Publications by authors named "Thoueille E"

In addition to the experimental work devoted to the capacities of newborns - among others on the question of sensory receptivity - it is interesting to show how much this receptivity intervenes during the clinical dialogue with young infants. But also how, from birth, professionals can identify individual profiles of babies, notably thanks to the Brazelton scale, and thus adapt their care practices.

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Background: Rare diseases may result in motor impairment, which in turn may affect parenthood. Our purpose was to evaluate perinatal outcomes, parenting needs, mother-infant interactions and infant development in a set of volunteer women with motor impairment due to a rare disease. In a parenting support institution, we recruited a consecutive series of 22 volunteer pregnant women or young mothers, recorded perinatal outcomes, and followed mother-infant interaction and relationship and infant development up to 14 months postpartum.

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The kinematics of hand movements (spatial use, curvature, acceleration, and velocity) of infants with their mothers in an interactive setting are significantly associated with age in cohorts of typical and at-risk infantsdiffer significantly at 5-6 months of age, depending on the context: relating either with an object or a person.Environmental and developmental factors shape the developmental trajectories of hand movements in different cohorts: environment for infants with VIMs; stage of development for premature infants and those with West syndrome; and both factors for infants with orality disorders.The curvature of hand movements specifically reflects atypical development in infants with West syndrome when developmental age is considered.

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Objectives: Maternity has been denied to blind women for a long time, and is still often criticized or not understood in a very demanding social environment for the future mothers. Our objective is to describe the follow-up of the pregnancies and the childbirth of the visual handicapped women within the framework of a dedicated network of care liking with the Maternal and Infant Protection Unit and the paediatric ward.

Patients And Method: We studied a retrospective series of 18 women blind or amblyopic followed up at the at the institut de puériculture et périnatologie (Paris, France) from 2001 to 2006.

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