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Dive into the research topics where Christiane Gueuning is active.

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Featured researches published by Christiane Gueuning.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1988

Alkaline phosphatase isoenzyme pattern in human amniotic fluid is dependent on the level of total activity. Implications in cystic fibrosis diagnosis.

C. Dictus-Vermeulen; J. Ameryckx; Christiane Gueuning; E. C. Van Bogaert; Guy Graff

Alkaline phosphatase activities have been examined in 500 consecutive human amniotic fluids obtained at diagnostic paracentesis between 14 and 38 wk of gestation. They were found to have a non-Gaussian, positively skewed distribution, independent of the protein concentrations. Residual activities after heat treatment or in presence of phenylalanine and levamisole allow evaluation of the placental, hepatic and intestinal isoenzyme components. It is shown that the contribution of the intestinal isoenzyme to the total activity is a linear function of the latter. This fact should be taken into account in the enzymatic diagnosis of cystic fibrosis as it is apparent that the part contributed by the intestinal isoenzyme is predictably smaller when the level of total activity is low.


Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry | 1982

Systemic effects of N, N-dimethyl-paraphenylenediamine hydrochloride on phosphate metabolism in innervated and denervated, slow and fast muscles of the rat

Christiane Gueuning; Michegle Authelet-Gillon; Jacqueline Flament-Durand; Guy Graff

N, N-dimethyl-paraphenylenediamine (DMPPD) hydrochloride increases the inorganic and organic acid-soluble phosphate (Pi and POAS) uptakes in the innervated gastrocnemius muscle of the rat but not in the innervated soleus. In the denervated gastrocnemius muscle, the effects of DMPPD and denervation are not additive, Pi uptake being even lower than on the controlateral innervated side. It is suggested that DMPPD acts only on the innervated fast fibre (white fibre, type II anaerobic fibre), as far as the permeability to Pi is concerned. Histological evidence of a severe myopathic process affecting slow and fast fibres, irrespective of denervation has been documented. Severe degenerative changes were still manifest after a 20-day DMPPD treatment. There is no obvious relation between the biochemical alterations in phosphate metabolism and the morphological lesions. The increased Pi and POAS uptakes observed in the innervated gastrocnemius and soleus muscles during generalized convulsions induced by DMPPD are independent of a direct drug action on the muscle fibre.


Annales De Chirurgie De La Main | 1985

Réparation du nerf périphérique: intérêt des colles biologiques et de la suture épipérineurale dans les interventions tardives: Etude expérimentale chez le rat

Corinne Becker; Christiane Gueuning; Guy Graff

In order to approximate as close as possible genuine clinical conditions, the sciatic nerve of the rat was divided and then repaired after a delay of one or seven days either by application of a biological glue or by an epiperineural suture technique. The metabolic activity of the sciatic nerve Schwann cells - whether located in the distal or the proximal ends - and that of the (fast acting) white gastrocnemius and (slow acting) red soleus muscle were assessed using 32P-radiolabeled acid-soluble phosphates. Delayed repair, as judged by our biochemical criteria, was equivalent whatever method, biological glue or suture, was used. The frozen and lyophilized forms of the biological glue provided similar results.


Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry | 1978

Effect of increasing duration of denervation on the rate of entry of inorganic phosphate into rat gastrocnemius muscle.

Guy Graff; Christiane Gueuning; C. Dictus-Vermeulen

The increased inorganic phosphate flow, characteristic of denervated gastrocnemius muscle, is shown to have no direct relation with either the loss of muscle mass or with the concentrations of the acid-soluble phosphate fractions. It is shown to increase hyperbolically with the time elapsed since the nerve section. The asymptotic value reached after thirty days suggests the presence of a saturable mechanism.


Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry | 1989

Alkaline phosphatase activities in normal and denervated, slow and fast rat muscles. Bearing on the possible participation of the enzyme in the transmembrane transport of phosphate ions.

C. Dictus-Vermeulen; Christiane Gueuning; Guy Graff

Alkaline phosphatase (AP) activities are present in rat gastrocnemius:48.7, plantaris: 68.9, tibialis anterior: 69.1 and soleus: 96.7 nmol phenol. min-1. 100 mg muscles-1. These concentrations are one and two orders of magnitude lower than those observed in duodenum and placenta, but similar to those observed in liver. Response to activators/inhibitors and electrophoretic behaviour assign the muscle AP activities to the rat liver/placenta isoenzyme group. Motor denervation does not affect significantly the total muscle AP content within the first 30 postoperative days, however the concomitant variations in muscle weight are responsible for wide differences in AP concentrations between innervated, denervated and reinnervated muscles. Parallel determinations of radiophosphate uptake and AP activities failed to document a necessary link between the two variables, i.e. between enzyme concentration and phosphate ion transport.


Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry | 1981

Phosphate metabolism and foetal growth in the rat. I. Net transfer of 31P and 32P inorganic phosphate from the maternal plasma to the normal placenta

E. C. Van Bogaert; Christiane Gueuning; Guy Graff

Net transfer of 31P and 32P inorganic phosphate from the maternal plasma to the rat foetus has been studied after intraperitoneal injection of [32P] ortho-phosphate in primigravid females at the 12th day or later stages of gestation. The concentration per unit weight of foetus of the inorganic phosphate (P1) fraction increases markedly with increasing foetal weight; labelling data [inverse relationship between P1 concentration and specific activity, absence of precursor/product relationship between P1 and acid-soluble organic-bound phosphates (POAS)] show this increase to result in part from the formation of a relatively inert metabolic pool, presumably in mineralized tissue. The foetal concentrations of calcium and inorganic phosphate show a strong positive correlation, both increasing markedly with foetal weight. The progressive accumulation of calcium does not, however, account entirely for the rising concentration of inorganic phosphate. The concentration per unit weight of foetus of the POAS fraction remains stable for foetuses smaller than 2 000 mg. In heavier foetuses (greater than 2 000 mg) the POAS concentrations are, with an abrupt transition, distinctly lower, rising however slightly with increasing foetal weight. The concentration per unit weight of foetus of the acid-insoluble organic-bound phosphate (POAIS) fraction decreases slightly with increasing foetal weight. The label uptake per unit weight of foetus of both POAS and POAIS fractions is negatively correlated with increasing foetal weight. The amount and label uptake per whole foetus of the P1, POAS and POAIS fractions are positively correlated with increasing foetal weight. Phosphate transfer to the foetus increases continuously, being maximal at or near birth.


Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry | 1980

Systemic effects of colchicine on phosphate metabolism in innervated and denervated, slow and fast muscles of the rat

Pablo Goldschmidt; Youri Glupczynski; Christiane Gueuning; Guy Graff

A single systemic injection of 75 micrograms colchicine/100 g body weight increases the permeability to inorganic phosphate of both fast gastrocnemius and extensor digitorum longus muscles and of the slow soleus muscle. In the two fast muscles, there is a significant interaction between colchicine treatment and 5-d- or 30-d- surgical denervation. In the slow soleus muscle there is no interaction between 5-d-colchicine treatment and the initial decrease in phosphate flow due to 5-d-surgical denervation but a significant interaction between colchicine treatment and the secondary increase in phosphate permeability observed after a 30-d-surgical denervation. Thirty days after a single systemic injection of colchicine the muscle phosphate metabolism is still perturbed especially in the slow soleus muscle in which the initial decrease in radioactive uptake associated with a 5-d-surgical denervation is inapparent. It is proposed that colchicine induces denervation-like alterations in the Pi- and POAS metabolism of skeletal muscles through mechanisms which are also activated -- partly or entirely -- by surgical denervation. These alterations do not result from the interruption of the axonal flow. A direct effect on the muscle membrane seems less likely than a disinhibition or activation of the muscle protein synthesis system.


Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry | 2008

Phosphate metabolism and foetal growth in the rat II. Net transfer of 31P and 32P inorganic phosphate from the maternal plasma to the normal foetus

E. C. Van Bogaert; Christiane Gueuning; Guy Graff

AbstractNet transfer of 31P and 32P inorganic phosphate from the maternal plasma to the rat foetus has been studied after intraperitoneal injection of [32P] ortho-phosphate in primigravid females at the 12th day or later stages of gestation.The concentration per unit weight of foetus of the inorganic phosphate (P1) fraction increases markedly with increasing foetal weight; labelling data [inverse relationship between P1 concentration and specific activity, absence of precursor/product relationship between P1 and acid-soluble organic-bound phosphates (POAS)] show this increase to result in part from the formation of a relatively inert metabolic pool, presumably in mineralized tissue. The foetal concentrations of calcium and inorganic phosphate show a strong positive correlation, both increasing markedly with foetal weight. The progressive accumulation of calcium does not, however, account entirely for the rising concentration of inorganic phosphate.The concentration per unit weight of foetus of the POAS fr...


European Surgical Research | 1986

Nerve and Muscle Regeneration after Axonal Division in Rats Treated with Isaxonine Phosphate (Isopropylamino-2-Pyrimidine Phosphate)

Corinne Becker; Christiane Gueuning; Guy Graff

Isaxonine phosphate (isopropylamino-2-pyrimidine phosphate), a neurotrophic agent, was tested on Schwann cell and muscle metabolism as evidenced by radiophosphate uptake in the inorganic phosphate and organic-bound acid-soluble phosphate fractions. It had no demonstrable effect either on sciatic nerve Schwann cells above and below an experimental crush or on the corresponding gastrocnemius and soleus muscles in their denervated and reinnervated state (7th to 28th postoperative day). It also failed to influence the end results (150th postoperative day) at nerve and muscle level after surgical division of the nerve and repair by either microsuture or fibrinogen adhesive.


Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry | 1978

Unlike Effects of Denervation on the Rate of Entry of Inorganic Phosphate Into Rat Slow and Fast Muscles

Guy Graff; Christiane Gueuning; C. Dictus-Vermeulen

The increased inorganic phosphate flow, characteristic of denervated gastrocnemius muscle is shown to be present in additional denervated fast muscles, i.e. the plantaris, tibialis anterior and extensor digitorum longus muscles. The response of the soleus, a slow muscle, to denervation is biphasic. After an initial decrease of the phosphate flow at the end of the first postoperative day, there is a secondary rise which has the same general characteristics as the rise observed in fast muscles i.e. an exponential or hyperbolic increase to an asymptotic value reached after thirty days. The denervated fast and slow muscles are not converging to an intermediate metabolic pattern. The changes in phosphate flow induced by denervation are reversible in the soleus as well as in the gastrocnemius muscles.

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Guy Graff

Université libre de Bruxelles

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C. Dictus-Vermeulen

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Corinne Becker

Université libre de Bruxelles

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E. C. Van Bogaert

Université libre de Bruxelles

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J. Ameryckx

Université libre de Bruxelles

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M. Secchi

Catholic University of Leuven

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J. van Gool

University of Amsterdam

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J.F. Lange

University of Amsterdam

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Pablo Goldschmidt

Université libre de Bruxelles

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