott J, Morton RD, Moss E, Murphy M, Pietravalle S, Potts SG, Roberts SPM, Rowland C, Senapathi D, Smart SM, Wood C, and Kunin WE
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees, Ecology, Ecosystem, Pollination, Agriculture, Insecticides
- Abstract
Research into pollinators in managed landscapes has recently combined approaches of pollination ecology and landscape ecology, because key stressors are likely to interact across wide areas. While laboratory and field experiments are valuable for furthering understanding, studies are required to investigate the interacting drivers of pollinator health and diversity across a broader range of landscapes and a wider array of taxa. Here, we use a network of 96 study landscapes in six topographically diverse regions of Britain, to test the combined importance of honeybee density, insecticide loadings, floral resource availability and habitat diversity to pollinator communities. We also explore the interactions between these drivers and the cover and proximity of semi-natural habitat. We found that among our four drivers, only honeybee density was positively related to wild pollinator abundance and diversity, and the positive association between abundance and floral resources depended on insecticide loadings and habitat diversity. By contrast, our exploratory models including habitat composition metrics revealed a complex suite of interactive effects. These results demonstrate that improving pollinator community composition and health is unlikely to be achieved with general resource enhancements only. Rather, local land-use context should be considered in fine-tuning pollinator management and conservation. This article is part of the theme issue 'Natural processes influencing pollinator health: from chemistry to landscapes'.
- Published
- 2022
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30. Three-Dimensional Quantification of Facial Morphology and Movements Using a Wearable Helmet.
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Guihard M, Gracies JM, and Baude M
- Subjects
- Adult, Face anatomy & histology, Facial Muscles, Head Protective Devices, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Male, Middle Aged, Movement, Reproducibility of Results, Facial Paralysis, Wearable Electronic Devices
- Abstract
This work proposes a 3D normative database of facial ranges of motion in adults free from facial disorders. Ten facial movements were analyzed, each targeting the activity of specific muscle groups innervated by the facial nerve. The experimental protocol included a test-retest reliability positioning procedure of 25 skin markers based on clinical expertise in facial morphology. Three maximal voluntary contractions were recorded for each facial movement studied, using a 3D facial motion capture helmet. We included 53 adults free from facial disorders (26 men; age 43 ± 14), evaluated twice one week apart. The reliability of marker positioning was expressed as absolute measurement errors. The range of motion vectors of all markers from the best rest to the maximal voluntary contraction was calculated for each muscle group. Primary, secondary, and tertiary markers were extracted for each facial movement. 3D Procruste and asymmetry indices were developed. This allowed the identification of common thresholds of 10% for the asymmetry index and of 6 mm for the Procruste index, beyond which facial motions would be considered abnormally asymmetric. The normative database quantifies facial motions and allows assessment of the degree of clinical disorders by comparison. This protocol is currently being investigated in patients with chronic unilateral peripheral facial paresis., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Marina Guihard et al.)
- Published
- 2022
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31. A DNA barcode-based survey of wild urban bees in the Loire Valley, France.
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Villalta I, Ledet R, Baude M, Genoud D, Bouget C, Cornillon M, Moreau S, Courtial B, and Lopez-Vaamonde C
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees classification, Cities, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Ecosystem, Endangered Species, France, Gene Library, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Bees genetics
- Abstract
The current decline of wild bees puts important ecosystem services such as pollination at risk. Both inventory and monitoring programs are needed to understand the causes of wild bee decline. Effective insect monitoring relies on both mass-trapping methods coupled with rapid and accurate identifications. Identifying wild bees using only morphology can be challenging, in particular, specimens from mass-trapped samples which are often in poor condition. We generated DNA barcodes for 2931 specimens representing 157 species (156 named and one unnamed species) and 28 genera. Automated cluster delineation reveals 172 BINs (Barcodes Index Numbers). A total of 36 species (22.93%) were found in highly urbanized areas. The majority of specimens, representing 96.17% of the species barcoded form reciprocally exclusive groups, allowing their unambiguous identification. This includes several closely related species notoriously difficult to identify. A total of 137 species (87.26%) show a "one-to-one" match between a named species and the BIN assignment. Fourteen species (8.92%) show deep conspecific lineages with no apparent morphological differentiation. Only two species pairs shared the same BIN making their identification with DNA barcodes alone uncertain. Therefore, our DNA barcoding reference library allows reliable identification by non-experts for the vast majority of wild bee species in the Loire Valley.
- Published
- 2021
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32. The neurophysiology of deforming spastic paresis: A revised taxonomy.
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Baude M, Nielsen JB, and Gracies JM
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- Humans, Motor Neurons physiology, Muscle Contraction physiology, Muscle Spasticity physiopathology, Muscle, Skeletal physiopathology, Paresis physiopathology, Muscle Spasticity classification, Paresis classification
- Abstract
This paper revisits the taxonomy of the neurophysiological consequences of a persistent impairment of motor command execution in the classic environment of sensorimotor restriction and muscle hypo-mobilization in short position. Around each joint, the syndrome involves 2 disorders, muscular and neurologic. The muscular disorder is promoted by muscle hypo-mobilization in short position in the context of paresis, in the hours and days after paresis onset: this genetically mediated, evolving myopathy, is called spastic myopathy. The clinician may suspect it by feeling extensibility loss in a resting muscle, although long after the actual onset of the disease. The neurologic disorder, promoted by sensorimotor restriction in the context of paresis and by the muscle disorder itself, comprises 4 main components, mostly affecting antagonists to desired movements: the first is spastic dystonia, an unwanted, involuntary muscle activation at rest, in the absence of stretch or voluntary effort; spastic dystonia superimposes on spastic myopathy to cause visible, gradually increasing body deformities; the second is spastic cocontraction, an unwanted, involuntary antagonist muscle activation during voluntary effort directed to the agonist, aggravated by antagonist stretch; it is primarily due to misdirection of the supraspinal descending drive and contributes to reducing movement amplitude; and the third is spasticity, one form of hyperreflexia, defined by an enhancement of the velocity-dependent responses to phasic stretch, detected and measured at rest (another form of hyperreflexia is "nociceptive spasms", following flexor reflex afferent stimulation, particularly after spinal cord lesions). The 3 main forms of overactivity, spastic dystonia, spastic cocontraction and spasticity, share the same motor neuron hyperexcitability as a contributing factor, all being predominant in the muscles that are more affected by spastic myopathy. The fourth component of the neurologic disorder affects the agonist: it is stretch-sensitive paresis, which is a decreased access of the central command to the agonist, aggravated by antagonist stretch. Improved understanding of the pathophysiology of deforming spastic paresis should help clinicians select meaningful assessments and refined treatments, including the utmost need to preserve muscle tissue integrity as soon as paresis sets in., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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33. Identification of five frailty profiles in community-dwelling individuals aged 50-75: A latent class analysis of the SUCCEED survey data.
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Segaux L, Oubaya N, Broussier A, Baude M, Canouï-Poitrine F, Naga H, Laurent M, Leissing-Desprez C, Audureau E, Ferrat E, Chailloleau C, Fromentin I, David JP, and Bastuji-Garin S
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Frail Elderly, Geriatric Assessment methods, Health Surveys, Humans, Latent Class Analysis, Male, Middle Aged, Frailty diagnosis, Independent Living statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: We sought to identify frailty profiles in individuals aged 50-75 by considering frailty as an unobservable latent variable in a latent class analysis (LCA)., Study Design: 589 prospectively enrolled community-dwelling individuals aged 50-75 (median: 61.7 years) had undergone a standardized, multidomain assessment in 2010-2015. Adverse health outcomes (non-accidental falls, fractures, unplanned hospitalizations, and death) that had occurred since the assessment were recorded in 2016-2017., Main Outcome Measures: The LCA used nine indicators (unintentional weight loss, relative slowness, weakness, impaired balance, osteoporosis, impaired cognitive functions, executive dysfunction, depression, and hearing impairment) and three covariates (age, gender, and consultation for health complaints). The resulting profiles were characterized by the Fried phenotype and adverse health outcomes., Results: We identified five profiles: "fit" (LC1, 29.7% of the participants; median age: 59 years); "weight loss, relative slowness, and osteoporosis" (LC2, 33.2%; 63 years); "weakness and osteopenia" (LC3, 21.9%; 60 years); "impaired physical and executive functions" (LC4, 11%; 67 years); and "impaired balance, cognitive functions, and depression" (LC5, 4.3%; 70 years). Almost all members of LC3 and LC4 were female, and were more likely than members of other profiles to have a frail or pre-frail Fried phenotype. Non-accidental falls were significantly more frequent in LC4. LC5 (almost all males) had the highest number of comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors but none was frail., Conclusions: Our data-driven approach covered most geriatric assessment domains and identified five frailty profiles. With a view to tailoring interventions and prevention, frailty needs to be detected among young seniors., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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34. Land use change in an agricultural landscape causing degradation of soil based ecosystem services.
