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Dive into the research topics where François Delelis is active.

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Featured researches published by François Delelis.


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases | 2014

Prospective comparison of speckle tracking longitudinal bidimensional strain between two vendors

Anne-Laure Castel; Catherine Szymanski; François Delelis; Franck Levy; Aymeric Menet; Amandine Mailliet; Nathalie Marotte; Pierre Graux; Christophe Tribouilloy; Sylvestre Maréchaux

BACKGROUND Speckle tracking is a relatively new, largely angle-independent technique used for the evaluation of myocardial longitudinal strain (LS). However, significant differences have been reported between LS values obtained by speckle tracking with the first generation of software products. AIMS To compare LS values obtained with the most recently released equipment from two manufacturers. METHODS Systematic scanning with head-to-head acquisition with no modification of the patients position was performed in 64 patients with equipment from two different manufacturers, with subsequent off-line post-processing for speckle tracking LS assessment (Philips QLAB 9.0 and General Electric [GE] EchoPAC BT12). The interobserver variability of each software product was tested on a randomly selected set of 20 echocardiograms from the study population. RESULTS GE and Philips interobserver coefficients of variation (CVs) for global LS (GLS) were 6.63% and 5.87%, respectively, indicating good reproducibility. Reproducibility was very variable for regional and segmental LS values, with CVs ranging from 7.58% to 49.21% with both software products. The concordance correlation coefficient (CCC) between GLS values was high at 0.95, indicating substantial agreement between the two methods. While good agreement was observed between midwall and apical regional strains with the two software products, basal regional strains were poorly correlated. The agreement between the two software products at a segmental level was very variable; the highest correlation was obtained for the apical cap (CCC 0.90) and the poorest for basal segments (CCC range 0.31-0.56). CONCLUSIONS A high level of agreement and reproducibility for global but not for basal regional or segmental LS was found with two vendor-dependent software products. This finding may help to reinforce clinical acceptance of GLS in everyday clinical practice.


American Heart Journal | 2014

Is mechanical dyssynchrony a therapeutic target in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction

Aymeric Menet; Lorraine Greffe; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; François Delelis; Yves Guyomar; Anne Laure Castel; Aurélie Guiot; Pierre Graux; Christophe Tribouilloy; Sylvestre Maréchaux

BACKGROUND Previous studies have found a high frequency of mechanical dyssynchrony in patients with heart failure (HF) with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), hence suggesting that cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) may be considered in HFpEF. The present study was designed to compare the amount of mechanical dyssynchrony between HFpEF patients and (1) HF with reduced EF (HFrEF) patients with an indication for CRT (HFrEF-CRT(+)) group, (2) HFrEF patients with QRS duration < 120 ms (HFrEF-QRS < 120 ms) group, and (3) hypertensive controls (HTN). METHODS Electrical (ECG) and mechanical dyssynchrony (atrio-ventricular dyssynchrony, interventricular dyssynchrony, intraventricular dyssynchrony) were assessed using conventional, tissue Doppler, and Speckle Tracking strain echocardiography in 40 HFpEF patients, 40 age- and sex-matched HTN controls, 40 HFrEF-QRS < 120 ms patients, and 40 HFrEF-CRT(+) patients. RESULTS The frequency of left bundle branch block was low in HFpEF patients (5%) and similar to HTN controls (5%, P = 0.85). Indices of dyssynchrony were similar between HFpEF and HTN patients or HFrEF-QRS < 120 ms patients. In contrast, most indices of dyssynchrony differed between HFpEF and HFrEF-CRT(+) patients. The principal components analysis on the entire cohort of 160 patients yielded 2 homogeneous groups of patients in terms of dyssynchrony, the first comprising HFrEF-CRT(+) patients and the second comprising HTN, HFrEF-QRS < 120 ms and HFpEF patients. CONCLUSIONS Mechanical dyssynchrony in HFpEF does not differ from that of patients with HTN or patients with HFrEF and a narrow QRS. This data raises concerns regarding the role of dyssynchrony in the pathophysiology of HFpEF and thereby the potential usage of CRT in HFpEF.


