Publications by authors named "Fontanel M"

Osteochondrosis (OC) is an important skeletal disease causing profound welfare concerns in horses. Although numerous studies have explored the genetics underlying OC in various breeds, the Belgian Warmblood (BW) remains unstudied despite having a concerning prevalence of 32.0%.

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Arabian horses are not only one of the most ancient breeds in the world, but they are also one of the most appreciated racehorse breeds today. The breed generates attention for their phenomenal endurance ability and their capability for gallop racing. Consequently, genetic testing to select the best individuals is attracting ever increasing interests from the Arabian industry.

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The recognition of alcoholic cardiomyopathy in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy is essential as they may regress, at least partially in a relatively short period, with abstention. The clinical history is the key to diagnosis because no other specific feature can identify the cause. Between January 1984 and July 1995, 26 candidates for cardiac transplantation with dilated cardiomyopathy and chronic alcoholism improved after withdrawal of alcohol.

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We report clinicopathological findings in 15 patients in whom the same bioprosthesis (BP) had been implanted simultaneously in both mitral and tricuspid positions. The aim of the study was to investigate whether position-related factors played an important role in BP degeneration. There were 14 women and 1 man with a mean age of 34 +/- 11 years.

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Between January 1979 and December 1991, we operated on 339 patients for chronic disease of the ascending aorta. The operation was elective in all. Endocarditis and its sequelae have been excluded.

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The ability of T4 polynucleotide kinase (PNK) to phosphorylate non-nucleosidic moieties 5'-attached to oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) has been investigated. Non-nucleosidic phosphoramidite units were prepared from ethane-1,2-diol and propane-1,3-diol backbones. Some of them corresponded to pure enantiomers.

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Between January 1986 and December 1986, 106 Sorin-Pericarbon (new prostheses made of bobine pericardium) valves were implanted by our group: the object of this paper is to report the medium-term results of this new bioprosthesis. The probability of degeneration-free function at 4 years was 96.5 +/- 3.

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Chronic constrictive pericarditis still poses diagnostic and therapeutic problems. A series of 84 cases (59 men-25 women; men age: 46 years) operated between 1979 and 1989 at the Pitié Hospital was reviewed. The majority of patients (72%) were in functional Classes III or IV; 88% had clinical signs of right ventricular failure and 18% had anasarca.

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The synthesis of a novel phosphoramidite reagent with a hexanediol backbone is described. This reagent has been used to incorporate a phenol moiety on an oligonucleotide (ODN) directly in the course of its automated synthesis. Multiple phenol attachments can be achieved by repetitive coupling cycles.

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We reviewed clinical data in 216 patients who underwent isolated aortic valve replacement with the Medtronic Hall prosthesis. Between January 1983 and December 1990, a total of 216 prosthetic valves were implanted in 180 males and 36 females. Preoperatively, 45.

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The purpose of this study was to bring up-to-date the immediate risks and long-term benefits of coronary surgery in elderly people. The results obtained in a series of 475 patients in their seventies suffering from coronary disease who underwent myocardial revascularization alone or combined with heart valve replacement at the La Pitié Hospital, Paris, between 1984 and 1989 were analyzed. Coronary disease was associated with heart valve disease in two-thirds of the cases.

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The results of coronary artery surgery in young adults have not been extensively studied. We analysed the results of 221 patients under 40 years of age operated between 1979 and 1989 at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital. The patients were 200 men and 21 women with an average age of 36.

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To study the results of bypass surgery in young adults, 221 patients undergoing myocardial revascularisation aged 40 or less (1979-1989) were reviewed. The study included 200 men and 21 women. Mean age was 36.

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French Polynesia has unique social, cultural and geographic features. The prevalence of acute rheumatic fever (ARF) of 1.2 % population justified the health authorities' classification of this endemic as "major, severe, and prioritary" in 1984.

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Seventeen polyarteriosclerotic patients underwent coronary bypass surgery before repair of an abdominal aortic aneurysm between December 1979 and November 1988 in the Cardiovascular Surgical Department of the Pitié Hospital. Sixteen patients had triple vessel disease and 1 patient had single vessel disease but with mitro-aortic valvular disease. The abdominal aortic aneurysm was asymptomatic in 9 cases.

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Patients with coronary disease associated with carotid artery stenosis and/or abdominal aortic aneurysm often raise problems of operative strategy; in particular, the order in which these lesions must be treated is a frequent source of controversy. We report the results of sequential or simultaneous combined surgery for multiple arterial lesions. Between 1979 and 1988, 65 patients with such lesions underwent either cerebral revascularization simultaneously with coronary bypass (n = 48) or repair of infrarenal aortic aneurysm a few weeks after myocardial revascularization (n = 17).

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Between January 1980 and June 1988, 51 patients over 80 years of age underwent open heart surgery at the La Pitié hospital (26 women and 25 men; average age 82 +/- 2 years, range 80-90 years). The cardiac pathology was calcific aortic stenosis (AS) in 40 cases, associated with coronary artery disease in 7 cases, mitral valve prolapse in 3 cases, coronary artery disease alone in 6 cases [complicated by a post-infarction ventricular septal defect (VSD) in one patient] or associated with aortic regurgitation in 1 case, and degeneration of an aortic bioprosthetic valve in 1 case. Forty patients (78%) were in Stage III or IV or the NYHA Classification.

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A series of 283 patients undergoing cardiac bypass surgery was studied to determine whether intraoperative autotransfusion, haemodilution, and a change in transfusion techniques of the same surgical team could reduce homologous blood requirements. The Cell-Save Haemonetics* system was used systematically in 167 consecutive patients (Group I). This group of autotransfused patients was analysed prospectively and compared with a control group (Group II) of 116 patients operated one year before and analysed retrospectively.

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Out of 3,678 patients who underwent aorto-coronary bypass between May, 1979 and October, 1987 at the La Pitié Hospital, Paris, 48 had simultaneous myocardial and cerebral revascularization. Operative mortality rate was 4.2 p.

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In an attempt to determine predictive factors of spontaneous death in patients needing heart transplantation, we studied 27 clinical and paraclinical variables in 171 patients aged from 14 to 61 years. Sixty-one of these patients died before transplantation could be performed, 59 were still alive awaiting transplantation and 51 received a heart transplant. The actuarial survival rate with or without transplantation was 65 percent at 1 year and 51 percent at 2 years.

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Low profile bioprostheses are particularly useful for certain anatomical conditions. In some patients with rheumatic aortic insufficiency, an important dilatation of the aortic annulus is present, even when the subcoronary aorta is not enlarged. In these cases, the bioimplant heart valve with its low height avoids any threat to the aortic wall or to the coronary ostia.

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Surgery of the aortic valve due to calcified aortic stenosis has been a well known procedure for many years. Continuous clinical improvement after isolated aortic valve replacement can be documented in the majority of patients followed up for several years. Surgery of this type in association with other procedures (coronary artery bypass, mitral valve replacement, etc.

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Between 1975 and 1983, 305 Hancock bioprostheses were implanted at the La Pitié Hospital, Paris, including 133 on the aortic valve and 172 on the mitral valve. The operative mortality rate was 6 p. 100 in patients with isolated aortic valve replacement and 12.

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We report the mid-term results obtained with 279 "low profile" Liotta xenografts implanted at the Hôpital de la Pitié, Paris, in 257 patients between February, 1981 and November, 1984. There were 86 aortic, 138 mitral, 11 triscupid and 22 mitral-aortic valve replacements. The wavy suture ring of the prosthesis makes it "low profile".

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