Publications by authors named "Guillaume Vignon"

During a blood test, the discovery of thrombocytosis is a frequent phenomenon with multiple origins. False thrombocytosis linked to analytical interferences is rare but must be eliminated before confirming the anomaly. The reaction origin, often very easily demonstrated by the context and/or the presence of a biological inflammatory syndrome, is the most frequent.

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Sideroblastic anemias in adults are often quickly labeled as myelodysplasias. We report two unfrequent observations of secondary acquired forms. The first one is a 15-year-old girl presented with severe cytopenias.

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The discovery of eosinophilia above 1.5 G/L should not be considered innocuous, requiring monitoring for etiology and possible secondary organ damage. Among these, cardiac localization is the most worrying, sometimes indolent, to be systematically sought by ultrasound and magnetic resonance.

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Immunosuppression is a well known risk factor for the development of lymphoid pathologies. The classification of these neoplasias is becoming more precise and complex, some features being common to all immunocompromised patients, primarily the important influence of Epstein-Barr virus. Whatever the origin of the immunodepression, these lymphoid proliferations are very heterogeneous, constituting a wide range between polymorphic aspects and clearly lymphomatous morphologies indistinguishable from those observed in immunocompetent subjects.

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The discovery of a monocytosis is a frequent phenomenon, requiring confirmation by reading under a microscope by an experimented biologist, to overcome usual cytological traps such as the presence of hairy cells, promonocytes or monoblasts. In the vast majority of cases the secondary origin is very easily found by the context and/or the presence of a biological inflammatory syndrome. More rarely the diagnosis is directed towards an eosinophilic pathology or an acute leukemia.

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The etiological assessment of a monoclonal gammopathy is currently standardized, the decisional algorithms allowing a sufficiently precise classification to consider the care, wait or therapeutic. The purpose of this review is to recall the difficulties concerning the interpretation of certain biological investigations and to point out the potential complications of monoclonal gammopathies labeled as "benign". The cooperation between clinicians and biologists is in all cases essential, allowing to propose on a case-by-case basis the best adapted explorations.

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Adult neutropenia, defined as a blood neutrophil count below 1.5 G/L, is a common condition. The most common cause of acute neutropenia is a drug-related reaction or an acute infectious disease.

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The presence of serum monoclonal IgM is often associated with the diagnosis of Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM) or other chronic lymphoproliferative disorders. IgM myeloma is a rare entity (0.5%).

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The most frequent causes of hemolytic anemias are immune or infectious diseases, drug induced hemolysis, thrombotic microangiopathies, hereditary spherocytosis, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase or pyruvate kinase deficiencies, thalassemia's and sickle cell disease. Sometimes no cause is found because a rarer etiology is involved. The goal of this review is to remember some unfrequent constitutional or acquired causes and to point out difficulties to avoid wrong interpretations of analysis results.

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IgE myeloma is an extremely rare disease characterized by frequent plasma cell leukemia, little monoclonal-spike on electrophoresis, an high incidence of t(11;14) translocation and a worse survival than those with common myelomas. We report here a new case of IgE myeloma and discuss clinical presentation, biological features and therapeutic option.

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The pseudopilin PulG is one of several essential components of the type II pullulanase secretion machinery (the Pul secreton) of the Gram-negative bacterium Klebsiella oxytoca. The sequence of the N-terminal 25 amino acids of the PulG precursor is hydrophobic and very similar to the corresponding region of type IV pilins. The structure of a truncated PulG (lacking the homologous region), as determined by X-ray crystallography, was found to include part of the long N-terminal alpha-helix and the four internal anti-parallel beta-strands that characterize type IV pilins, but PulG lacks the highly variable loop region with a disulphide bond that is found in the latter.

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The secreton or type II secretion machinery of gram-negative bacteria includes several type IV pilin-like proteins (the pseudopilins) that are absolutely required for secretion. We previously reported the presence of a bundled pilus composed of the pseudopilin PulG on the surface of agar-grown Escherichia coli K-12 cells expressing the Klebsiella oxytoca pullulanase (Pul) secreton genes at high levels (N. Sauvonnet, G.

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