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Dive into the research topics where Armelle Magot is active.

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Featured researches published by Armelle Magot.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2004

Worsening of neurologic symptoms after epidural anesthesia for labor in a Guillain-Barré patient.

Sandrine Wiertlewski; Armelle Magot; Sophie Drapier; Jean-Marc Malinovsky; Yann Péréon

UNLABELLED We report the case of a pregnant woman presenting with Guillain-Barré syndrome in which her neurologic status worsened immediately after delivery under epidural analgesia. We believe that the anesthetic technique may have played a role in the disease progression. Because of this potential association, the risks of worsening neurologic status after regional anesthesia and alternative analgesia options should be discussed with the parturient. IMPLICATIONS Because of the potential interaction between regional anesthesia and Guillain-Barré syndrome in pregnant women, the risks of worsening neurologic status and alternative analgesia options should be discussed with the parturient.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2014

An exploratory randomised double-blind and placebo-controlled phase 2 study of a combination of baclofen, naltrexone and sorbitol (PXT3003) in patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A

Shahram Attarian; Jean-Michel Vallat; Laurent Magy; Benoît Funalot; Pierre-Marie Gonnaud; Arnaud Lacour; Yann Péréon; Odile Dubourg; Jean Pouget; Joëlle Micallef; Jérôme Franques; Marie-Noëlle Lefebvre; Karima Ghorab; Mahmoud Al-Moussawi; Vincent Tiffreau; Marguerite Preudhomme; Armelle Magot; Laurène Leclair-Visonneau; Tanya Stojkovic; Laura Bossi; Philippe Lehert; Walter Gilbert; Viviane Bertrand; Jonas Mandel; Aude Milet; Rodolphe Hajj; Lamia Boudiaf; Catherine Scart-Grès; Serguei Nabirotchkin; Mickael Guedj

BackgroundCharcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A disease (CMT1A) is a rare orphan inherited neuropathy caused by an autosomal dominant duplication of a gene encoding for the structural myelin protein PMP22, which induces abnormal Schwann cell differentiation and dysmyelination, eventually leading to axonal suffering then loss and muscle wasting. We favour the idea that diseases can be more efficiently treated when targeting multiple disease-relevant pathways. In CMT1A patients, we therefore tested the potential of PXT3003, a low-dose combination of three already approved compounds (baclofen, naltrexone and sorbitol). Our study conceptually builds on preclinical experiments highlighting a pleiotropic mechanism of action that includes downregulation of PMP22. The primary objective was to assess safety and tolerability of PXT3003. The secondary objective aimed at an exploratory analysis of efficacy of PXT3003 in CMT1A, to be used for designing next clinical development stages (Phase 2b/3).Methods80 adult patients with mild-to-moderate CMT1A received in double-blind for 1 year Placebo or one of the three increasing doses of PXT3003 tested, in four equal groups. Safety and tolerability were assessed with the incidence of related adverse events. Efficacy was assessed using the Charcot-Marie-Tooth Neuropathy Score (CMTNS) and the Overall Neuropathy Limitations Scale (ONLS) as main endpoints, as well as various clinical and electrophysiological outcomes.ResultsThis trial confirmed the safety and tolerability of PXT3003. The highest dose (HD) showed consistent evidence of improvement beyond stabilization. CMTNS and ONLS, with a significant improvement of respectively of 8% (0.4% - 16.2%) and 12.1% (2% - 23.2%) in the HD group versus the pool of all other groups, appear to be the most sensitive clinical endpoints to treatment despite their quasi-stability over one year under Placebo. Patients who did not deteriorate over one year were significantly more frequent in the HD group.ConclusionsThese results confirm that PXT3003 deserves further investigation in adults and could greatly benefit CMT1A-diagnosed children, usually less affected than adults.Trial registrationEudraCT Number: 2010-023097-40. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01401257. The Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products issued in February 2014 a positive opinion on the application for orphan designation for PXT3003 (EMA/OD/193/13).