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Baude M, Meyer BC, and Schindewolf M
- Abstract
Landscape structure and ecosystem service (ES) provision in Central Europe have changed fundamentally and some ES have been irreversibly degraded over the last 250 years. The land use change analysis of a typical agricultural landscape near Leipzig (Germany) uses digitized historical GIS-data, serial cadastral maps and documents in time steps 1750, 1850, 1950 and 2005. Arable land area increased from 73.4% (1750) to 87.2% (2005) and grassland decreased from 22.1% to 4.2%. ES provision change analysis has resulted e.g. in a significant increase of winter wheat production comparing the decades 1990-1999 to 2000-2009. However, natural soil production capacity has degraded based on the interpretation of historical soil assessment maps (1864, 1937) and the actual erosion risk hazard has increased strongly in the same period. Caused by the Prussian agricultural revolution between 1750 and 1850 a high biodiversity level is found, followed by a slight decrease during the industrialization in the second half of the 19th century. By industrialized production and collectivization since 1960 devastation of vegetation structures has brought habitat degradation and a dramatic biodiversity loss. Driving forces analysis shows that significant drivers of land use and ES changes since 1750 are socioeconomic, political and technical drivers. It clarifies the impact of landscape changes by Prussian agrarian reforms, industrialization, technical and land management innovations, Kolkhoz system and Common Agricultural Policy on ES degradation based on the indicators crop production, natural soil production capacity, soil degradation caused by erosion hazards and biodiversity., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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35. Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract vs conventional therapy in chronic stroke-induced hemiparesis: NEURORESTORE, a multicenter randomized controlled trial.
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Gracies JM, Pradines M, Ghédira M, Loche CM, Mardale V, Hennegrave C, Gault-Colas C, Audureau E, Hutin E, Baude M, and Bayle N
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Paresis etiology, Paresis rehabilitation, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Research Design, Single-Blind Method, Stroke complications, Medical Records, Patient Education as Topic methods, Stroke Rehabilitation methods
- Abstract
Background: After discharge from hospital following a stroke, prescriptions of community-based rehabilitation are often downgraded to "maintenance" rehabilitation or discontinued. This classic therapeutic behavior stems from persistent confusion between lesion-induced plasticity, which lasts for the first 6 months essentially, and behavior-induced plasticity, of indefinite duration, through which intense rehabilitation might remain effective. This prospective, randomized, multicenter, single-blind study in subjects with chronic stroke-induced hemiparesis evaluates changes in active function with a Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract vs conventional therapy alone, pursued for a year., Methods: One hundred and twenty four adult subjects with chronic hemiparesis (> 1 year since first stroke) will be included in six tertiary rehabilitation centers. For each patient, two treatments will be compared over a 1-year period, preceded and followed by an observational 6-month phase of conventional rehabilitation. In the experimental group, the therapist will implement the diary-based and antagonist-targeting Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract method using two monthly home visits. The method involves: i) prescribing a daily antagonist-targeting self-rehabilitation program, ii) teaching the techniques involved in the program, iii) motivating and guiding the patient over time, by requesting a diary of the work achieved to be brought back by the patient at each visit. In the control group, participants will benefit from conventional therapy only, as per their physician's prescription. The two co-primary outcome measures are the maximal ambulation speed barefoot over 10 m for the lower limb, and the Modified Frenchay Scale for the upper limb. Secondary outcome measures include total cost of care from the medical insurance point of view, physiological cost index in the 2-min walking test, quality of life (SF 36) and measures of the psychological impact of the two treatment modalities. Participants will be evaluated every 6 months (D1/M6/M12/M18/M24) by a blinded investigator, the experimental period being between M6 and M18. Each patient will be allowed to receive any medications deemed necessary to their attending physician, including botulinum toxin injections., Discussion: This study will increase the level of knowledge on the effects of Guided Self-rehabilitation Contracts in patients with chronic stroke-induced hemiparesis., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02202954 , July 29, 2014.
- Published
- 2019
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36. Effect on Passive Range of Motion and Functional Correlates After a Long-Term Lower Limb Self-Stretch Program in Patients With Chronic Spastic Paresis.
