60 results on '"Pagenault M"'
Search Results
52. [Peptic stenosis of the colon: a rare complication of esophagocoloplasty].
- Author
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Mallak A, Bourienne A, Pagenault M, and Bretagne JF
- Subjects
- Aged, Anastomosis, Surgical, Anti-Ulcer Agents therapeutic use, Colon transplantation, Constriction, Pathologic etiology, Constriction, Pathologic therapy, Dilatation, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Omeprazole therapeutic use, Time Factors, Colon surgery, Deglutition Disorders etiology, Esophagoplasty adverse effects, Esophagoplasty methods, Stomach surgery
- Published
- 2000
53. [Primary T-cell lymphoma of the common bile duct].
- Author
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Corbinais S, Caulet-Maugendre S, Pagenault M, Spiliopoulos Y, Dauriac C, and Mendler MH
- Subjects
- Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Cholangiography, Common Bile Duct Neoplasms drug therapy, Common Bile Duct Neoplasms pathology, Endosonography, Humans, Immunophenotyping, Lymphocytes immunology, Lymphocytes pathology, Lymphoma, T-Cell drug therapy, Lymphoma, T-Cell pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Common Bile Duct Neoplasms diagnosis, Lymphoma, T-Cell diagnosis
- Abstract
Involvement of the gastrointestinal tract is frequently reported among the extranodal sites of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, but primary lymphoma of the common bile duct is extremely rare. We report the case of a 29-year-old man who presented with obstructive jaundice, leading to the diagnosis of high-grade primary non Hodgkin's T-cell lymphoma, originating from the extrahepatic biliary tract, and confirmed by endosonography and magnetic resonance cholangiography. This patient was treated by sequential chemotherapy without resection and remained in complete remission after one year.
- Published
- 2000
54. [Multicenter prospective study of prognostic factors of gastroduodenal ulcer hemorrhages. Reevaluation of clinical and endoscopic factors in the era of endoscopic hemostasis].
- Author
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Bourienne A, Pagenault M, Heresbach D, Jacquelinet C, Faroux R, Lejean-Colin I, Person B, Masliah C, Nouel O, Seyrig JA, Gosselin M, and Bretagne JF
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage mortality, Humans, Male, Peptic Ulcer mortality, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage etiology, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage therapy, Hemostasis, Endoscopic, Peptic Ulcer complications
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate in a prospective study the prognostic factors of recurrent bleeding and mortality in patients presenting with high risk peptic ulcer bleeding routinely treated by endoscopic hemostasis., Patients and Methods: A multicenter study was carried out in 8 Western French hospitals in 144 patients with gastrointestinal bleeding peptic from ulcer type I or IIa, b as defined by Forrest classification. Thirty four and 38 parameters were studied respectively in order to predict recurrent bleeding and death. Significant predictive factors (P < 0.1) in univariate analysis were entered in a multivariate logistic regression analysis., Results: Endoscopic hemostasis was performed in 108 of 144 cases (75%). Recurrent bleeding and death occurred in 39 (28%) and 22 cases (15%), respectively. By multivariate analysis, the only predictor of rebleeding was hypovolemia at admission. Predictors of death were ASA score, cardiovascular Goldman score and recurrent bleeding. In this study, prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection was low (41%) but was not a predictive factor., Conclusions: In a selected population of peptic ulcer bleeding patients with high risk of rebleeding, prevalence of recurrent bleeding and death remains rather high, despite routine endoscopic hemostasis. In the era of endoscopic hemostasis, clinical parameters remain the best prognostic factors of peptic ulcer bleeding outcome.
- Published
- 2000
55. [Should Helicobacter pylori infection be taken into account in the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents?].
- Author
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Bretagne JF, Pagenault M, Bourienne A, and Heresbach D
- Subjects
- Cyclooxygenase 2, Dyspepsia chemically induced, Dyspepsia complications, Helicobacter Infections enzymology, Helicobacter Infections epidemiology, Helicobacter Infections physiopathology, Humans, Isoenzymes metabolism, Membrane Proteins, Peptic Ulcer chemically induced, Peptic Ulcer complications, Peptic Ulcer physiopathology, Peroxidases metabolism, Prevalence, Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases metabolism, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal adverse effects, Helicobacter Infections complications, Helicobacter pylori
- Published
- 1999
56. Fecal incontinence with normal anal canal pressures: where is the pitfall?
- Author
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Siproudhis L, Bellissant E, Pagenault M, Mendler MH, Allain H, Bretagne JF, and Gosselin M
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological physiology, Catheterization, Female, Humans, Male, Manometry, Middle Aged, Pressure, Prospective Studies, Rectum physiopathology, Reference Values, Sensation physiology, Anal Canal physiopathology, Fecal Incontinence physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: One third of subjects who suffer from fecal incontinence are found to have values within the normal range when anal manometry is performed. For these patients, one hypothesis is that impaired rectal adaptation to distension may occur. The aim of our study was to analyze anorectal responses to rectal isobaric distension in this population., Methods: This was a prospective study conducted in 51 consecutive incontinent patients (45 female, six male) divided into two groups according to their functional anal state: absence (19 patients aged 55 +/- 6 yr) or presence of manometric anal weakness (32 patients aged 59 +/- 2 yr). The subjects were submitted to two randomized modes of rectal isobaric distension (tonic, phasic) with an electronic barostat. Anal pressures, perception, and volumes of the rectum were recorded at six different preselected pressures., Results: As compared with those having anal weakness, patients with no anal weakness retained higher mean pressures at both upper (36.9 +/- 2.2 vs 22.9 +/- 1.4 mm Hg; p = 0.01) and lower parts (41.0 +/- 2.0 vs 23.3 +/- 1.4 mm Hg; p = 0.002) of the anal canal, similar perception scores, but much lower rectal volumes (68.5 +/- 5.5 vs 121.8 +/- 7.0 ml; p = 0.008) in response to rectal isobaric distension., Conclusion: A decrease in rectal adaptation could be involved in fecal leakage in patients with no anal manometric weakness.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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57. [Gene therapy and the gastrointestinal tract].
- Author
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Lainé F, Heresbach D, Pagenault M, Gosselin M, Bretagne JF, and Ferry N
- Subjects
- Animals, Clinical Trials as Topic, Disease Models, Animal, Gene Transfer Techniques, Genes, Reporter, Genetic Vectors, Humans, Immunotherapy methods, Gastrointestinal Diseases genetics, Gastrointestinal Diseases therapy, Genetic Therapy methods
- Published
- 1998
58. [Incidence of inflammatory bowel diseases in Bretagne (1994-1995). ABERMAD. Association Bertonne d'Etude et de Recherche des Maladies de l'Appareil Digesif].
- Author
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Pagenault M, Tron I, Alexandre JL, Cruchant E, Dabadie A, Chaperon J, Robaszkiewicz M, and Bretagne JF
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Chronic Disease, Colitis epidemiology, Colitis, Ulcerative epidemiology, Crohn Disease epidemiology, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Registries, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of the study was to determine the incidence and the main clinical data of inflammatory bowel disease in Brittany., Methods: According to EPIMAD registry's methodology, private and public gastroenterologists (n = 139) of Brittany (2836418 inhabitants) referred all patients consulting for the first time, in 1994 and 1995 with clinical symptoms compatible with inflammatory bowel disease. An interviewer practitioner completed at the gastroenterologist's consulting room a standard questionnaire for each patient. Each case was reviewed separately by four experts to assign a diagnosis of definite, probable, possible Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, unclassifiable chronic colitis, or acute colitis (onset of symptoms < 6 weeks)., Results: 657 cases were recorded: 205 Crohn's disease (31%), 165 ulcerative colitis (25%) including 75 ulcerative proctitis (46%), 42 unclassifiable chronic colitis (7%), 245 acute colitis (37%). The crude mean annual incidence (per 10(5) inhabitants) based on definite and probable cases only was 2.8 for Crohn's disease and 2.9 for ulcerative colitis. The female/male ratio was 0.9 for Crohn's disease and 0.5 for ulcerative colitis. The median age at time of diagnosis was 27 for Crohn's disease and 36 for ulcerative colitis. The median time between onset of symptoms and diagnosis was equal to 3 months for Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis., Conclusion: In Brittany the observed incidence of ulcerative colitis is similar to that of Crohn's disease and close to that observed in northern France. The incidence of Crohn's disease is lower. However, the real incidence of inflammatory bowel disease is currently underestimated due to the large number of acute colitis requiring a follow up and the cases of Crohn's disease classified as possible not taken into account.
- Published
- 1997
59. [Polymorphism of the microsatellites and tumor necrosis factor genes in chronic inflammatory bowel diseases].
- Author
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Heresbach D, Ababou A, Bourienne A, Alizadeh M, Quelvennec E, Pagenault M, Dabadie A, Berre NH, Campion JP, Launois B, Gosselin M, Genetet B, Bretagne JF, and Semana G
- Subjects
- Adult, Alleles, Chromosome Mapping, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 6, Chronic Disease, Colitis, Ulcerative genetics, Crohn Disease genetics, Disease Susceptibility, Female, Haplotypes, Humans, Male, Polymorphism, Genetic, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases genetics, Microsatellite Repeats genetics, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha genetics
- Abstract
Objectives: Multiplex family studies have excluded chromosome 6 as a candidate gene of susceptibility to inflammatory bowel disease. However, one recent study suggested that a gene involved in the pathogenesis of Crohn's disease is located on chromosome 6 confering to a microsatellite allelic combination (a2, b1, c2, d4, e1) a strong genetic risk factor in Crohn's disease. The aim of our study was to determine simultaneously the polymorphisms of the TNF microsatellites and of the genes coding for TNF synthesis in patients with inflammatory bowel disease., Patients and Methods: Sixty patients with ulcerative colitis, 100 patients with Crohn's disease were compared to 64 healthy ethnically matched controls. Five TNF microsatellite loci (a, b, c, d, e) were typed using polymerase chain reaction PCR, and two dimorphisms of TNF alpha and TNF beta (intron 1) were studied by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP)., Results: Allelic frequencies of TNF microsatellites and of TNF alpha and beta genes were similar in Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and controls. Five loci microsatellite haplotypes, especially a2 b1 c2 d4 e1 allelic combination, were not more frequent in Crohn's disease (25%) compared to ulcerative colitis (27%) or controls (20%). Subgroups stratification according to clinical characteristics did not modify haplotype frequencies. Analysis of our data taking simultaneously into account the MHC alleles (DRB*01 or DRB1*04) did not modify our data; however, it suggested that extended haplotype on short arm of chromosome 6 differed between patients and controls. Linkage disequilibrium (delta = -360.10(-4); P < 0.01) between a2, b1, c2, d4, e1 allelic combination and DRB1*04 allele was observed only in Crohn's disease., Conclusion: Percentages of patients with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis carrying TNF microsatellite or TNF alpha and beta gene haplotypes were similar to those of healthy controls. These data argue against involvement of the TNF locus without exclusion of short arm of chromosome 6 implication in Crohn's disease pathogenesis.
- Published
- 1997
60. [Giant hyperplastic polyposis with adenomatous tissue].
- Author
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Beusnel C, Le Berre N, Pagenault M, Luherne Y, Bargain A, Ramée MP, Gosselin M, and Bretagne JF
- Subjects
- Adenomatous Polyps pathology, Adenomatous Polyps surgery, Aged, Colectomy, Diverticulum, Colon surgery, Humans, Male, Postoperative Complications, Reoperation, Sigmoid Diseases surgery, Sigmoid Neoplasms pathology, Sigmoid Neoplasms surgery, Adenomatous Polyps complications, Diverticulum, Colon complications, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage etiology, Sigmoid Diseases complications, Sigmoid Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Hyperplastic polyps are the most common type of colorectal polyps. They are usually multiple and localized in the rectosigmoid area. They are easily recognized by their small size (< 10 mm), sessile form, smooth-surface and translucid appearance. Typically, these polyps have no malignant potential. We report the case of a 68-year-old man who had multiple rectosigmoid polyps, some of them having macroscopic features of adenomatous polyps. Because of the occurrence of bleeding after endoscopic polypectomy of two polyps corresponding to adenomas at examination, because of the multiplicity of these polyps and their localization in diverticulosis, a left colectomy followed by coloanal anastomosis was performed. Histologic examination of the surgical specimen revealed the hyperplastic nature of all polyps with, in two of them, a focus of adenomatous tissue.
- Published
- 1996
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