Muscle & Nerve | 2015

NON-INVASIVE ASSESSMENT OF MUSCLE STIFFNESS IN PATIENTS WITH DUCHENNE MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY

Lilian Lacourpaille; François Hug; Arnaud Guével; Yann Péréon; Armelle Magot; Jean-Yves Hogrel; Antoine Nordez

ABSTRACT: Introduction: Assessment of muscle mechanical properties may provide clinically valuable information for follow‐up of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) through the course of their disease. In this study we aimed to assess the effect of DMD on stiffness of relaxed muscles using elastography (supersonic shear imaging). Methods: Fourteen DMD patients and 13 control subjects were studied. Six muscles were measured at 2 muscle lengths (shortened and stretched): gastrocnemius medialis (GM); tibialis anterior (TA); vastus lateralis (VL); biceps brachii (BB); triceps brachii (TB); and abductor digiti minimi (ADM). Results: Stiffness was significantly higher in DMD patients compared with controls for all the muscles (main effect for population, P < 0.033 in all cases), except for ADM. The effect size was small (d = 0.33 for ADM at both muscle lengths) to large (d = 0.86 for BB/stretched). Conclusions: Supersonic shear imaging is a sensitive non‐invasive technique to assess the increase in muscle stiffness associated with DMD. Muscle Nerve 51: 284–286, 2015


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Mutations in FAM111B Cause Hereditary Fibrosing Poikiloderma with Tendon Contracture, Myopathy, and Pulmonary Fibrosis

Sandra Mercier; Sébastien Küry; Gasnat Shaboodien; Darren T. Houniet; Nonhlanhla P. Khumalo; Chantal Bou-Hanna; Nathalie Bodak; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Albert David; Laurence Faivre; Dominique Figarella-Branger; Romain K. Gherardi; Elise Glen; Antoine Hamel; Christian Laboisse; Cédric Le Caignec; Pierre Lindenbaum; Armelle Magot; Arnold Munnich; Jean-Marie Mussini; Komala Pillay; Thahira Rahman; Richard Redon; Emmanuelle Salort-Campana; Mauro Santibanez-Koref; Christel Thauvin; S. Barbarot; Bernard Keavney; Stéphane Bézieau; Bongani M. Mayosi

Congenital poikiloderma is characterized by a combination of mottled pigmentation, telangiectasia, and epidermal atrophy in the first few months of life. We have previously described a South African European-descent family affected by a rare autosomal-dominant form of hereditary fibrosing poikiloderma accompanied by tendon contracture, myopathy, and pulmonary fibrosis. Here, we report the identification of causative mutations in FAM111B by whole-exome sequencing. In total, three FAM111B missense mutations were identified in five kindreds of different ethnic backgrounds. The mutation segregated with the disease in one large pedigree, and mutations were de novo in two other pedigrees. All three mutations were absent from public databases and were not observed on Sanger sequencing of 388 ethnically matched control subjects. The three single-nucleotide mutations code for amino acid changes that are clustered within a putative trypsin-like cysteine/serine peptidase domain of FAM111B. These findings provide evidence of the involvement of FAM111B in congenital poikiloderma and multisystem fibrosis.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Immune response and mitochondrial metabolism are commonly deregulated in DMD and aging skeletal muscle.

Daniel Baron; Armelle Magot; Gérard Ramstein; Marja Steenman; Guillemette Fayet; Catherine Chevalier; Philippe Jourdon; Rémi Houlgatte; Frédérique Savagner; Yann Péréon

Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is a complex process involving multiple pathways downstream of the primary genetic insult leading to fatal muscle degeneration. Aging muscle is a multifactorial neuromuscular process characterized by impaired muscle regeneration leading to progressive atrophy. We hypothesized that these chronic atrophying situations may share specific myogenic adaptative responses at transcriptional level according to tissue remodeling. Muscle biopsies from four young DMD and four AGED subjects were referred to a group of seven muscle biopsies from young subjects without any neuromuscular disorder and explored through a dedicated expression microarray. We identified 528 differentially expressed genes (out of 2,745 analyzed), of which 328 could be validated by an exhaustive meta-analysis of public microarray datasets referring to DMD and Aging in skeletal muscle. Among the 328 validated co-expressed genes, 50% had the same expression profile in both groups and corresponded to immune/fibrosis responses and mitochondrial metabolism. Generalizing these observed meta-signatures with large compendia of public datasets reinforced our results as they could be also identified in other pathological processes and in diverse physiological conditions. Focusing on the common gene signatures in these two atrophying conditions, we observed enrichment in motifs for candidate transcription factors that may coordinate either the immune/fibrosis responses (ETS1, IRF1, NF1) or the mitochondrial metabolism (ESRRA). Deregulation in their expression could be responsible, at least in part, for the same transcriptome changes initiating the chronic muscle atrophy. This study suggests that distinct pathophysiological processes may share common gene responses and pathways related to specific transcription factors.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Gender as a Modifying Factor Influencing Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1 Phenotype Severity and Mortality: A Nationwide Multiple Databases Cross-Sectional Observational Study.

Céline Dogan; Marie De Antonio; D. Hamroun; Hugo Varet; Marianne Fabbro; Felix Rougier; Khadija Amarof; Marie-Christine Arne Bes; Anne-Laure Bedat-Millet; Anthony Behin; Remi Bellance; F. Bouhour; Célia Boutte; F.-C. Boyer; Emmanuelle Campana-Salort; Françoise Chapon; Pascal Cintas; Claude Desnuelle; Romain Deschamps; Valérie Drouin-Garraud; Xavier Ferrer; Hélène Gervais-Bernard; Karima Ghorab; P. Laforêt; Armelle Magot; Laurent Magy; Dominique Menard; Marie-Christine Minot; Aleksandra Nadaj-Pakleza; Sybille Pellieux

Background Myotonic Dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is one of the most heterogeneous hereditary disease in terms of age of onset, clinical manifestations, and severity, challenging both medical management and clinical trials. The CTG expansion size is the main factor determining the age of onset although no factor can finely predict phenotype and prognosis. Differences between males and females have not been specifically reported. Our aim is to study gender impact on DM1 phenotype and severity. Methods We first performed cross-sectional analysis of main multiorgan clinical parameters in 1409 adult DM1 patients (>18y) from the DM-Scope nationwide registry and observed different patterns in males and females. Then, we assessed gender impact on social and economic domains using the AFM-Téléthon DM1 survey (n = 970), and morbidity and mortality using the French National Health Service Database (n = 3301). Results Men more frequently had (1) severe muscular disability with marked myotonia, muscle weakness, cardiac, and respiratory involvement; (2) developmental abnormalities with facial dysmorphism and cognitive impairment inferred from low educational levels and work in specialized environments; and (3) lonely life. Alternatively, women more frequently had cataracts, dysphagia, digestive tract dysfunction, incontinence, thyroid disorder and obesity. Most differences were out of proportion to those observed in the general population. Compared to women, males were more affected in their social and economic life. In addition, they were more frequently hospitalized for cardiac problems, and had a higher mortality rate. Conclusion Gender is a previously unrecognized factor influencing DM1 clinical profile and severity of the disease, with worse socio-economic consequences of the disease and higher morbidity and mortality in males. Gender should be considered in the design of both stratified medical management and clinical trials.


BMC Genomics | 2011

Meta-analysis of muscle transcriptome data using the MADMuscle database reveals biologically relevant gene patterns

Daniel Baron; Emeric Dubois; Audrey Bihouée; Raluca Teusan; Marja Steenman; Philippe Jourdon; Armelle Magot; Yann Péréon; Reiner A. Veitia; Frédérique Savagner; Gérard Ramstein; Rémi Houlgatte

