19 results match your criteria: "University Teaching Hospital of Purpan[Affiliation]"
Brain Commun
November 2023
University Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Inria, Grenoble INP, LJK, 38000 Grenoble, France.
Severe traumatic brain injury can lead to transient or even chronic disorder of consciousness. To increase diagnosis and prognosis accuracy of disorder of consciousness, functional neuroimaging is recommended 1 month post-injury. Here, we investigated brain networks remodelling on longitudinal data between 1 and 3 months post severe traumatic brain injury related to change of consciousness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain
April 2024
Critical Care Unit, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, F-31059 Toulouse Cedex 9, France.
The pathophysiological underpinnings of critically disrupted brain connectomes resulting in coma are poorly understood. Inflammation is potentially an important but still undervalued factor. Here, we present a first-in-human prospective study using the 18-kDa translocator protein (TSPO) radioligand 18F-DPA714 for PET imaging to allow in vivo neuroimmune activation quantification in patients with coma (n = 17) following either anoxia or traumatic brain injuries in comparison with age- and sex-matched controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
May 2023
From the Intensive Care Unit (S.L., G.J., A.F., M. Paul, M.-C.d.-C.), Centre Hospitalier de Versailles-Site André Mignot, Le Chesnay; University Paris-Saclay (S.L., G.J.), UVSQ, INSERM, CESP, Team « PsyDev », Villejuif; IctalGroup (S.L., P.S., J.C., M.L., G.P., G.J., A. Galbois, O.L., P. Bailly, P. Beuret, C.B., A.S., A.M.), Le Chesnay, France; Anesthesiology and Surgical-Trauma Intensive Care (R.B.), University Clinic Hospital, Valencia; Department of Surgery (R.B.), University of Valencia, Spain; Neuro-Intensive Care Unit (N.E.), Rothschild Foundation Hospital, Paris, France; Anesthesiology and Intensive Care (R.M.-T.), Hospital Regional de Alta Especilidad del Bajío, Leon, Mexico; Intensive Care Unit (P.S.), Groupe Hospitalier Sud Ile de France, Melun; Medical ICU (S.B.), Cochin Hospital, AP-HP, Paris, France; Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery (M. Pizzi, C.M.), University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville; Department of Neurology (C.M.), Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT; Department of Neurology (C.M.), University of Utah, Salt Lake City; Intensive Care Unit (J.C.), Centre Hospitalier Intercommunal Toulon La Seyne sur Mer; Intensive Care Unit (B.Z.), Hôpital Foch, Suresnes; Réanimation Médicale (M.L.), CHU Dijon; Service de Médecine Intensive Réanimation (G.P.), Centre Hospitalier d'Argenteuil; Intensive Care Unit (A. Galbois), Claude Galien Private Hospital, Quincy-sous-Senart, Île-de-France; Réanimation Chirurgicale (Y.L.), Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Rennes; Hospices Civils de Lyon (L.A.), Hôpital Edouard Herriot, Service de Médecine Intensive-Réanimation; Université de Lyon (L.A.), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Faculté de Médecine Lyon-Est; Service de Réanimation (O.L.), Centre Hospitalier de la Rochelle, Nouvelle-Aquitaine; Intensive Care Unit (A. Guillon), Tours University Hospital; INSERM UMR 1100 (Research Center for Respiratory Diseases) (A. Guillon), University of Tours; Médecine Intensive Réanimation (P. Bailly), CHU de Brest; Service de Réanimation et Soins Continus (P. Beuret), Centre Hospitalier de Roanne, Rhône-Alpes; Polyvalent ICU (S. Siami), Centre Hospitalier Sud Essonne Dourdan-Etampes, Paris; Médecine Intensive Réanimation (D.B.), Centre Hospitalier Régional d'Orléans; Médecine Intensive Réanimation (G.C.), District Hospital Center, La Roche-sur-Yon, France; Centro de Investigación Clínica (L.G.), and Adult Intensive Care Unit (J.L.A., J.M.), Fundación Valle del Lili, University Hospital, Cali, Colombia; Service de Réanimation (C.B.), Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint Joseph; Service de Réanimation (A.S.), Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France; Service de Réanimation (N.S.), Hôpital Fleyriat, Bourg en Bresse; Service de Médecine Intensive Réanimation (G.G.), Hôpital Universitaire Ambroise-Paré, APHP, Boulogne-Billancourt, France; Department of Neurology (D.S., Evie Sobczak, Emily Swafford, K.O.P., A.A.), University of Miami, FL; Service d'Anesthésie Réanimation Chirurgicale (A.M.), Hôpital Henri Mondor, Creteil, Île-de-France; Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care (M.H.), Beaujon Hospital, DMU Parabol, AP-HP. Nord, Paris; Critical Care Unit (S. Silva), University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Toulouse Cedex 9; Toulouse NeuroImaging Center (S. Silva), Toulouse University, UMR INSERM/UPS 1214, UPS, France; and Intensive Care Unit (M.J.A.d.C.), Hospital Nossa Senhora de Lourdes (Antigo Hospital Alfa), Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil.