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Pradines M, Baude M, Marciniak C, Francisco G, Gracies JM, Hutin E, and Bayle N
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Lower Extremity physiopathology, Male, Muscle Spasticity physiopathology, Paraparesis rehabilitation, Paresis diagnosis, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Muscle Spasticity rehabilitation, Muscle Stretching Exercises methods, Paresis rehabilitation, Range of Motion, Articular physiology, Walking Speed physiology
- Abstract
Background: In current health care systems, long-duration stretching, performed daily, cannot be obtained through prescriptions of physical therapy. In addition, the short-term efficacy of the various stretching techniques is disputed, and their long-term effects remain undocumented., Objective: To evaluate changes in extensibility in 6 lower limb muscles and in ambulation speed after a ≥1-year self-stretch program, the Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract (GSC), in individuals with chronic spastic paresis., Design: Retrospective study., Setting: Neurorehabilitation clinic., Participants: Patients diagnosed with hemiparesis or paraparesis at least 1 year before the initiation of a GSC and who were then involved in the GSC program for at least 1 year., Interventions: For each patient, specific muscles were identified for intervention among the following: gluteus maximus, hamstrings, vastus, rectus femoris, soleus, and gastrocnemius. Prescriptions and training for a daily, high-load, prolonged, home self-stretching program were primarily based on the baseline coefficient of shortening, defined as C
SH = [(XN -XV1 )/XN ] (XV1 = PROM, passive range of motion; XN = normally expected amplitude)., Main Outcome Measurements: Six assessments were performed per year, measuring the Tardieu XV1 or maximal slow stretch range of motion angle (PROM), CSH , 10-m ambulation speed, and its functional ambulation category (Perry's classification: household, limited, or full). Changes from baseline in self-stretched and nonself-stretched muscles were compared, with meaningful XV1 change defined as ΔXV1 >5° for plantar flexors and >10° for proximal muscles. Correlation between the composite XV1 (mean PROM for the 6 muscles) and ambulation speed also was evaluated., Results: Twenty-seven GSC participants were identified (14 women, mean age 44 years, range 29-59): 18 with hemiparesis and 9 with paraparesis. After 1 year, 47% of self-stretched muscles showed meaningful change in PROM (ΔXV1 ) versus 14% in nonself-stretched muscles (P < .0001, χ2 ). ΔCSH was -31% (95% confidence interval [95% CI] -41.5 to -15.2) in self-stretched versus -7% (95% CI -11.9 to -2.1) in nonself-stretched muscles (P < .0001, t-test). Ambulation speed increased by 41% (P < .0001) from 0.81 m/s (95% CI 0.67-0.95) to 1.15 m/s (95% CI 1.01-1.29). Eight of the 12 patients (67%) who were in limited or household categories at baseline moved to a higher functional ambulation category. There was a trend for a correlation between composite XV1 and ambulation speed (r = 0.44, P = .09) in hemiparetic patients., Conclusion: Therapists should consider prescribing and monitoring a long-term lower limb self-stretch program using GSC, as this may increase muscle extensibility in adult-onset chronic paresis., Level of Evidence: III., (Copyright © 2018 American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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37. Food for Pollinators: Quantifying the Nectar and Pollen Resources of Urban Flower Meadows.
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Hicks DM, Ouvrard P, Baldock KC, Baude M, Goddard MA, Kunin WE, Mitschunas N, Memmott J, Morse H, Nikolitsi M, Osgathorpe LM, Potts SG, Robertson KM, Scott AV, Sinclair F, Westbury DB, and Stone GN
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees, Ecosystem, Food, Pollination, Seasons, Seeds, Biodiversity, Flowers, Plant Nectar, Pollen
- Abstract
Planted meadows are increasingly used to improve the biodiversity and aesthetic amenity value of urban areas. Although many 'pollinator-friendly' seed mixes are available, the floral resources these provide to flower-visiting insects, and how these change through time, are largely unknown. Such data are necessary to compare the resources provided by alternative meadow seed mixes to each other and to other flowering habitats. We used quantitative surveys of over 2 million flowers to estimate the nectar and pollen resources offered by two exemplar commercial seed mixes (one annual, one perennial) and associated weeds grown as 300m2 meadows across four UK cities, sampled at six time points between May and September 2013. Nectar sugar and pollen rewards per flower varied widely across 65 species surveyed, with native British weed species (including dandelion, Taraxacum agg.) contributing the top five nectar producers and two of the top ten pollen producers. Seed mix species yielding the highest rewards per flower included Leontodon hispidus, Centaurea cyanus and C. nigra for nectar, and Papaver rhoeas, Eschscholzia californica and Malva moschata for pollen. Perennial meadows produced up to 20x more nectar and up to 6x more pollen than annual meadows, which in turn produced far more than amenity grassland controls. Perennial meadows produced resources earlier in the year than annual meadows, but both seed mixes delivered very low resource levels early in the year and these were provided almost entirely by native weeds. Pollen volume per flower is well predicted statistically by floral morphology, and nectar sugar mass and pollen volume per unit area are correlated with flower counts, raising the possibility that resource levels can be estimated for species or habitats where they cannot be measured directly. Our approach does not incorporate resource quality information (for example, pollen protein or essential amino acid content), but can easily do so when suitable data exist. Our approach should inform the design of new seed mixes to ensure continuity in floral resource availability throughout the year, and to identify suitable species to fill resource gaps in established mixes.
