Publications by authors named "PETIT H"

Parkinsonism is the most frequent neurological complication of carbon monoxide intoxication. Its prognosis is severe and Dopa is ineffective. We treated 9 patients (mean age 60.

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A 32-year old woman presented with serious memory impairment and a mental syndrome named loss of psychic auto-activation or psychic akinesia following carbon monoxide poisoning. The MRI findings were bilateral pallidal lesions probably associated with thalamic lesions. The evolution was favourable.

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A case of global and persistent amnesia due to a right polar and anterior thalamic infarction is reported. There was a moderate impairment of attention and categorization ability. The amnesia was primarily anterograde, with partial disturbance of short-term memory and severe deficit of long-term memory for verbal and visuo-spatial materials.

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Forty-six femoropopliteal occlusions in 44 patients (aged 45-95 years) were recanalized with the percutaneous rotating tip atherectomy catheter completed by balloon dilatation. Thirty-one patients had tight intermittent claudication of the lower limbs, five had resting pain and 10 had skin disorders. The length of the occlusion ranged from 2 to 24 cm.

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Three groups of patients with single hemispheric brain abscesses or subdural empyemas, from 1 to 5 cm large, with similar initial prognosis, have been treated either by medical treatment alone (20), aspiration (21), or excision (15). Differences in survival were not found, but medical treatment alone was better for long term sequelae. Surgical procedures (either aspiration or excision) were better for both isolation of the organism and the hospital stay before discharge.

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We studied normotensive and nondiabetic subjects, free of cardiac disorders, to determine whether Alzheimer's disease is a possible factor of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) white matter or periventricular hyperintensities, and to investigate relationships between computed tomographic scan and MRI changes. We failed to reveal (1) any difference in the severity of MRI white matter and periventricular hyperintensities between patients and controls, (2) any correlation of MRI white matter and periventricular hyperintensities with either ages or Mini-Mental State Examination scores. We found (1) a poor interobserver agreement, and (2) a correlation between computed tomographic scan and MRI white matter changes but not between computed tomographic and MRI periventricular changes.

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Refsum's disease is a polyneuropathy due to a hereditary error in the metabolism of a fatty acid, phytanic acid, usually leading to cardiac failure only at an advanced stage of the disease. The authors report the case of two brothers with Refsum's disease revealed by a heart failure before the clinical stage of the peripheral neuropathy. In the younger brother, the affection started at the age of 22 years by an acute pulmonary oedema which revealed a dilated, hypokinetic myocardiopathy, associated with retinitis pigmentosa, ptosis, anosmia and biological myolysis.

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We report a case of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis in a 52 year-old man. The patient had complained of headache and drowsiness for a few hours before he became comatose with a bilateral sixth cranial nerve palsy. The cerebrospinal fluid contained less than one lymphocyte per cubic millimeter, a low glucose level (0.

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Between June 6 1988 and September 30 1989, 46 superficial femoral obliterations in 44 patients were treated by rotary atherectomy, completed by conventional dilatation in 40 patients. The 44 patients (27 males and 17 females), mean age over 66.5 years (45 to 90), presented symptomatic superficial femoral obliterations (17 tight stage, two occlusions, 5 stage III, and 10 stage IV occlusions), with mean length of 9.

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Pulmonary embolism was first described by Laennec in 1819. After introduction of the Trendelenburg surgical technique, Kirschner, in 1925, performed the first successful embolectomy. In a review of the literature, in 42 patients, survival rate was 45% on use of a modified Trendelenburg method employing cross-clamping of the vena cava.

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A body condition scoring for Small East African type goats in Zimbabwe is described. This measure is less affected by confounding variables than is body weight as an estimate of animal's condition and nutritional state. Furthermore, it requires no special equipment.

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The relationship between peptidergic neurites and paired helical filaments (PHF)-positive neurites in Alzheimer's disease (AD) senile plaques (SP) was studied using combined fluorescence and bright field optics. Cryostat sections of AD hippocampi were first stained by thioflavine-S and immunolabeled with antisera raised against different neuropeptides: somatostatin 28(1-12) (som 28(1-12)), somatostatin 14 (som 14), neuropeptide Y (NPY), cholecystokinin (CCK) and substance P (sP). Secondly, using the elution-restaining procedure, sections were immunolabeled with anti-tau/PHF.

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The relationship between peptidergic dystrophic neurites and paired helical filament (PHF)-positive neurites in Alzheimer's disease (AD) senile plaques (SPs) was studied using combined fluorescence and bright-field optics. Cryostat sections of AD hippocampi were first stained with thioflavine-S and immunolabelled with antisera raised against different neuropeptides: somatostatin-28(1-12), somatostatin-14, neuropeptide Y, cholecystokinin (CCK) and substance P. Secondly, using the elution-restaining procedure, sections were immunolabelled with anti-tau/PHF.

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Eight Holstein male calves, each fitted with an ileal reentrant cannula at 7 to 10 d of age, were fed a milk replacer based on low heat skim milk powder with or without an oxalate-NaOH buffer known to prevent curd formation in the abomasum. The calves were used to study the effects of milk clotting on digesta flow at the ileum and apparent digestibility measured by fecal and ileal collection. Patterns of ileal flow of total digesta, DM, N, and fat were similar for the clotting and the nonclotting milk replacers.

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Single photon emission tomography with Hm PAO Tc99m was used in 27 patients with probable Alzheimer's disease, 9 patients with multi-infarct, dementia, and 11 healthy volunteers. The data were quantified in 4 regions of interest (using the basal ganglia as an internal standard): left and right prefrontal areas (Fg and Fd), and left and right parietal areas (Pg and Pd). Pg and Pd indices were lower in patients with Alzheimer's disease than in patients with multi-infarct dementia, and healthy volunteers (p less than 0.

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Brain CT's of 30 patients with early onset probable Alzheimer's disease (according to NINCDS-ADRDA work-group criteria), were compared to those of 30 sex- and age-matched control subjects. This study has confirmed that patients with Alzheimer's disease have higher cerebral atrophy than control subjects, and that cerebral atrophy is correlated with the severity of the disease appreciated with the mini-mental state and the global deterioration scales. It revealed that patients were more different from control subjects for the subjective index and for the third ventricle index.

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A 19 year-old man developed an acute syndrome of the anterior horn of cervical spinal cord during a primo-infection with toxoplasma. The neurological syndrome was completely regressive after treatment with 1 600 mg/day of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for three months.

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