Publications by authors named "Tallet F"

Background: Obesity is characterized by inflammation, caused by increase in proinflammatory cytokines, a key factor for the development of insulin resistance. SR141716A, a cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) antagonist, shows significant improvement in clinical status of obese/diabetic patients. Therefore, we studied the effect of SR141716A on human adipocyte inflammatory profile and differentiation.

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Objective: White adipose tissue (WAT) is now considered a defined tissue capable of interactions with other organ systems. WAT role in elevating the level of systemic chronic inflammation suggests that alterations in this tissue as the result of disease or environmental factors may influence the development and progression of various obesity-related pathologies. This study investigated WAT cell-specific responses to an organometal compound, trimethyltin (TMT), to determine possible contribution to induced inflammation.

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Background: The risk of cardiovascular disease is inversely correlated to level of plasma HDL-c. Moreover, reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) from peripheral tissues to the liver is the most widely accepted mechanism linked to the anti-atherosclerotic activity of HDL. The apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) and the ABC transporters play a key role in this process.

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Alphaviruses, including Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), produce a transient illness in humans, but severe forms leading to chronic incapacitating arthralgia/arthritis have been reported by mechanisms largely ill-characterized. The pathogenesis of CHIKV was addressed in a prospective cohort study of 49 hospitalized patients from Reunion Island subsequently categorized into two distinct groups at 12 mo postinfection. Comprehensive analyses of the clinical and immunological parameters throughout the disease course were analyzed in either the "recovered" or the "chronic" groups to identify prognostic markers of arthritis-like pathology after CHIKV disease.

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Background: The development of obesity has been linked to an inflammatory process, and the role of adipose tissue in the secretion of pro-inflammatory molecules such as IL-6 or TNFalpha has now been largely confirmed. Although TNFalpha secretion by adipose cells is probably induced, most notably by TLR ligands, the activation and secretion pathways of this cytokine are not yet entirely understood. Moreover, given that macrophagic infiltration is a characteristic of obesity, it is difficult to clearly establish the level of involvement of the different cellular types present within the adipose tissue during inflammation.

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Obesity leads to the appearance of an inflammatory process, which can be initiated even with a moderate weight gain. Palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) is an endogenous lipid, secreted by human adipocytes, that possesses numerous anti-inflammatory properties. The main purpose of this study was to investigate the anti-inflammatory effect of PEA on human adipocytes, as well as in a murine model.

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Oxidative stress and protein modifications are frequently observed in numerous disease states. Albumin, the major circulating protein in blood, can undergo increased glycoxidation in diabetes. Protein glycoxidation can lead to the formation of advanced glycoxidation end products, which induce various deleterious effects on cells.

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Delayed postprandial clearance of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TGRL) could induce a decrease of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) vitamin E content through its transfer into TGRL. We thus studied lipoprotein vitamin E content during postprandial hypertriglyceridemia induced by a high fat meal without vitamin E supplement. Venous blood was drawn from five healthy male volunteers following a 12 h fast at (t0) then 2 h (t2), 4 h (t4), 6 h (t6) and 8 h (t8) after a 80 g fat meal.

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We have characterized changes in lipoproteins from cholestatic individuals and reproduced them by incubating lipoproteins from healthy individuals with cholic acid. The cholestatic patients showed an increase in low density lipoprotein (LDL) (>85%), with a smaller proportion of esterified cholesterol, and a fall in high density lipoprotein (HDL) (<10%), with a larger proportion of phospholipids. The protein composition of cholestatic HDL1 was characterized by a smaller proportion of apo A (I, II) and a prominent apo E fraction (39% vs.

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Surgical wound blood which is ched through drains after total knee replacement surgery with a tourniquet may be returned to the patient using special collecting devices. This study aimed to compare two systems, Orth-Evac and Solcotrans Plus an to assess the safety of the reinfusion of non washed blood cells. It included 30 patients scheduled for total knee replacement surgery, free from tumoral or coagulation disease and allocated randomly in three groups of 10 each: the Orth-Evac group (OGr), the Solcotrans Plus group (SGr) and the Control group (CGr).

