7 results on '"Marie Vitello"'
Search Results
2. N°345 – Case-report of a patient who regains sight after zolpidem: Multimodal report
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Paolo Cardone, Marie Vitello, Emilie Szymkowicz, Leandro Sanz, Aurore Thibaut, Cecile Andris, Valentine Demoulin, Rajanikant Panda, Michiel Meys, Sylvie Chokron, Steven Laureys, Jitka Annen, Charlotte Martial, and Olivia Gosseries
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Neurology ,Physiology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sensory Systems - Published
- 2023
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3. Cerebral Electrometabolic Coupling in Disordered and Normal States of Consciousness
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Jitka Annen Ir, Gianluca Frasso, Glenn van der Lande, Estelle Bonin, Marie Vitello, Rajanikant Panda, Arianna Sala, Federico Raimondo, Mohamed Ali Bahri, Nicholas D. Schiff, Olivia Gosseries, Aurore Thibaut, and Steven Laureys
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
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4. The gating pore blocker 1-(2,4-xylyl)guanidinium selectively inhibits pacemaking of midbrain dopaminergic neurons
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Stephan A. Pless, Marie Vitello, Dominique Engel, Vincent Seutin, Sofian Ringlet, Laurent Massotte, Jean-François Liégeois, Jochen Roeper, Kevin Jehasse, Bernard Lakaye, Sebastian Hartmann, Han Chow Chua, and Romain Vitello
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Male ,Patch-Clamp Techniques ,Substantia nigra ,Gating ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Bursting ,Mice ,Norepinephrine ,Dopamine ,Biological Clocks ,Mesencephalon ,medicine ,Animals ,Patch clamp ,GABAergic Neurons ,Rats, Wistar ,Ion channel ,Guanidine ,Pharmacology ,Chemistry ,Pars compacta ,Dopaminergic Neurons ,Ventral Tegmental Area ,Rats ,Ventral tegmental area ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Substantia Nigra ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Biophysics ,Ion Channel Gating ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Although several ionic mechanisms are known to control rate and regularity of the slow pacemaker in dopamine (DA) neurons, the core mechanism of pacing is controversial. Here we tested the hypothesis that pacemaking of SNc DA neurons is enabled by an unconventional conductance. We found that 1-(2,4-xylyl)guanidinium (XG), an established blocker of gating pore currents, selectively inhibits pacemaking of DA neurons. The compound inhibited all slow pacemaking DA neurons that were tested, both in the substantia nigra pars compacta, and in the ventral tegmental area. Interestingly, bursting behavior was not affected by XG. Furthermore, the drug did not affect fast pacemaking of GABAergic neurons from substantia nigra pars reticulata neurons or slow pacemaking of noradrenergic neurons. In DA neurons, current-clamp analysis revealed that XG did not appear to affect ion channels involved in the action potential. Its inhibitory effect persisted during blockade of all ion channels previously suggested to contribute to pacemaking. RNA sequencing and voltage-clamp recordings yielded no evidence for a gating pore current to underlie the conductance. However, we could isolate a small subthreshold XG-sensitive current, which was carried by both Na+ and Cl− ions. Although the molecular target of XG remains to be defined, these observations represent a step towards understanding pacemaking in DA neurons.
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- 2021
5. Beyond current guidelines: reduction in minimum administered radiopharmaceutical activity with preserved diagnostic image quality in pediatric hepatobiliary scintigraphy
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Marie Vitello, S. Ted Treves, David Zurakowski, Michael J. Gelfand, Zvi Bar-Sever, A. Hans Vija, Frederic H. Fahey, Xinhua Cao, Katherine Zukotynski, Laura A. Drubach, Xinhong Ding, Anthony Falone, Manojeet Bhattacharya, Robert Markelewicz, and Frederick D. Grant
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Image quality ,Glycine ,Technetium Tc 99m Disofenin ,Radiation Dosage ,Scintigraphy ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiopharmaceutical Activity ,Biliary Tract ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Aniline Compounds ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Imino Acids ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,food and beverages ,Organotechnetium Compounds ,General Medicine ,Liver ,Dose optimization ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Female ,Radiology ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
To determine if the minimum administered radiopharmaceutical activity for hepatobiliary scintigraphy can be reduced while preserving diagnostic image quality using enhanced planar processing (EPP).A total of 40 infants between 10 and 270 days old (body mass 2.2 - 6.5 kg) had hepatobiliary scintigraphy during the period 2004 - 2010 following the intravenous administration of either (99m)Tc-mebrofenin (18 patients) or (99m)Tc-disofenin (22 patients). Due to the small size of these patients, they all received the minimum administered activity of 18.5 MBq consistent with the North American Consensus Guidelines. Six nuclear medicine physicians subjectively graded the acceptability of the image quality for clinical interpretation using a four-point scale (not acceptable, fair, good, excellent). Each physician independently graded seven image sets including the original study (full activity) and simulated reduced activity studies using binomial subsampling (50% of full activity, 25% of full activity and activity reduced by weight), with and without EPP.For full-activity studies, 98% were deemed acceptable by the six physicians for clinical interpretation. The percentages of acceptable 50% reduced activity studies with and without EPP were not significantly different from the percentage of acceptable full-activity studies (P = 0.193 and P = 0.998, respectively). The percentage of acceptable 25% reduced activity studies without EPP was significantly different from the percentage of acceptable full-activity studies (P0.001); however, this difference vanished when EPP was applied (P = 0.482). The activity reduced by weight ranged from 1.85 to 4.81 MBq (10% to 26% of full dose) and the percentages of acceptable studies with and without EPP were significantly different from the percentage of acceptable full-activity studies (P0.001 and P = 0.02, respectively).Clinically interpretable hepatobiliary scintigraphy images can be obtained in infants when the minimum administered activity is substantially reduced. Without EPP, clinically acceptable images may be produced with a reduction of 50%, and with EPP, a reduction of 75% or more may be possible.
