Frédérique Buffon
University of Paris
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Featured researches published by Frédérique Buffon.
Neurology | 2007
Anand Viswanathan; Andreas Gschwendtner; Jean-Pierre Guichard; Frédérique Buffon; Rodica Cumurciuc; Michael O'Sullivan; Markus Holtmannspötter; Chahin Pachai; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Martin Dichgans; Hugues Chabriat
Objective: Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a hereditary arteriopathy caused by mutations of the Notch3 gene. The disease is characterized by T2-hyperintense lesions (subcortical white matter lesions), T1-hypointense lesions (lacunar lesions), and T2*-weighted gradient-echo (GE) lesions (cerebral microhemorrhages [CMs]) visualized on clinical MRI sequences and is considered as a model of “pure” subcortical ischemic vascular dementia. Although numerous studies have investigated the impact of white matter lesions in patients with CADASIL, the clinical importance of lacunar lesions remains unknown. Our purpose was to examine the influence of the visible MRI markers in the disease, including the load of lacunar lesions on cognitive impairment and disability in CADASIL. Methods: We collected clinical data from 147 consecutive patients enrolled in an ongoing two-center prospective cohort study. Degree of disability was assessed by modified Rankin scale and Barthel index. Degree of cognitive impairment was assessed by Mattis Dementia Rating Scale and Mini-Mental Status Examination. T1-weighted, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, and GE images were obtained on a 1.5-T MRI. Volume and location of lacunar lesions, white matter hyperintensities (WMHs), and CMs were assessed. Results: There was a significant independent association between age, volume of lacunar lesions, and global cognitive function scales when analyzed in a multivariable model. In contrast, WMHs and CMs had no independent influence on cognitive function. Disability in this cohort was associated with volume of lacunar lesions, CMs, systolic blood pressure, and age but not with WMHs. Conclusions: Among the lesions observed on conventional MRI in cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), the overall lacunar lesion burden seems to have the most important impact on cognitive function and disability. These findings suggest that preventive strategies to decrease the risk of lacunar lesions as observed on MRI may reduce disease-related impairment in CADASIL. These results suggest that lacunar lesions may also play a key role in disability and cognitive impairment in more common forms of small-vessel disease.
Stroke | 2007
Eric Jouvent; Anand Viswanathan; Jean-François Mangin; Michael O'Sullivan; Jean-Pierre Guichard; Andreas Gschwendtner; Rodica Cumurciuc; Frédérique Buffon; Nils Peters; Chahin Pachai; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Martin Dichgans; Hugues Chabriat
Background and Purpose— Cerebral atrophy has been recently recognized as a key marker of disease progression in cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL). The contribution of subcortical cerebral lesions in this process remains undetermined. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships between cerebral volume and different types of subcortical MRI lesions in CADASIL. Methods— Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data from 147 patients with CADASIL recruited from a prospective cohort study were analyzed. Validated methods were used to determine the ratio of brain volume to intracranial cavity volume (brain parenchymal fraction [BPF]), volume of white matter hyperintensities, volume of lacunar lesions, number of cerebral microhemorrhages, and mean apparent diffusion coefficient. Associations between BPF, clinical scales, and the different subcortical MRI markers were tested. Results— BPF obtained in 129 patients was significantly associated with the Mattis dementia rating scale (P<0.0001), Mini-Mental State Examination (P=0.002), and modified Rankin scale (P<0.0001) after adjustment for age and sex. Multiple linear regression modeling showed that BPF was independently associated with mean apparent diffusion coefficient (P<0.0001), volume of lacunar lesions (P=0.004), and age (P<0.0001), accounting for 46% of the observed variance in BPF but not with volume of white matter hyperintensities or number of microhemorrhages. Conclusions— In association with age, mean apparent diffusion coefficient and volume of lacunar lesions are strong and independent MRI predictors of BPF, a key marker of cognitive and motor disability in CADASIL. These results suggest brain atrophy is related to remote and/or diffuse consequences of both lacunar lesions and widespread microstructural alterations within the brain outside lacunar lesions.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2005
Dominique Hervé; Nicolas Molko; Sabina Pappata; Frédérique Buffon; LeBihan D; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Hugues Chabriat
Background: Cerebral infarcts are responsible for functional alterations and microscopic tissue damage at distance from the ischaemic area. Such remote effects have been involved in stroke recovery. Thalamic hypometabolism is related to motor recovery in middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarcts but little is known concerning the tissue changes underlying these metabolic changes. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is highly sensitive to microstructural tissue alterations and can be used to quantify in vivo the longitudinal microscopic tissue changes occurring in the thalamus after MCA infarcts in humans. Methods: Nine patients underwent DTI after an isolated MCA infarct. Mean diffusivity (MD), fractional anisotropy (FA), and thalamic region volume were measured from the first week to the sixth month after stroke onset in these patients and in 10 age matched controls. Results: MD significantly increased in the ipsilateral thalamus between the first and the sixth month (0.766×10−3 mm2/s first month; 0.792×10−3 mm2/s third month; 0.806×10−3 mm2/s sixth month). No significant modification of FA was detected. In six patients, the ipsilateral/contralateral index of MD was higher than the upper limit of the 95% CI calculated in 10 age matched controls. An early decrease of MD preceded the increase of ipsilateral thalamic diffusion in one patient at the first week and in two other patients at the first month. Conclusion: After MCA infarcts, an increase in diffusion is observed with DTI in the ipsilateral thalamus later than 1 month after the stroke onset. This is presumably because of the progressive loss of neurons and/or glial cells. In some patients, this increase is preceded by a transient decrease in diffusion possibly related to an early swelling of these cells or to microglial activation. Further studies in larger series are needed to assess the clinical correlates of these findings.
