Publications by authors named "Marie Hubert"

Objectives: Circulating cardiac biomarkers may improve the prediction of long-term outcomes after cardiac surgery. The authors sought to assess if cardiac biomarkers also help better predict short-term morbidity.

Design: Prospective observational study.

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  • * Conducted at a university hospital, the research included patients aged 75 and older, with the EFS administered prior to surgery to assess frailty.
  • * Results showed that integrating the EFS with the EuroSCORE II significantly improved mortality prediction (p = 0.04) and was linked to longer ICU stays and higher rates of discharge to healthcare facilities.
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  • The study evaluates the effectiveness of measuring peak systolic global longitudinal strain (GLS) during transesophageal echocardiography to predict postoperative low cardiac output syndrome (LCOS) in adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
  • It involved analyzing data from 275 patients, where GLS was found to significantly correlate with LCOS, alongside other factors like cardiopulmonary bypass duration and left ventricular ejection fraction.
  • Although incorporating GLS improved the prediction model for LCOS, the overall predictive ability, assessed by the area under the ROC curve, did not show a significant difference between the two models.
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Objectives: To investigate whether using hydroxyethyl starch (HES) 130/0.4 as a pump prime and for intraoperative fluid therapy is associated with postoperative acute kidney injury (AKI) after adult cardiac surgery.

Design: Retrospective observational study.

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Objectives: To compare transfusion requirements in adult cardiac surgery patients when balanced hydroxyethyl starches (HES) (130/0.4) or balanced crystalloids is used for pump prime and intraoperative fluid therapy.

Design: Data were obtained retrospectively from medical records and perfusion charts.

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Electrotransfer is a method by which molecules can be introduced into living cells via plasma membrane electropermeabilization. Here, we show that electropermeabilization affects the lateral mobility of Rae-1, a GPi anchored protein. Our results suggest that 10-20 % of the membrane surface is occupied by defects or pores and that these structures propagate rapidly (<1 min) over the cell surface.

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Metopimazine (MPZ) is used to prevent emesis during chemotherapies. A transdermal delivery system of MPZ may present a great advantage in patients to improve compliance. Hydroxypropyl beta cyclodextrin (HPbetaCD) and partially methylated beta cyclodextrin (PMbetaCD) were tested to enhance the percutaneous absorption of MPZ through pig skin using Franz's cells.

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We have compared the protein maps of agar-entrapped Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells to those of free counterparts grown in the presence or absence of the immobilized-cell gel support. Principal component analyses (PCAs) were used to interpret spot quantity variations observed on electropherograms obtained by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. PCA of the data matrix (923 rows x 6 columns) in which spot density values were standardized horizontally extracted three principal components (PCs) with eigenvalues higher than 1, accounting together for 71.

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The protein maps of Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells from two natural (attached) and one artificial (gel-entrapped) immobilized-cell (IC) systems, together with their free (suspended) counterparts, were compared after incubation for 18 or 48 h in a minimal salt medium. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to interpret the variations in protein spot densities that were observed on electropherogram obtained by two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE). PCA of the 2-DE data, a matrix of 933 rows (observations, i.

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Immunoblots of a two-dimensional PAGE-separated HL-60 cell proteomic map and mass spectrometry were combined to characterize proteins targeted by autoantibodies produced by male (New Zealand White x BXSB)F(1) (WB) mice that develop lupus and anti-phospholipid syndrome. Analysis of sera sequentially obtained from seven individual mice at different ages showed that six proteins, vimentin, heat shock protein 60, UV excision-repair protein RAD23, alpha-enolase, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein L, and nucleophosmin, were the targets of the B cell autoimmune response, and that autoantibodies to them were synthesized sequentially in an orderly pattern that recurred in all the male WB mice analyzed: anti-vimentin first and anti-nucleophosmin last, with anti-RAD23 and anti-heat shock protein 60, then anti-alpha-enolase and anti-heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein L Abs occuring concomitantly. Anti-vimentin reactivity always appeared before anti-cardiolipin and anti-DNA Abs, suggesting that vimentin is the immunogen initiating the autoimmune process.

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