Publications by authors named "Caudron M"

Article Synopsis
  • The article discusses the impact of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols on patients undergoing AIS surgery, particularly how it affects inflammation and recovery.
  • It compares outcomes from two different management approaches: the newer ERAS protocol (2019-2022) and the traditional care method (2017-2019), focusing on re-hospitalization, complications, pain management, and opioid use.
  • Results indicate that the ERAS pathway significantly improved recovery metrics, reducing pain scores, opioid consumption, length of stay, and complication rates, suggesting its effectiveness in enhancing patient recovery post-surgery.
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Today, acetabular surgeons in training have to learn ilioinguinal and anterior intrapelvic approaches (AIP). The aim of this study was to describe the 5-years learning curve of a surgeon. Objective was to assess clinical and radiological results; and to assess factors which could influence this learning curve.

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Case: We report a case of a 79-years old man who sustained a Fragility Fracture of the Pelvis (FFP) classified type IVb according to Rommens and Hofmann. After a delayed diagnosis with persistence of pain and loss of mobility, a bilateral sacroplasty was performed. Although pain relief was achieved, a fracture progression (FP) occurred with bilateral neurologic compression of L5 and S1 nerve roots with pain recurrence.

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Purpose: Uni- or bilateral hip osteoarthritis is a common disease generating pain, stiffness, and functional disabilities. Changes in the normal walking with higher energy expenditures are observed. Facing a cruel lack of biomechanical data, we decided to analyse the impact on the walking of single and simultaneous bilateral total hip arthroplasties (THA).

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We present the first measurement of the timelike Compton scattering process, γp→p^{'}γ^{*}(γ^{*}→e^{+}e^{-}), obtained with the CLAS12 detector at Jefferson Lab. The photon beam polarization and the decay lepton angular asymmetries are reported in the range of timelike photon virtualities 2.25 View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pediatric ARDS continues to be a management challenge in the ICU with prolonged hospitalizations and high mortality. Thromboembolic pulmonary embolism and in situ pulmonary artery thrombosis might represent underappreciated thrombotic processes for a subset of these patients. Although well described in the adult literature, descriptions of pulmonary thromboses with pediatric ARDS are limited to case reports.

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Background: Catatonia is a severe motor syndrome found in approximately 10% of all acute psychiatric hospital admissions. It can occur in various psychiatric diseases. The authors report the first case report of catatonia during cannabis withdrawal.

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Production of Ran-guanosine triphosphate (GTP) around chromosomes induces local nucleation and plus end stabilization of microtubules (MTs). The nuclear protein TPX2 is required for RanGTP-dependent MT nucleation. To find the MT stabilizer, we affinity purify nuclear localization signal (NLS)-containing proteins from Xenopus laevis egg extracts.

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We present Monte Carlo (MC) simulations of the stretching of a single chromatin fiber. The model approximates the DNA by a flexible polymer chain with Debye-Hückel electrostatics and uses a two-angle zigzag model for the geometry of the linker DNA connecting the nucleosomes. The latter are represented by flat disks interacting via an attractive Gay-Berne potential.

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Recent evidence points at a role of protein interaction gradients around chromatin in mitotic spindle morphogenesis in large eukaryotic cells. Here, we explain how gradients can arise over distances of tens of microns around supramolecular structures from mixtures of soluble molecules. We discuss how coupled sets of such reaction diffusion processes generate the spatial information that determines the local dynamics of microtubules required to form a bipolar spindle.

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During cell division, chromosomes are distributed to daughter cells by the mitotic spindle. This system requires spatial cues to reproducibly self-organize. We report that such cues are provided by chromosome-mediated interaction gradients between the small guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) Ran and importin-beta.

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The conformation of mononucleosome complexes reconstituted with recombinant core histones on a 614-basepair-long DNA fragment containing the Xenopus borealis 5S rRNA nucleosome positioning sequence was studied by scanning/atomic force microscopy in the absence or presence of linker histone H1. Imaging without prior fixation was conducted with air-dried samples and with mononucleosomes that were injected directly into the scanning force microscopy fluid cell and visualized in buffer. From a quantitative analysis of approximately 1,700 complexes, the following results were obtained: i), In the absence of H1, a preferred location of the nucleosome at the X.

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Applying Hydroxyurea, Nocodazole and Aphidicolin in succession to obtain parasynchronous growth, the progression of HTC and HeLa cells through the cell cycle has been monitored by laser flow cytometry. The experimental results show that HTC cells behave identically whether grown in monolayer or attached to dextran-based microbeads but that the chemical nature of the micro-support itself plays an important role especially on the speed with which the cells pass from mitosis into G1, polyacrylamide-based microbeads being superior in this respect.

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One case of a syndrome simulating a systemic disease is reported. An HLA-B, patient presented with apparent toxoplasmosis, retinal vein occlusion, autoantibodies against cephalin, contact factors and lipoproteins, immune complexes, rheumatoid factor, and cryoprecipitate. A representation of the immunological mechanisms involved is proposed.

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A patient with lambda Bence-Jones proteinuria, Waldenström's macroglobulinaemia, and Franklin's disease (gamma HCD), but without clinical evidence of a lymphoproliferative disorder, is presented. The serum contained two distinct immunoglobulin abnormalities: a monoclonal immunoglobulin M (IgM) of lambda type, and a protein fragment which was immunologically related to immunoglobulin G (IgG) and devoid of light chain activity. This gamma HCD protein belongs to the gamma 3 subclass with a molecular weight of approximately 60,000 daltons.

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Endoplasmic reticulum-associated crystals were seen in 1-10% of the bone-marrow lymphocytes and in the lymphocytes of the peripheral blood in three cases of immunocytoma. Their crystalline nature and their location in the cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum was proved by ultrastructural study. IgM lambda in the crystals was demonstrated by fluorescent and peroxidase-labelled antibody methods.

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