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Added to human serum in vitro, RU 41740, an immunomodulating agent extracted from Klebsiella pneumoniae, binds selectively to lipoproteins containing apolipoprotein B (low-density lipoproteins and very-low-density lipoproteins, VLDL) and, at higher concentrations, to lipoproteins containing apolipoprotein A (high-density lipoproteins). The fact that lipoproteins modulate polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) functions led us to suspect that the VLDL-RU 41740 complex might affect PMN functions. In this study, the effect of this complex on PMN superoxide generation was measured in the presence and absence of the classical stimulants formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine and phorbol myristate acetate.

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Despite continuous monitoring progress, septic shock remains the main cause of death in Intensive Care Units. Septic stress triggers a complex array of biological modifications resulting in an acquired disease of intermediary metabolism whose main characteristic is an inefficient cellular use of glucidic, lipidic and protidic substrates together with oxygen. The purpose of this review is to present metabolic disturbances observed during sepsis and septic shock.

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A study was carried out to assess the effects of oral sodium citrate on the pH and volume of gastric content in 52 unpremedicated women undergoing elective Caesarean section under general anaesthesia. The patients were randomly assigned to two groups: group T (n = 26) without antacids and group C (n = 26) receiving orally 30 ml of 0.3 M sodium citrate solution 5 min before induction of anaesthesia.

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Coronary haemodynamics and myocardial metabolism of nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) and lactate were studied in 11 patients with severe sepsis, and compared to 10 control subjects. Coronary sinus blood flow was evaluated by thermodilution. Arterial and coronary sinus blood samples were collected for the measurement of lactate and total and individual NEFA concentrations both in septic and control patients.

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Propranolol binding to human alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (AAG) delipidated by two methods is described. Commercial AAG (99% pure) was either precipitated by ethanol-acetone and then washed by ether, or it was precipitated by ethanol. Binding capacity was quantified by the product n x Ka where n denotes the number of binding sites and Ka the association constant (M-1).

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Propranolol binding to rat serum samples was studied after 7 days of phenobarbital (PB) administration to induce alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (AAG). In male Sprague-Dawley rats, serum AAG concentrations and the bound/free propranolol ratio (B/F) were increased slightly after enzyme-inducing drug administration (mean +/- S.D.

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Total (t), monomeric (m) and polymeric (p) immunoglobulin A (IgA) levels were simultaneously measured in mixed faecal material collected over three consecutive days using a modified one-dimensional immunoelectrophoretic assay, which is a precise and reproducible method. Faecal t-, m- and p-IgA levels were statistically higher in 32 diarrhoeic patients than in a group of 16 healthy subjects (respectively 2.2, 2.

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A technique to specifically quantify monomeric IgA and total IgA in colostrum has been developed using a modified one-dimensional immunoelectrophoretic assay. This method employed electrophoresis in antibody-containing polyacrylamide-agarose gel in the presence of a gel barrier which blocks polymeric IgA. The addition of PEG (polyethylene-glycol 6000) to the anodic gel increased the sharpness of the peaks, the height of which was proportional to the antigen concentration.

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A fast and practicable gas-liquid chromatographic method for the quantitation of non-esterified fatty acids (C14:0-C18:2) from 100 microliter plasma is described. This technique includes extraction, purification using the solvents n-heptane and 0.5 M Na2CO3, and methylation by 0.

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Plasma high density lipoproteins (HDL) from patients with obstruction of the common bile duct were studied by crossed immunoelectrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. All cholestatic HDL fractions were rich in phospholipids (51.5 +/- 9%) with high proportions of free cholesterol (13.

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The present work studies lipid metabolism in patients with algodystrophy (AD). A correct positive correlation (r = 0.75) between the triglyceride levels and low density lipoprotein (LDL)/very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) ratio and the VLDL increase observed by gel disk electrophoresis confirm that a type IV hyperlipoproteinemia is associated with AD.

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