Publications by authors named "Emmanuel Maxime"

Professor Michael Larsen, who is a member of the ERN-EYE Ontology Study Group and co-chair of Workgroup on Retinal Rare Eye Diseases (WG1), was inadvertently omitted from the author list in the Acknowledgements section of the original article [1].

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The optical accessibility of the eye and technological advances in ophthalmic diagnostics have put ophthalmology at the forefront of data-driven medicine. The focus of this study is rare eye disorders, a group of conditions whose clinical heterogeneity and geographic dispersion make data-driven, evidence-based practice particularly challenging. Inter-institutional collaboration and information sharing is crucial but the lack of standardised terminology poses an important barrier.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Congenital myasthenic syndromes (CMS) are a heterogeneous group of inherited neuromuscular disorders sharing the common feature of fatigable weakness due to defective neuromuscular transmission. Despite rapidly increasing knowledge about the genetic origins, specific features and potential treatments for the known CMS entities, the lack of standardized classification at the most granular level has hindered the implementation of computer-based systems for knowledge capture and reuse. Where individual clinical or genetic entities do not exist in disease coding systems, they are often invisible in clinical records and inadequately annotated in information systems, and features that apply to one disease but not another cannot be adequately differentiated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The Neotropical freshwater ichthyofauna contains over 5,600 fish species in a small area, making it one of the most diverse vertebrate ecosystems globally.
  • A survey in the Fitzcarrald region of southeastern Peru reveals high species diversity, with many fish species coexisting and a significant turnover between different habitats and tributaries.
  • Findings suggest that the fish species in Fitzcarrald are ancient due to geographical isolation and habitat specialization, rather than recent adaptive changes, helping to explain their rich biodiversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF