20 results on '"Costes F"'
Search Results
2. Activités physiques et réadaptation respiratoire
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Chéhère, B., Pernot, J., and Costes, F.
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- 2021
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3. La réadaptation respiratoire, une perspective historique: d’Hippocrate à la télé-réadaptation
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Prefaut, C. and Costes, F.
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- 2021
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4. Évaluation de la sarcopénie et facteurs associés dans les myopathies inflammatoires idiopathiques
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Oyouba, Y., primary, Lambert, C., additional, Verdilos, A., additional, Reynaud, V., additional, Costes, F., additional, and Tournadre, A., additional
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- 2022
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5. Étude de la sarcopénie dans le syndrome obésité-hypoventilation. Une comparaison cas témoins (SOH+/−)
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Millet, A., primary, Greil, A., additional, Costes, F., additional, Boirie, Y., additional, Farigon, N., additional, Gentes, E., additional, Pereira, B., additional, and Caillaud, D., additional
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- 2022
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6. Haemodynamic compensations for exercise tissue oxygenation in early stages of COPD: an integrated cardiorespiratory assessment study
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Darcy Marciniuk, Jean Bourbeau, Bruno Pereira, Laura Filaire, Hélène Perrault, Ruddy Richard, François Maltais, Julianne Touron, Aurélien Mulliez, Wan Tan, Dennis Jensen, and Costes Frederic
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Medicine ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Background Cardiovascular comorbidities are increasingly being recognised in early stages of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) yet complete cardiorespiratory functional assessments of individuals with mild COPD or presenting with COPD risk factors are lacking. This paper reports on the effectiveness of the cardiocirculatory-limb muscles oxygen delivery and utilisation axis in smokers exhibiting no, or mild to moderate degrees of airflow obstruction using standardised cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET).Methods Post-bronchodilator spirometry was used to classify participants as ‘ever smokers without’ (n=88), with ‘mild’ (n=63) or ‘mild-moderate’ COPD (n=56). All underwent CPET with continuous concurrent monitoring of oxygen uptake (V’O2) and of bioimpedance cardiac output (Qc) enabling computation of arteriovenous differences (a-vO2). Mean values of Qc and a-vO2 were mapped across set ranges of V’O2 and Qc isolines to allow for meaningful group comparisons, at same metabolic and circulatory requirements.Results Peak exercise capacity was significantly reduced in the ‘mild-moderate COPD’ as compared with the two other groups who showed similar pulmonary function and exercise capacity. Self-reported cardiovascular and skeletal muscle comorbidities were not different between groups, yet disease impact and exercise intolerance scores were three times higher in the ‘mild-moderate COPD’ compared with the other groups. Mapping of exercise Qc and a-vO2 also showed a leftward shift of values in this group, indicative of a deficit in peripheral O2 extraction even for submaximal exercise demands. Concurrent with lung hyperinflation, a distinctive blunting of exercise stroke volume expansion was also observed in this group.Conclusion Contrary to the traditional view that cardiovascular complications were the hallmark of advanced disease, this study of early COPD spectrum showed a reduced exercise O2 delivery and utilisation in individuals meeting spirometry criteria for stage II COPD. These findings reinforce the preventive clinical management approach to preserve peripheral muscle circulatory and oxidative capacities.
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- 2024
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7. Hemodynamic Changes in Patients With Pectus Excavatum During Exercise: Relationship to Chest Wall Deformity Indexes.
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Filaire L, Costes F, Touron J, Tardy MM, Molnar I, Perrault H, Filaire M, and Richard R
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adolescent, Exercise physiology, Exercise Test methods, Adult, Young Adult, Funnel Chest physiopathology, Hemodynamics physiology, Thoracic Wall physiopathology
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Funding Support and Author Disclosures The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.
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- 2024
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8. Similar maximal aerobic capacity but lower energy efficiency during low-to-moderate exercise in women with constitutional thinness: new results from the NUTRILEAN study.
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Verney J, Lambert C, Isacco L, Beraud D, Boscaro A, Pereira B, Costes F, Rannou F, Julian V, Duclos M, Boirie Y, Thivel D, and Bailly M
- Abstract
Purpose: Individuals with constitutional thinness have been presented with a lower muscular energy metabolism at the cellular level but their effective aerobic capacities and exercise-related energy efficiency remains unexplored. The present study compares maximal and sub-maximal aerobic capacities between subjects with constitutional thinness and age-matched normal-weight ones., Methods: Anthropometric measures, body composition (Dual-X-ray absorptiometry), physical activity and sedentary time (GT3x actigraphs), and maximal aerobic capacities (cycling V ˙ O
2peak test) were assessed in 18 constitutionally thin (CT-body mass index < 17.5 kg m-2 ) and 17 normal-weight (NW-body mass index between 20 and 25 kg m-2 ) women. Energy efficiency was assessed during a submaximal cycling test and a walking exercise., Results: CT had a lower body mass and body mass index compared to NW. Absolute peak oxygen uptake and maximal aerobic power were lower in CT subjects compared to NW (ES: - 1.63 [- 2.40; - 0.86] and - 1.32 [- 2.05; - 0.58], p < 0.001). V ˙ O2peak related to body mass was not different between groups. Gross and net efficiency (ES: - 0.78 [- 1.48; - 0.06], p = 0.03 and ES: - 0.73 [- 1.43; - 0.01], p = 0.05) were lower in CT compared to NW during the submaximal cycling exercise. The gross energy cost of walking related to body mass was lower in subjects with CT (ES: - 1.80 [- 2.60; - 0.97, p = 0.05), with no difference for the net one. Perceived exertion was similar between groups in responses to both submaximal exercises., Conclusion: Constitutionally thin women do not show impaired aerobic capacities at moderate to maximal intensities despite lower energy efficiency while cycling and walking at low-to-moderate intensities., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2024
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9. [A systemic gene therapy for the treatment of cystic fibrosis].
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Boillot L and Costes F
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- Humans, Cystic Fibrosis therapy, Cystic Fibrosis genetics, Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator genetics, Genetic Therapy methods, Genetic Therapy trends
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- 2024
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10. Post-exercise energy replacement might lead to reduced subsequent energy intake in women with constitutional thinness: Exploratory results from the NUTRILEAN project.
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Boscaro A, Bailly M, Pereira B, Beraud D, Costes F, Julian V, Duclos M, Finlayson G, Thivel D, Boirie Y, and Verney J
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- Humans, Female, Energy Intake physiology, Hunger physiology, Energy Metabolism physiology, Weight Gain, Thinness, Appetite physiology
- Abstract
While people with Constitutional Thinness (CT) declare a deep willingness to gain weight, there appetitive responses to energy balance manipulations remain unclear. The present work compares the effect of an acute exercise combined or not with an energy replacement load, on subsequent energy intake, appetite and food reward, between normal weight and women with CT. Anthropometric measurements, body composition (Dual X-ray absorptiometry-DXA) and aerobic capacity (VO2max) were assessed in 10 normal-weight (Body Mass Index-BMI): 20-25 kg/m
2 ) and 10 C T (BMI<17.5 kg/m2 ) women (18-30 years). They randomly performed i) a resting session (CON); ii) an exercise session (EX); iii) an exercise session with energy replacement (EX + R). Their subsequent ad libitum intake, appetite feelings and food reward were evaluated (Leeds-Food-Preference-Questionnaire). CT showed a lower weight (p < 0,001), BMI(p < 0,001), Fat-Mass (%) (p = 0,003) and Fat-Free Mass (kg) (p < 0,001). CT showed a lower ad libitum energy intake on EX + R compared with CON (p = 0,008) and a higher Relative Energy Intake (REI) on CON compared with EX (p = 0,007) and EX + R (p < 0,001). A lower was observed during EX and EX + R compared with CON (p = 0,006,p = 0,009 respectively) in CT. No condition nor group effect was found for hunger. NW only showed a higher pre-meal fullness on EX + R compared to CON and EX (p < 0,001). Choice (p = 0,030), Explicit Liking (p = 0,016), Explicit Wanting (p = 0,004) and Implicit Wanting (p = 0,035) for taste were higher on EX + R than CON and EX. The decreased EI observed in CT when the exercise-induced energy expenditure is compensated by the ingestion of an equivalent energy load, might contribute to explain the difficulty to increase their energy balance and then induce weight gain. Further studies are needed to better understand their energy balance regulation to propose adapted weight gain strategies., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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11. Challenges of considering both extremities of the weight status spectrum to better understand obesity: insights from the NUTRILEAN project in constitutionally thin individuals.
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Boscaro A, Verney J, Tremblay A, King JA, Pereira B, Costes F, Julian V, Duclos M, Boirie Y, Thivel D, and Bailly M
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- Humans, Obesity, Extremities, Thinness epidemiology, Feeding and Eating Disorders
- Abstract
Background/objectives: While the physiology of obesity has been so extensively investigated to date, only an extremely small number of studies (less than 50) have focused on the other extremity of the weight spectrum: constitutional thinness. Yet, this important state of underweight in the absence of any eating disorders provides a mirror model of obesity that might be particularly insightful in understanding obesity. Nevertheless, important methodological and recruitment-related issues appear when it comes to this complex constitutionally thin phenotype, as experienced by our research group with the realization of the ongoing NUTRILEAN clinical trial. To face this challenge, the present paper aims at identifying, analyzing, and discussing the quality of such recruitment processes in publications about constitutional thinness., Methods: In this order, a group of experts collectively created a new grading system to assess the level of rigour and quality achieved by each study based on different criteria., Results: The main results were that (i) metabolic-related biasing criteria were poorly observed despite being crucial, (ii) recruitment processes were not detailed enough and with sufficient explicitness, and (iii) recruiting among already identified patients would be associated with both higher sample sizes and better scores of quality., Conclusions: The present work encourages investigators to adopt a high level of rigour despite the complexity and duration of recruitment processes for this specific population, and readers to pay close attention to the quality of recruitment when interpreting the data. To better understand obesity and its physiological adaptations, it seems essential not only to compare it to normal-weight conditions, but also to the other extremity of the weight status spectrum represented by constitutional thinness., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2023
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12. Are Women's Empowerment and Income Inequality Associated with Excess Weight in Latin American Cities?
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Tumas N, Rodríguez López S, Mazariegos M, Ortigoza A, Anza Ramírez C, Pérez Ferrer C, Moore K, Yamada G, Menezes MC, Sarmiento OL, Pericàs JM, Belvis Costes F, Lazo M, and Benach J
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- Female, Humans, Male, Latin America epidemiology, Cities, Obesity epidemiology
- Abstract
While income gradients and gender inequalities in excess weight have been noted elsewhere, data from Latin American cities is lacking. We analyzed gender-specific associations between city-level women's empowerment and income inequality with individual-level overweight/obesity, assessing how these associations vary by individual education or living conditions within cities in Latin America. Data came from national surveys and censuses, and was compiled by the SALURBAL project (Urban Health in Latin America). The sample included 79,422 individuals (58.0% women), living in 538 sub-cities, 187 cities, and 8 countries. We used gender-stratified Poisson multilevel models to estimate the Prevalence Rate Ratios (PRR) for overweight/obesity (body mass index ≥ 25 kg/m
2 ) per a unit change in city-level women's empowerment (proxied by a score that measures gender inequalities in employment and education) and income inequality (proxied by income-based Gini coefficient). We also tested whether individual education or sub-city living conditions modified such associations. Higher city labor women's empowerment (in women) and higher city Gini coefficient (in men) were associated with a lower prevalence of overweight/obesity (PRR = 0.97 (95%CI 0.94, 0.99) and PRR = 0.94 (95%CI 0.90, 0.97), respectively). The associations varied by individual education and sub-city living conditions. For labor women's empowerment, we observed weakened associations towards the null effect in women with lower education and in residents of sub-cities with worse living conditions (men and women). For the Gini coefficient, the association was stronger among men with primary education, and a negative association was observed in women with primary education. Our findings highlight the need for promoting equity-based policies and interventions to tackle the high prevalence of excess weight in Latin American cities., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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13. The effect of a pressure ventilatory support on quadriceps endurance is maintained after exercise training in severe COPD patients. A longitudinal randomized, cross over study.
- Author
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Labeix P, Court Fortune I, Muti D, Berger M, Chomette-Ballereau S, Barthelemy JC, Féasson L, and Costes F
- Abstract
Purpose: In severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients, the application of an inspiratory pressure support (IPS) during exercise increases exercise tolerance and the benefit of exercise training during pulmonary rehabilitation (PR). Moreover, it improves quadriceps endurance after a session of cycling exercise suggesting a reduced muscle fatigue. We looked for the persistence of this effect after PR and sought an association between the improved quadriceps endurance with IPS and the training load during PR. Patients and methods: We studied 20 patients with severe COPD (6 in stage 3and 14 in stage 4 of GOLD) before and after PR. As part of a PR program, patients completed 16 cycling sessions over 6 weeks with the addition of IPS during exercise. As a surrogate of muscular fatigue, quadriceps endurance was measured at 70% of maximal strength in a control condition, after a constant work rate exercise test (CWR) with IPS (TlimQ IPS) or with a sham ventilation (TlimQsham), in a random order. These tests were repeated similarly at the end of PR. Results: PR was associated with a significant increase in maximal power output, cycling endurance, quadriceps strength and endurance. Session training load (power output x duration of the session) increased by 142% during the course of the program. Before PR, CWR duration increases with IPS compared to sham ventilation (Δtime = +244s, p = 0.001). Compared to control condition, post-exercise TlimQ reduction was lower with IPS at isotime than at the end of CWR or than with sham ventilation (-9 ± 21%, -18 ± 16% and -23 ± 18%, respectively, p = 0.09, p < 0.0001 and p < 0.0001). After PR, the post-exercise decrease of TlimQ was reduced after IPS compared to sham (-9 ± 18% vs. -21 ± 17%, respectively, p = 0.004). No relationship was found between the prevention of quadriceps fatigue and the training load. Conclusion: In severe COPD patients, the beneficial effect of a ventilator support on quadriceps endurance persisted after PR with IPS. However, it was not related to the increase in training load, and could not predict the training response to non-invasive ventilation during exercise., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Labeix, Court Fortune, Muti, Berger, Chomette-Ballereau, Barthelemy, Féasson and Costes.)
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- 2022
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14. Effects of exercise-induced metabolic and mechanical loading on skeletal muscle mitochondrial function in male rats.
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Touron J, Perrault H, Maisonnave L, Patrac V, Walrand S, Malpuech-Brugere C, Pereira B, Burelle Y, Costes F, and Richard R
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- Animals, Male, Mitochondria, Quadriceps Muscle metabolism, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Rats, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Running physiology
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Over the past decades, a growing interest in eccentric (ECC) exercise has emerged, but mitochondrial adaptations to ECC training remain poorly documented. Using an approach for manipulating mechanical and metabolic exercise power, we positioned that for the same metabolic power, training using concentric (CON) or ECC contractions would induce similar skeletal muscle mitochondrial adaptations. Sixty adult rats were randomly assigned to a control (CTRL) or three treadmill training groups running at 15 m·min
-1 for 45 min, 5 days weekly for 8 wk at targeted upward or downward slopes. Animals from the CON (+15%) and ECC30 (-30%) groups were trained at iso-metabolic power, whereas CON and ECC15 (-15%) exercised at iso-mechanical power. Assessments were made of vastus intermedius mitochondrial respiration (oxygraphy), enzymatic activities (spectrophotometry), and real-time qPCR for mRNA transcripts. Maximal rates of mitochondrial respiration were 14%-15% higher in CON and ECC30 compared with CTRL and ECC15. Apparent Km for ADP for trained groups was 40%-66% higher than CTRL, with statistical significance reached for CON and ECC30. Complex I and citrate synthase activities were 1.6 (ECC15) to 1.8 (ECC30 and CON) times values of CTRL. Complex IV activity was higher than CTRL ( P < 0.05) only for CON and ECC30. mRNA transcripts analyses showed higher TFAM, SLC25A4, CKMT2, and PPID in the ECC30 compared with CTRL. Findings confirm that training-induced skeletal muscle mitochondrial function adaptations are governed by the extent of metabolic overload irrespective of exercise modality. The distinctive ECC30 mRNA transcript pattern may reflect a cytoskeleton damage-repair or ECC adaptive cycle that differs from that of biogenesis. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Anticipating outcomes of eccentric versus concentric training is confounded by differences in mechanical efficiency. Our observations in groups of rats submitted to uphill and downhill running regimens inducing similar levels of metabolic demands or same external power outputs reaffirm that independent of modality, oxygen requirements and not external work governs skeletal muscle mitochondrial function adaptations.- Published
- 2022
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15. New Insights on Bone Tissue and Structural Muscle-Bone Unit in Constitutional Thinness.
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Bailly M, Boscaro A, Thomas T, Féasson L, Costes F, Pereira B, Hager J, Estour B, Galusca B, Metz L, Courteix D, Thivel D, Verney J, and Germain N
- Abstract
While few studies pointed out low bone mineral densities in constitutionally thin women, little is known about potential explanations. The objective was to further explore bone architecture in both women and men with constitutional thinness to investigate their mechanical muscle-bone coupling (or uncoupling). Thirty constitutionally thin people and 31 normal weight controls participated in the study. Body composition, hip structural analysis, and trabecular bone score were assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, bone architecture using high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography, and muscle explorations through histological staining on muscle biopsies. Thirty-two out of the 48 indexes relative to density, geometry, texture, and architecture of bones were found significantly lower ( p < 0.05) in constitutionally thin individuals compared with controls. This observation was particularly pronounced in constitutionally thin men. Bone microarchitecture was more altered in weight-supporting bone (tibia) than in non-weight-supporting (radius) bone, which might refer to a normal physiological adaptation (Frost's mechanostat theory). Yet, the heat-maps of correlations analyses showed many alterations of body weight or muscle associations with bone parameters in constitutionally thin individuals contrary to controls. Present results might support the idea of intrinsic disturbances of bone cells independently to the small muscle structure, particularly in men., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Bailly, Boscaro, Thomas, Féasson, Costes, Pereira, Hager, Estour, Galusca, Metz, Courteix, Thivel, Verney and Germain.)
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- 2022
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16. Bactericidal effects and stability of LL-37 and CAMA in the presence of human lung epithelial cells.
- Author
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Geitani R, Moubareck CA, Costes F, Marti L, Dupuis G, Sarkis DK, and Touqui L
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- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Humans, Lung drug effects, Lung microbiology, Cathelicidins, Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides pharmacology, Epithelial Cells drug effects, Epithelial Cells microbiology, Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Abstract
Cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) are important actors in host innate immunity and represent a promising alternative to combat antibiotic resistance. Here, the bactericidal activity of two CAMPs (LL-37 and CAMA) was evaluated against Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) in the presence of IB3-1 cells, a cell line derived from patients with cystic fibrosis. The two CAMPs exerted different effects on PA survival depending on the timing of their administration. We observed a greater bactericidal effect when IB3-1 cells were pretreated with sub-minimum bactericidal concentrations (Sub-MBCs) of the CAMPs prior to infection. These findings suggest that CAMPs induce the production of factors by IB3-1 cells that improve their bactericidal action. However, we observed no bactericidal effect when supra-minimum bactericidal concentrations (Supra-MBCs) of the CAMPs were added to IB3-1 cells at the same time or after infection. Western-blot analysis showed a large decrease in LL-37 levels in supernatants of infected IB3-1 cells and an increase in LL-37 binding to these cells after LL-37 administration. LL-37 induced a weak inflammatory response in the cells without being toxic. In conclusion, our findings suggest a potential prophylactic action of CAMPs. The bactericidal effects were low when the CAMPs were added after cell infection, likely due to degradation of CAMPs by bacterial or epithelial cell proteases and/or due to adherence of CAMPs to cells becoming less available for direct bacterial killing., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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17. [Respiratory telerehabilitation in cases of COPD].
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Hayot M, Saey D, Costes F, Bughin F, and Chambellan A
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- Dyspnea etiology, Exercise Tolerance, Humans, Quality of Life, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive rehabilitation, Telerehabilitation
- Abstract
Telerehabilitation brings together a set of rehabilitation practices applied remotely by means of information and communication technologies. Even though it has been taking on increasing importance in many health fields over 10 years, telerehabilitation had yet to find its place in pulmonary rehabilitation before 2020, when the pandemic situation impelled numerous teams to put it to work. Pilot studies on respiratory diseases, primarily COPD, along with recent data from randomized or non-randomized studies, have enhanced our understanding of "remote" practice. In this review of the literature, we will show that pulmonary telerehabilitation is feasible, safe and likely to yield short-term (and possibly longer term) effects generally similar to those achieved in the pulmonary rehabilitation programs of specialized centers, especially as regards some indicators of exercise tolerance, dyspnea or patient quality of life. However, the number of studies and patients included in these programs remains too limited in terms of modalities, duration, long-term effects, or adaptations in case of exacerbation to be the subject of recommendations. The potential of respiratory telerehabilitation justifies continuing clinical trials and experiments, which need to be coordinated with the interventions characterizing a conventional program., (Copyright © 2021 SPLF. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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18. Fine Detection of Human Motion During Activities of Daily Living as a Clinical Indicator for the Detection and Early Treatment of Chronic Diseases: The E-Mob Project.
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Thivel D, Corteval A, Favreau JM, Bergeret E, Samalin L, Costes F, Toumani F, Dualé C, Pereira B, Eschalier A, Fearnbach N, Duclos M, and Tournadre A
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- Chronic Disease, Humans, Activities of Daily Living, Movement
- Abstract
Methods to measure physical activity and sedentary behaviors typically quantify the amount of time devoted to these activities. Among patients with chronic diseases, these methods can provide interesting behavioral information, but generally do not capture detailed body motion and fine movement behaviors. Fine detection of motion may provide additional information about functional decline that is of clinical interest in chronic diseases. This perspective paper highlights the need for more developed and sophisticated tools to better identify and track the decomposition, structuration, and sequencing of the daily movements of humans. The primary goal is to provide a reliable and useful clinical diagnostic and predictive indicator of the stage and evolution of chronic diseases, in order to prevent related comorbidities and complications among patients., (©David Thivel, Alice Corteval, Jean-Marie Favreau, Emmanuel Bergeret, Ludovic Samalin, Frédéric Costes, Farouk Toumani, Christian Dualé, Bruno Pereira, Alain Eschalier, Nicole Fearnbach, Martine Duclos, Anne Tournadre. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 14.01.2022.)
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- 2022
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19. [Pulmonary rehabilitation, a historical perspective from Hippocrates to tele-rehabilitation].
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Prefaut C and Costes F
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- Exercise Tolerance, Humans, Quality of Life, Walking, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive, Telerehabilitation
- Abstract
In ancient times Hippocrates described a disease, the 3rd phthisis, which seems to correspond to COPD and is mainly treated by walking, gradually increasing the number of steps until reaching 10,000 steps a day at the end of the initial period of treatment. The recent era began in the second half of the 20th century and ended in 2015, with an unusual Cochrane Library editorial in which it was stated that the accumulated evidence (statistically significant and clinically relevant improvements in clinical signs, tolerance to exercise, quality of life, days hospitalization…) on the effects of rehabilitation programs suffice to suspend research on the subject and to justify focus on new elements in the programs. It is essential, in fact, to establish uniform practical recommendations for the prescription of routine rehabilitation (number and duration of physical activity sessions, therapeutic education, re-training intensity…). In addition, studies should be carried out on new practices: community or home rehabilitation, long-term rehabilitation, tele-rehabilitation., (Copyright © 2021 SPLF. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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20. [Physical activity and pulmonary rehabilitation].
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Chéhère B, Pernot J, and Costes F
- Subjects
- Exercise, Humans, Quality of Life, RNA, Viral, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Physical activity in daily life (PA) in patients with chronic respiratory disease is reduced. Inactivity is associated with an increased risk of hospitalisation and mortality. Even though pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is associated with improved quality of life (fewer symptoms, greater exercise capacity…), its benefits with regard to PA remain unclear., State of the Art: For each patient, it is important during a respiratory rehabilitation (RR) programme to evaluate PA and its determinants. Only programs aimed at improved self-management and including educational therapy (ETP) have shown a short-term increase of PA following PR. Several studies have reported better long-term adherence when professionals help the patient to construct a personalised PA project, with regular follow-up and an array of activities (local facilities, urban walking…) chosen by the patient and adapted to the environment., Perspectives: The ongoing SARS-CoV2 pandemic has highlighted the importance of human interaction, even at a distance using information and communication technologies, as a means of sustaining patient motivation. Future controlled and randomized studies should focus on the long-term impact on PA of innovative strategies in patients with chronic respiratory diseases. Moreover, it would be interesting to quantify the socioeconomic impact as well as the sustainable health benefits of the different strategies outlined in this review., Conclusion: It is not possible to offer a single solution likely to maintain RR benefits over an extended lapse of time. However, follow-up with an ETP and/or regular and customized support during the post-training period facilitates the long-term adoption of active behavior., (Copyright © 2021 SPLF. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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