BackgroundDNA microarray technology has had a great impact on muscle research and microarray gene expression data has been widely used to identify gene signatures characteristic of the studied conditions. With the rapid accumulation of muscle microarray data, it is of great interest to understand how to compare and combine data across multiple studies. Meta-analysis of transcriptome data is a valuable method to achieve it. It enables to highlight conserved gene signatures between multiple independent studies. However, using it is made difficult by the diversity of the available data: different microarray platforms, different gene nomenclature, different species studied, etc.DescriptionWe have developed a system tool dedicated to muscle transcriptome data. This system comprises a collection of microarray data as well as a query tool. This latter allows the user to extract similar clusters of co-expressed genes from the database, using an input gene list. Common and relevant gene signatures can thus be searched more easily. The dedicated database consists in a large compendium of public data (more than 500 data sets) related to muscle (skeletal and heart). These studies included seven different animal species from invertebrates (Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans) and vertebrates (Homo sapiens, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus, Canis familiaris, Gallus gallus). After a renormalization step, clusters of co-expressed genes were identified in each dataset. The lists of co-expressed genes were annotated using a unified re-annotation procedure. These gene lists were compared to find significant overlaps between studies.ConclusionsApplied to this large compendium of data sets, meta-analyses demonstrated that conserved patterns between species could be identified. Focusing on a specific pathology (Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy) we validated results across independent studies and revealed robust biomarkers and new pathways of interest. The meta-analyses performed with MADMuscle show the usefulness of this approach. Our method can be applied to all public transcriptome data.


Muscle & Nerve | 2013

Guillain–Barré syndrome during childhood: Particular clinical and electrophysiological features

David Devos; Armelle Magot; Julie Perrier‐Boeswillwald; Guillemette Fayet; Laurène Leclair-Visonneau; Yolaine Ollivier; Yann Péréon

Guillain–Barré syndrome (GBS) has some specific characteristics in children.


Muscle & Nerve | 2008

A new MPZ mutation associated with a mild CMT1 phenotype presenting with recurrent nerve compression

Armelle Magot; Philippe Latour; Jean-Marie Mussini; Reda Mourtada; Pierre Guihéneuc; Yann Péréon

P0 is a transmembrane protein of the immunoglobulin superfamily that plays a role in myelin structure and function. Myelin protein zero gene (MPZ) mutations usually cause a demyelinating variant of Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease type 1B (CMT1B), but there is a wide spectrum of phenotypic manifestation of these mutations. We describe three patients from one family and one separate patient who presented with a demyelinating neuropathy. Some had recurrent lesions at compression sites mimicking hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP). A heterozygous nonsense mutation (Tyr145Stop) corresponding to a T‐to‐A transition at nucleotide position 435 in exon 3 of the MPZ gene was identified in all patients. This mutation leads to an extracellular truncated protein, which may explain the mild phenotype. Therefore, such MPZ gene mutations should be searched for in cases of demyelinating neuropathy with acute nerve compression as well as in cases of the HNPP phenotype associated with normal the PMP22 gene. Muscle Nerve, 2008


Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism | 2011

Atypical neurologic complications in patients with primary Sjögren's syndrome: report of 4 cases.

Laure Michel; Frédérique Toulgoat; Hubert Desal; David Laplaud; Armelle Magot; Mohamed Hamidou; Sandrine Wiertlewski

BACKGROUND Neurologic involvement occurs in approximately 25% of patients with primary Sjögrens syndrome. Manifestations are diverse and can affect the entire neuroaxis. Central nervous system dysfunction involves the brain as well as the spinal cord and may recur over time. Due to a variety of presentations, Sjögrens syndrome with neurologic involvement may be difficult to diagnose. METHODS We report 4 cases of patients with primary Sjögrens syndrome who presented with atypical neurologic manifestations. RESULTS The first case describes a patient with a pseudotumoral lesion. The second patient was a 54-year-old woman suffering from a multiple mononeuropathy. The third case describes a 66-year-old man whose primary Sjögrens syndrome presented as progressive multiple sclerosis, and the fourth case reports a 57-year-old woman patient suffering from myelitis along with progressive cognitive disorders. CONCLUSIONS Neurologic impairment in Sjögrens syndrome is probably underestimated and the diagnosis is often delayed. Primary Sjögrens syndrome should be suspected in patients presenting with atypical clinical and radiologic neurologic manifestations.

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Pierre Guihéneuc

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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