Publications by authors named "Moal M"

Article Synopsis
  • Entrepreneurs face high stress and burnout, making recovery crucial, and the Recovery Experience Questionnaire (REQ) helps assess their recovery through four factors: psychological detachment, relaxation, mastery, and control.
  • A study involving 1,043 French entrepreneurs validated the French version of the REQ, checking its reliability and confirming its four-factor structure using statistical analyses.
  • Results showed the French REQ had strong internal consistency and significant links to health indicators, confirming it as a valid tool for understanding recovery experiences and potentially applicable to various work populations.
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Purpose: The Fat Sand Rat (Psammomys obesus) recapitulates several features of human pre-proliferative diabetic retinopathy, but data are restricted to wild animals, incompatible with stringent biomedical research criteria. To overcome this barrier, we characterized retinal changes in a colony of P. obsesus maintained under strictly controlled housing conditions.

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Cerebellar abnormalities have been reported in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Beyond its role in hallmark features of ASD, the cerebellum and its connectivity with forebrain structures also play a role in navigation. However, the current understanding of navigation abilities in ASD is equivocal, as is the impact of the disorder on the functional anatomy of the cerebellum.

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Background: Inhibitory control and attention processing atypicalities are implicated in various diseases, including autism spectrum disorders (ASD). These cognitive functions can be tested by using visually guided saccade-based paradigms in children, adolescents and adults to determine the time course of such disorders.

Methods: In this study, using Gap, Step, Overlap and Antisaccade tasks, we analyzed the oculomotor behavior of 82 children, teenagers and adults with high functioning ASD and their peer typically developing (TD) controls in a two-year follow-up study under the auspices of the InFoR-Autism project.

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Mycophenolic acid (MPA) targets the inosine 5'-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) of human lymphocytes. It is widely used as an immunosuppressant to prevent rejection in solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients who, incidentally, are at risk for pneumonia (PCP). We hypothesized that MPA exerts selective pressure on microorganisms considering its in vitro antifungal activity on other fungi.

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Repetitive behaviors (RB) represent a wide spectrum of symptoms ranging from sensory-motor stereotypies to complex cognitive rituals, frequently dichotomized as low- and high-order sub-groups of symptoms. Even though these subgroups are considered as phenomenologically distinct in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), brain imaging and genetic studies suggest that they have common mechanisms and pathways. This discrepancy may be explained by the frequent intellectual disability reported in ASD, which blurs the RB expressivity.

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Cyanobacterial blooms in eutrophic freshwater is a global threat to the functioning of ecosystems, human health and the economy. Parties responsible for the ecosystems and human health increasingly demand reliable predictions of cyanobacterial development to support necessary decisions. Long-term data series help with identifying environmental drivers of cyanobacterial developments in the context of climatic and anthropogenic pressure.

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Pulmonary specimen pairs from five patients who presented with pulmonary colonization and later developed Pneumocystis Pneumonia (PcP) were retrospectively examined for P. jirovecii genotyping. A match of genotypes in pulmonary specimen pairs of three patients was observed, whereas a partial match and a mismatch were observed in the fourth and fifth patients, respectively.

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Background: Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are characterized by abnormal neurodevelopment, genetic, and environmental risk factors, as well as immune dysfunctions. Several lines of evidence suggest alterations in innate immune responses in children with ASD. To address this question in adults with high-functioning ASD (hf-ASD), we sought to investigate the role of natural killer (NK) cells in the persistence of ASD.

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Article Synopsis
  • Eutrophication significantly impairs water quality in both inland and marine environments, resulting in issues like toxic cyanobacteria blooms and green algae overgrowth.
  • The term is widely used and defined differently by scientists and policymakers, leading to debates over regulations aimed at managing its causes.
  • A collaborative effort by four French research institutes analyzed the latest findings on eutrophication over two years, involving 40 experts to guide better public policy.
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Background: In previous analyses of BENEFIT, a phase 3 study, belatacept-based immunosuppression, as compared with cyclosporine-based immunosuppression, was associated with similar patient and graft survival and significantly improved renal function in kidney-transplant recipients. Here we present the final results from this study.

Methods: We randomly assigned kidney-transplant recipients to a more-intensive belatacept regimen, a less-intensive belatacept regimen, or a cyclosporine regimen.

