Publications by authors named "Baillet L"

Structural-change detection and characterization, or structural-health monitoring, is generally based on modal analysis, for detection, localization, and quantification of changes in structure. Classical methods combine both variations in frequencies and mode shapes, which require accurate and spatially distributed measurements. In this study, the detection and localization of a local perturbation are assessed by analysis of frequency changes (in the fundamental mode and overtones) that are combined with a perturbation-based linear inverse method and a deconvolution process.

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Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) often lose weight, but after subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS), they gain weight. We compared daily energy intake (DEI), resting energy expenditure (REE) and substrate oxidation rates (measured by indirect calorimetry) in nineteen STN-DBS-treated patients (Group S), thirteen others on pharmacologic treatment by levodopa (Group L) and eight control subjects. We also determined the acute effects of STN-DBS and levodopa on REE and substrate oxidation rates.

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We compared Harris and Benedict [H & B; Harris, J. A., & Benedict, F.

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Objective: In the present study, we measured fibrinolytic parameters, including PAI-1 antigen and activity in a group of type 2 diabetic patients in secondary oral anti-diabetic failure treated with insulin alone or with insulin plus metformin.

Research Design And Methods: 12 type 2 diabetic patients in secondary oral anti-diabetic failure were randomly allocated into two groups receiving insulin alone or insulin plus metformin 1000 mg twice a day; six weeks later, the treatments were swapped over. At the end of each treatment period, blood samples were withdrawn for metabolic and fibrinolytic analysis.

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We compared cystatin C, creatinine, and the Cockroft formula for assessment of early renal failure, defined as a (51)Cr-EDTA clearance < 80 mL/min, in 89 diabetic patients with various degrees of renal impairment (glomerular filtration rate [GFR], 11.4 to 196.5 mL/min).

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Purpose: Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is an immune defect characterized by primary hypogammaglobulinemia. Most of the time, clinical manifestations that reveal CVID are recurrent bacterial infections, but auto-immune or granulomatous events may occur.

Methods: This retrospective study was conducted on 17 patients fulfilling the classical CVID definition.

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Objective: Determine the mechanism of glucose intolerance in chronically uremic subjects.

Design: Comparison of doubly labeled oral glucose tolerance tests.

Subjects: Seven nondialyzed chronically uremic subjects (creatinine, 420 +/- 104 micromol/L) and 7 healthy subjects, matched for age and body mass index.

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As diabetes is directly influenced by the way of life, a control of diet and physical activity may help in a prevention of the disease. Three recent studies have demonstrated this beneficial effect. Reduction caloric intake, controlling body weight and limitation of saturated fat absorption have proved their benefit effect in predisposed population; in the same way physical activity is effective in weight control and improvement insulino-resistance.

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Background/aims: To determine the decline in glucose tolerance in normal-weight middle-aged subjects, we performed a cross-sectional study using double-labelled oral glucose tolerance tests in 8 middle-aged (46.3 +/- 0.9 years) and in 8 young (23.

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Objective: To compare normal and pathologic values of three different tests for screening patients at risk of foot complications: mono-filament, tuning fork and vibration threshold perception (VTP).

Methods: Two hundred and fifty consecutive patients followed-up in a diabetic clinic were screened for sensitive polyneuropathy by three different tests in three different examinations in a blind design. The 10 g mono-filament, tuning fork and Horwell neuro-esthesiometer were applied to different sites on the patients' legs and feet.

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We report the case of a 66 years old woman with a well controlled, insulin-treated, type 2 diabetes, who experienced a ten-fold increase of her daily insulin needs (from 21 to 215 U/day) after the onset of a symptomatic atrial fibrillation. Check-up for another cause of insulin resistance was negative, and insulin doses could be decreased to preceding values only after electric cardioversion. Symptomatic atrial fibrillation should be considered as a potential cause of hyperglycemia.

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We have previously shown that a ketoacid-supplemented very-low-protein diet (KSVLPD), which has been proposed to slow down the rate of progression of chronic renal failure (CRF), improves tissue insulin sensitivity and decreases hyperinsulinemia in predialytic uremic patients. However, this diet may interfere with nutritional status. The aim of this study was to study basal energy expenditure (EE) and EE after an oral glucose load in patients with CRF before and during a KSVLPD (0.

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Chronic renal failure (CRF) is often accompanied by hyperleptinemia caused by deficient renal metabolism of leptin and possibly increased leptin production, which in turn may result from the hyperinsulinemia and increased proinflammatory cytokine levels in patients with CRF. The hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance observed in patients with CRF improve on supplemented very low protein diets (SVLPDs). The goal of our study is to determine whether the correction of hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance in patients with CRF by SVLPDs is accompanied by improvement in hyperleptinemia.

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It is well established that medium and long chain (+)-acylcarnitines (i.e. fatty acid esters of the unnatural d-isomer of carnitine) inhibit the oxidation of long chain fatty acids in mammalian tissues by interfering with some component(s) of the mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) system.

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Although insulin is a well-known cause of body weight gain, it is not clear whether it is due to the accumulation of fat or lean mass. We performed a 3 months Body-Impedance Analysis follow-up in 72 diabetic patients in a wide range of insulin indications: insulin introduction in young inaugural type 1 diabetics (n = 12), late-onset type 1 (n = 12), type 2 affected by intercurrent diseases (n = 12) or microangiopathic complications (n = 12), type 2 with failure of oral antidiabetic agents (n = 12), and insulin withdrawal in type 2 (n = 12). In type 1 patients, insulin led to the most important weight gain, but it was fat-free, with a major benefit on HbA1C.

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A case of McCune-Albright syndrome with acromegaly and chrondrosarcoma is reported. The potential role of chronic growth hormone overproduction in the occurrence of malignant transformation and the possible value of bisphosphonates in the treatment of bone fibrous dysplasias are discussed.

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Two patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and moderate chronic renal failure experienced a worsening of glycaemic control when recombinant human erythropoietin (r-HuEPO) was introduced, leading to insulin therapy. A 71-year-old woman with a 20-year history of NIDDM had presented histologically documented diabetic nephropathy for 2 years during which glucose control was stabilized by a diet and glibenclamide 10 mg. In the 6 months following introduction of r-HuEPO, hyperglycaemic symptoms developed, and HbA1C increased from 8.

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