Publications by authors named "J de Leon"

Small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) are promising nanocarriers for drug delivery to treat a wide range of diseases due to their natural origin and innate homing properties. However, suboptimal therapeutic effects, attributed to ineffective targeting, limited lysosomal escape, and insufficient delivery, remain challenges in effectively delivering therapeutic cargo. Despite advances in sEV-based drug delivery systems, conventional approaches need improvement to address low drug-loading efficiency and to develop surface functionalization techniques for precise targeting of cells of interest, all while preserving the membrane integrity of sEVs.

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Road traffic is one of the main sources of particulate matter in the urban environment, emitting particulate organic and elemental carbon compounds and metal-rich particles through combustion and brakes and tires wear. In Western Africa, the carbon and metal composition of airborne particles is also influenced by additional sources linked to biomass combustion and recent industrialization. Here, we investigated the impact of combustion-related and non-combustion-related emissions on the distribution of carbonaceous fractions and iron-rich particles in two urban environments in France and Senegal.

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Based on historic observations that children with reading disabilities were disproportionately both male and non-right-handed, and that early life insults of the left hemisphere were more frequent in boys and non-right-handed children, it was proposed that early focal neuronal injury disrupts typical patterns of motor hand and language dominance and in the process produces developmental dyslexia. To date, these theories remain controversial. We revisited these earliest theories in a contemporary manner, investigating demographics associated with reading disability, and in a subgroup with and without reading disability, compared structural imaging as well as patterns of activity during tasks of verb generation and non-word repetition using magnetoencephalography source imaging.

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Article Synopsis
  • Clozapine use is primarily associated with the risk of neutropenia, but there is limited research on adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and fatal outcomes in patients under 18 years old.
  • A study analyzed 2,825 reports of clozapine usage in this age group, revealing 42 fatal outcomes, with the most common ADR being decreased white blood cell count, while suicide was a significant cause of non-duplicated fatalities.
  • To better prevent fatal outcomes in young patients, child and adolescent psychiatrists should broaden their focus beyond severe neutropenia to include other serious ADRs like pneumonia, while still being cautious of the risk of overdose in those at risk for suicide.
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