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2005
Frédérique Buffon; Nicolas Molko; Dominique Hervé; Raphaël Porcher; Isabelle Denghien; Sabina Pappatà; Denis Le Bihan; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Hugues Chabriat
Diffusion tensor imaging can be used in vivo to assess the longitudinal and regional microstructural changes occurring after middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarcts in humans. Nine patients were investigated 1 week (D7), 1 (M1), 3 (M3), and 6 months (M6) after the occurrence of an isolated MCA infarction. First, an overall analysis was performed using histograms of mean diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy (FA) in each hemisphere. Thereafter, the regional pattern of diffusion changes was investigated voxel by voxel with statistical parametric mapping 99. In the hemisphere ipsilateral to the infarction, histogram analysis revealed a significant decrease in FA between D7 and M6 associated with a progressive increase in MD from D7 to M3. Remote from the MCA territory, the voxel by voxel analyses detected a significant increase in MD within the thalamus at M3 and M6 and a reduction in FA along the pyramidal tract at M6. In the contralateral hemisphere, between D7 and M6, a significant hemispheric atrophy was observed in association with a global reduction in anisotropy, in the absence of distinctive regional diffusion changes. These results suggest that micro- and macrostructural tissue modifications can be detected with diffusion tensor imaging in regions remote from the ischemic area in both hemispheres.
Stroke | 2008
Marcel Arnold; Ralf W. Baumgartner; Christian Stapf; Krassen Nedeltchev; Frédérique Buffon; David H. Benninger; Dimitrios Georgiadis; Matthias Sturzenegger; Heinrich P. Mattle; Marie-Germaine Bousser
Background and Purpose— Isolated Horner syndrome without associated cranial nerve palsies or ischemic symptoms is an important presentation of spontaneous internal carotid artery dissection (sICAD). Ultrasound is often used as a screening method in these patients because cervical MRI is not always available on an emergency basis. Current knowledge on ultrasound findings in patients with sICAD presenting with isolated Horner syndrome is limited. Methods— Patients were recruited from prospective cervical artery dissection databases of 3 tertiary care centers. Diagnosis of sICAD was confirmed by cervical MRI and MR angiography or digital subtraction angiography in all patients. Data on Doppler sonography and color duplex sonography examinations performed within 30 days of symptom onset were analyzed. Results— We identified 88 patients with Horner syndrome as the only sign of sICAD. Initial ultrasound examination was performed in 72 patients after a mean time interval from symptom onset to examination of 11 (SD 8) days. The overall frequency of false-negative ultrasound findings was 31% (22 of 72 patients). It showed stenosis ≥80% or occlusion in 34 (47%) patients, and stenosis ≤80% in 16 (22%). It visualized mural hematoma in 7 patients and intimal flap in one. Patients with normal ultrasound were less frequently smokers (9% versus 28%, P=0.034), and had less frequently migraine without aura (9% versus 43%, P=0.012) or neck pain (18% versus 62%, P=0.003) than those with pathological ultrasound findings. Conclusions— Nearly one third of patients with Horner syndrome as the only sign of sICAD presented with normal ultrasound findings. These results indicate that ultrasound is not a reliable method to diagnose sICAD in patients with isolated Horner syndrome.
