205 results on '"P. Hüppi"'
Search Results
2. Neuroprocessing Mechanisms of Music during Fetal and Neonatal Development: A Role in Neuroplasticity and Neurodevelopment
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O. Chorna, M. Filippa, J. Sa De Almeida, L. Lordier, M. G. Monaci, P. Hüppi, D. Grandjean, and A. Guzzetta
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The primary aim of this viewpoint article is to examine recent literature on fetal and neonatal processing of music. In particular, we examine the behavioral, neurophysiological, and neuroimaging literature describing fetal and neonatal music perception and processing to the first days of term equivalent life. Secondly, in light of the recent systematic reviews published on this topic, we discuss the impact of music interventions on the potential neuroplasticity pathways through which the early exposure to music, live or recorded, may impact the fetal, preterm, and full-term infant brain. We conclude with recommendations for music stimuli selection and its role within the framework of early socioemotional development and environmental enrichment.
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- 2019
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3. Effect of an early music intervention on emotional and neurodevelopmental outcomes of preterm infants at 12 and 24 months
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Manuela Filippa, Lara Lordier, Fleur Lejeune, Joana Sa De Almeida, Petra Susan Hüppi, Francisca Barcos-Munoz, Maria Grazia Monaci, and Cristina Borradori-Tolsa
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preterm infants ,music intervention ,emotion ,attention ,effortful control ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
BackgroundFew studies have found long-term effects of early musical environmental enrichment in the NICU on preterm infant’s development. This study examines how early music enrichment affects emotional development and effortful control abilities in 12- and 24-month-old very preterm (VPT) infants.MethodsOne hundred nineteen newborns were recruited, including 83 VPTs and 36 full-term (FT) infants. The VPT infants were randomly assigned to the music intervention (44 VPT-Music) or control (39 VPT-control) groups. VPT-Music infants listened specifically designed music intervention from the 33rd week of gestation until hospital discharge. At 12 and 24 months, children were clinically evaluated using the Bayley-III Scales of Infant and Toddler Development and the Laboratory Temperament Assessment Battery, and at 24 months, with 3 additional episodes of the Effortful Control Battery.Results and discussionOur analysis showed that during a fear eliciting task, the VPT-Music group expressed lower level of fear reactivity and higher positive motor actions than VPT-controls and FT infants. At 24 months, the VPT-music group had lower scores for negative motor actions in the joy task, compared to both VPT-control and FT groups. In addition, both FT and VPT-music had higher scores of sustained attention compared to VPT-controls, but the contrasts were not significant. No significant effects on mental, language and motor outcomes were identified and for all three dimensions of the ECBQ.ConclusionThe present study suggests that an early music intervention in the NICU might influence preterm children’s emotional processing at 12 and 24 months. Limitations and suggestions for future research are highlighted.
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- 2024
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4. The catalytic role of glutathione transferases in heterologous anthocyanin biosynthesis
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Eichenberger, Michael, Schwander, Thomas, Hüppi, Sean, Kreuzer, Jan, Mittl, Peer R. E., Peccati, Francesca, Jiménez-Osés, Gonzalo, Naesby, Michael, and Buller, Rebecca M.
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- 2023
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5. 'Vis-à-Vis Training' to Improve Emotional and Executive Competences in Very Preterm Children: A Pilot Study and Randomised Controlled Trial
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Maria Chiara Liverani, Vanessa Siffredi, Greta Mikneviciute, Emma Mazza, Russia Ha-Vinh Leuchter, Petra Susan Hüppi, Cristina Borradori Tolsa, and Edouard Gentaz
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preterm ,children ,socio-emotional competences ,executive functions ,intervention ,randomised controlled trial ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Premature birth can lead to socio-emotional, behavioural and executive problems that impact quality of life and school performance in the long term. The aim of this pilot study was to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of a 12-week computerised training called Vis-à-vis to enhance these competencies in a cohort of very preterm (VPT) children aged 6 to 9. Methods: This pilot randomised controlled trial included 45 children born before 32 gestational weeks. Socio-emotional, behavioural and executive competencies were evaluated at three time points using computerised tasks, neuropsychological tests and questionnaires. Results: Among the eligible VPT children, 20% (n = 45) accepted to be part of the study, and 40% (n = 18) dropped out. Finally, 60% (n = 27) of the enrolled participants completed the study. Results showed a significant improvement in emotion knowledge and recognition immediately after the completion of the training. Conclusions: Overall, our results indicate that the implementation of this type of computerised training is feasible, but the overall compliance is unsatisfactory given the high dropout rate. Nevertheless, the positive effect of the training on emotion recognition encourages further exploration of these kinds of interventions to prevent adverse consequences in children born too soon.
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- 2024
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6. Multisensory stimuli and pain perception in the newborn
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Hüppi, Petra S. and Filippa, Manuela
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- 2024
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7. Large-scale brain network dynamics in very preterm children and relationship with socio-emotional outcomes: an exploratory study
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Siffredi, Vanessa, Liverani, Maria Chiara, Freitas, Lorena G. A., Tadros, D., Farouj, Y., Borradori Tolsa, Cristina, Van De Ville, Dimitri, Hüppi, Petra Susan, and Ha-Vinh Leuchter, Russia
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- 2023
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8. The effect of mindfulness-based intervention on neurobehavioural functioning and its association with white-matter microstructural changes in preterm young adolescents
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Siffredi, Vanessa, Liverani, Maria Chiara, Van De Ville, Dimitri, Freitas, Lorena G. A., Borradori Tolsa, Cristina, Hüppi, Petra Susan, and Ha-Vinh Leuchter, Russia
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- 2023
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9. The effect of mindfulness-based intervention on neurobehavioural functioning and its association with white-matter microstructural changes in preterm young adolescents
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Vanessa Siffredi, Maria Chiara Liverani, Dimitri Van De Ville, Lorena G. A. Freitas, Cristina Borradori Tolsa, Petra Susan Hüppi, and Russia Ha-Vinh Leuchter
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Very preterm (VPT) young adolescents are at high risk of executive, behavioural and socio-emotional difficulties. Previous research has shown significant evidence of the benefits of mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) on these abilities. This study aims to assess the association between the effects of MBI on neurobehavioral functioning and changes in white-matter microstructure in VPT young adolescents who completed an 8-week MBI program. Neurobehavioural assessments (i.e., neuropsychological testing, parents- and self-reported questionnaires) and multi-shell diffusion MRI were performed before and after MBI in 32 VPT young adolescents. Combined diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) measures were extracted on well-defined white matter tracts (TractSeg). A multivariate data-driven approach (partial least squares correlation) was used to explore associations between MBI-related changes on neurobehavioural measures and microstructural changes. The results showed an enhancement of global executive functioning using parent-reported questionnaire after MBI that was associated with a general pattern of increase in fractional anisotropy (FA) and decrease in axonal dispersion (ODI) in white-matter tracts involved in executive processes. Young VPT adolescents with lower gestational age at birth showed the greatest gain in white-matter microstructural changes after MBI.
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- 2023
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10. New insights into the development of the human cerebral cortex.
