Publications by authors named "J Clouzeau"

Article Synopsis
  • * The study analyzed 122 children with sickle cell disease diagnosed at birth between 1992 and 2002, finding significant differences in emergency admissions and health complications between various genotypes, especially higher in SS/Sβ0 patients.
  • * Ischemic strokes were found in 3 patients (average age 6.9 years), with an incidence rate of 3.1 per 1,000 patient-years, while no strokes occurred in those with SC or Sβ + thalassemia genotypes.
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The emergency department (ED) physicians working for the French Service d'Aide Medicale d'Urgence (SAMU) refer about 84% of individuals who contact SAMU for psychiatric problems to the psychiatric ED (PED), compared with only 20% of those calling with other medical emergencies. Physicians' lack of psychiatric knowledge may contribute to the high PED referral rate. The authors created a new psychiatric nurse-led service to improve the identification of psychiatric emergencies and assessed PED referrals and inpatient hospitalization rates before and after the new service commenced.

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In an effort to address a major challenge in chemical safety assessment, alternative approaches for characterizing systemic effect levels, a predictive model was developed. Systemic effect levels were curated from ToxRefDB, HESS-DB and COSMOS-DB from numerous study types totaling 4379 in vivo studies for 1247 chemicals. Observed systemic effects in mammalian models are a complex function of chemical dynamics, kinetics, and inter- and intra-individual variability.

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The epidemiology of paediatric bone and joint infections from South America is poorly known. We herein report a retrospective study conducted in whole French Guiana from January 2010 to December 2015. Medical charts of 55 previously healthy children were analysed, identifying 27 with osteomyelitis, 22 with septic arthritis and 6 with multifocal infections and/or osteoarthritis.

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Validated in vitro methods for skin corrosion and irritation were adopted by the OECD and by the European Union during the last decade. In the EU, Switzerland and countries adopting the EU legislation, these assays may allow the full replacement of animal testing for identifying and classifying compounds as skin corrosives, skin irritants, and non irritants. In order to develop harmonised recommendations on the use of in vitro data for regulatory assessment purposes within the European framework, a workshop was organized by the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health together with ECVAM and the BfR.

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