Publications by authors named "Eric Mallet"

In preterm infants, early nutrient intake during the first week of life often depends on parenteral nutrition. This study aimed to evaluate the influence of standardized parenteral nutrition using three-in-one double-chamber solutions (3-in-1 STD-PN) on early neonatal growth in a cohort of moderately preterm (MP) infants. This population-based, observational cohort study included preterm infants admitted to neonatal centers in the southeast regional perinatal network in France.

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Objectives: MenBvac® is an outer membrane vesicle (OMV)-based meningococcal vaccine. From 2006 to 2012, it was used to control a clonal B outbreak in Normandy (France). We aimed to analyse the durability of the response against the epidemic strain and coverage beyond the vaccine strain.

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Article Synopsis
  • Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) tests in France have surged by tenfold over the past decade, often for questionable reasons.
  • In 2013, the French National Authority for Health imposed limits on when these tests could be ordered, restricting them mainly to specific health conditions like rickets and certain cases in older adults.
  • The authors argue that there are additional valid reasons for testing, supported by research, and advocate for the continued reimbursement of serum 25OHD tests for broader clinical scenarios.
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Heart rate variability analysis using 24-h Holter monitoring is frequently performed to assess the cardiovascular status of a patient. The present retrospective study is based on the beat-to-beat interval variations or ΔRR, which offer a better view of the underlying structures governing the cardiodynamics than the common RR-intervals. By investigating data for three groups of adults (with normal sinus rhythm, congestive heart failure, and atrial fibrillation, respectively), we showed that the first-return maps built on ΔRR can be classified according to three structures: (i) a moderate central disk, (ii) a reduced central disk with well-defined segments, and (iii) a large triangular shape.

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Metopimazine (MPZ) is an antiemetic considered as a currently used drug. In France, it has become the leading antiemetic mediator due to its good tolerance, however, its pharmacokinetics has never previously been studied in children. MPZ was administered by oral route to 8 children with a single dose of 0.

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Unlabelled: Vitamin D is a key hormone in the regulation of calcium and phosphorus metabolism and plays a pivotal role in bone health, particularly during pediatric age when nutritional rickets and impaired bone mass acquisition may occur. Great interest has been placed in recent years on vitamin D's extraskeletal actions. However, while recent data suggest a possible role of vitamin D in the pathogenesis of several pathological conditions, including infectious and autoimmune diseases, the actual impact of vitamin D status on the global health of children and adolescents, other than bone, remains a subject of debate.

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The objective of this systematic literature review is to discuss the latest French recommendation issued in 2012 that a fall within the past year should lead to bone mineral density (BMD) measurement using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). This recommendation rests on four facts. First, osteoporosis and fall risk are the two leading risk factors for nonvertebral fractures in postmenopausal women.

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Infantile Nutritional Rickets has disappeared almost completely in France since 1992 as vitamin D enriched formula availability and previous vitamin D supplementation of infants. The search of evocative symptoms of rickets should be a routine procedure in infants, in particular in case of insufficient vitamin D intake i.e.

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A novel mutation in CYP24A1 provides insight into idiopathic infantile hypercalcemia. In this report of 3 brothers, in twins supplemented with vitamin D (1900 IU/d), only the twin homozygous for CYP24A1 exhibited idiopathic infantile hypercalcemia. A subsequently affected younger brother given vitamin D 400 IU/d was not hypercalcemic.

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Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis cause invasive disease in children aged <2 years. While individual conjugate vaccines are available to protect this age group against these pathogens, availability of a vaccine combining these antigens into a single injection is desirable. This study randomized 467 healthy infants to receive 4 doses of combination 9-valent pneumococcal and meningococcal serogroup C conjugate vaccine (9vPnC-MnCC) or 9-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (9vPnC).

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Objective: To analyze vitamin D metabolism and response to ketoconazole, an imidazole derivative that inhibits the vitamin D-1-hydroxylase, in infants with idiopathic hypercalcemia, and hypercalciuria.