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Molnár, Zoltán, Clowry, Gavin J, Šestan, Nenad, Alzu'bi, Ayman, Bakken, Trygve, Hevner, Robert F, Hüppi, Petra S, Kostović, Ivica, Rakic, Pasko, Anton, ES, Edwards, David, Garcez, Patricia, Hoerder-Suabedissen, Anna, and Kriegstein, Arnold
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Pyramidal Cells ,Cerebral Cortex ,Interneurons ,Animals ,Humans ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,Neurogenesis ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,GABA ,associative areas ,calretinin ,inhibitory interneurons ,neurogenesis ,neuroimaging ,neuronal progenitors ,prefrontal cortex ,subplate neurons ,Stem Cell Research ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Neurological ,GABA ,Biomedical Engineering ,Medical Physiology ,Anatomy & Morphology - Abstract
The cerebral cortex constitutes more than half the volume of the human brain and is presumed to be responsible for the neuronal computations underlying complex phenomena, such as perception, thought, language, attention, episodic memory and voluntary movement. Rodent models are extremely valuable for the investigation of brain development, but cannot provide insight into aspects that are unique or highly derived in humans. Many human psychiatric and neurological conditions have developmental origins but cannot be studied adequately in animal models. The human cerebral cortex has some unique genetic, molecular, cellular and anatomical features, which need to be further explored. The Anatomical Society devoted its summer meeting to the topic of Human Brain Development in June 2018 to tackle these important issues. The meeting was organized by Gavin Clowry (Newcastle University) and Zoltán Molnár (University of Oxford), and held at St John's College, Oxford. The participants provided a broad overview of the structure of the human brain in the context of scaling relationships across the brains of mammals, conserved principles and recent changes in the human lineage. Speakers considered how neuronal progenitors diversified in human to generate an increasing variety of cortical neurons. The formation of the earliest cortical circuits of the earliest generated neurons in the subplate was discussed together with their involvement in neurodevelopmental pathologies. Gene expression networks and susceptibility genes associated to neurodevelopmental diseases were discussed and compared with the networks that can be identified in organoids developed from induced pluripotent stem cells that recapitulate some aspects of in vivo development. New views were discussed on the specification of glutamatergic pyramidal and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic interneurons. With the advancement of various in vivo imaging methods, the histopathological observations can be now linked to in vivo normal conditions and to various diseases. Our review gives a general evaluation of the exciting new developments in these areas. The human cortex has a much enlarged association cortex with greater interconnectivity of cortical areas with each other and with an expanded thalamus. The human cortex has relative enlargement of the upper layers, enhanced diversity and function of inhibitory interneurons and a highly expanded transient subplate layer during development. Here we highlight recent studies that address how these differences emerge during development focusing on diverse facets of our evolution.
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- 2019
11. Music impacts brain cortical microstructural maturation in very preterm infants: A longitudinal diffusion MR imaging study
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Joana Sa de Almeida, Olivier Baud, Sebastien Fau, Francisca Barcos-Munoz, Sebastien Courvoisier, Lara Lordier, François Lazeyras, and Petra S. Hüppi
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Diffusion MRI ,Fixel-based analysis ,Human preterm brain development ,Music intervention ,NODDI ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Preterm birth disrupts important neurodevelopmental processes occurring from mid-fetal to term-age. Musicotherapy, by enriching infants’ sensory input, might enhance brain maturation during this critical period of activity-dependent plasticity. To study the impact of music on preterm infants’ brain structural changes, we recruited 54 very preterm infants randomized to receive or not a daily music intervention, that have undergone a longitudinal multi-shell diffusion MRI acquisition, before the intervention (at 33 weeks’ gestational age) and after it (at term-equivalent-age). Using whole-brain fixel-based (FBA) and NODDI analysis (n = 40), we showed a longitudinal increase of fiber cross-section (FC) and fiber density (FD) in all major cerebral white matter fibers. Regarding cortical grey matter, FD decreased while FC and orientation dispersion index (ODI) increased, reflecting intracortical multidirectional complexification and intracortical myelination. The music intervention resulted in a significantly higher longitudinal increase of FC and ODI in cortical paralimbic regions, namely the insulo-orbito-temporopolar complex, precuneus/posterior cingulate gyrus, as well as the auditory association cortex. Our results support a longitudinal early brain macro and microstructural maturation of white and cortical grey matter in preterm infants. The music intervention led to an increased intracortical complexity in regions important for socio-emotional development, known to be impaired in preterm infants.
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- 2023
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12. Corpus callosum structural characteristics in very preterm children and adolescents: Developmental trajectory and relationship to cognitive functioning
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Vanessa Siffredi, Maria Chiara Liverani, Dimitri Van De Ville, Lorena G.A. Freitas, Cristina Borradori Tolsa, Petra Susan Hüppi, and Russia Ha-Vinh Leuchter
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Prematurity ,Corpus callosum ,Developmental trajectory ,Neuropsychological functions: Structural characteristics ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Previous studies suggest that structural alteration of the corpus callosum, i.e., the largest white matter commissural pathway, occurs after a preterm birth in the neonatal period and lasts across development. The present study aims to unravel corpus callosum structural characteristics across childhood and adolescence in very preterm (VPT) individuals, and their associations with general intellectual, executive and socio-emotional functioning. Neuropsychological assessments, T1-weighted and multi-shell diffusion MRI were collected in 79 VPT and 46 full term controls aged 6–14 years. Volumetric, diffusion tensor and neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) measures were extracted on 7 callosal portions using TractSeg. A multivariate data-driven approach (partial least squares correlation) and a cohort-based age normative modelling approach were used to explore associations between callosal characteristics and neuropsychological outcomes. The VPT and a full-term control groups showed similar trends of white-matter maturation over time, i.e., increase FA and reduced ODI, in all callosal segments, that was associated with increase in general intellectual functioning. However, using a cohort-based age-related normative modelling, findings show atypical pattern of callosal development in the VPT group, with reduced callosal maturation over time that was associated with poorer general intellectual and working memory functioning, as well as with lower gestational age.
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- 2023
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13. Behavioral outcome of very preterm children at 5 years of age: Prognostic utility of brain tissue volumes at term‐equivalent‐age, perinatal, and environmental factors
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Maria Chiara Liverani, Serafeim Loukas, Laura Gui, Marie‐Pascale Pittet, Maricé Pereira, Anita C. Truttmann, Pauline Brunner, Myriam Bickle‐Graz, Petra S. Hüppi, Djalel‐Eddine Meskaldji, and Cristina Borradori‐Tolsa
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behavioral outcome ,classification ,machine learning ,MRI ,preterm infants ,volumetric brain data ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Objective Prematurity is associated with a high risk of long‐term behavioral problems. This study aimed to assess the prognostic utility of volumetric brain data at term‐equivalent‐age (TEA), clinical perinatal factors, and parental social economic risk in the prediction of the behavioral outcome at 5 years in a cohort of very preterm infants (VPT,
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- 2023
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14. The effect of a mindfulness-based intervention on executive, behavioural and socio-emotional competencies in very preterm young adolescents
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Vanessa Siffredi, Maria Chiara Liverani, Petra Susan Hüppi, Lorena G. A. Freitas, Jiske De Albuquerque, Fanny Gimbert, Arnaud Merglen, Djalel Eddine Meskaldji, Cristina Borradori Tolsa, and Russia Hà-Vinh Leuchter
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Very preterm (VPT) children and adolescents show executive, behavioural and socio-emotional difficulties that persists into adulthood. This study aims to assess the effectiveness of a mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) in improving these competencies in VPT young adolescents using a randomised controlled trial design. 56 young adolescents aged 10–14 years, born before 32 gestational weeks, were randomly assigned to an “intervention” or a “waiting” group and completed an 8-week MBI in a cross-over design. Executive, behavioural and socio-emotional competencies were assessed at three different time points via parent and self-reported questionnaires, neuropsychological testing and computerised tasks. The data were analysed using an intention-to-treat approach with linear regression modelling. Our findings show a beneficial effect of MBI on executive, behavioural and socio-emotional competencies in VPT young adolescents measured by parent questionnaires. Increased executive competencies were also observed on computerised task with enhanced speed of processing after MBI. Two subgroups of participants were created based on measures of prematurity, which revealed increased long-term benefits in the moderate-risk that were not observed in the high-risk subgroups of VPT young adolescents. MBI seems a valuable tool for reducing detrimental consequences of prematurity in young adolescents, especially regarding executive, behavioural and socio-emotional difficulties. Clinical Trial Registration ClinicalTrials, NCT04638101. Registered 20 November 2020—Retrospectively registered, https://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT04638101 .
