Publications by authors named "Wolber A"

Understanding the subprocesses of risky decision making is a prerequisite for understanding (dys-)functional decisions. For the present fMRI study, we designed a novel variant of the balloon-analog-risk task (BART) that measures three phases: decision making, reward anticipation, and feedback processing. Twenty-nine healthy young adults completed the BART.

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Craniostenosis is a morphological anomaly affecting about 0.5 of 1000 births and one third of the cases are of genetic origin. Among the syndromes responsible for craniostenosis, there is the Saethre-Chotzen syndrome due to a mutation of the TWIST 1 gene located on chromosome 7.

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Background And Purpose: Morphological correction is one of the main aims of surgery for sagittal synostosis (SSO). Different surgical techniques have been developed; however, few studies have compared the different surgical protocols. The morphological outcome is poorly documented, because a consensual evaluation tool is lacking.

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Introduction: Early decompressive posterior linear craniectomy (PLC) can be indicated in very young infants with complex multisuture synostosis, which often involve the lambdoid suture (LS). The literature data on the surgical technique and its results are scarce.

Material And Methods: Based on our experience with PLC during the last 10 years, we detail our surgical technique for PLC, the possible pitfalls, and complication avoidance.

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Purpose: Lambdoid synostosis (LS) is a rare condition, which is either isolated; associated with sagittal synostosis, the "Mercedes-Benz" syndrome (MBS); or with synostosis of the coronal sutures (oxycephalic form). In addition, LS is part of the phenotype of a growing number of genetic diseases. The nosology, pathophysiology, and management are controversial.

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We have previously identified NOD2 genotype and inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) phenotype, as associated with shifts in the ileal microbiome ("dysbiosis") in a patient cohort. Here we report an integrative analysis of an expanded number of Crohn's disease (CD) related genetic defects in innate immune function (NOD2, ATG16L1, IRGM, CARD9, XBP1, ORMDL3) and composition of the ileal microbiome by combining the initial patient cohort (Batch 1, 2005-2010, n = 165) with a second consecutive patient cohort (Batch 2, 2010-2012, n = 118). These combined patient cohorts were composed of three non-overlapping phenotypes: 1.

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Synostotic anterior plagiocephaly is a rare pathological cranial malformation. Therapeutic options are rarely studied due to the rarity of the malformation and difficulties in diagnosis and care management. The objective of this study was to analyze the results obtained with the Lille protocol based on 62 CT-scans done before and after surgery in 31 patients.

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Introduction: Cleft palate requires surgery in the first years of life, furthermore repairing anatomically the soft and hard palate is complex on a surgical level because of the fine tissues and the local intraoral configuration. It is valuable to train first on simulators before going to the operating room. However, there is no material dedicated to learning how to perform intraoral sutures in cleft palate surgery.

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Distraction osteogenesis, initially developed by Ilizarov for limb, is the tissular extension caused by the progressive space of the osseous pieces following an osteotomy. Distraction is osteogenesic and histogenic. Twenty-five years ago, at the instigation of McCarthy, this technique was used to handle the craniofacial malformations in the various floors of the face : mandibular, mediofacial and cranial.

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Craniosynostosis are rare congenital malformations of the skull resulting from the premature fusion of one or several cranial sutures. Prevalence is considered in approximately 1 on 2000 births. Non syndromic craniosynostosis (NSC) or isolated form are the most frequent forms (85 % of the cases).

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Purpose: Midfacial distraction for facial stenosis is minimizing the communication between cranial fossa and nasal fossa caused by the Le Fort III osteotomy during frontofacial advancement procedures. There are different types of distractors, such as internal and external devices. The aim of our study is to present a series of 22 consecutive distraction cases operated without any Le Fort osteotomy with external distraction frames.

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From the early beginning, in 1977, of our experience in the treatment of trigonocephaly and with the follow-up of 263 patients, we have been convinced that it was a condition related to the skull base. It is now proved thank to the comparison between patient's CT scan and normal template (normal skull of the same age) in vestibular orientation. We used to correct this condition by a frontal reshaping and a rotation of the superior and lateral orbital rim along an oblique axis.

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Background: Non-syndromic coronal synostoses oxycephaly and brachycephaly (NSCSOB) are rare. Their natural history, surgical management, and outcome are debated.

Material And Methods: We reviewed the available literature on NSCSOB.

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Introduction: For 35 years, we have a tight neuro-plastic surgical cooperation for the surgical correction and long-term systematic follow-up of 125 cases of unicoronal synostotic plagiocephaly.

Methods: We have tried to understand why some patients had kept an asymmetrical facial growth pattern in spite of a good fronto orbital correction. Analysis in vestibular orientation which was available from 1993 has demonstrated a discrepancy between the ocular and the vestibular verticality referential system.

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Our aim was to evaluate the long-term outcomes of prosthetic treatment and orbital expansion in the management of microphthalmia syndromes. We did a retrospective single-centre study of all cases of microphthalmia treated between 1989 and 2010. The patients were divided into three groups: isolated microphthalmia, microphthalmia associated with micro-orbitism, and complex microphthalmia syndrome.

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Introduction: During the 1970s, frontofacial advancement revolutionized the treatment of severe facial stenosis. Unfortunately, this method was associated with significant morbidity due to the Le Fort III osteotomy, which creates a major communication between the frontocranial dead space and the nasal fossae. Midfacial distraction improves the complication rate by diminishing the size of this gap.

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Surgical treatment of maxillonasal dysplasia or Binder syndrome is a challenge for surgeons. Its aim is to replace or substitute the missing or malformed anatomic structures. The authors report a comprehensive analysis for the understanding of the mechanisms resulting in the lack of maxillonasal development observed in Binder syndrome.

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Hibernomas are uncommon tumors composed of brown fat. Their consistency is multiple but usually harder than a regular lipoma. It is a mobile, slow-growing mass.

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Skin graft is the most common and simple procedure to cover superficial defect. Skin of variable thickness and size is completely detached from its origin (donor site) to cover a defect (recipient site). This simple procedure is the result of a long and eventful technical and theoretical evolvement.

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We are reporting on an easy, reliable and reproducible nipple-areola complex reconstruction. The main feature is to perform a full-thickness skin graft to rebuild the areola and a subcutaneous pedicled island flap for the reconstruction of the nipple in the middle of the graft. Each step is described.

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Introduction: The facial artery musculomucosal (FAMM) flap described by Pribaz in 1992 is a musculomucosa flap of the cheek plugged into the higher or lower facial pedicle artery. Indications in terms of substance losses in the oral cavity are numerous.

Patients And Methods: Twenty cases carried out from 2003 to 2006 at the Oscar-Lambret Neck Surgery Cancer Center are reported with a study first on record, then a study on 15 patients (three deaths, two flaps take away for local recurrence).

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