Publications by authors named "Capron T"

During SARS-CoV-2 infection, eosinopenia may reflect a hyperactive immune response. In this study of hospitalized COVID-19 patients, we aimed to better understand the prognostic value of severe eosinopenia (absolute eosinophil count = 0 G/L) and decipher its underlying mechanisms. We retrospectively analyzed the records of COVID-19 patients hospitalized from March to June 2020 in three university hospitals in Marseille, France.

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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate the potential additional value of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in the assessment of left ventricular (LV) dilatation and dysfunction by comparison to standard echocardiography in patients with chronic left-sided valvular regurgitation.

Materials And Methods: We prospectively enrolled patients with chronic severe mitral regurgitation (MR) or aortic regurgitation (AR). They underwent standard echocardiography and CMR using aortic flow and LV-function sequences.

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Percutaneous pleural maneuvers are performed routinely in the management of pleural diseases with a favorable safety profile. We report a case of cerebral air embolism during a pleural lavage for the management of an empyema. This severe complication is rarely reported in the literature, although it can happen after any percutaneous thoracic procedures.

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Purpose: The purpose of this prospective study was to assess the value of biventricular extracellular volume (ECV) in pre-capillary pulmonary hypertension (PH) obtained using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) and to correlate ECV with markers of prognosis such as strain echocardiography and blood biomarkers of fibrosis.

Materials And Methods: Twelve patients with PH (6 men, 6 women; mean age=50±16 [SD] years; age range: 22-73 years) underwent the same day: (i), transthoracic echocardiography including measurement of right ventricular (RV) fractional shortening (RVfs), tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), maximal tricuspid annular velocity, RV global and segmental deformation; (ii), right heart catheterization measuring pulmonary arterial pressures (inmmHg) and cardiac output (inL/min); (iii), CMR at 1.5-T measuring RV volumes and ejection fraction; (iv), native and 15min post-contrast T1 mapping using modified look-locker inversion-recovery sequence; and (v), serum quantification of two biomarkers of collagen turnover and hematocrit.

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Pleural metastasis of thyroid carcinoma is very rarely encountered in the evaluation of pleural effusion and diagnosis may be challenging. However, an anaplastic transformation of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), although a rare condition, should be considered even after a prolonged period of patient follow-up. Here we report a case of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma mimicking malignant pleural mesothelioma diagnosed nine years after the initial diagnosis of PTC and detail the clues used to orient and confirm the diagnosis.

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Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterised by nonreversible proximal bronchial obstruction leading to major respiratory disability. However, patient phenotypes better capture the heterogeneously reported complaints and symptoms of COPD. Recent studies provided evidence that classical bronchial obstruction does not properly reflect respiratory disability, and symptoms now form the new paradigm for assessment of disease severity and guidance of therapeutic strategies.

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Acid sphingomyelinase deficiency (ASMD), also called Niemann-Pick disease, is a storage disorder with pulmonary involvement but few respiratory symptoms in adults. However, the disease may evolve towards clinically relevant respiratory symptoms with referral to the pulmonologist for management and care. Based on two case reports illustrating respiratory impairment, the aim of this work was to review clinical features, diagnosis, respiratory prognostic and therapeutics for the pulmonologist.

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Purpose: Although arterial spin labeling (ASL) has become a routinely performed method in the rodent heart, its application to the human heart remains challenged by low tissue blood flow and cardiac and respiratory motion. We hypothesized that an alternative steady-pulsed ASL (spASL) method would provide more efficient perfusion signal averaging by driving the tissue magnetization into a perfusion-dependent steady state.

Methods: We evaluated the feasibility of spASL in the human heart by combining pulsed labeling in the aortic root with a balanced steady state free precession sequence.

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Background: Assessment of cyclic myocardial blood flow (MBF) variations can be an interesting addition to the characterization of microvascular function and its alterations. To date, totally non-invasive in vivo methods with this capability are still lacking. As an original technique, a cine arterial spin labeling (ASL) cardiovascular magnetic resonance approach is demonstrated to be able to produce dynamic MBF maps across the cardiac cycle in rats.

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We have measured universal conductance fluctuations in the metallic spin glass Ag:Mn as a function of temperature and magnetic field. From this measurement, we can access the phase coherence time of the electrons in the spin glass. We show that this phase coherence time increases with both the inverse of the temperature and the magnetic field.

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Arterial spin labeling has been developed and used for the quantitative and completely noninvasive assessment of myocardial perfusion in vivo. Here we propose a novel arterial spin labeling method called cine-ASL, which is based on an electrocardiogram-gated steady-pulsed labeling approach combined with simultaneous readout over the cardiac cycle using cine-fast low-angle shot. This method led to shorter acquisition times than the previously used Look-Locker flow-sensitive alternating inversion recovery gradient-echo technique while preserving spatial resolution and robustness with respect to cardiac motion.

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In small rodent myocardial perfusion studies, the most widely used method is based on Look-Locker measurements of the magnetization recovery after FAIR preparation, which bears limitations regarding acquisition efficiency due to the pulsed arterial spin labeling nature of the sequence. To improve efficiency, this two-article set proposes a new steady-pulsed arterial spin labeling scheme using a cine readout incorporating one tagging pulse per heart cycle. In this part, we derive a theoretical description of the magnetization time evolution in such a scheme.

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We present phase coherence time measurements in quasi-one-dimensional mesoscopic wires made from high mobility two-dimensional electron gas. By implanting gallium ions into a GaAs/AlGaAs heterojunction we are able to vary the diffusion coefficient over 2 orders of magnitude. We show that in the diffusive limit, the decoherence time follows a power law as a function of diffusion coefficient as expected by theory.

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