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- 2021
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15. Editorial: Agricultural diversification: Benefits and barriers for sustainable soil management
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Rosa Francaviglia, María Almagro, Heikki Lehtonen, Roman Hüppi, and Jesús Rodrigo-Comino
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crop diversification ,sustainable soil management ,ecosystem services ,low input farming ,economic profitability ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Published
- 2022
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16. Nutrient limitations regulate soil greenhouse gas fluxes from tropical forests: evidence from an ecosystem-scale nutrient manipulation experiment in Uganda
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J. Tamale, R. Hüppi, M. Griepentrog, L. F. Turyagyenda, M. Barthel, S. Doetterl, P. Fiener, and O. van Straaten
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Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Soil macronutrient availability is one of the abiotic controls that alters the exchange of greenhouse gases (GHGs) between the soil and the atmosphere in tropical forests. However, evidence on the macronutrient regulation of soil GHG fluxes from central African tropical forests is still lacking, limiting our understanding of how these biomes could respond to potential future increases in nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) deposition. The aim of this study was to disentangle the regulation effect of soil nutrients on soil GHG fluxes from a Ugandan tropical forest reserve in the context of increasing N and P deposition. Therefore, a large-scale nutrient manipulation experiment (NME), based on 40 m×40 m plots with different nutrient addition treatments (N, P, N + P, and control), was established in the Budongo Central Forest Reserve. Soil carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and nitrous oxide (N2O) fluxes were measured monthly, using permanently installed static chambers, for 14 months. Total soil CO2 fluxes were partitioned into autotrophic and heterotrophic components through a root trenching treatment. In addition, soil temperature, soil water content, and nitrates were measured in parallel to GHG fluxes. N addition (N and N + P) resulted in significantly higher N2O fluxes in the transitory phase (0–28 d after fertilization; p) because N fertilization likely increased soil N beyond the microbial immobilization and plant nutritional demands, leaving the excess to be nitrified or denitrified. Prolonged N fertilization, however, did not elicit a significant response in background (measured more than 28 d after fertilization) N2O fluxes. P fertilization marginally and significantly increased transitory (p=0.05) and background (p=0.01) CH4 consumption, probably because it enhanced methanotrophic activity. The addition of N and P (N + P) resulted in larger CO2 fluxes in the transitory phase (p=0.01), suggesting a possible co-limitation of both N and P on soil respiration. Heterotrophic (microbial) CO2 effluxes were significantly higher than the autotrophic (root) CO2 effluxes (p) across all treatment plots, with microbes contributing about two-thirds of the total soil CO2 effluxes. However, neither heterotrophic nor autotrophic respiration significantly differed between treatments. The results from this study suggest that the feedback of tropical forests to the global soil GHG budget could be disproportionately altered by increases in N and P availability over these biomes.
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- 2021
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17. Relationship Between Early Functional and Structural Brain Developments and Brain Injury in Preterm Infants
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De Wel, O., Van Huffel, S., Lavanga, M., Jansen, K., Dereymaeker, A., Dudink, J., Gui, L., Hüppi, P. S., de Vries, L. S., Naulaers, G., Benders, M. J. N. L., and Tataranno, M. L.
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- 2021
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18. Fast‐paced city life? Tempo and mode of phenotypic changes in urban birds from Switzerland
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Evelyn Hüppi and Madeleine Geiger
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aves ,darwins ,haldanes ,morphological change ,rate of evolution ,urban evolution ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Humans' large influence on the environment has constructed many new ecological niches, such as in urban areas. Phenotypic changes, including morphological ones related to human influence, are known from a small number of bird species. The amount of change in a given time period, that is, the rate of change, may vary. Rates of change (both evolutionary and through phenotypic plasticity) are reportedly rapid in human‐influenced settings, although this is disputed. We present new data on changes in beak dimensions and rates of change over historical time periods in four urban bird species (Common Chaffinch, European Greenfinch, Eurasian Blackbird, House Sparrow) from three Swiss cities (Basel, Bern, Geneva). Our study shows that beak dimensions have changed little in most investigated urban bird populations over the past century. Only in Genevan Blackbirds there was evidence for an increase in beak length over the past 65 years; Bernese Chaffinches appear to be trending toward a decrease in beak width over the past 55 years. Rates of change in our sample in comparison with literature records showed that compared to populations less influenced by humans, urban evolutionary rates appear to be similar. Although in accordance with previous findings about other urban bird species, our study exemplifies the difficulty to find universal patterns in tempo and mode of phenotypic evolution in urban areas, even when considering the same taxa. Our data contribute to the expanding field of urban evolutionary biology, which is particularly important regarding the growing urban habitats worldwide.
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- 2022
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19. Evolution and development of the bird chondrocranium
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Evelyn Hüppi, Ingmar Werneburg, and Marcelo R. Sánchez-Villagra
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Heterochrony ,Skull ,Disparity ,Homology ,Ontogeny ,Aves ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Abstract Background Birds exhibit an enormous diversity in adult skull shape (disparity), while their embryonic chondrocrania are considered to be conserved across species. However, there may be chondrocranial features that are diagnostic for bird clades or for Aves as a whole. We synthesized and analyzed information on the sequence of chondrification of 23 elements in ten bird species and five outgroups. Moreover, we critically considered the developmental morphology of the chondrocrania of 21 bird species and examined whether the diversity in adult skull shape is reflected in the development of the embryonic skull, and whether there are group-specific developmental patterns. Results We found that chondrocranial morphology is largely uniform in its major features, with some variation in the presence or absence of fenestrae and other parts. In kiwis (Apteryx), the unique morphology of the bony skull in the orbito-nasal region is reflected in its chondrocranial anatomy. Finally, differences in morphology and chondrification sequence may distinguish between different Palaeognathae and Neognathae and between the Galloanserae and Neoaves. The sequence of chondrification is largely conserved in birds, but with some variation in most regions. The peri- and prechordal areas in the base of the chondrocranium are largely conserved. In contrast to the outgroups, chondrification in birds starts in the acrochordal cartilage and the basicranial fenestra is formed secondarily. Further differences concern the orbital region, including early chondrification of the pila antotica and the late formation of the planum supraseptale. Conclusion Synthesizing information on chondrocranial development confronts terminological issues and a lack of comparable methods used (e.g., different staining; whole-mounts versus histology). These issues were taken into consideration when assessing differences across species. The summary of works on avian chondrocranial development, covered more than a century, and a comparison of the chondrification sequence among birds could be conducted. Future studies could test the hypothesis that chondrocranial disparity in Aves, in terms of the shape and proportion of individual elements, could be as large as adult skull disparity, despite conserved developmental patterns and the richness of forms in other (dermal) portions of the skull.
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- 2021
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20. Shedding light on excessive crying in babies
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Adam-Darque, Alexandra, Freitas, Lorena, Grouiller, Frédéric, Sauser, Julien, Lazeyras, François, Van De Ville, Dimitri, Pollien, Philippe, Garcia-Rodenas, Clara L., Bergonzelli, Gabriela, Hüppi, Petra S., and Ha-Vinh Leuchter, Russia
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- 2021
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21. Soil Nitrous Oxide Emission and Methane Exchange From Diversified Cropping Systems in Pannonian Region
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Roman Hüppi, László Horváth, József Dezső, Marietta Puhl-Rezsek, and Johan Six
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diversification in farming systems ,intercropping ,nitrous oxide emissions ,non-linear gas fluxes ,vineyard ,asparagus field ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Diversified farming systems are promoted to improve ecosystem services in agriculture while maintaining productivity. Intercropping could improve soil quality, the stability of yields and climate resilience. Whether direct emissions of greenhouse gases from soil are reduced as well, depends on the specific measures of diversification. Here, we determined the greenhouse gas emissions from soils of two diversification experiments in the Pannonian climate of Hungary. Firstly, in an asparagus field, oat and field pea was introduced as intercrop between the asparagus berms. Secondly, grass and aromatic herbs were intercropped in a vineyard between the grape rows. The results show that especially for nitrous oxide, average treatment emissions can increase with additional legumes (+252% with intercropped field peas) but decrease with aromatic herbs (−66%). No significant changes were found for methane exchange. This shows that, while other ecosystem services can be increased by intercropping, changes in soil greenhouse gas emissions by intercropping are highly context dependent.
