Publications by authors named "Cyrille Giffard"

In patients with middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory stroke, attempts to recanalize the brain are currently being extended beyond the classic 3-h time window. Mechanical thrombectomy is particularly attractive as it may carry lesser risks of severe hemorrhagic transformation than thrombolysis. However, whether late reperfusion per se promotes hemorrhagic transformation and increases infarct volume as compared to permanent occlusion is unclear.

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We recently mapped the visual recognition memory network in the behaving baboon using a positron emission tomography (PET) activation paradigm with 18F-fluoro-deoxyglucose during a visual delayed matching-to-sample task. This study confirmed the key role of the perirhinal cortex and documented an unexpected left-sided advantage. Specific contribution of each subdivision of the perirhinal cortex has, however, never been investigated.

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Thrombolysis within 3 to 6 hours of symptom onset is recommended therapy for acute middle cerebral artery (MCA) stroke, but recent imaging studies in humans suggest that the penumbra may last much longer in some patients. It is therefore important to study the events that take place with occlusions that last longer than 6 hours. Based upon positron emission tomography (PET), the tissue with high oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) is at risk of infarction.

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The authors previously reported that excitotoxic lesions of both the perirhinal and entorhinal cortices in baboons induce remote neocortical and hippocampal hypometabolism reminiscent of that observed in Alzheimer disease (AD), suggesting that disconnection may play a role in AD. Because the cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (CMR ) was preferentially correlated with perirhinal damage, the area first affected by neurofibrillary tangles in both AD and normal aging, the present series of experiments aimed at assessing the specific metabolic effects of perirhinal lesions. Using PET, CMR was measured before surgery and sequentially over the ensuing 10 months.

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