Background And Objectives: To report the prevalence of acute encephalopathy and outcomes in patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and to identify determinants of 90-day outcomes.
Methods: Data from adults with severe COVID-19 and acute encephalopathy were prospectively collected for patients requiring intensive care unit management in 31 university or university-affiliated intensive care units in 6 countries (France, United States, Colombia, Spain, Mexico, and Brazil) between March and September of 2020. Acute encephalopathy was defined, as recently recommended, as subsyndromal delirium or delirium or as a comatose state in case of severely decreased level of consciousness.
Brain Commun
March 2023
Critical Care Unit, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan (URM), Toulouse, France.
Accumulating evidence indicates that coronavirus disease 2019 is a major cause of delirium. Given the global dimension of the current pandemic and the fact that delirium is a strong predictor of cognitive decline for critically ill patients, this raises concerns regarding the neurological cost of coronavirus disease 2019. Currently, there is a major knowledge gap related to the covert yet potentially incapacitating higher-order cognitive impairment underpinning coronavirus disease 2019 related delirium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrit Care
February 2023
Critical Care Unit, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Place du Dr Baylac, 31059, Toulouse Cedex 9, France.
Lancet Respir Med
June 2023
Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care unit, Regional University Hospital of Montpellier, St-Eloi Hospital, University of Montpellier, PhyMedExp, INSERM U1046, CNRS UMR, 9214, Montpellier, CEDEX 5, France. Electronic address:
Background: Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) and oxygen therapy (high-flow nasal oxygen [HFNO] or standard oxygen) following extubation have never been compared in critically ill patients with obesity. We aimed to compare NIV (alternating with HFNO or standard oxygen) and oxygen therapy (HFNO or standard oxygen) following extubation of critically ill patients with obesity.
Methods: In this multicentre, parallel group, pragmatic randomised controlled trial, conducted in 39 intensive care units in France, critically ill patients with obesity undergoing extubation were randomly assigned (1:1) to either the NIV group or the oxygen therapy group.
J Clin Med
November 2022
Department of Pharmacy, University Hospital of Besançon, 25056 Besançon, France.
Background: Given the rapidly evolving pandemic of COVID-19 in 2020, authorities focused on the repurposing of available drugs to develop timely and cost-effective therapeutic strategies. Evidence suggested the potential utility of remdesivir in the framework of an early access program. REMDECO-19 is a multicenter national cohort study assessing the ability of remdesivir to improve the outcome of patients hospitalized with COVID-19.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurocrit Care
August 2022
Toulouse NeuroImaging Center, Toulouse III Paul Sabatier University, Inserm, Toulouse, France.