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- 2022
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22. Crop growth, carbon sequestration and soil erosion in an organic vineyard of the Villány Wine District, Southwest Hungary
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József Dezső, Dénes Lóczy, Marietta Rezsek, Roman Hüppi, János Werner, and László Horváth
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crop diversification ,organic vineyard ,phenometry ,leaf area index ,c/n ratio ,carbon sequestration ,biomass ,image analysis ,soil erosion ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
A more resilient adaptation to changing climate calls for crop diversification in vineyards, too. As a contribution to the H2020 collaborative project of the European Union, called Diverfarming, and part of the agroecological experiments during 2018 and 2019, grapevine biomass growth was monitored in connection with carbon storage types in soil and in the deposits removed by soil erosion. Phenometry was carried out interpreting segmented images to follow changes in biomass. It was found that crop growth could be best described by the Richards growth function. The distinction between grapevine and intercrop growth, however, requires further refinement in image analysis. In the laboratory TOC and Ntotal were measured for both the soil and the plant organs as well as for the eroded sediments. Greenhouse gas emissions and photosynthesis were monitored. Looking at the change of Leaf Area Index (LAI) over the growing period, image analysis pointed out the role of cut shoots from pruning in the C and N cycles. Maximum leaf area (at ripening) for guyot cultivation technique was extimated at 7,840 m2 ha-1. Soil loss by erosion was established by sediment traps at the end of vinestock rows. The grain size distribution analysis led to the remarkable result that as erosion proceeded, the ratio of the sand fraction increased but remained within the range for the textural class of loam. Organic matter contents grew to 38 g kg-1. The rate of soil erosion is higher in ploughed than in grassed interrows by orders of magnitude.
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- 2020
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23. Early vocal contact and music in the NICU: new insights into preventive interventions
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Filippa, Manuela, Lordier, Lara, De Almeida, Joana Sa, Monaci, Maria Grazia, Adam-Darque, Alexandra, Grandjean, Didier, Kuhn, Pierre, and Hüppi, Petra S.
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- 2020
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24. Maternal Stress, Depression, and Attachment in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Before and During the COVID Pandemic: An Exploratory Study
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Filippa Manuela, Francisca Barcos-Munoz, Maria Grazia Monaci, Lara Lordier, Maricé Pereira Camejo, Joana Sa De Almeida, Didier Grandjean, Petra S. Hüppi, and Cristina Borradori-Tolsa
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neonatal intensive care unit ,preterm infants ,maternal stress ,maternal depression ,attachment ,COVID pandemic ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The main aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mothers’ postnatal depression, stress, and attachment during their stay in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). Twenty mothers of very premature infants born before 32weeks of gestational age were recruited at the Geneva University Hospital between January 2018 and February 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic started. Mothers were screened for postnatal depression after their preterm infant’s birth (Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, EPDS), then for stress (Parental Stressor Scale: Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, PSS:NICU), and attachment (Maternal Postnatal Attachment Scale, MPAS) at infant’s term-equivalent age. Data were compared with 14 mothers recruited between November 2020 and June 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic. No significant differences were found in the scores for depression, stress, and attachment between the two groups. However, a non-statistically significant trend showed a general increase of depression symptoms in mothers during the COVID-19 pandemic, which significantly correlated to the attachment and stress scores. Moreover, the PSS:NICU Sights and Sounds score was significantly positively correlated with EPDS scores and negatively with the MPAS score only in the During-COVID group. To conclude, we discussed a possible dampened effect of the several protective family-based actions that have been adopted in the Geneva University Hospital during the health crisis, and we discussed the most appropriate interventions to support parents in this traumatic period during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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- 2021
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25. Evolution and development of the bird chondrocranium
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Hüppi, Evelyn, Werneburg, Ingmar, and Sánchez-Villagra, Marcelo R.
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- 2021
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26. Clinical proton MR spectroscopy in central nervous system disorders.
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Oz, Gülin, Alger, Jeffry R, Barker, Peter B, Bartha, Robert, Bizzi, Alberto, Boesch, Chris, Bolan, Patrick J, Brindle, Kevin M, Cudalbu, Cristina, Dinçer, Alp, Dydak, Ulrike, Emir, Uzay E, Frahm, Jens, González, Ramón Gilberto, Gruber, Stephan, Gruetter, Rolf, Gupta, Rakesh K, Heerschap, Arend, Henning, Anke, Hetherington, Hoby P, Howe, Franklyn A, Hüppi, Petra S, Hurd, Ralph E, Kantarci, Kantarci, Klomp, Dennis WJ, Kreis, Roland, Kruiskamp, Marijn J, Leach, Martin O, Lin, Alexander P, Luijten, Peter R, Marjańska, Malgorzata, Maudsley, Andrew A, Meyerhoff, Dieter J, Mountford, Carolyn E, Nelson, Sarah J, Pamir, M Necmettin, Pan, Jullie W, Peet, Andrew C, Poptani, Harish, Posse, Stefan, Pouwels, Petra JW, Ratai, Eva-Maria, Ross, Brian D, Scheenen, Tom W, Schuster, Christian, Smith, Ian CP, Soher, Brian J, Tkáč, Ivan, Vigneron, Daniel B, Kauppinen, Risto A, and MRS Consensus Group
- Subjects
MRS Consensus Group ,Humans ,Central Nervous System Diseases ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Biomarkers ,Brain Disorders ,Neurodegenerative ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Neurological ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging - Abstract
A large body of published work shows that proton (hydrogen 1 [(1)H]) magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy has evolved from a research tool into a clinical neuroimaging modality. Herein, the authors present a summary of brain disorders in which MR spectroscopy has an impact on patient management, together with a critical consideration of common data acquisition and processing procedures. The article documents the impact of (1)H MR spectroscopy in the clinical evaluation of disorders of the central nervous system. The clinical usefulness of (1)H MR spectroscopy has been established for brain neoplasms, neonatal and pediatric disorders (hypoxia-ischemia, inherited metabolic diseases, and traumatic brain injury), demyelinating disorders, and infectious brain lesions. The growing list of disorders for which (1)H MR spectroscopy may contribute to patient management extends to neurodegenerative diseases, epilepsy, and stroke. To facilitate expanded clinical acceptance and standardization of MR spectroscopy methodology, guidelines are provided for data acquisition and analysis, quality assessment, and interpretation. Finally, the authors offer recommendations to expedite the use of robust MR spectroscopy methodology in the clinical setting, including incorporation of technical advances on clinical units.
- Published
- 2014
27. Preterm birth leads to impaired rich-club organization and fronto-paralimbic/limbic structural connectivity in newborns
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Joana Sa de Almeida, Djalel-Eddine Meskaldji, Serafeim Loukas, Lara Lordier, Laura Gui, François Lazeyras, and Petra S. Hüppi
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Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging ,Connectomics ,Graph-theory ,Human brain development ,Preterm birth ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Prematurity disrupts brain development during a critical period of brain growth and organization and is known to be associated with an increased risk of neurodevelopmental impairments. Investigating whole-brain structural connectivity alterations accompanying preterm birth may provide a better comprehension of the neurobiological mechanisms related to the later neurocognitive deficits observed in this population.Using a connectome approach, we aimed to study the impact of prematurity on neonatal whole-brain structural network organization at term-equivalent age. In this cohort study, twenty-four very preterm infants at term-equivalent age (VPT-TEA) and fourteen full-term (FT) newborns underwent a brain MRI exam at term age, comprising T2-weighted imaging and diffusion MRI, used to reconstruct brain connectomes by applying probabilistic constrained spherical deconvolution whole-brain tractography. The topological properties of brain networks were quantified through a graph-theoretical approach. Furthermore, edge-wise connectivity strength was compared between groups.Overall, VPT-TEA infants’ brain networks evidenced increased segregation and decreased integration capacity, revealed by an increased clustering coefficient, increased modularity, increased characteristic path length, decreased global efficiency and diminished rich-club coefficient. Furthermore, in comparison to FT, VPT-TEA infants had decreased connectivity strength in various cortico-cortical, cortico-subcortical and intra-subcortical networks, the majority of them being intra-hemispheric fronto-paralimbic and fronto-limbic. Inter-hemispheric connectivity was also decreased in VPT-TEA infants, namely through connections linking to the left precuneus or left dorsal cingulate gyrus – two regions that were found to be hubs in FT but not in VPT-TEA infants. Moreover, posterior regions from Default-Mode-Network (DMN), namely precuneus and posterior cingulate gyrus, had decreased structural connectivity in VPT-TEA group.Our finding that VPT-TEA infants’ brain networks displayed increased modularity, weakened rich-club connectivity and diminished global efficiency compared to FT infants suggests a delayed transition from a local architecture, focused on short-range connections, to a more distributed architecture with efficient long-range connections in those infants. The disruption of connectivity in fronto-paralimbic/limbic and posterior DMN regions might underlie the behavioral and social cognition difficulties previously reported in the preterm population.
