Publications by authors named "Franquet E"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to assess if adding contrast-enhanced diagnostic CT (DxCT) to PSMA-PET/CT for prostate cancer provides better diagnostic certainty.
  • The research involved multiple readers analyzing both imaging methods and determining their confidence in identifying disease presence.
  • The results showed that while there was good agreement among readers, adding DxCT did not significantly enhance diagnostic certainty overall, except possibly during initial cancer staging.
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Urban streams display consistent ecological symptoms that commonly express degraded biological, physical, and chemical conditions: the urban stream syndrome (USS). Changes linked to the USS result in consistent declines in the abundance and richness of algae, invertebrates, and riparian vegetation. In this paper, we assessed the impacts of extreme ionic pollution from an industrial effluent in an urban stream.

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  • - COVID-19 can affect multiple body systems, and its impact on nuclear medicine imaging can go beyond just the lungs, necessitating awareness from nuclear medicine physicians.
  • - While FDG-PET/CT isn't typically used for COVID-19 evaluations, it can help monitor the disease's effects due to its ability to assess the entire body functionally and anatomically.
  • - Common nuclear imaging findings related to COVID-19 vaccination include hypermetabolic axillary lymphadenopathy, which can complicate diagnoses and management in cancer patients, especially those with related lymphatic issues.
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PET/CT is a commonly used modality in cancer imaging, as it can help in diagnosis, staging and assessment of treatment response in many cancer types. A better understanding of the tumor microenvironment and identification of multiple selective targets are promoting further investigation into different radiotracers for diagnosis and therapy. In the past few decades many radiopharmaceuticals have emerged for specific oncologic indications providing superior detection rate than some morphologic modalities.

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Acanthocephalans' position in food webs, in close interaction with free-living species, could provide valuable information about freshwater ecosystem health through the viability of the parasites' host populations. We explored Pomphorhynchus laevis cystacanths' and adults' intensities of infection, and the prevalence of infected hosts respectively in their Gammarus pulex intermediate hosts and Squalius cephalus definitive hosts in a Mediterranean river. First, we analysed the relationship between P.

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Land-use changes through urbanization and biological invasions both threaten plant-pollinator networks. Urban areas host modified bee communities and are characterized by high proportions of exotic plants. Exotic species, either animals or plants, may compete with native species and disrupt plant-pollinator interactions.

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High mountain lakes are a network of sentinels, sensitive to any events occurring within their waterbodies, their surrounding catchment and their airshed. In this paper, we investigate how catchments impact the taxonomic and functional composition of phytoplankton communities in high mountain lakes, and how this impact varies according to the atmospheric nutrient deposition regime. For two years, we sampled the post snow-melt and the late summer phytoplankton, with a set of biotic and abiotic parameters, in six French alpine lakes with differing catchments (size and vegetation cover) and contrasting nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) deposition regimes.

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Background: Mechanisms of metabolic improvement after bariatric surgery remain incompletely understood. Intestinal glucose uptake is increased after gastric bypass in rodents, potentially contributing to reduced blood glucose and type 2 diabetes remission.

Objective: We assessed whether intestinal glucose uptake is increased in humans after gastric surgery.

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The environmental safety of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis (Bti) is still controversial, mainly because most of the previous field studies on its undesired effects were spatially limited and did not address the relationship between community similarity and application time and frequency. No general statement can therefore be drawn on the usage conditions of Bti that insure protection of non-target organisms.

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The posterior mediastinum contains several structures that can produce a wide variety of pathologic conditions. Descending thoracic aorta, esophagus, azygos and hemiazygos veins, thoracic duct, lymph nodes, adipose tissue, and nerves are all located in this anatomical region and can produce diverse abnormalities. Although chest radiography may detect many of these pathologic conditions, computed tomography and magnetic resonance are the imaging modalities of choice for further defining the relationship of posterior mediastinal lesions to neighboring structures and showing specific imaging features that narrow the differential diagnosis.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the effects of mosquito larvicides, specifically Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis (Bti) and spinosad, on non-target aquatic species in Mediterranean wetlands, with a focus on two chironomid species: Polypedilum nubifer and Tanytarsus curticornis.* -
  • Bti is known for its selective targeting of mosquito larvae without harming other species, while spinosad, although effective for mosquito control, has been shown to be lethal to P. nubifer and potentially harmful to T. curticornis.* -
  • The research emphasizes the importance of understanding population dynamics of non-target species to accurately assess the ecological risks associated with larvicide applications
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Background: Identification of cancer or inflammatory bowel disease in the intestinal tract by PET/computed tomography (CT) imaging can be hampered by physiological uptake of F-fluorodeoxyglucose (F-FDG) in the normal colon. Previous work has localized this F-FDG uptake to the intestinal lumen, predominantly occupied by bacteria. We sought to determine whether pretreatment with an antibiotic could reduce F-FDG uptake in the healthy colon.

