6 results on '"Bergère G"'
Search Results
2. Case-Control Study on Exercise-Induced Vasculitis in Hikers.
- Author
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Quéneau A, Pistorius MA, Connault J, Raimbeau A, Gautier G, Bergère G, Artifoni M, Durant C, Bénichou A, Hersant J, and Espitia O
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Male, Vasculitis diagnosis, Vasculitis epidemiology, Venous Insufficiency diagnosis, Venous Insufficiency epidemiology
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to identify clinical factors associated with exercise-induced vasculitis (EIV). This study included EIV cases and controls matched for age. Cases included were all members of a hiking club and participated in extended hiking trips. Exercise-induced vasculitis was diagnosed based on clinical signs occurring only after prolonged walks. Chronic venous disease was defined using the Clinical Etiological Anatomical Pathophysiologic classification. This study included 162 hikers: 32 EIV cases and 130 matched controls. Mean age at EIV diagnosis was 47.1 years and 24 (75.0%) of EIV cases were women. Chronic venous disease was present in 19 (57.6%) of EIV cases vs 39 (30.0%) in controls ( P = .001); those with EIV had significantly more saphenous vein insufficiency and C3 venous insufficiency than controls, 85.0 vs 52.6% and 8 (25.0%) vs 13 (10.0%) ( P = .02), respectively. For EIV cases, mean walking distance per hike was significantly higher than for controls ( P = .002). Exercise-induced vasculitis symptoms were typical with rash and/or purpura on the leg in warm conditions. Lesions spontaneously disappear in <10 days. In this study, EIV cases had more chronic venous disease and longer mean walking distances than controls.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Prevalence of post-thrombotic syndrome in a cohort of upper extremity vein thrombosis.
- Author
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Hervé H, Toquet C, Ploton G, Connault J, Gautier G, Raimbeau A, Bergère G, Hersant J, Durant C, Artifoni M, Brebion N, Kubina JM, Pistorius MA, and Espitia O
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Young Adult, Postthrombotic Syndrome epidemiology, Postthrombotic Syndrome etiology, Upper Extremity Deep Vein Thrombosis complications
- Abstract
Objective: Post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS) is one of the main complications that occurs after venous thrombosis. There are few data on the proportion of patients that will develop upper extremity PTS (UE-PTS) after upper extremity venous thrombosis (UEVT). The main objective of the study was to assess the prevalence of PTS in a UEVT cohort and to identify predictive factors of UE-PTS., Methods: This study included patients with a history of proximal or arm UEVT, diagnosed on duplex ultrasound examination, between January 1, 2015, and December 31, 2017, in a university hospital. After UEVT, each patient was evaluated by a prospective standardized recording of clinical manifestations and duplex ultrasound examination in case of upper limb symptoms. UE-PTS was defined as a modified Villalta score of 4 or higher., Results: Ninety-two patients were included; 68 (73.9%) had deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and 24 (19.2%) arm superficial vein thrombosis. Thirteen patients had PTS (14.1%), 12 (17.6%) in the DVT group and 1 (4.2%) in the superficial vein thrombosis group. There was a history of DVT in 92.3% of the cases of PTS. PTS was more frequent in patients with strokes with limb movement reduction (P = .01). On multivariate Cox analysis, a history of stroke (hazard ratio, 5.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.46-20.22; P = .01) was predictive of UE-PTS., Conclusions: UE-PTS occurred in 14.1% of cases after UEVT. Stroke with a decrease in limb movement was a predictor of developing PTS. Diagnostic criteria should be established for UE-PTS and prospective studies are needed to improve the description and management of UE-PTS., (Copyright © 2021 Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Effect of cannabis consumption on characteristics and evolution of thromboangitis obliterans.
- Author
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Bergère G, Toquet C, Hoffmann C, Bressollette L, Raimbeau A, Durant C, Artifoni M, Gautier G, Hersant J, Connault J, Pistorius MA, and Espitia O
- Subjects
- Amputation, Surgical, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Cannabis, Thromboangiitis Obliterans
- Abstract
Background: Thromboangiitis obliterans (TAO) is a distal non atherosclerotic thrombotic vasculitis affecting tobacco smokers. The role of cannabis co-exposure remains controversial. The study aims to assess how cannabis consumption influences clinical presentation and outcome of TAO in tobacco smokers. Patients and methods: TAO patients, according to Papa's criteria, were included in a retrospective bicentric study between the 1
st January 2003 and the 1st march 2020. Clinical characteristics, arterial involvement at TAO diagnosis, vascular event and amputations during follow-up were analyzed according to cannabis consumption. Results: Seventy-three patients with TAO patients were included. Forty-five patients were in Tobacco group (T) and 28 in Tobacco and cannabis group (T&C). Tobacco exposure was less important in T&C group than in T group (19.4±11.3 vs 31.6±16.6 pack-years) (p=0.005) and patients in T&C group were younger at TAO diagnosis than in T group (p=0.008). Patients in T&C group presented more claudication (33.3% vs 8.9%, p=0.01) and less upper limbs resting ischemia (25.9% vs 51.1%, p=0.04) than patients in the T group. No differences were found between groups with regard to arterial distribution. Amputation rate for patients who had at least one major or minor amputation did not differ between T and T&C group (25% vs 14.8%, p=0.38). Conclusions: Cannabis consumption was associated with a younger age of TAO onset. However, it does not affect amputation-free survival, Tobacco exposure is less important in T&C patients; data of this bicentric study suggest that cannabis could be a cofactor of tobacco which accelerates TAO onset.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Predictive factors of venous recanalization in upper-extremity vein thrombosis.