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Background: Kidney recipients maintaining a prolonged allograft survival in the absence of immunosuppressive drugs and without evidence of rejection are supposed to be exceptional. The ERA-EDTA-DESCARTES working group together with Nantes University launched a European-wide survey to identify new patients, describe them and estimate their frequency for the first time.

Methods: Seventeen coordinators distributed a questionnaire in 256 transplant centres and 28 countries in order to report as many 'operationally tolerant' patients (TOL; defined as having a serum creatinine <1.

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Unlabelled: It is not a usual venture to review experiments conducted decades ago in the context of interests of that time and replace them in a long-term historical perspective. These investigations were the product of a long-standing interest for individual differences in vulnerabilities relative to coping with stressful situations and for potential pathological conditions such as drug abuse. The rationale was, and still is, to decipher the psychobiological characteristics of these complex traits.

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When examined in a long-term perspective, brain sciences demonstrate certain conceptual consistencies as well as theoretical oppositions that have lasted for centuries, ever since Ancient Greece. The neurosciences have progressed more on the basis of technological than conceptual advances, and the constant recuperation of new techniques from other sciences have led to a continually reductionist view of the brain and its functions. In a different perspective, if not opposite to the reductionism, are the psychological constructs and those that constitute the functional unity of individuals, which are still mysterious.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on predicting renal outcomes in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) using a prognostic model based on genetic and clinical factors.
  • Four key variables were identified that influence the age at which patients may reach end-stage renal disease (ESRD), leading to a scoring system that categorizes patients into low, intermediate, or high risk for ESRD progression.
  • The new scoring system can help tailor treatment plans by accurately forecasting ESRD onset, with high predictive values for early and delayed progression based on individual patient scores.
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The Belatacept Evaluation of Nephroprotection and Efficacy as First-line Immunosuppression Trial randomized patients receiving a living or standard criteria deceased donor kidney transplant to a more (MI) or less intensive (LI) regimen of belatacept or cyclosporine A (CsA). The 5-year results of the long-term extension (LTE) cohort are reported. A total of 456 (68.

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  • This study examines post-transplantation lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) in kidney transplant recipients in France over a 10-year period, highlighting its serious impact on patient survival.
  • A total of 500 cases of PTLD were analyzed, revealing a 5-year survival rate of 53% and a 10-year rate of 45%, with factors like age, serum creatinine level, and PTLD characteristics affecting survival.
  • The researchers developed a prognostic score based on five variables at diagnosis to classify patients' risk levels, aiming to improve treatment strategies for PTLD in kidney transplant recipients.
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We report here on a European cohort of 27 kidney transplant recipients displaying operational tolerance, compared to two cohorts of matched kidney transplant recipients under immunosuppression and patients who stopped immunosuppressive drugs and presented with rejection. We report that a lower proportion of operationally tolerant patients received induction therapy (52% without induction therapy vs. 78.

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The psychobiological concept of stress built up over the years since the 1930s. The understanding of the neurobiological mechanisms involved has progressed remarkably during the past years. This article provides an overview of the recent data opposing acute and chronic stress.

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  • This study investigates the impact of switching from a low-exposure calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) to mycophenolate sodium in kidney transplant patients taking everolimus and corticosteroids after one year of surgery.
  • Results showed a small improvement in kidney function (measured by mGFR) for the CNI-free group compared to those who continued with CNI, although the difference wasn't statistically significant.
  • The findings suggest that eliminating CNI might maintain efficacy and could be beneficial, but the small sample size means larger studies are needed to confirm these results.
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Background: Eighteen renal transplant recipients (RTRs) developed Pneumocystis jirovecii infections at the renal transplantation unit of Brest University Hospital (Brest, Brittany, France) from May 2008 through April 2010, whereas no cases of P. jirovecii infection had been diagnosed in this unit since 2002. This outbreak was investigated by identifying P.

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Mycophenolic acid (MPA) dose is frequently reduced in tacrolimus-treated kidney transplant patients, but alternatively the recommended MPA dose can be maintained with reduced tacrolimus exposure. In a 6-month, multicenter, randomized, openlabel study, maintenance kidney transplant patients receiving MPA (mycophenolate mofetil 1g/d or enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium (EC-MPS) 720 mg/d) and tacrolimus were randomized to convert to EC-MPS 1,440 mg/d with reduced tacrolimus (n = 46), or receive EC-MPS 720 mg/d with unchanged tacrolimus (n = 48). Mean estimated GFR (eGFR, aMDRD) at Month 6 was 49.

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