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This study was conducted around Céret (Pyrénées-Orientales, mean elevation 200 m) to test the statistical reliability of 12 stations devoted to sampling the Leishmania infantum vectors Phlebotomus ariasi and P. perniciosus in the South of France. Each station included a retaining wall and the surrounding phytoecological environment (total area: 2,000 m(2)).

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The arterial switch operation (ASO) is the preferred technique for correcting transposition of the great arteries, but translocation and reimplantation of the coronary arteries can produce myocardial ischemia. This report aims to describe the authors' experience with exercise single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) used to evaluate myocardial perfusion. Exercise-rest gated-myocardial perfusion SPECT was performed for 69 patients (49 boys; median age, 9 years; 5th percentile [6.

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Tuberculosis (TB) continues to be an important public health problem in developed countries especially in deprived socioeconomic groups, older people, immunocompromised patients, drug-therapy resistant cases and the immigrant population. The spine is the most frequent location of musculoskeletal TB. The wide range of clinical presentations results in difficulties and delays in diagnosis.

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  • Chitobiase plays a key role in the degradation and recycling of exoskeletons during arthropod moulting, and its activity can help monitor arthropod population dynamics, especially in aquatic environments.
  • The study investigated the effects of various larvicides, including spinosad and diflubenzuron, on Daphnia pulex and Daphnia magna over 14 days, measuring chitobiase activity, adult survival, growth, and fecundity.
  • Results indicated that spinosad and diflubenzuron negatively impacted both species significantly more than the reference larvicide Bti, particularly affecting D. magna more severely, while chitobiase activity correlated positively with growth and reproduction metrics.
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  • The study evaluates the population-level effects of two insecticides, spinosad and Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis (Bti), on non-target species Daphnia pulex and Daphnia magna through a life-table response approach.
  • Laboratory results revealed that spinosad significantly reduces survival and fecundity for both species, with a lower population growth rate (λ) compared to control and Bti-treated groups.
  • Field microcosm experiments showed that spinosad exposure led to rapid population extinction within about a month, with D. magna being more sensitive to the insecticide than D. pulex.
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The present study was undertaken to assess the impact of a candidate mosquito larvicide, spinosad (8, 17 and 33 microg L(-1)) on a field population of Daphnia magna under natural variations of water temperature and salinity, using Bti (0.16 and 0.50 microL L(-1)) as the reference larvicide.

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Spinosad, a candidate biological larvicide for mosquito control, was evaluated for its effects on a field population of Daphnia pulex, using Bacillus thuringiensis serovar israelensis (Bti) as a reference larvicide. Microcosms (125L enclosures) were placed in a shallow temporary oligohaline marsh where D. pulex was present.

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The taxonomic richness erosion and the role of tributaries in the maintenance of the taxonomic richness were considered in a Mediterranean catchment in southeastern France. Nine stations were chosen along the Arc stream (three stations downstream from an organic effluent and one station upstream from the pollution source) and on two groups of tributaries (three intermittent and two perennial). High biodiversity erosion was noticed in the main stem, revealing diffuse sources of pollution added to the expected effect of the localized organic pollution.

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Background And Objectives: To characterize the frequency, risk factors, clinical presentation and etiological subtypes of cerebrovascular diseases (CVD) following cardiac transplantation (CTX).

Methods: In a retrospective review of our CTX database (period 1984-2002), we assessed demographic data, vascular risk factors, surgery and donor details. We classified ischemic stroke (IS) using the clinical criteria of the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project and the etiological criteria of the TOAST study.

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Population responses of a planktonic freshwater diatom, Asterionella formosa Hassal, to the hydrodynamic anthropic disturbances were studied at the landscape scale, along a series of nine reservoirs, for a period of 18 months. The analysis of biotic descriptors as cell abundance, cell length and architecture has shown a strong morphological plasticity of this diatom. The morphological variability of A.

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