79 research outputs found

    ModĂ©lisation statistique pour la prĂ©diction du pronostic de patients atteints d’un Accident Vasculaire CĂ©rĂ©bral

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    Stroke is a serious disease that needs emergency health care. Due to potential side effects, the patients must fulfil very restrictive criteria for eligibility to the curative treatment. These criteria limit drastically the accessibility to treatment : currently, an estimated 10% of stroke patients are treated. The purpose of this work was to develop a statistical framework for stroke predictive models. We deal with assessing predictive models in a low-prevalence context, building predictive models for spatial data, making volumic predictions depending on the treatement option, and performing image segmentation in presence of image artefacts. Tools developed in this thesis have been collected in an R package named MRIaggrL’Accident Vasculaire CĂ©rĂ©bral (AVC) est une maladie grave pour laquelle des critĂšres trĂšs stricts encadrent l’administration du traitement curatif en phase aigĂŒe. Ces critĂšres limitent drastiquement l’accĂšs Ă  ce traitement : on estime que seuls 10% des patients atteints d’un AVC en bĂ©nĂ©ficient. L’objectif de ce travail est de proposer un modĂšle prĂ©dictif de l’évolution de l’AVC qui permette d’identifier le volume de tissu Ă  risque de chaque patient. Ce volume, qui correspond au bĂ©nĂ©fice potentiel du traitement, permettra de mieux orienter le mĂ©decin dans sa dĂ©cision de traiter. Pour rĂ©pondre Ă  cet objectif nous nous intĂ©ressons aux problĂ©matiques d’évaluation de modĂšles prĂ©dictifs dans un contexte de faible prĂ©valence, de modĂ©lisation prĂ©dictive sur donnĂ©es spatiales, de prĂ©diction volumique en fonction de l’option de traitement et de segmentation d’images en prĂ©sence d’artefacts. Les outils dĂ©veloppĂ©s ont Ă©tĂ© rassemblĂ©s au sein d’une librairie de fonctions du logiciel R nommĂ©e MRIagg

    Acute Traumatic Stress Screening Can Identify Patients and Their Partners at Risk for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms After a Cardiac Arrest:A Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study

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    BACKGROUND: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is prevalent in patients who have had a cardiac arrest and their partners. Accordingly, acute traumatic stress screening is recommended, but its association with later PTSD symptoms has never been addressed in postresuscitation settings. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine whether acute traumatic stress is associated with PTSD symptoms in patients who have had a cardiac arrest and their partners. METHODS: This multicenter longitudinal study of 141 patients and 97 partners measures acute traumatic stress at 3 weeks and PTSD symptoms at 3 months and 1 year after resuscitation, using the Impact of Event Scale. Linear regression models were used to evaluate the association between severity of acute traumatic stress and PTSD symptoms and post hoc to explore effects of group (patients/partners), age, and sex on acute traumatic stress severity. We categorized Impact of Event Scale scores higher than 26 at 3 months and 1 year as clinical severe PTSD symptoms. RESULTS: Higher acute traumatic stress severity is significantly positively associated with higher PTSD symptom severity at 3 months (patients and partners: P < .001) and 1 year (patients and partners: P < .001) postresuscitation, with the strongest association for women compared with men (P = .03). Acute traumatic stress was higher in women compared with men across groups (P = .02). Clinical severe PTSD symptoms were present in 26% to 28% of patients and 45% to 48% of partners. CONCLUSION: Experiencing a cardiac arrest may elicit clinical severe PTSD symptoms in patients, but particularly in their partners. Screening patients and partners for acute traumatic stress postresuscitation is warranted to identify those at increased risk of long-term PTSD symptoms

    Brain serotonin 4 receptor binding is inversely associated with verbal memory recall

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    BACKGROUND: We have previously identified an inverse relationship between cerebral serotonin 4 receptor (5‐HT (4)R) binding and nonaffective episodic memory in healthy individuals. Here, we investigate in a novel sample if the association is related to affective components of memory, by examining the association between cerebral 5‐HT (4)R binding and affective verbal memory recall. METHODS: Twenty‐four healthy volunteers were scanned with the 5‐HT (4)R radioligand [(11)C]SB207145 and positron emission tomography, and were tested with the Verbal Affective Memory Test‐24. The association between 5‐HT (4)R binding and affective verbal memory was evaluated using a linear latent variable structural equation model. RESULTS: We observed a significant inverse association across all regions between 5‐HT (4)R binding and affective verbal memory performances for positive (p = 5.5 × 10(−4)) and neutral (p = .004) word recall, and an inverse but nonsignificant association for negative (p = .07) word recall. Differences in the associations with 5‐HT (4)R binding between word categories (i.e., positive, negative, and neutral) did not reach statistical significance. CONCLUSION: Our findings replicate our previous observation of a negative association between 5‐HT (4)R binding and memory performance in an independent cohort and provide novel evidence linking 5‐HT (4)R binding, as a biomarker for synaptic 5‐HT levels, to the mnestic processing of positive and neutral word stimuli in healthy humans

    Safety and EEG data quality of concurrent high-density EEG and high-speed fMRI at 3 Tesla

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    Concurrent EEG and fMRI is increasingly used to characterize the spatial-temporal dynamics of brain activity. However, most studies to date have been limited to conventional echo-planar imaging (EPI). There is considerable interest in integrating recently developed high-speed fMRI methods with high-density EEG to increase temporal resolution and sensitivity for task-based and resting state fMRI, and for detecting interictal spikes in epilepsy. In the present study using concurrent high-density EEG and recently developed high-speed fMRI methods, we investigate safety of radiofrequency (RF) related heating, the effect of EEG on cortical signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in fMRI, and assess EEG data quality.The study compared EPI, multi-echo EPI, multi-band EPI and multi-slab echo-volumar imaging pulse sequences, using clinical 3 Tesla MR scanners from two different vendors that were equipped with 64- and 256-channel MR-compatible EEG systems, respectively, and receive only array head coils. Data were collected in 11 healthy controls (3 males, age range 18-70 years) and 13 patients with epilepsy (8 males, age range 21-67 years). Three of the healthy controls were scanned with the 256-channel EEG system, the other subjects were scanned with the 64-channel EEG system. Scalp surface temperature, SNR in occipital cortex and head movement were measured with and without the EEG cap. The degree of artifacts and the ability to identify background activity was assessed by visual analysis by a trained expert in the 64 channel EEG data (7 healthy controls, 13 patients).RF induced heating at the surface of the EEG electrodes during a 30-minute scan period with stable temperature prior to scanning did not exceed 1.0° C with either EEG system and any of the pulse sequences used in this study. There was no significant decrease in cortical SNR due to the presence of the EEG cap (p > 0.05). No significant differences in the visually analyzed EEG data quality were found between EEG recorded during high-speed fMRI and during conventional EPI (p = 0.78). Residual ballistocardiographic artifacts resulted in 58% of EEG data being rated as poor quality.This study demonstrates that high-density EEG can be safely implemented in conjunction with high-speed fMRI and that high-speed fMRI does not adversely affect EEG data quality. However, the deterioration of the EEG quality due to residual ballistocardiographic artifacts remains a significant constraint for routine clinical applications of concurrent EEG-fMRI
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