- Published
- 2021
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28. Altered orbitofrontal activation in preterm-born young adolescents during performance of a reality filtering task
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Lorena G.A. Freitas, Maria Chiara Liverani, Vanessa Siffredi, Armin Schnider, Cristina Borradori Tolsa, Russia Ha-Vinh Leuchter, Dimitri Van De Ville, and Petra S. Hüppi
- Subjects
Preterm ,Orbitofrontal Cortex ,Reality filtering ,fMRI ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Preterm birth is one of the main causes for neurodevelopmental problems, and has been associated with a wide range of impairments in cognitive functions including executive functions and memory. One of the factors contributing to these adverse outcomes is the intrinsic vulnerability of the premature brain. Neuroimaging studies have highlighted structural and functional alterations in several brain regions in preterm individuals across lifetime. The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is crucial for a multitude of complex and adaptive behaviours, and its structure is particularly affected by premature birth. Nevertheless, studies on the functional impact of prematurity on the OFC are still missing.Orbitofrontal Reality filtering (ORFi) refers to the ability to distinguish if a thought is relevant to present reality or not. It can be tested using a continuous recognition task and is mediated by the OFC in adults and typically developing young adolescents. Therefore, the ORFi task was used to investigate whether OFC functioning is affected by prematurity. We compared the neural correlates of ORFi in 35 young adolescents born preterm (below 32 weeks of gestation) and aged 10 to 14 years with 25 full term-born controls.Our findings indicate that OFC activation was required only in the full-term group, whereas preterm young adolescents did not involve OFC in processing the ORFi task, despite being able to correctly perform it.
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- 2021
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29. Recommendation for hygiene and topical in neonatology from the French Neonatal Society
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Renesme, Laurent, Allen, A., Audeoud, F., Bouvard, C., Brandicourt, A., Casper, C., Cayemaex, L., Denoual, H., Duboz, M. A., Evrard, A., Fichtner, C., Fischer-Fumeaux, C. J., Girard, L., Gonnaud, F., Haumont, D., Hüppi, P., Knezovic, N., Laprugne-Garcia, E., Legouais, S., Mons, F., Pelofy, V., Picaud, J. C., Pierrat, V., Pladys, P., Reynaud, A., Souet, G., Thiriez, G., Tourneux, P., Touzet, M., Truffert, P., Zaoui, C., Zana-Taieb, E., Zores, C., Sizun, J., and Kuhn, P.
- Published
- 2019
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30. L’enveloppement, l’habillage et les tissus en contact avec l’enfant en néonatologie
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F. Berne Audéoud, S.L. Lenglemetz, M. Touzet, G. Thiriez, A. Allen, F. Audeoud, C. Bouvard, A. Brandicourt, L. Caeymaex, M.A. Duboz, A. Evrard, C. Fichtner, C. Fischer-Fumeaux, L. Girard, F. Gonnaud, P. Hüppi, N. Knezovic, P. Kuhn, E. Laprugne-Garcia, S. Legouais, F. Mons, J.-B. Muller, J.-C. Picaud, V. Pierrat, P. Pladys, A. Reynaud, L. Renesme, A. Rideau, J. Sizun, G. Souet, P. Tourneux, P. Truffert, C. Tscherning, C. Zaoui, E. Zana-Taieb, and C. Zores-Koenig
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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31. Arachidonic and docosahexaenoic acid supplementation and brain maturation in preterm infants; a double blind RCT.
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Moltu, Sissel J., Nordvik, Tone, Rossholt, Madelaine E., Wendel, Kristina, Chawla, Maninder, Server, Andres, Gunnarsdottir, Gunnthorunn, Pripp, Are Hugo, Domellöf, Magnus, Bratlie, Marianne, Aas, Marlen, Hüppi, Petra S., Lapillonne, Alexandre, Beyer, Mona K., Stiris, Tom, Maximov, Ivan I., Geier, Oliver, and Pfeiffer, Helle
- Abstract
Arachidonic acid (ARA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) are important structural components of neural cellular membranes and possess anti-inflammatory properties. Very preterm infants are deprived of the enhanced placental supply of these fatty acids, but the benefit of postnatal supplementation on brain development is uncertain. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that early enteral supplementation with ARA and DHA in preterm infants improves white matter (WM) microstructure assessed by diffusion-weighted MRI at term equivalent age. In this double-blind, randomized controlled trial, infants born before 29 weeks gestational age were allocated to either 100 mg/kg ARA and 50 mg/kg DHA (ARA:DHA group) or medium chain triglycerides (control). Supplements were started on the second day of life and provided until 36 weeks postmenstrual age. The primary outcome was brain maturation assessed by diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) using Tract-Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS) analysis. We included 120 infants (60 per group) in the trial; mean (range) gestational age was 26
+3 (22+6 - 28+6 ) weeks and postmenstrual age at scan was 41+3 (39+1 - 47+0 ) weeks. Ninety-two infants underwent MRI imaging, and of these, 90 had successful T1/T2 weighted MR images and 74 had DTI data of acceptable quality. TBSS did not show significant differences in mean or axial diffusivity between the groups, but demonstrated significantly higher fractional anisotropy in several large WM tracts in the ARA:DHA group, including corpus callosum, the anterior and posterior limb of the internal capsula, inferior occipitofrontal fasciculus, uncinate fasciculus, and the inferior longitudinal fasciculus. Radial diffusivity was also significantly lower in several of the same WM tracts in the ARA:DHA group. This study suggests that supplementation with ARA and DHA at doses matching estimated fetal accretion rates improves WM maturation compared to control treatment, but further studies are needed to ascertain any functional benefit. www.clinicaltrials.gov ; ID:NCT03555019. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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32. A framework based on sulcal constraints to align preterm, infant and adult human brain images acquired in vivo and post mortem
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Lebenberg, J., Labit, M., Auzias, G., Mohlberg, H., Fischer, C., Rivière, D., Duchesnay, E., Kabdebon, C., Leroy, F., Labra, N., Poupon, F., Dickscheid, T., Hertz-Pannier, L., Poupon, C., Dehaene-Lambertz, G., Hüppi, P., Amunts, K., Dubois, J., and Mangin, J.-F.