Background: There is an unfulfilled need to find the best way to automatically capture, analyze, organize, and merge structural and functional brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data to ultimately extract relevant signals that can assist the medical decision process at the bedside of patients in postanoxic coma. We aimed to develop and validate a deep learning model to leverage multimodal 3D MRI whole-brain times series for an early evaluation of brain damages related to anoxoischemic coma.
Methods: This proof-of-concept, prospective, cohort study was undertaken at the intensive care unit affiliated with the University Hospital (Toulouse, France), between March 2018 and May 2020.
Crit Care Explor
June 2022
Critical Care Unit, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Toulouse, France.
Unlabelled: There is only low-certainty evidence on the use of predictive models to assist COVID-19 patient's ICU admission decision-making process. Accumulative evidence suggests that lung ultrasound (LUS) assessment of COVID-19 patients allows accurate bedside evaluation of lung integrity, with the added advantage of repeatability, absence of radiation exposure, reduced risk of virus dissemination, and low cost. Our goal is to assess the performance of a quantified indicator resulting from LUS data compared with standard clinical practice model to predict critical respiratory illness in the 24 hours following hospital admission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntensive Care Med
June 2021
Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Unit, Regional University Hospital of Montpellier, St-Eloi Hospital, University of Montpellier, PhyMedExp, INSERM U1046, CNRS UMR, 9214, Montpellier Cedex 5, France.
Purpose: The effect of the routine use of a stylet during tracheal intubation on first-attempt intubation success is unclear. We hypothesised that the first-attempt intubation success rate would be higher with tracheal tube + stylet than with tracheal tube alone.
Methods: In this multicentre randomised controlled trial, conducted in 32 intensive care units, we randomly assigned patients to tracheal tube + stylet or tracheal tube alone (i.
Br J Anaesth
October 2020
Medical Intensive Care Department, Angers University Hospital, Angers, France.
Background: Arterial pressure lability is common during the process of replacing syringes used for norepinephrine infusions in critically ill patients. It is unclear if there is an optimal approach to minimise arterial pressure instability during this procedures. We investigated whether 'double pumping' changeover (DPC) or automated changeover (AC) reduced blood pressure lability in critically ill adults compared with quick syringe changeover (QC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrit Care Med
August 2020
Toulouse NeuroImaging Center, Toulouse University, Inserm, UPS, Toulouse, France.
Objectives: Recovery from coma might critically depend on the structural and functional integrity of frontoparietal networks. We aimed to measure this integrity in traumatic brain injury and anoxo-ischemic (cardiac arrest) coma patients by using an original multimodal MRI protocol.
Design: Prospective cohort study.
Neuroimage
July 2019
Toulouse NeuroImaging Center, Université de Toulouse, Inserm, UPS, France; Critical Care Unit. University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Place du Dr Baylac, F-31059, Toulouse Cedex 9, France.
Graph theory has been playing an increasingly important role in understanding the organizational properties of brain networks, subsequently providing new tools for the search of neural correlates of consciousness, particularly in the context of patients recovering from severe brain injury. However, this approach is not without challenges, as it usually relies on arbitrarily fixing a threshold in order to retain the strongest connections proportionally equal across subjects. This method increases the comparability between individuals or groups but it risks the inclusion of false positive and therefore spurious connections, especially in the context of brain disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrit Care Med
August 2017
Critical Care Unit, Critical Care Medicine and Anesthesiology Department, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Toulouse Cedex 9, France and Toulouse NeuroImaging Center, Toulouse University, Inserm, UPS, France.
Anesthesiology
October 2017
From the Critical Care Unit (S.S., D.A.A., L.H., F.F., D.R., A.M., B.R.) and Critical Care and Anaesthesiology Department (S.S., D.A.A., L.H., J.R., F.F., D.R., A.M., O.F., B.R.), University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Toulouse, France; French National Institute of Health and Medical Research U1214, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Toulouse, France (S.S.); Critical Care Unit, Hopital Dieu Hospital, Narbonne, France (P.C., M.M., B.B.); Critical Care Unit, University Cancer Institute Hospital of Toulouse, France (J.R.); and Intensive Care Unit and Transplantation, Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care B, Saint Eloi Hospital, Montpellier, France (S.J.).
