Publications by authors named "P Cardot"

Conventional antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) methods require 24-48 h to provide results, creating the need for a probabilistic antibiotic therapy that increases the risk of antibiotic resistance emergence. Consequently, the development of rapid AST methods has become a priority. Over the past decades, sedimentation field-flow fractionation (SdFFF) has demonstrated high sensitivity in early monitoring of induced biological events in eukaryotic cell populations.

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We aimed to delineate sex-based differences in neuroplasticity that may be associated with previously reported sex-based differences in physiological alterations caused by repetitive succession of hypoxemia-reoxygenation encountered during obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). We examined long-term changes in the activity of brainstem and diencephalic cardiorespiratory neuronal populations induced by chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH) in male and female mice by analyzing expression. Whereas the overall baseline and CIH-induced expression in females was higher than in males, possibly reflecting different neuroplastic dynamics, in contrast, structures responded to CIH by upregulation in males only.

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Intrauterine ischemia-hypoxia is detrimental to the developing brain and leads to white matter injury (WMI), encephalopathy of prematurity (EP), and often to cerebral palsy (CP), but the related pathophysiological mechanisms remain unclear. In prior studies, we used mild intrauterine hypoperfusion (MIUH) in rats to successfully reproduce the diversity of clinical signs of EP, and some CP symptoms. Briefly, MIUH led to inflammatory processes, diffuse gray and WMI, minor locomotor deficits, musculoskeletal pathologies, neuroanatomical and functional disorganization of the primary somatosensory and motor cortices, delayed sensorimotor reflexes, spontaneous hyperactivity, deficits in sensory information processing, memory and learning impairments.

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Article Synopsis
  • Central alveolar hypoventilation syndromes (CHS) are serious neurorespiratory disorders that lead to dangerous levels of carbon dioxide and low oxygen, requiring patients to rely on assisted ventilation for their entire lives.
  • Recent research suggests that gonane synthetic progestins, such as desogestrel, may improve respiratory function in CHS patients by restoring CO2 chemosensitivity, although results have been inconsistent.
  • Further studies are needed to clarify how these progestins affect breathing mechanisms in CHS and determine their practical clinical applications.
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