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- 2014
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6. Policies to promote use of generic medicines in low and middle income countries: A review of published literature, 2000–2010
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Warren A. Kaplan, Veronika J. Wirtz, Marie Vitello, and Lindsay Sarah Ritz
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Economic growth ,Public economics ,Descriptive statistics ,Transparency (market) ,Health Policy ,Developing country ,Private sector ,humanities ,Incentive ,Profit margin ,Economics ,Drugs, Generic ,Humans ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Developing Countries ,Pharmaceutical policy ,Health policy - Abstract
Objective Review the literature on the impact of policies designed to enhance uptake of generic medicines in low and middle income countries (LMICs). Methods We searched for publications related to generic medicines policies (January 2000–March 2010) and did a bibliometric, descriptive analysis of the dataset in addition to an analysis of studies evaluating the impact of pro-generic policies. We repeated a subset of this larger search in January 2012. Results Of the 4994 articles screened, 315 (6.3%) full-text publications were related to generic medicines policies. Of these 315, 236 (75%) dealt with generic medicine policies in high-income countries, and 79 (25%) with policies in LMICs. In total, we found only 10 evaluation studies looking at the impact of competition, trade, pricing and prescribing policies on generic medicine price and/or volume. Key barriers to implementing generic medicine policies in LMICs are negative perceptions of stakeholders (e.g., generics are of lower quality) plus perverse private sector financial incentives to sell products with the highest profit margin. Other relevant barriers are legal/regulatory, such as the absence of generic substitution regulations. There also exists a general difficulty in promoting generics due to a lack of transparency in the pharmaceutical supply and distribution system, for example, a lack of price information provided by health care provider organizations to physicians. Conclusion There is little policy evaluation to determine which pro-generic policies increase generic medicines utilization in LMICs. Ensuring a functioning medicines regulation authority, creating a reasonably robust market of generic medicines and aligning incentives for physicians, consumers and drug sellers are necessary prerequisites for increasing the uptake and use of generic medicines.
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- 2012
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7. Local production of medical technologies and its effect on access in low and middle income countries: a systematic review of the literature
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Lindsay Sarah Ritz, Warren A. Kaplan, and Marie Vitello
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Strategic planning ,Pharmaceutical Policy ,Engineering ,Public economics ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Access to Medicines ,Industrial Policy ,Review Article ,Data science ,Systematic review ,Multinational corporation ,Production (economics) ,Pharmaceuticals ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,business ,Empirical evidence ,Emerging markets ,Research question ,Pharmaceutical policy - Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this study was to assess the existing theoretical and empirical literature examining the link between "local production" of pharmaceuticals and medical devices and increased local access to these products. Our preliminary hypothesis is that studies showing a robust relationship between local production and access to medical products are sparse, at best. Methods: An extensive literature search was conducted using a wide variety of databases and search terms intending to capture as many different aspects of this issue as possible. The results of the search were reviewed and categorized according to their relevance to the research question. The literature was also reviewed to determine the rigor used to examine the effects of local production and what implications these experiences hold for other developing countries. Results: Literature addressing the benefits of local production and the link between it and access to medical products is sparse, mainly descriptive and lacking empirical evidence. Of the literature we reviewed that addressed comparative economics and strategic planning of multinational and domestic firms, there are few dealing with emerging markets and lower-middle income countries and even fewer that compare local biomedical producers with multinational corporations in terms of a reasonable metric. What comparisons exist mainly relate to prices of local versus foreign/multinational produced medicines. Conclusions: An assessment of the existing theoretical and empirical literature examining the link between "local production" of pharmaceuticals and medical devices and increased local access to these products reveals a paucity of literature explicitly dealing with this issue. Of the literature that does exist, methods used to date are insufficient to prove a robust relationship between local production of medical products and access to these products. There are mixed messages from various studies, and although the studies may correctly depict specific situations in specific countries with reference to specific products, such evidence cannot be generalized. Our review strongly supports the need for further research in understanding the dynamic link between local production and access to medical products
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- 2012
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