- Author
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Ploton G, Brebion N, Guyomarch B, Pistorius MA, Connault J, Hersant J, Raimbeau A, Bergère G, Artifoni M, Durant C, Gautier G, Dumont R, Kubina JM, Toquet C, and Espitia O
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Catheterization, Central Venous methods, Catheterization, Peripheral adverse effects, Catheterization, Peripheral methods, Catheters, Indwelling adverse effects, Central Venous Catheters, Female, France, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Thrombosis, Veins, Venous Thrombosis metabolism, Venous Thrombosis therapy, Catheterization, Central Venous adverse effects, Upper Extremity blood supply, Venous Thrombosis physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Upper extremity venous thrombosis (UEVT) represents about 10% of venous thrombo-embolic disease. This is mainly explained by the increasing use of central venous line, for oncologic or nutritional care. The factors associated with venous recanalization are not known., Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate prognosis factor associated with venous recanalization after UEVT., Methods: This study included patients with UEVT diagnosed with duplex ultra-sonography (DUS) from January 2015 to December 2017 with DUS evaluations during follow-up. A multivariate Cox proportional-hazards-model analysis was performed to identify predictive factors of UEVT complete recanalization., Results: This study included 494 UEVT, 304 proximal UEVT and 190 distal UEVT. The median age was 58 years, 39.5% were women. Clinical context was: hematological malignancy (40.7%), solid cancer (14.2%), infectious or inflammatory context (49.9%) and presence of venous catheters or pacemaker leads in 86.4%. The rate of recanalization without sequelae of UEVT was 38%. For all UEVT, in multivariate analysis, factors associated with complete vein recanalization were: thrombosis associated with central venous catheter (CVC) (HR:2.40, [1.45;3.95], p<0.001), UEVT limited to a venous segment (HR:1.94, [1.26;3.00], p = 0.003), occlusive thrombosis (HR:0.48 [0.34;0.67], p<0.0001), the presence of a PICC Line (HR:2.29, [1.48;3.52], p<0.001), a thrombosis of deep and distal topography (HR:1.70, [1.10;2.63], p = 0.02) or superficial thrombosis of the forearm (HR:2.79, [1.52;5.12], p<0.001). For deep and proximal UEVT, non-occlusive UEVT (HR:2.23, [1.49;3.33], p<0.0001), thrombosis associated with CVC (HR:1.58, [1.01;2.47], p = 0.04) and infectious or inflammatory context (HR:1.63, [1.10;2.41], p = 0.01) were factors associated with complete vein recanalization., Conclusion: In this study, factors associated with UEVT recanalization were UEVT limited to a venous segment, thrombosis associated with CVC, a thrombosis of deep and distal thrombosis topography and superficial thrombosis of the forearm. Occlusive thrombosis was associated with the absence of UEVT recanalization., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A STROBE cohort study of 755 deep and superficial upper-extremity vein thrombosis.
- Author
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Ploton G, Pistorius MA, Raimbeau A, Denis Le Seve J, Bergère G, Ngohou C, Goueffic Y, Artifoni M, Durant C, Gautier G, Connault J, and Espitia O
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pulmonary Embolism etiology, Pulmonary Embolism mortality, Retrospective Studies, Thrombosis complications, Thrombosis diagnostic imaging, Thrombosis mortality, Ultrasonography, Venous Thrombosis complications, Venous Thrombosis diagnostic imaging, Venous Thrombosis mortality, Arm blood supply, Thrombosis diagnosis, Venous Thrombosis diagnosis
- Abstract
Upper extremity vein thrombosis (UE-VT) are more and more frequent pathologies and yet little studied. The aim is to describe the clinical and ultrasound features, UE-VT-related diseases, and the prevalence of pulmonary embolism (PE) and associated deaths.All UE-VT patients diagnosed by Doppler-ultrasound in Nantes University Hospital, from January 2015 to December 2017, were included retrospectively. UE-VT suspicion patterns, clinical features, UE-VT topography, and prevalence of PE and death were analyzed.Seven hundred and fifty-five UE-VT were analyzed, including 427 deep thrombosis (UE-DVT) and 328 superficial thrombosis (UE-SVT). In 86.2% (n = 651) UE-VT were related to endovascular devices. Among these thrombosis, one third is in connection with a PICC LINE and one quarter with a peripheral venous line. Forty nine percent (n = 370) of the patients had solid neoplasia or hematological malignancies. An inflammatory or systemic infectious context was found in 40.8% (n = 308) of the cases. The most frequently observed clinical sign at the UE-VT diagnosis was edema (28.6%). Among the UE-SVT it was the presence of an indurated cord (33.2%) and among the UE-DVT the indication of the Doppler-ultrasound was mainly a suspicion of infection on endovascular device (35.1%). In 10.6% (n = 80) of the cases the UE-VT were asymptomatic. The most frequently thrombosed veins were brachial basilic veins (16.7% of all thrombosed segments) followed by jugular (13%) and subclavian (12.3%) veins; 61.3% (n = 463) of UE-VT were in the right upper extremity; 63.3% (n = 478) UE-VT were occlusive. The occurrence of PE is 4% and the death rate is 10.2%, mainly related to the severe comorbidities of patients with UE-VT.UE-VT occurs in particular clinical contexts (hematological malignancies, solid cancers, systemic infections) and in the majority of endovascular devices (86.2%). The occurrence of PE is low.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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