Publications by authors named "Marie Cecile Henry-Feugeas"

Background: Susac syndrome (SuS) is a rare immune-mediated microangiopathy with potential disabling evolution. We aimed to analyze brain microstructural damage through diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in SuS and determine its association with poor outcomes.

Method: CarESS study is a prospective multicenter national cohort study of patients with SuS.

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  • Nonreversible hearing loss (HL) is a significant issue for patients with Susac syndrome (SuS), prompting a study to identify risk factors associated with HL in these individuals.* -
  • The CARESS study involved 36 patients diagnosed with SuS, revealing that 52.8% experienced severe HL after a median follow-up of about 52 months, with many showing cochleovestibular involvement at diagnosis.* -
  • The study concluded that the use of immunosuppressive (IS) drugs at diagnosis may lower the odds of developing severe HL, suggesting these drugs should be regularly considered in SuS treatment.*
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  • Susac syndrome (SuS) is a rare disease affecting the brain, retina, and inner ear, and the study aimed to see if the amount of brain lesions at the start could predict patient outcomes.* -
  • Conducted in France from 2012 to 2019, the study analyzed 23 patients using MRI to look at the characteristics of brain lesions at diagnosis and during follow-up.* -
  • Results showed that despite differences in the number of brain lesions (low vs. high), there was no significant impact on disability or overall outcomes for patients with SuS.*
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  • Background: The study examines brain MRI abnormalities in patients with severe COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) and identifies potential neurological issues related to the virus.
  • Methods: Researchers analyzed data from 37 hospitalized patients who had neurological symptoms and abnormal brain MRIs between March and April 2020, excluding cases with ischemic strokes or unrelated chronic lesions.
  • Results: The patient cohort, primarily older men, exhibited various neurological symptoms, with MRI findings showing significant abnormalities in brain regions including the medial temporal lobe and evidence of microhemorrhages, suggesting COVID-19's impact on brain structure.
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Developmental venous anomalies (DVAs) are usually asymptomatic. We report a case of DVA thrombosis with recurrent tiny frontal hematoma in a 24-year-old man. The contribution of T2-GRE and SWAN sequences are discussed.

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Background: Rapid Cognitive Decline (RCD) in Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is associated with a worse disease progression. There is no consensual predictor of RCD and only a few studies have focused on RCD in late-onset dementia, the most common form of AD.

Objective: To identify the predictors of RCD, in a population of community-dwelling patients with recently diagnosed late onset AD.

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Hyperemia is a major criterion for the diagnosis of acute myocarditis on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging but its assessment is challenging and time consuming. We evaluated the usefulness of the contrast-enhanced first-pass perfusion (FPP) on magnetic resonance imaging for detecting subepicardial hyperemia in acute myocarditis. Forty-seven consecutive patients (mean age: 42 ± 15.

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Background: Prognostic value of the infarct- and non-infarct like patterns and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) parameters on long-term outcome of patients after acute myocarditis is not well known.

Methods: Between 2006 and 2015, 112 consecutive patients with CMR-based diagnosis of acute myocarditis were identified in our institution. Of them, 88 were available for clinical follow-up and represented our studied population.

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Background: Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) is routinely used as a complementary technique to trans-thoracic echocardiography (TTE) for assessing thoracic aortic aneurysms (TAA). However different measures can be obtained on CT and there are no recommendations on which to use. The objective was to determine which CT measurements most closely match reference TTE measurements in Marfan patients with TAA.

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Objective: To examine the diagnostic ability of the Lawton Instrumental Activities Daily Living (IADLs) scale and the Activities Daily Living (ADLs) scale as a sensitive tool to Alzheimer's disease (AD) in community-dwelling elderly people.

Design: In an old age memory outpatient center, among patients with a clinical diagnosis of AD dementia or no dementia supported by at least 6 months of follow-up, we looked back at the baseline Lawton IADL scale (short version IADL-4 item), ADL scale, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MOCA) values.

Results: There were 109 patients with AD and 53 nondemented individuals (81.

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The recent concept of pulse wave encephalopathy helps understanding the cerebral venous remodeling in aging. This so-called periventricular venous collagenosis is an expected mechanical consequence of the age-related changes in arterial pulsations and the mechanical fatigue of vascular smooth muscles. Unlike arteriolar mechanical stress, venular mechanical stress depends on both the blood pulse wave amplitude and the mechanical properties of the environment tissue.

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Background: The French government gave a consensual definition of reinforced care units for Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms in Dementia (BPSD) within the project "Plan Alzheimer 2008/2012." These Cognitive and Behavioral Units (CBU) differ in resources from the traditional reference units for BPSD management, the Acute Psychogeriatric Units (APU). However, a better understanding of their operational specificities may enhance the CBU and APU synergies.

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As increasingly shown in neuropathological and predementia clinical studies, cognitive decline with altered intracranial dynamics can fulfill current clinical criteria of dementia of the Alzheimer's type (DAT) and there is a marked pathogenic complexity of this epidemic syndrome. Whereas structural studies only suggest the unexpected frequency of cerebrovascular changes in late life DAT, flow quantification MR sequences now offer a great opportunity of in vivo accurate analysis of cerebrovascular function. Their first applications have allowed development of a modern concept of the intracranial dynamics; a complex windkessel system allows two processes that are crucial to insure brain oxygenation and nutrition, a periodic systolic marked expansion of the intracranial blood compartment within the rigid cranial cavity on the one hand, a marked dampening of the arterial pulse wave before it reaches capillary level on the other hand.

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The critical question as to the respective role of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and cerebrovascular disease in dementia of the Alzheimer's type (DAT), the most common form of dementia, is still debated. But there has been considerable progress in understanding cerebral hemodynamics and the relationship between structural brain damage and cognitive decline, in routine neuro imaging techniques. These advances now allow the proposition of a novel MR classification of DAT including indicators of both cerebrovascular function and regional brain atrophy.

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Mobility dysfunction of unknown origin predicts dementia in the elderly and is associated with periventricular leukoaraiosis (LA), another predictor of dementia of still controversial pathogenesis, in the elderly with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Thus, this study examined which gait and balance parameters best correlate with periventricular LA to better understand the pathogenesis of mobility decline in MCI. High resolution MRI and detailed mobility assessment were performed in 61 subjects (72 years+/-5) with MCI.

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Our aim was to use early magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to investigate the causes of cognitive decline in elderly people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Baseline structural and flow quantification MR sequences, and clinical and neuropsychological follow-up for at least two years, were performed on 62 elderly subjects with MCI. Of these subjects, 17 progressed to dementia, and 15 of these progressed to dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT).

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