Publications by authors named "Sebag C"

Objective: Rapid, high-volume screening programs are needed as part of cervical cancer prevention in China.

Methods: In a 5-day screening project in Inner Mongolia, 3345 women volunteered following a community awareness campaign, and self-swabbed to permit rapid HPV testing. Two AmpFire™ HPV detection systems (Atila Biosystems) were sufficient to provide pooled 15-HPV type data within an hour.

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Background: Accelerated global control of cervical cancer would require primary prevention with human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination in addition to novel screening program strategies that are simple, inexpensive, and effective. We present the feasibility and outcome of a community-based HPV self-sampled screening program.

Methods: In Ile Ife, Nigeria, 9406 women aged 30-49 years collected vaginal self-samples, which were tested for HPV in the local study laboratory using Hybrid Capture-2 (HC2) (Qiagen).

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Background: Cardiac amyloidosis due to familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) includes restrictive cardiomyopathy, thickened cardiac walls, conduction disorders and cardiac denervation. Impaired blood pressure variability has been documented in FAP related to the Val30Met mutation.

Aims: To document blood pressure variability in FAP patients with various mutation types and its relationship to the severity of cardiac involvement.

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Background: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) is an autosomic dominant disease with a high rate of conduction disorders and increased risk of sudden death. Prophylactic cardiac pacing may be considered in asymptomatic patients with FAP. However, the potential benefits are unknown.

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Radiofrequency ablation is the reference treatment of refractory nodal reentry. Cryoablation has the advantage of having more modulable effects and minimises the risk of permanent atrioventricular block (AVB). Its immediate efficacy seems comparable to that of radiofrequency ablation but the long-term results are not well known.

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Radiofrequency current is the reference energy source for endocavitary ablation of arrhythmias. It is particularly well adapted for the ablation of focal arrhythmogenic substrates such as accessory pathways or foyers of automatism. Technological advances have made the lesions larger but the extension of the indications of percutaneous ablation to more complex substrates such as atrial fibrillation have justified the evaluation of alternative energies.

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Catheter ablation is a radical treatment for various severe and drug-refractory arrhythmias. Radiofrequency is the reference energy for ablation, but has some limitations. Cryoenergy gradually freezes myocardial tissue, allowing the consequences to be predicted before inducing the lesion.

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Arrhythmic cardiomyopathy (ACM) is a clinical entity which can be reproduced in experimental models and which corresponds to all myocardial changes induced by chronic tachycardia. It may affect the atria and/or ventricles and, in this case, occur with all types of arrhythmia. Arrhythmia complicating a cardiomyopathy is the differential diagnosis of ventricular ACM.

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Atrioventricular blocks may be classified according to their degree, their site and their aetiology. Assessing the degree of block is not always easy when the P waves are poorly visible and/or masked by the ventricular complexes. Affirmation that a 2nd degree block is a Mobitz II block requires examination of the ECG to differentiate it from "false" Mobitz II due to variable PP intervals or concealed hisian extrasystoles.

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Since its introduction at the beginning of the 1980s, radiofrequency ablation of accessory atrioventricular pathways has become method because of its excellent results and the indications have increased to cases in which only symptomatic improvement is the objective. These advances have been made possible by technical innovations to the generators of the radiofrequency current and, above all, to the ablation catheters which enable mapping nearly all the perimeter of the atrioventricular rings and reach all the accessory pathways irrespective of their site. The approach depends on the localisation of the accessory pathway but the criteria of mapping are the same: detection of a specific accessory pathway potential, precession or concordance (depending on the topography) of the initial peak of the endocavitary ventriculogramme and the onset of the delta wave on the surface ECG, QS morphology of the ventriculogramme on monopolar recording, shortest VA' interval in orthodromic reciprocating tachycardia for latent kent bundles.

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Between 1986 and 1994, 50 patients (mean age 63 +/- 13 years), 25 of whom had organic heart disease and presenting with atrial arrhythmias refractory to 5.6 +/- 1.6 antiarrhythmic drugs, underwent radiofrequency ablation (5 +/- 3 pulses by procedure; duration of pulses 50.

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Radiofrequency currents are the reference physical agent for endocavitary ablation, especially of supraventricular tachycardias. They are delivered in a continuous mode or sinusoidal waves. Because of the high frequency between 200 and 3,000 kHz there is no stimulation of the neuromuscular cells.

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[Double responses].

Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss

December 1995

Double response is a rare electrocardiographic phenomenon requiring two atrioventricular conduction pathways with very different electrophysiological properties. Double ventricular responses are the usual manifestation: an atrial depolarisation (spontaneous or provoked, anticipated or not) is followed by a first ventricular response dependent on an accessory pathway or a rapid nodal pathway and then a second response resulting from sufficiently delayed transmission through a nodal pathway for the ventricles to have recovered their excitability when the second wave of activation reaches them. A simple curiosity when isolated and occurring under unusual conditions, particularly during electrophysiological investigation of the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome, the double response may initiate symptomatic non-reentrant junctional tachycardia when associated with nodal duality and repeating from atria in sinus rhythm.

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The electrocardiographic analysis of atrial fibrillation is usually easy. However, some cases may be difficult to interpret: the organisation and voltage of the fibrillation waves can be very variable leading to appearances of atypical flutter in cases with large "f" waves or, conversely, in cases with low voltage fibrillation, to those of sinus mode dysfunction. The ventricular response may be slow: the conduction is usually delayed in the atrioventricular node where concealed conduction plays an important role in determining the ventricular response.

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Radiofrequency currents produce circumscribed tissue necrosis by progressive and localised heating. Endocardial application via the percutaneous approach with a specific electrophysiological catheter enables destruction of the anatomical substrate of many cardiac arrhythmias. The technique is well tolerated due to the absence of barometric phenomena and general anaesthesia, and the possibility of modulating the energy delivered, which explains why it has supplanted fulguration in most indications.

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In experimental models of coronary occlusion, the physiopathology of ventricular arrhythmias varies with its timing, there being three main phases: early, late and chronic. The early phase covers the first 30 minutes and is dominated by tachycardias and fibrillations resulting from multiple micro-reentry circuits which are the consequence of major changes in conduction and excitability created by acute ischaemia. These arrhythmias may be triggered by extrasystoles which have a different mechanism related to the injury current generated in the border zone between ischaemic and healthy cells.

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The effects of beta-blockers and calcium-channel blockers on cardiopulmonary response during exercise are not well characterized. Sixteen sedentary patients with essential hypertension underwent a randomized, double-blind, cross-over study comparing atenolol and diltiazem sustained-release 300 mg, each administered during 6 weeks, after a 15-day run-in placebo period. Neither atenolol nor diltiazem significantly affected maximal exercise duration, maximal oxygen uptake, ventilatory threshold, or any of the ventilatory parameters during exercise.

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The feasibility and results of percutaneous double balloon valvuloplasty were evaluated in 2 patients with stenosis of porcine bioprostheses in the tricuspid valve position. The procedures were performed with a Trefoil 3 x 10 and a 15 mm balloon. Long inflations (4 and 3 minutes) were well tolerated.

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The treatment of chronic ventricular arrhythmias depends on the severity and tolerance of the arrhythmia. Extrasystoles, even repetitive, in the healthy heart, are usually respected when asymptomatic or treated with betablockers in first intention when symptomatic. These drugs should also be proposed for patients with ischemic heart disease and non-sustained ventricular tachycardia, a situation in which Class I antiarrhythmics should be avoided.

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The risk of sudden arrhythmic death after myocardial infarction is high, especially during the first months. The evaluation of this risk should be performed before hospital discharge in the same way as residual ischaemia and left ventricular function, which are independent risk factors for arrhythmia, are assessed. Holter monitoring provides information not only about ventricular hyperexcitability (especially the detection of unsustained ventricular tachycardia) but also about the activity of the autonomic nervous system by analysis of variations of the sinus rhythm, the decrease of which carries a poor prognosis.

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Catheter ablation of the atrioventricular junction may be proposed for the treatment of certain atrial arrhythmias resistant to antiarrhythmic therapy. One of the methods currently being evaluated uses radio-frequency energy which has certain advantages compared with direct current ablation because of the progressive and limited lesions it produces. This technique was used in 24 patients with atrial arrhythmias resistant to antiarrhythmic therapy.

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Complete atrioventricular block (AVB) following radiotherapy has been reported rarely, usually after high dose mediastinal irradiation for Hodgkin's disease or lung or breast carcinoma. We report six new cases of episodic complete infranodal AVB, requiring permanent pacemaker implantation. The mean age was 48-years old (ranging from 25-60) at the first Adams Stokes attack, mean delay was 12 years after irradiation (10-18), and mean radiation dose was 5,200 rads (4,000-6,500).

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Diltiazem and Nifedipine could be synergic. The aim of this study was to investigate the benefits of their association. Eighteen patients, 15 men and 3 women, average age 61 +/- 6 years, with stable angina on effort, were studied.

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