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2011

Clinical and echocardiographic correlates of plasma B-type natriuretic peptide levels in patients with aortic valve stenosis and normal left ventricular ejection fraction.

Sylvestre Maréchaux; Mehdi Hattabi; Francis Juthier; Dan Valentin Neicu; M. Richardson; Emilie Carpentier; Nadia Bouabdallaoui; François Delelis; Carlo Banfi; Joke Breyne; Brigitte Jude; Philippe Asseman; André Vincentelli; Thierry Le Tourneau; Pierre Graux; Philippe Pibarot; Pierre Vladimir Ennezat

Background: Several studies suggest that BNP testing may help define the timing of aortic valve surgery in patients with aortic valve stenosis (AVS) prior onset of overt LV systolic dysfunction. The aim of this study was to identify clinical and echocardiographic correlates of plasma BNP levels in a large cohort of patients with AVS and preserved LV ejection fraction. Method and results: One hundred thirty‐five consecutive patients were prospectively included in the present study (Mean age 73 ± 13 years old, 66 (49%) male). Eighty‐nine patients (66%) had severe AVS (aortic valve area <0.6 cm2/m2 BSA). Plasma BNP levels, clinical and comprehensive Doppler echocardiography evaluation was performed in all patients. Independent clinical correlates of plasma BNP levels (R2= 0.19) were older age (P < 0.0001) and presence of AVS symptoms (P = 0.004). Independent echocardiographic correlates of plasma BNP levels (R2= 0.38) were E/Ea ratio (P = 0.01), LV mass index (P = 0.018), left atrial surface (P < 0.0001) and systolic pulmonary artery pressure (sPAP; P = 0.004). Overall, independent correlates of plasma BNP levels (R2= 0.47) were older age (P = 0.001), known coronary artery disease (P = 0.047), increased LV mass index (P = 0.001), left atrial enlargement (P = 0.002), and increased sPAP (P = 0.003). Conclusions: In patients with AVS and normal LV ejection fraction, plasma BNP predominantly reflects the clinical and echocardiographic consequences of afterload burden imposed on the left ventricle rather than the severity of valve stenosis, per se. (Echocardiography 2011;28:695‐702)


International Journal of Cardiology | 2016

Prognostic value of left ventricular reverse remodeling and performance improvement after cardiac resynchronization therapy: A prospective study.

Aymeric Menet; Yves Guyomar; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; Pierre Graux; Anne Laure Castel; François Delelis; Sébastien Heuls; Estelle Cuvelier; Cécile Gevaert; Caroline Le Goffic; Christophe Tribouilloy; Sylvestre Maréchaux

BACKGROUND The present study was designed to evaluate the respective value of left ventricular (LV) reverse remodeling (changes in LV end-systolic volume relative to baseline (ΔLVESV)) or LV performance improvement (ΔLV ejection fraction (ΔLVEF) or ΔGlobal longitudinal strain (GLS)) to predict long-term outcome in a prospective cohort of consecutive patients receiving routine cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). METHODS One hundred and seventy heart failure patients (NYHA classes II-IV, LVEF ≤ 35%, QRS width ≥ 120 ms) underwent echocardiography before and 9 months after CRT. The relationships between ΔLVESV, ΔLVEF, ΔGLS and outcome (all-cause mortality and/or CHF hospitalization, overall mortality, cardiovascular mortality, CHF hospitalization) were investigated. RESULTS During a median follow-up of 32 months, 20 patients died and 27 were hospitalized for heart failure. ΔLVESV, ΔLVEF or ΔGLS were significantly associated with all-cause mortality or CHF hospitalization (adjusted hazards ratio (HR) per standard deviation 0.58 (0.43-0.77), 0.39 (0.27-0.57) or 0.55 (0.37-0.83) respectively, all p < 0.01) and all other endpoints (all p < 0.01). Patients with ΔLVESV≥15%, ΔLVEF ≥ 10% and ΔGLS ≥ 1% had a reduced risk of mortality or CHF hospitalization (adjusted HR=0.25 (0.12-0.51), p < 0.001, adjusted HR = 0.26 (0.13-0.54), p < 0.001 and adjusted HR 0.38 (0.19-0.75), p = 0.006 respectively). Overall performance of multivariate models was better using ΔLVESV or ΔLVEF compared with ΔGLS. Interobserver agreement was excellent for ΔLVESV (Intraclass correlation coefficient - ICC-0.91) and ΔGLS (ICC 0.90) but modest for ΔLVEF (ICC 0.76) in a sample of 20 patients from the study population. CONCLUSIONS LV reverse remodeling assessed by ΔLVESV is a strong and reproducible predictor of outcome following CRT. Compared with ΔLVESV, ΔLVEF and ΔGLS have important shortcomings: poorer reproducibility or lower predictive value.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2012