- Published
- 2016
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38. Historical nectar assessment reveals the fall and rise of floral resources in Britain.
- Author
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Baude M, Kunin WE, Boatman ND, Conyers S, Davies N, Gillespie MA, Morton RD, Smart SM, and Memmott J
- Subjects
- Animals, Flowers classification, Grassland, Insecta physiology, Medicago chemistry, Medicago growth & development, Plants metabolism, Pollination, Species Specificity, United Kingdom, Biodiversity, Flowers chemistry, Flowers growth & development, Plant Nectar analysis, Plants chemistry, Plants classification
- Abstract
There is considerable concern over declines in insect pollinator communities and potential impacts on the pollination of crops and wildflowers. Among the multiple pressures facing pollinators, decreasing floral resources due to habitat loss and degradation has been suggested as a key contributing factor. However, a lack of quantitative data has hampered testing for historical changes in floral resources. Here we show that overall floral rewards can be estimated at a national scale by combining vegetation surveys and direct nectar measurements. We find evidence for substantial losses in nectar resources in England and Wales between the 1930s and 1970s; however, total nectar provision in Great Britain as a whole had stabilized by 1978, and increased from 1998 to 2007. These findings concur with trends in pollinator diversity, which declined in the mid-twentieth century but stabilized more recently. The diversity of nectar sources declined from 1978 to 1990 and thereafter in some habitats, with four plant species accounting for over 50% of national nectar provision in 2007. Calcareous grassland, broadleaved woodland and neutral grassland are the habitats that produce the greatest amount of nectar per unit area from the most diverse sources, whereas arable land is the poorest with respect to amount of nectar per unit area and diversity of nectar sources. Although agri-environment schemes add resources to arable landscapes, their national contribution is low. Owing to their large area, improved grasslands could add substantially to national nectar provision if they were managed to increase floral resource provision. This national-scale assessment of floral resource provision affords new insights into the links between plant and pollinator declines, and offers considerable opportunities for conservation.
- Published
- 2016
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39. How much flower-rich habitat is enough for wild pollinators? Answering a key policy question with incomplete knowledge.
- Author
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Dicks LV, Baude M, Roberts SP, Phillips J, Green M, and Carvell C
- Abstract
In 2013, an opportunity arose in England to develop an agri-environment package for wild pollinators, as part of the new Countryside Stewardship scheme launched in 2015. It can be understood as a 'policy window', a rare and time-limited opportunity to change policy, supported by a narrative about pollinator decline and widely supported mitigating actions. An agri-environment package is a bundle of management options that together supply sufficient resources to support a target group of species. This paper documents information that was available at the time to develop such a package for wild pollinators. Four questions needed answering: (1) Which pollinator species should be targeted? (2) Which resources limit these species in farmland? (3) Which management options provide these resources? (4) What area of each option is needed to support populations of the target species? Focussing on wild bees, we provide tentative answers that were used to inform development of the package. There is strong evidence that floral resources can limit wild bee populations, and several sources of evidence identify a set of agri-environment options that provide flowers and other resources for pollinators. The final question could only be answered for floral resources, with a wide range of uncertainty. We show that the areas of some floral resource options in the basic Wild Pollinator and Farmland Wildlife Package (2% flower-rich habitat and 1 km flowering hedgerow), are sufficient to supply a set of six common pollinator species with enough pollen to feed their larvae at lowest estimates, using minimum values for estimated parameters where a range was available. We identify key sources of uncertainty, and stress the importance of keeping the Package flexible, so it can be revised as new evidence emerges about how to achieve the policy aim of supporting pollinators on farmland.
- Published
- 2015
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40. A Bidimensional System of Facial Movement Analysis Conception and Reliability in Adults.
- Author
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Baude M, Hutin E, and Gracies JM
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Observer Variation, Reproducibility of Results, Time Factors, Facial Muscles physiology, Movement, Physiology methods
- Abstract
Objective: To design a bidimensional facial movement measuring tool and study its reliability., Methods: We utilized the free video-analysis software Kinovea that can track preselected points during movements and measure two-point distances off-line. Three raters positioned facial markers on 10 healthy individuals and video-taped them during maximal bilateral contractions of frontalis, corrugator, orbicularis oculi, zygomaticus, orbicularis oris, and buccinator, on two occasions. Each rater also analyzed the first video twice, one week apart. For each muscle, intrarater reliability was measured by percent agreements (PA) and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) between two assessments of the same video one week apart and between assessments of two videos collected one week apart. Interrater reliability was measured by PA, ICC, and coefficients of variation (CV) between assessments of the first video-recording by the three raters., Results: Intrarater and interrater reliabilities were good to excellent for frontalis (PA and ICC > 70%; CV < 15%), moderate for orbicularis oculi, zygomaticus, and orbicularis oris, and poor for corrugator and buccinators., Discussion: Without formal prior training, the proposed method was reliable for frontalis in healthy subjects. Improved marker selection, training sessions, and testing reliability in patients with facial paresis may enhance reliability for orbicularis oculi, zygomaticus, and orbicularis oris.
- Published
- 2015
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41. The potential for indirect effects between co-flowering plants via shared pollinators depends on resource abundance, accessibility and relatedness.
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Carvalheiro LG, Biesmeijer JC, Benadi G, Fründ J, Stang M, Bartomeus I, Kaiser-Bunbury CN, Baude M, Gomes SI, Merckx V, Baldock KC, Bennett AT, Boada R, Bommarco R, Cartar R, Chacoff N, Dänhardt J, Dicks LV, Dormann CF, Ekroos J, Henson KS, Holzschuh A, Junker RR, Lopezaraiza-Mikel M, Memmott J, Montero-Castaño A, Nelson IL, Petanidou T, Power EF, Rundlöf M, Smith HG, Stout JC, Temitope K, Tscharntke T, Tscheulin T, Vilà M, and Kunin WE
- Subjects
- Animals, Bees, Diptera, Models, Biological, Plant Nectar chemistry, Flowers genetics, Magnoliopsida genetics, Phylogeny, Pollination
- Abstract
Co-flowering plant species commonly share flower visitors, and thus have the potential to influence each other's pollination. In this study we analysed 750 quantitative plant-pollinator networks from 28 studies representing diverse biomes worldwide. We show that the potential for one plant species to influence another indirectly via shared pollinators was greater for plants whose resources were more abundant (higher floral unit number and nectar sugar content) and more accessible. The potential indirect influence was also stronger between phylogenetically closer plant species and was independent of plant geographic origin (native vs. non-native). The positive effect of nectar sugar content and phylogenetic proximity was much more accentuated for bees than for other groups. Consequently, the impact of these factors depends on the pollination mode of plants, e.g. bee or fly pollinated. Our findings may help predict which plant species have the greatest importance in the functioning of plant-pollination networks., (© 2014 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd and CNRS.)
- Published
- 2014
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42. Conspecifics as informers and competitors: an experimental study in foraging bumble-bees.
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Baude M, Danchin É, Mugabo M, and Dajoz I
- Subjects
- Animals, Choice Behavior, Color, Flowers physiology, Pollination, Bees physiology, Competitive Behavior, Feeding Behavior physiology
- Abstract
Conspecifics are usually considered competitors negatively affecting food intake rates. However, their presence can also inform about resource quality by providing inadvertent social information. Few studies have investigated whether foragers perceive conspecifics as informers or competitors. Here, we experimentally tested whether variation in the density of demonstrators ('none', 'low' and 'high'), whose location indicated flower profitability, affected decision-making of bumble-bees Bombus terrestris. Bumble-bees foraged on either 'simple' (two colours) or 'complex' (four colours) artificial floral communities. We found that conspecifics at low density may be used as sources of information in first flower choices, whereas they appeared as competitors over the whole foraging sequence. Low conspecific densities improved foragers' first-visit success rate in the simple environment, and decreased time to first landing, especially in the complex environment. High conspecific densities did not affect these behavioural parameters, but reduced flower constancy in both floral communities, which may alter the efficiency of pollinating visits. These results suggest that the balance of the costs and benefits of conspecific presence varies with foraging experience, floral community and density. Spatio-temporal scales could thus be an important determinant of social information use. This behavioural flexibility should allow bumble-bees to better exploit their environment., (This journal is © 2011 The Royal Society)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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