Study Design: Twenty infants (4 days-17 months) with hypercalcemia, severe hypercalciuria, and low parathyroid hormone level, (10 had nephrocalcinosis), including 10 treated with ketoconazole (3-9 mg/kg/day), were followed to the age of 2 to 51 months. Vitamin D receptor expression (VDR), 24-hydroxylase activity, and functional gene polymorphisms of vitamin D metabolism regulators VDR(rs4516035), 1-hydroxylase(rs10877012), 24-hydroxylase(rs2248359), FGF23(rs7955866), Klotho(rs9536314, rs564481, rs648202), were evaluated.

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Background: Metopimazine is an antiemetic drug already used by oral and rectal administration. It would be interesting to develop a new formulation for a transdermal administration.

Objective: The objective of this study was to determine the influence of iontophoresis on the metopimazine transdermal absorption and the possible synergistic enhancement with chemical enhancers.

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Metopimazine (MPZ) is used to prevent emesis during chemotherapies. A transdermal delivery system of MPZ may present a great advantage in patients to improve compliance. Hydroxypropyl beta cyclodextrin (HPbetaCD) and partially methylated beta cyclodextrin (PMbetaCD) were tested to enhance the percutaneous absorption of MPZ through pig skin using Franz's cells.

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Objectives: Primary hyperparathyroidism (HP1) in childhood is thought to be extremely rare. Its exact incidence remains unknown, as do the characteristics of HP1. A retrospective study collection was conducted on cases supplied by members of the Working Group on Calcium Metabolism throughout France over a 20-year period (1984-2004), since the availability of the intact parathormone (iPTH) radioimmunoassay.

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Acute bronchiolitis is the main cause of emergency visits and hospitalizations in infants. Recent data suggest that neutrophil- and eosinophil-mediated inflammations were part of bronchiolitis pathophysiology. Apart from the defined risk factors, few was known on the underlying pathophysiology, which might point out the differences observed in the severity of the disease.

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Recurrent upper respiratory tract infections should be considered as a normal process in infants who build immune defenses in an environment where they meet viruses. Nasal lavage with saline serum and the blowing when possible are the only treatment justified in all the cases. Antibiotic treatment is not justified.

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We report on the results of clinical evaluation of a newly developed system for wireless monitoring of pulse oximetry (SpO2), actimetry and position in infants. The sensors, electronics and the power supply were integrated into a specially designed infant shoe named BBA bootee. The comparative data collected in 71 babies yielded a mean (bias +/- SD) value of (-1.

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The Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaSR) belongs to the class III G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), which include receptors for pheromones, amino acids, sweeteners, and the neurotransmitters glutamate and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). These receptors are characterized by a long extracellular amino-terminal domain called a Venus flytrap module (VFTM) containing the ligand binding pocket. To elucidate the molecular determinants implicated in Ca(2+) recognition by the CaSR VFTM, we developed a homology model of the human CaSR VFTM from the x-ray structure of the metabotropic glutamate receptor type 1 (mGluR1), and a phylogenetic analysis of 14 class III GPCR VFTMs.

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Unlabelled: The main objective of this study was to assess in 5-6-year-old French children (n=234) the persistence of antibodies induced by a primary series vaccination (at 2-4 months of age) and a first booster (at 12-16 months of age) with a pentavalent two-component acellular pertussis combined vaccine (DTacP-IPV-Hib; Pentavac). The second objective was to evaluate in these 5-6-year-old French children the safety and the immunogenicity of a tetravalent acellular pertussis combined vaccine (DTacP-IPV; Tetravac) given as second booster.

Results: Seroprotective antibody levels against diphtheria, tetanus, types 1-3 poliomyelitis and PRP were maintained 4-5 years after primary-vaccination and first booster with Pentavac.

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To reduce the number of injections needed to comply with paediatric vaccination requirements, a liquid, hexavalent vaccine (DTaP-IPV-PRP-T-HBs; Hexavac; Aventis Pasteur MSD) has been developed for primary and booster vaccination of infants and toddlers. In extensive clinical studies, Hexavac has been shown to be highly immunogenic. Seroconversion or seroprotective titres of antibodies against all antigens were achieved in the majority of infants following a primary series of three doses administered at 1-2-month intervals from 2 months of age.

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