Two-dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiography for atrioventricular accessory pathways persistent ventricular pre-excitation despite successful radiofrequency ablation

François Delelis; Dominique Lacroix; Marjorie Richardson; Didier Klug; Claude Kouakam; François Brigadeau; Yves Guyomar; Pierre Graux; Salem Kacet; Corinne Gautier; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; Sylvestre Maréchaux

AIMS The present study was undertaken to investigate the concordance between longitudinal two-dimensional (2D)-speckle-tracking data and endocardial mapping for localizing atrioventricular accessory pathways (AP), and whether longitudinal 2D-speckle-tracking imaging accurately identifies the contractile abnormalities associated with AP and the effect of radiofrequency ablation. METHODS AND RESULTS Echocardiograms were repeated twice in 40 patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome (before and early after ablation) and in 40 healthy controls to obtain longitudinal 2D strain and strain rate data. The site of ablation was considered as the gold standard for the AP localization. While control patients had a homogeneous strain pattern, all but two patients with WPW had an abnormal deformation pattern with three peaks in one or two basal contiguous segments: an early peak concomitantly with the delta wave followed by a systolic and a post-sytolic one. The rapid increase in LV longitudinal deformation within the basal pre-excited zone resulted in a pre-systolic peak strain rate at the beginning of the delta wave by SR imaging that was not found in controls. The early basal contraction spread towards the mid-ventricle before merging with the normal activated segments in 15 patients (39%). Contractile abnormalities were no more than one adjacent segment different compared with the AP ablation site in all these 38 patients. Regional strain was impaired in the pre-excited areas especially in AP localized in the interventricular septum. The abnormal deformation pattern persisted in 16 (42%) patients despite successful radiofrequency ablation. However, the difference in the regional strain between WPW patients and controls did not remain after ablation. CONCLUSION Longitudinal 2D-speckle-tracking data accurately match with endocardial mapping findings for localizing AP. Longitudinal 2D-speckle-tracking imaging accurately identifies AP-associated contractile abnormalities. Longitudinal 2D-speckle-tracking identifies persistence of local ventricular pre-excitation immediately after successful ablation.


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases | 2016

Global longitudinal strain software upgrade: Implications for intervendor consistency and longitudinal imaging studies.

Anne-Laure Castel; Aymeric Menet; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; François Delelis; Caroline Le Goffic; Camille Binda; Raphaëlle-Ashley Guerbaai; Franck Levy; Pierre Graux; Christophe Tribouilloy; Sylvestre Maréchaux

