Publications by authors named "Myriam Ly-Le Moal"

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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  • The study investigates repetitive and restricted behaviors and interests (RRBI) in autism, classifying them into 'motor-driven' and 'cognitively driven' categories while considering the roles of clinical contexts and neuroanatomy.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 792 participants, including autistic individuals, their relatives, and typically developing individuals, using standardized scales and MRI to assess RRBI patterns and brain volumes.
  • The analysis revealed three main RRBI factors, with 'motor-driven' symptoms linked to lower putamen volumes, while 'cognitively driven' symptoms showed different associations with brain structure, highlighting the complexity of RRBI in autism.
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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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  • The study investigates sensory processing issues in autistic individuals, focusing on hypo and hyper-sensory sensitivities potentially linked to genetic factors affecting GABA-ergic and glutamatergic pathways.
  • Researchers analyzed the sensory profiles of 1136 participants (including autistic individuals, relatives, and controls) and found significant differences in sensory processing between these groups, with variability being a key factor.
  • While the new differential Short Sensory Profile (dSSP) provided useful insights, it struggled to distinguish between individuals with similar sensory symptom levels, suggesting a need for combining this score with genetic and other sensory assessments for better understanding of sensory processing in autism.
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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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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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  • The study aimed to explore the progression of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) using new methods, particularly wearable devices, over a 24-month period to assess their effectiveness as clinical trial endpoints.
  • A total of 81 patients with Type 2 and 3 SMA, who had varying levels of functional abilities, were evaluated on various parameters such as motor function, upper limb strength, and pulmonary function.
  • Significant declines in motor function and upper limb strength were observed over 12 months, with some parameters detecting changes as early as 6 months, suggesting that the innovative measures are effective for monitoring disease progression.
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Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are heterogeneous and complex neurodevelopmental conditions that urgently need reliable and sensitive measures to inform diagnosis properly. The Reading the Mind in the Eyes Task (or Eyes Test from now on) is widely used for this purpose. A recent study showed that subcategories of items of the children version of the Eyes Test could be especially discriminative to distinguish ASD and control children.

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  • Recognition of social anxiety symptoms in individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) is challenging due to overlapping symptoms, prompting a study to investigate this association.
  • The study involved 79 children and adolescents with ASD and 28 matched control participants, utilizing various standard assessment tools to evaluate anxiety, depression, and social skills.
  • Results indicated that higher levels of social anxiety correlate significantly with impairments in social communication and motivation in ASD individuals, highlighting the importance of considering comorbid anxiety disorders in diagnostic assessments.
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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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  • - Recent studies using resting-state fMRI have uncovered unusual patterns of brain connectivity in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), although there's no solid agreement on what these changes mean clinically.
  • - An analysis of four large ASD groups showed consistent patterns of both increased (hyperconnectivity) and decreased (hypoconnectivity) brain activity, particularly in sensory-motor areas and regions involved in higher cognitive functions.
  • - While these brain connectivity patterns might link to ASD symptoms related to communication and daily skills, their overlap with typical brain patterns limits their potential use in diagnosis and treatment efficacy evaluations.
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Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a developmental disorder underdiagnosed in adults. To date, no consistent evidence of alterations in brain structure has been reported in adults with ASD and few studies were conducted at that age. We analyzed structural magnetic resonance imaging data from 167 high functioning adults with ASD and 195 controls.

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The current theory implying local, short-range overconnectivity in autism spectrum disorder, contrasting with long-range underconnectivity, is based on heterogeneous results, on limited data involving functional connectivity studies, on heterogeneous paediatric populations and non-specific methodologies. In this work, we studied short-distance structural connectivity in a homogeneous population of males with high-functioning autism spectrum disorder and used a novel methodology specifically suited for assessing U-shaped short-distance tracts, including a recently developed tractography-based atlas of the superficial white matter fibres. We acquired diffusion-weighted MRI for 58 males (27 subjects with high-functioning autism spectrum disorder and 31 control subjects) and extracted the mean generalized fractional anisotropy of 63 short-distance tracts.

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Attention Deficit and Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) and Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) are frequent comorbid neurodevelopmental conditions and the overlap between both disorders remains to be delineated. A more complete understanding of the shared genetic and environmental factors is needed. Using a family-based method, we evaluated the risk of ADHD in a group of relatives with an ASD proband (ASD-) and a group of relatives with an ASD and ADHD proband (ASD+).

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