- Published
- 2018
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33. Effects of an Early Postnatal Music Intervention on Cognitive and Emotional Development in Preterm Children at 12 and 24 Months: Preliminary Findings
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Fleur Lejeune, Lara Lordier, Marie P. Pittet, Lucie Schoenhals, Didier Grandjean, Petra S. Hüppi, Manuela Filippa, and Cristina Borradori Tolsa
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preterm children ,early intervention ,music ,anger reactivity ,fear reactivity ,emotion regulation ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Preterm birth is associated with a higher prevalence of neurodevelopmental deficits. Indeed, preterm children are at increased risk for cognitive, behavioral, and socio-emotional difficulties. There is currently an increasing interest in introducing music intervention in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) care. Several studies have shown short-term beneficial effects. A recent study has shown that listening to a familiar music (heard daily during the NICU stay) enhanced preterm infants’ functional connectivity between auditory cortices and subcortical brain regions at term-equivalent age. However, the long-term effects of music listening in the NICUs have never been explored. The aim of this study was to evaluate at 12 and 24 months the effects of music listening in the NICU on cognitive and emotional development in preterm children by comparing them to a preterm control group with no previous music exposure and to a full-term group. Participants were 44 children (17 full-term and 27 preterm). Preterm children were randomized to either music intervention or control condition (without music). The preterm-music group regularly listened to music from 33 weeks postconceptional age until hospital discharge or term-equivalent age. At 12 months, children were evaluated on the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, Third Edition, then with 4 episodes of the Laboratory Temperament Assessment Battery (assessing expressions of joy, anger, and fear, and sustained attention). At 24 months, the children were evaluated with the same tests, and with 3 additional episodes of the Effortful Control Battery (assessing inhibition). Results showed that the scores of preterm children, music and control, differed from those of full-term children for fear reactivity at 12 months of age and for anger reactivity at 24 months of age. Interestingly, these significant differences were less important between the preterm-music and the full-term groups than between the preterm-control and the full-term groups. The present study provides preliminary, but promising, scientific findings on the beneficial long-term effects of music listening in the NICU on neurodevelopmental outcomes in preterm children, and more specifically on emotion mechanisms at 12 and 24 months of age. Our findings bring new insights for supporting early music intervention in the NICU.
- Published
- 2019
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34. Crop Diversification in Viticulture with Aromatic Plants: Effects of Intercropping on Grapevine Productivity in a Steep-Slope Vineyard in the Mosel Area, Germany
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Felix Dittrich, Thomas Iserloh, Cord-Henrich Treseler, Roman Hüppi, Sophie Ogan, Manuel Seeger, and Sören Thiele-Bruhn
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perennial cropping systems ,grape production ,medicinal and aromatic plants ,grapevine yield ,must quality ,experimental design ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 - Abstract
The effects of intercropping grapevine with aromatic plants are investigated using a multi-disciplinary approach. Selected results are presented that address the extent to which crop diversification by intercropping impacts grapevine yield and must quality, as well as soil water and mineral nutrients (NO3-N, NH4-N, plant-available K and P). The experimental field was a commercial steep-slope vineyard with shallow soils characterized by a high presence of coarse rock fragments in the Mosel area of Germany. The field experiment was set up as randomized block design. Rows were either cultivated with Riesling (Vitis vinifera L.) as a monocrop or intercropped with Origanum vulgare or Thymus vulgaris. Regarding soil moisture and nutrient levels, the topsoil (0–0.1 m) was more affected by intercropping than the subsoil (0.1–0.3 m). Gravimetric moisture was consistently lower in the intercropped topsoil. While NO3-N was almost unaffected by crop diversification, NH4-N, K, and P were uniformly reduced in topsoil. Significant differences in grapevine yield and must quality were dominantly attributable to climate variables, rather than to the treatments. Yield stabilization due to intercropping with thyme and oregano seems possible with sufficient rainfall or by irrigation. The long-term effects of intercropping on grapevine growth need further monitoring.
- Published
- 2021
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35. The Association of Maternal Exposure to Domestic Violence During Childhood With Prenatal Attachment, Maternal-Fetal Heart Rate, and Infant Behavioral Regulation
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Ana Sancho-Rossignol, Zoe Schilliger, María I. Cordero, Sandra Rusconi Serpa, Manuella Epiney, Petra Hüppi, François Ansermet, and Daniel S. Schechter
- Subjects
childhood trauma ,domestic violence ,emotion regulation ,prenatal attachment ,infant behavior ,parenting ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Human and animal models suggest that maternal hormonal and physiological adaptations during pregnancy shape maternal brain functioning and behavior crucial for offspring care and survival. Less sensitive maternal behavior, often associated with psychobiological dysregulation and the offspring's behavioral and emotional disorders, has been observed in mothers who have experienced adverse childhood experiences. Strong evidence shows that children who are exposed to domestic violence (DV) are at risk of being abused or becoming abusive in adulthood. Yet little is known about the effect of childhood exposure to DV on the expecting mother, her subsequent caregiving behavior and related effects on her infant. Thus, the present study examined the association of maternal exposure to DV during childhood on prenatal maternal attachment, maternal heart rate reactivity to an infant-crying stimulus and post-natal infant emotional regulation. Thirty-three women with and without exposure to DV during childhood were recruited during the first trimester of pregnancy and followed until 6-month after birth. The Maternal Antenatal Attachment Scale (MAAS) was used to measure prenatal attachment of the mother to her fetus during the second trimester of pregnancy, maternal and fetal heart rate reactivity to an infant-crying stimulus was assessed at the third trimester of pregnancy, and the Infant Behavior Questionnaire-Revised (IBQ-R) was used to assess infant emotional regulation at 6-months. Results showed that pregnant women that were exposed to DV during childhood had a poorer quality of prenatal attachment of mother to fetus, regardless of whether they also experienced DV during adulthood. In addition, maternal exposure to DV during childhood was associated with increased maternal heart rate to infant-crying stimulus and worse infant emotional regulation. These findings highlight the importance of prenatal screening for maternal exposure to DV during childhood as a risk factor for disturbances in the development of maternal attachment, dysfunctional maternal behavior and emotion dysregulation.
- Published
- 2018
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36. Restricting the nonlinearity parameter in soil greenhouse gas flux calculation for more reliable flux estimates.
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Roman Hüppi, Raphael Felber, Maike Krauss, Johan Six, Jens Leifeld, and Roland Fuß
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The static chamber approach is often used for greenhouse gas (GHG) flux measurements, whereby the flux is deduced from the increase of species concentration after closing the chamber. Since this increase changes diffusion gradients between chamber air and soil air, a nonlinear increase is expected. Lateral gas flow and leakages also contribute to non linearity. Several models have been suggested to account for this non linearity, the most recent being the Hutchinson-Mosier regression model (hmr). However, the practical application of these models is challenging because the researcher needs to decide for each flux whether a nonlinear fit is appropriate or exaggerates flux estimates due to measurement artifacts. In the latter case, a flux estimate from the linear model is a more robust solution and introduces less arbitrary uncertainty to the data. We present the new, dynamic and reproducible flux calculation scheme, kappa.max, for an improved trade-off between bias and uncertainty (i.e. accuracy and precision). We develop a tool to simulate, visualise and optimise the flux calculation scheme for any specific static N2O chamber measurement system. The decision procedure and visualisation tools are implemented in a package for the R software. Finally, we demonstrate with this approach the performance of the applied flux calculation scheme for a measured flux dataset to estimate the actual bias and uncertainty. The kappa.max method effectively improved the decision between linear and nonlinear flux estimates reducing the bias at a minimal cost of uncertainty.
- Published
- 2018
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37. Effect of biochar and liming on soil nitrous oxide emissions from a temperate maize cropping system
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R. Hüppi, R. Felber, A. Neftel, J. Six, and J. Leifeld
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Biochar, a carbon-rich, porous pyrolysis product of organic residues may positively affect plant yield and can, owing to its inherent stability, promote soil carbon sequestration when amended to agricultural soils. Another possible effect of biochar is the reduction in emissions of nitrous oxide (N2O). A number of laboratory incubations have shown significantly reduced N2O emissions from soil when mixed with biochar. Emission measurements under field conditions however are more scarce and show weaker or no reductions, or even increases in N2O emissions. One of the hypothesised mechanisms for reduced N2O emissions from soil is owing to the increase in soil pH following the application of alkaline biochar. To test the effect of biochar on N2O emissions in a temperate maize cropping system, we set up a field trial with a 20t ha−1 biochar treatment, a limestone treatment adjusted to the same pH as the biochar treatment (pH 6.5), and a control treatment without any addition (pH 6.1). An automated static chamber system measured N2O emissions for each replicate plot (n = 3) every 3.6 h over the course of 8 months. The field was conventionally fertilised at a rate of 160 kg N ha−1 in three applications of 40, 80 and 40 kg N ha−1 as ammonium nitrate. Cumulative N2O emissions were 52 % smaller in the biochar compared to the control treatment. However, the effect of the treatments overall was not statistically significant (p = 0.27) because of the large variability in the data set. Limed soils emitted similar mean cumulative amounts of N2O as the control. There is no evidence that reduced N2O emissions with biochar relative to the control is solely caused by a higher soil pH.