BACKGROUND Speckle tracking can be used to measure left ventricular global longitudinal strain (GLS). AIMS To study the effect of speckle tracking software product upgrades on GLS values and intervendor consistency. METHODS Subjects (patients or healthy volunteers) underwent systematic echocardiography with equipment from Philips and GE, without a change in their position. Off-line post-processing for GLS assessment was performed with the former and most recent upgrades from these two vendors (Philips QLAB 9.0 and 10.2; GE EchoPAC 12.1 and 13.1.1). GLS was obtained in three myocardial layers with EchoPAC 13.1.1. Intersoftware and intervendor consistency was assessed. Interobserver variability was tested in a subset of patients. RESULTS Among 73 subjects (65 patients and 8 healthy volunteers), absolute values of GLS were higher with QLAB 10.2 compared with 9.0 (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC]: 0.88; bias: 2.2%). Agreement between EchoPAC 13.1.1 and 12.1 varied by myocardial layer (13.1.1 only): midwall (ICC: 0.95; bias: -1.1%), endocardium (ICC: 0.93; bias: 1.6%) and epicardial (ICC: 0.80; bias: -3.3%). Although GLS was comparable for QLAB 9.0 versus EchoPAC 12.1 (ICC: 0.95; bias: 0.5%), the agreement was lower between QLAB 10.2 and EchoPAC 13.1.1 endocardial (ICC: 0.91; bias: 1.1%), midwall (ICC: 0.73; bias: 3.9%) and epicardial (ICC: 0.54; bias: 6.0%). Interobserver variability of all software products in a subset of 20 patients was excellent (ICC: 0.97-0.99; bias: -0.8 to 1.0%). CONCLUSION Upgrades of speckle tracking software may be associated with significant changes in GLS values, which could affect intersoftware and intervendor consistency. This finding has important clinical implications for the longitudinal follow-up of patients with speckle tracking echocardiography.


Case Reports | 2012

Subarachnoid haemorrhage mimicking acute myocardial infarction.

François Delelis; Gauthier Calais; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; Arnaud Delebarre; Riadh Rihani; Jean-Michel Lemahieu; Pierre Cornaert; Sylvestre Maréchaux

A 54-year-old obese woman with a history of hypertension dialed ambulance service for headache and vomiting. EKG found diffuse ST segment elevation (figure 1A). Prehospital management consisted of intravenous aspirin, oral antiplatelet therapy (prasugrel) and subcutaneous low-molecular-weight heparin. She was transferred in our intensive care unit. Echocardiography showed impaired left ventricular ejection fraction (30%) with apical dysfunction but preserved basal function (figure 1B–D). Coronary angiography showed normal epicardial coronary arteries (figure 1E,F …


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2017

Clinical significance of septal deformation patterns in heart failure patients receiving cardiac resynchronization therapy

Aymeric Menet; Anne Bernard; Christophe Tribouilloy; Christophe Leclercq; Cécile Gevaert; Yves Guyomar; Raphaëlle-Ashley Guerbaai; François Delelis; Anne-Laure Castel; Pierre Graux; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; Erwan Donal; Sylvestre Maréchaux

Aims Specific septal motion related to dyssynchrony is strongly linked to reverse remodelling, in patients with systolic heart failure (HF) receiving cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). We aimed to investigate the relationship between septal deformation patterns studied by longitudinal speckle tracking and clinical outcome following CRT. Methods and results A total of 284 CRT candidates from two centres (HF NYHA classes II-IV, ejection fraction < 35%, QRS ≥ 120 ms) were prospectively included. Longitudinal strain of the septum in the apical four-chamber view determined three patterns of septal contraction. The endpoints were overall mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and hospitalization for HF. Compared with patterns 1 or 2, pattern 3 was associated with an increased risk for both overall and cardiovascular mortality [hazard ratio (HR) = 3.78, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.85-7.75, P < 0.001 and HR = 3.84, 95% CI: 1.45-10.16, P = 0.007, respectively] and HF hospitalization (HR = 4.41, 95% CI: 2.18-8.90, P < 0.001). Addition of septal patterns to multivariable models, including baseline QRS width and presence of left bundle branch block, improved risk prediction, and discrimination. In patients with intermediate QRS duration (120-150 ms), pattern 3 remained associated with a worse outcome than pattern 1 or 2 (P < 0.05 for all endpoints). Conclusion The identification of septal deformation patterns provides important prognostic information in CRT candidates in addition to ordinary clinical, electrocardiographic, and echocardiographic predictors of outcome in HF patients. This parameter may be particularly useful in patients with intermediate QRS duration in whom the benefit of CRT remains uncertain.