Background: Recent studies suggest that isolated sonographic assessment of the respiratory, cardiac, or neuromuscular functions in mechanically ventilated patients may assist in identifying patients at risk of postextubation distress. The aim of the present study was to prospectively investigate the value of an integrated thoracic ultrasound evaluation, encompassing bedside respiratory, cardiac, and diaphragm sonographic data in predicting postextubation distress.
Methods: Longitudinal ultrasound data from 136 patients who were extubated after passing a trial of pressure support ventilation were measured immediately after the start and at the end of this trial.
Neuroimage Clin
March 2018
Toulouse NeuroImaging Center, Université de Toulouse, Inserm, UPS, France; Critical Care Unit, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Place du Dr Baylac, F-31059 Toulouse Cedex 9, France. Electronic address:
Posteromedial cortex (PMC) is a highly segregated and dynamic core, which appears to play a critical role in internally/externally directed cognitive processes, including conscious awareness. Nevertheless, neuroimaging studies on acquired disorders of consciousness, have traditionally explored PMC as a homogenous and indivisible structure. We suggest that a fine-grained description of intrinsic PMC topology during coma, could expand our understanding about how this cortical hub contributes to consciousness generation and maintain, and could permit the identification of specific markers related to brain injury mechanism and useful for neurological prognostication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrit Care Med
August 2017
1Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, Critical Care Unit, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Place du Dr Baylac, Toulouse Cedex 9, France.2Critical Care and Anaesthesiology Department, University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Place du Dr Baylac, Toulouse Cedex 9, France.3Toulouse NeuroImaging Center, Toulouse University, Inserm, UPS, France.4Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, Critical Care Unit, Hopital Dieu Hospital, Narbonne, France.5Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, School of medicine and Surgery, University Milano Bicocca and Hospital San Gerardo, Monza, Italy.6Department of Neuroradiology, University Hospital of Clermont-Ferrand, Clermont-Ferrand, France.7Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, University Hospital of Clermont-Ferrand, Clermont-Ferrand, France.8Laboratoire d'Imagerie Biomédicale (UMR S 1146/UMR 7371), Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie-Paris 06, Paris, France.9Critical Care and Anaesthesiology Department, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpétrière, APHP, Paris, France.10Department of Neuroradiology, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpétrière, APHP, Paris, France.11Cyclotron Research Center and Department of Neurology, University Hospital and University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.12Algology and Palliative Care Department, University Hospital and University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.
Neurology
December 2015
From the Critical Care Unit (S.S., B.R.), Critical Care and Anaesthesiology Department (S.S., C.V., B.R., T.G., T.S., O.F.), and SAMU 31 (V.B.), University Teaching Hospital of Purpan, Place du Dr Baylac, F-31059 Toulouse Cedex 9; INSERM U825 (S.S., C.V., I.L., P.P.), CHU Purpan, Place du Dr Baylac, F-31059 Toulouse Cedex 9, France; Department of Radiology (F.d.P.), Santa Lucia Foundation, Rome; ITAB (F.d.P.), Department of Neuroscience Imaging and Clinical Science, G. D'Annunzio University, Chieti, Italy; and Leenaards Memory Center (J.-F.D.), Department of Clinical Neuroscience CHUV and University of Lausanne, Switzerland.
Objective: We hypothesize that the major consciousness deficit observed in coma is due to the breakdown of long-range neuronal communication supported by precuneus and posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), and that prognosis depends on a specific connectivity pattern in these networks.
Methods: We compared 27 prospectively recruited comatose patients who had severe brain injury (Glasgow Coma Scale score <8; 14 traumatic and 13 anoxic cases) with 14 age-matched healthy participants. Standardized clinical assessment and fMRI were performed on average 4 ± 2 days after withdrawal of sedation.