- Published
- 2015
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38. Ontogeny and phylogeny of the mammalian chondrocranium: the cupula nasi anterior and associated structures of the anterior head region
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Hüppi, Evelyn, Sánchez-Villagra, Marcelo R., Tzika, Athanasia C., and Werneburg, Ingmar
- Published
- 2018
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39. Lactoferrin Promotes Early Neurodevelopment and Cognition in Postnatal Piglets by Upregulating the BDNF Signaling Pathway and Polysialylation
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Chen, Yue, Zheng, Zhiqiang, Zhu, Xi, Shi, Yujie, Tian, Dandan, Zhao, Fengjuan, Liu, Ni, Hüppi, Petra S., Troy, II, Frederic A., and Wang, Bing
- Published
- 2015
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40. Accès et rôle des parents en néonatalogie en période d’épidémie COVID-19 — Propositions du GREEN de la SFN
- Author
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P. Kuhn, J. Sizun, C. Tscherning, A. Allen, F. Audeoud, C. Bouvard, A. Brandicourt, L. Caeymaex, M.A. Duboz, A. Evrard, C. Fichtner, C. Fischer-Fumeaux, L. Girard, F. Gonnaud, P. Hüppi, N. Knezovic, E. Laprugne-Garcia, S. Legouais, F. Mons, J.-B. Muller, J.-C. Picaud, V. Pierrat, P. Pladys, A. Reynaud, L. Renesme, A. Rideau, G. Souet, G. Thiriez, P. Tourneux, M. Touzet, P. Truffert, C. Zaoui, E. Zana-Taieb, and C. Zores
- Subjects
Recommandations - Abstract
La pandemie « Corona Virus Disease 2019 » (COVID-19) liee au « SARS-CoV-2 » a ete declaree « crise sanitaire mondiale » par l’Organisation mondiale de la sante fin janvier 2020. Des mesures exceptionnelles de confinement ont ete prises pour contenir cette infection tres contagieuse et parfois grave, que les equipes soignantes combattent en premiere ligne. Les nouveau-nes hospitalises representent par principe de precaution un groupe de patients vulnerables juge potentiellement a risque, mais qui s’avere finalement peu infecte et pauci-symptomatique comme l’indiquent les faibles incidences et severites des cas pediatriques publies [1]. L’acces des parents a leur nouveau-ne hospitalise fait partie integrante des soins en neonatologie et en particulier des soins centres sur l’enfant et sa famille. La presence de ses parents a ses cotes est un droit fondamental pour l’enfant hospitalise [2] et repond a un besoin premier des parents d’etre aupres de leur bebe [3]. Les benefices de strategies environnementales et de soins portees par les parents sont etablis avec un haut niveau de preuve [4]. La prematurite est source de stress parental, de troubles de l’attachement et de troubles anxiodepressifs renforces par la separation de la dyade parent–enfant, qui entrave le contact physique normal et la proximite emotionnelle entre la mere (le pere) et son enfant [5], [6]. Cette separation precoce peut affecter la sante mentale des parents mais aussi avoir des effets durables sur la programmation emotionnelle et le neurodeveloppement des nouveau-nes. La pandemie COVID-19 expose toutes les personnes a un stress et une angoisse qui peuvent majorer les troubles psychologiques preexistants ou exacerber le vecu des situations emotionnellement difficiles [7]. Ceci est vrai pour les soignants mais aussi pour les parents de nouveau-nes hospitalises dans un contexte de distanciation sociale qui limite le soutien de leurs proches. Bien que cela ne soit pas encore documente, il est aussi possible que les meres COVID-19 positives soient exposees a un plus grand sentiment de culpabilite, deja tres present en cas de naissance prematuree ; et se rajoutant a une crainte pour leur propre etat de sante. Pourtant, la situation pandemique actuelle et le decret de confinement national ont pour effet collateral de restreindre l’accueil des parents en neonatologie aussi bien quand la mere est suspecte ou infectee par le COVID-19 au moment de l’accouchement, qu’en dehors de cette situation. Ces restrictions d’acces variables suivant les centres, resultent de regles institutionnelles editees avec les equipes d’hygiene hospitaliere de chaque hopital, de decisions prises au niveau des poles de pediatrie et/ou des hopitaux mere-enfant. Ces mesures qui visent initialement a proteger les nouveau-nes hospitalises et l’ensemble des adultes presents dans les services de neonatologie peuvent alterer la qualite des soins delivres a ces patients vulnerables et a leur famille. Notre reflexion vise a mettre en balance les mesures necessaires pour contenir la pandemie avec les besoins premiers des enfants hospitalises en neonatalogie et de leurs parents. Nous envisageons les avis emis sur la prise en charge d’un nouveau-ne d’une mere avec COVID-19 suspecte ou confirme, par des organisations internationales, des institutions et societes savantes. Pour finir, nous proposons des actions pour aider les professionnels de sante a soutenir la qualite des soins delivres, l’attachement et la participation des parents aux soins de leur nouveau-ne hospitalise, sans majorer le risque de propagation du virus.
- Published
- 2020
41. Führung im modernen Fußball
- Author
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Hüppi, Michael
- Published
- 2014
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42. Perinatal and early postnatal reorganization of the subplate and related cellular compartments in the human cerebral wall as revealed by histological and MRI approaches
- Author
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Kostović, Ivica, Jovanov-Milošević, Nataša, Radoš, Milan, Sedmak, Goran, Benjak, Vesna, Kostović-Srzentić, Mirna, Vasung, Lana, Čuljat, Marko, Radoš, Marko, Hüppi, Petra, and Judaš, Miloš
- Published
- 2014
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43. Multimodality evaluation of the pediatric brain: DTI and its competitors
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Vasung, Lana, Fischi-Gomez, Elda, and Hüppi, Petra S.
- Published
- 2013
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44. L’enveloppement, l’habillage et les tissus en contact avec l’enfant en néonatologie
- Author
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Berne Audéoud, F., Lenglemetz, S.L., Touzet, M., Thiriez, G., Allen, A., Audeoud, F., Bouvard, C., Brandicourt, A., Caeymaex, L., Duboz, M.A., Evrard, A., Fichtner, C., Fischer-Fumeaux, C., Girard, L., Gonnaud, F., Hüppi, P., Knezovic, N., Kuhn, P., Laprugne-Garcia, E., Legouais, S., Mons, F., Muller, J.-B., Picaud, J.-C., Pierrat, V., Pladys, P., Reynaud, A., Renesme, L., Rideau, A., Sizun, J., Souet, G., Thiriez, G., Tourneux, P., Touzet, M., Truffert, P., Tscherning, C., Zaoui, C., Zana-Taieb, E., and Zores-Koenig, C.
- Published
- 2023
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45. N use efficiencies and N2O emissions in two contrasting, biochar amended soils under winter wheat—cover crop—sorghum rotation
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Roman Hüppi, Albrecht Neftel, Moritz F Lehmann, Maike Krauss, Johan Six, and Jens Leifeld
- Subjects
biochar ,nitrous oxide ,nitrogen use efficiency ,leaching ,lysimeter ,15N tracer ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Science ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Biochar, a carbon-rich, porous pyrolysis product of organic residues, is evaluated as an option to tackle major problems of the global food system. Applied to soil, biochar can sequester carbon and have beneficial effects on nitrogen (N) cycling, thereby enhancing crop yields and reducing nitrous oxide (N _2 O) emissions. There is little understanding of the underlying mechanisms, but many experiments indicated increased yields and manifold changes in N transformation, suggesting an increase in N use efficiency. Biochar’s effects can be positive in extensively managed tropical agriculture, however less is known about its use in temperate soils with intensive fertilisation. We tested the effect of slow pyrolysis wood chip biochar on N use efficiency, crop yields and N _2 O emissions in a lysimeter system with two soil types (sandy loamy Cambisol and silty loamy Luvisol) in a winter wheat—cover crop—sorghum rotation. ^15 N-labelled ammonium nitrate fertiliser (170 kg N ha ^−1 in 3 doses, 10% ^15 N) was applied to the first crop to monitor its fate in three ecosystem components (plants, soil, leachate). Green rye was sown as cover crop to keep the first year’s fertiliser N for the second year’s sorghum crop (fertilised with 110 kg N ha ^−1 in two doses and natural abundance ^15 N). We observed no effects of biochar on N fertiliser use efficiency, yield or N uptake for any crop. Biochar reduced leaching by 43 ± 19% but only towards the end of the experiment with leaching losses being generally low. For both soils N _2 O emissions were reduced by 15 ± 4% with biochar compared to the control treatments. Our results indicate that application of the chosen biochar induces environmental benefits in terms of N _2 O emission and N leaching but does not substantially affect the overall N cycle and hence crop performance in the analyzed temperate crop rotation.
- Published
- 2016
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46. Early metabolic defects in dexamethasone-exposed and undernourished intrauterine growth restricted rats.
- Author
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Emmanuel Somm, Delphine M Vauthay, Audrey Guérardel, Audrey Toulotte, Philippe Cettour-Rose, Philippe Klee, Paolo Meda, Michel L Aubert, Petra S Hüppi, and Valérie M Schwitzgebel
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Poor fetal growth, also known as intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), is a worldwide health concern. IUGR is commonly associated with both an increased risk in perinatal mortality and a higher prevalence of developing chronic metabolic diseases later in life. Obesity, type 2 diabetes or metabolic syndrome could result from noxious "metabolic programming." In order to better understand early alterations involved in metabolic programming, we modeled IUGR rat pups through either prenatal exposure to synthetic glucocorticoid (dams infused with dexamethasone 100 µg/kg/day, DEX) or prenatal undernutrition (dams feeding restricted to 30% of ad libitum intake, UN). Physiological (glucose and insulin tolerance), morphometric (automated tissue image analysis) and transcriptomic (quantitative PCR) approaches were combined during early life of these IUGR pups with a special focus on their endocrine pancreas and adipose tissue development. In the absence of catch-up growth before weaning, DEX and UN IUGR pups both presented basal hyperglycaemia, decreased glucose tolerance, and pancreatic islet atrophy. Other early metabolic defects were model-specific: DEX pups presented decreased insulin sensitivity whereas UN pups exhibited lowered glucose-induced insulin secretion and more marked alterations in gene expression of pancreatic islet and adipose tissue development regulators. In conclusion, these results show that before any catch-up growth, IUGR rats present early physiologic, morphologic and transcriptomic defects, which can be considered as initial mechanistic basis of metabolic programming.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. La famille dans les unités de médecine néonatale
- Author
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C. Casper, C. Fichtner, F. Gonnaud, N. Knezovic, A. Reynaud, P. Kuhn, J. Sizun, A. Allen, F. Audeoud, C. Bouvard, A. Brandicourt, L. Cayemaex, H. Denoual, M.A. Duboz, A. Evrard, C. Fischer-Fumeaux, L. Girard, D. Haumont, P. Hüppi, E. Laprugne-Garcia, S. Legouais, F. Mons, V. Pelofy, J.-C. Picaud, V. Pierrat, A. Renaud, L. Renesme, G. Souet, G. Thiriez, P. Tourneux, M. Touzet, P. Truffert, C. Zaoui, E. Zana-Taieb, and C. Zores
- Subjects
03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,030227 psychiatry - Abstract
Resume La famille est primordiale pour les nouveau-nes hospitalises. Elle soutient son developpement, tout en tissant des liens d’attachement solides avec lui. Les soins centres sur l’enfant et sa famille affirment que la famille fait partie de l’equipe soignante de neonatologie. Elle est integree dans le processus de decision medicale et est partenaire dans les soins a son ou ses enfants. Il semble essentiel de preciser la definition de la famille. Nous allons aborder cette definition sous un aspect juridique, sociologique ou philosophique. Le Groupe de Reflexion et d’Evaluation de l’Environnement des Nouveau-nes (GREEN) de la Societe francaise de neonatologie estime qu’il est important de clarifier la definition de la famille d’un nouveau-ne hospitalise, de decrire les difficultes lies a la separation pour l’enfant, ses parents, sa fratrie et sa famille, de faire un etat des lieux sur les pratiques, puis de proposer des recommandations et des strategies d’application.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Le portage des nouveau-nés en peau à peau
- Author
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C. Zaoui-Grattepanche, P. Kuhn, V. Pierrat, A. Allen, F. Audeoud, C. Bouvard, A. Brandicourt, C. Casper, L. Cayemaex, H. Denoual, M.A. Duboz, A. Evrard, C. Fichtner, C. Fischer-Fumeaux, L. Girard, F. Gonnaud, D. Haumont, P. Hüppi, N. Knezovic, E. Laprugne-Garcia, S. Legouais, F. Mons, V. Pelofy, J.-C. Picaud, A. Renaud, L. Renesme, J. Sizun, G. Souet, G. Thiriez, P. Tourneux, M. Touzet, P. Truffert, C. Zaoui, E. Zana-Taieb, and C. Zores
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03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,030212 general & internal medicine - Abstract
Resume Le peau a peau est defini par le portage d’un enfant vetu d’une couche et d’un bonnet entre les seins de sa mere ou contre le torse du pere, peau contre peau. Les objectifs du Groupe de Reflexion et d’Evaluation de l’Environnement des Nouveau-nes etaient d’evaluer son rationnel scientifique et d’emettre des recommandations pratiques pour sa realisation en neonatologie et en salle de naissance. Une recherche bibliographique systematique, suivant la methodologie de la Haute Autorite de sante, montre l’existence de benefices sur la stabilite physiologique, le sommeil, la douleur, le developpement neurologique, l’allaitement, l’attachement et le stress parental. Il est recommande que le peau a peau soit propose a tous les bebes prematures hospitalises, le plus precocement et le plus largement possible, des stabilite clinique, avec des procedures ecrites de transfert et surveillance, et un environnement soutenant. Cette pratique semble beneficier aux nouveau-nes extremement prematures et/ou intubes, mais necessite une expertise de l’equipe. Le peau a peau precoce en salle de naissance avec la mere est benefique pour l’allaitement, le comportement, l’adaptation du nouveau-ne a terme ou proche du terme. Le peau a peau avec le pere ameliore aussi le comportement de l’enfant. L’installation immediate en peau a peau avec la mere est fortement recommandee pour le nouveau-ne d’âge ≥ 35 semaines, si son etat clinique le permet. Il est recommande a chaque equipe d’informer et soutenir les parents, d’instaurer des procedures de securite/surveillance adaptees pour soutenir la pratique du peau a peau en securite en salle de naissance.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. National ethical directives and practical aspects of forgoing life-sustaining treatment in newborn infants in a Swiss intensive care unit
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ME Berner, PC Rimensberger, and PS Hüppi
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Euthanasia ,Futility ,Withdrawal of life support ,ethics ,Newborn ,Death and dying ,Medicine - Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Immunoglobulin serum levels in very low birth weight infants treated with different intravenous preparations
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Amato, M., Markus, D., Hüppi, P., and Imbach, P.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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