American Heart Journal | 2018

Assessment of left ventricular size and function by 3-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography: Impact of the echocardiography platform and analysis software

Anne Laure Castel; Manuel Toledano; Christophe Tribouilloy; François Delelis; Amandine Mailliet; Nathalie Marotte; Raphaëlle A Guerbaai; Franck Levy; Pierre Graux; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; Sylvestre Maréchaux

Background Whether echocardiography platform and analysis software impact left ventricular (LV) volumes, ejection fraction (EF), and stroke volume (SV) by transthoracic tridimensional echocardiography (3DE) has not yet been assessed. Hence, our aim was to compare 3DE LV end‐diastolic and end‐systolic volumes (EDV and ESV), LVEF, and SV obtained with echocardiography platform from 2 different manufacturers. Methods 3DE was performed in 84 patients (65% of screened consecutive patients), with equipment from 2 different manufacturers, with subsequent off‐line postprocessing to obtain parameters of LV function and size (Philips QLAB 3DQ and General Electric EchoPAC 4D autoLVQ). Twenty‐five patients with clinical indication for cardiac magnetic resonance imaging served as a validation subgroup. Results LVEDV and LVESV from 2 vendors were highly correlated (r = 0.93), but compared with 4D autoLVQ, the use of Qlab 3DQ resulted in lower LVEDV and LVESV (bias: 11 mL, limits of agreement: −25 to +47 and bias: 6 mL, limits of agreement: −22 to +34, respectively). The agreement between LVEF values of each software was poor (intraclass correlation coefficient 0.62) despite no or minimal bias. SVs were also lower with Qlab 3DQ advanced compared with 4D autoLVQ, and both were poorly correlated (r = 0.66). Consistently, the underestimation of LVEDV, LVESV, and SV by 3DE compared with cardiac magnetic resonance imaging was more pronounced with Philips QLAB 3DQ advanced than with 4D autoLVQ. Conclusions The echocardiography platform and analysis software significantly affect the values of LV parameters obtained by 3DE. Intervendor standardization and improvements in 3DE modalities are needed to broaden the use of LV parameters obtained by 3DE in clinical practice.


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases | 2017

Relationship between exercise pressure gradient and haemodynamic progression of aortic stenosis

Anne Ringle; Franck Levy; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; Caroline Le Goffic; Anne-Laure Castel; François Delelis; Aymeric Menet; Dorothée Malaquin; Pierre Graux; André Vincentelli; Christophe Tribouilloy; Sylvestre Maréchaux

BACKGROUND AND AIMS We hypothesized that large exercise-induced increases in aortic mean pressure gradient can predict haemodynamic progression during follow-up in asymptomatic patients with aortic stenosis. METHODS We retrospectively identified patients with asymptomatic moderate or severe aortic stenosis (aortic valve area<1.5cm2 or<1cm2) and normal ejection fraction, who underwent an exercise stress echocardiography at baseline with a normal exercise test and a resting echocardiography during follow-up. The relationship between exercise-induced increase in aortic mean pressure gradient and annualised changes in resting mean pressure gradient during follow-up was investigated. RESULTS Fifty-five patients (mean age 66±15 years; 45% severe aortic stenosis) were included. Aortic mean pressure gradient significantly increased from rest to peak exercise (P<0.001). During a median follow-up of 1.6 [1.1-3.2] years, resting mean pressure gradient increased from 35±13mmHg to 48±16mmHg, P<0.0001. Median annualised change in resting mean pressure gradient during follow-up was 5 [2-11] mmHg. Exercise-induced increase in aortic mean pressure gradient did correlate with annualised changes in mean pressure gradient during follow-up (r=0.35, P=0.01). Hemodynamic progression of aortic stenosis was faster in patients with large exercise-induced increase in aortic mean pressure gradient (≥20mmHg) as compared to those with exercise-induced increase in aortic mean pressure gradient<20mmHg (median annualised increase in mean pressure gradient 19 [6-28] vs. 4 [2-10] mmHg/y respectively, P=0.002). Similar results were found in the subgroup of 30 patients with moderate aortic stenosis. CONCLUSION Large exercise-induced increases in aortic mean pressure gradient correlate with haemodynamic progression of stenosis during follow-up in patients with asymptomatic aortic stenosis. Further studies are needed to fully establish the role of ESE in the decision-making process in comparison to other prognostic markers in asymptomatic patients with aortic stenosis.

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Raphaëlle-Ashley Guerbaai

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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