Stroke | 2013
Michelle von Babo; Gian Marco De Marchis; Hakan Sarikaya; Christian Stapf; Frédérique Buffon; Urs Fischer; Mirjam Rachel Heldner; Jan Gralla; Simon Jung; Barbara Goeggel Simonetti; Heinrich P. Mattle; Ralf W. Baumgartner; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Marcel Arnold
Background and Purpose— To compare potential risk factors, clinical symptoms, diagnostic delay, and 3-month outcome between spontaneous internal carotid artery dissection (sICAD) and spontaneous vertebral artery dissection (sVAD). Methods— We compared patients with sICAD (n=668) and sVAD (n=302) treated in 3 university hospitals. Results— Patients with sICAD were older (46.3±9.6 versus 42.0±10.2 years; P<0.001), more often men (62.7% versus 53.0%; P=0.004), and presented more frequently with tinnitus (10.9% versus 3.4%; P<0.001) and more severe ischemic strokes (median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, 10±7.1 versus 5±5.9; P<0.001). Patients with sVAD had more often bilateral dissections (15.2% versus 7.6%; P<0.001) and were more often smokers (36.0% versus 28.7%; P=0.007). Thunderclap headache (9.2% versus 3.6%; P=0.001) and neck pain were more common (65.8% versus 33.5%; P<0.001) in sVAD. Subarachnoid hemorrhage (6.0% versus 0.6%; P<0.001) and ischemic stroke (69.5% versus 52.2%; P<0.001) were more frequent in sVAD. After multivariate analysis, sex difference lost its significance (P=0.21), and all other variables remained significant. Time to diagnosis was similar in sICAD and sVAD and improved between 2001 and 2012 compared with the previous 10-year period (8.0±10.5 days versus 10.7±13.2 days; P=0.004). In sVAD, favorable outcome 3 months after ischemic stroke (modified Rankin Scale, 0–2: 88.8% versus 58.4%; P<0.001), recurrent transient ischemic attack (4.8% versus 1.1%; P=0.001), and recurrent ischemic stroke (2.8% versus 0.7%; P=0.02) within 3 months were more frequent. Conclusions— sICAD and sVAD patients differ in many aspects. Future studies should perform separate analyses of these 2 entities.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2009
Marcel Arnold; Pannier B; Hugues Chabriat; Krassen Nedeltchev; Christian Stapf; Frédérique Buffon; Crassard I; Thomas F; Guize L; R. W. Baumgartner; Marie-Germaine Bousser
Background: Limited knowledge exists on vascular risk factors, body height and weight in patients with spontaneous cervical artery dissection (sCAD). Patients and methods: In this case-control study, major vascular risk factors, body weight, body height and body mass index (BMI) of 239 patients obtained from a prospective hospital-based sCAD registry were compared with 516 age- and sex-matched healthy controls undergoing systematic health examinations in the Clinical and Preventive Investigations Center, Paris. Gender-specific analyses were performed. Results: The mean body height was higher in sCAD patients than in controls (171.3 cm (SD 8.6) vs 167.7 cm (8.9); p<0.0001) and sCAD patients had a significantly lower mean body weight (67.5 (12.2) kg vs 69.3 (14.6) kg; p<0.001) and mean BMI (22.9 (3.3) kg/m2 vs 24.5 (4.2) kg/m2; p<0.0001) than controls. The overall frequency of hypertension, diabetes, current smoking, past smoking and hypercholesterolaemia did not differ significantly between sCAD patients and controls. The mean total plasma cholesterol level was identical in both groups (5.5 mmol/l, SD 1.1). Gender specific subgroup analyses showed similar results for men and women. Conclusion: Patients with sCAD had a higher body height and a lower body weight and BMI than controls, while major vascular risk factors were similar in sCAD patients and controls.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2009
Marcel Arnold; G M De Marchis; Christian Stapf; R. W. Baumgartner; Krassen Nedeltchev; Frédérique Buffon; Aikaterini Galimanis; Hakan Sarikaya; Heinrich P. Mattle; Marie-Germaine Bousser
Background: Spontaneous cervicocephalic artery dissection (sCAD) of more than two cervical arteries is rare. Patients and methods: Vascular and potential sCAD risk factors, triggering events, clinical and neuroimaging findings, and outcome of patients with multiple sCAD were studied. Patients were drawn from prospective hospital-based sCAD registries. Results: Of 740 consecutive patients with sCAD, 11 (1.5%) had three, and one had four (0.1%) sCAD. Eight of these 12 patients were women. One patient had additional dissections of the celiac trunk and hepatic artery. Vascular risk factors included hypertension (n = 1), hypercholesterolaemia (n = 6), current smoking (n = 5) and migraine (n = 6). No patient had a family history of sCAD, fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) or connective tissue disease. SCAD was preceded by a minor trauma in five and infection in four patients. Clinical manifestations included ischaemic stroke (n = 8), transient ischaemic attack (n = 3), headache (n = 9), neck pain (n = 4), Horner syndrome (n = 5), pulsatile tinnitus (n = 2) and dysgeusia (n = 1). Brain MRI revealed ischaemic infarcts that affected one vessel territory in seven and two territories in two patients. The 3-month outcome was favourable (modified Rankin scale score 0–1) in 10 patients (83%). No new recurrent stroke or sCAD occurred during a mean follow-up of 50 (SD 29) months. Conclusion: Multiple sCAD occurred preferentially in women and caused clinical symptoms and signs mainly in one vascular territory. In none of the patients was FMD or any other underlying arteriopathy apparent. The majority of multiple sCAD was preceded by a minor trauma or infection. Clinical outcome was favourable in most patients, and long-term prognosis benign. The data suggest that transient vasculopathy may be a major mechanism for multiple sCAD.
Ophthalmic Surgery and Lasers | 2018
Audrey Giocanti-Auregan; Alain Gaudric; Frédérique Buffon; Manuele Mine; Corinne Delahaye-Mazza; Salomon Y. Cohen; Ali Erginay; Hugues Chabriat; Elisabeth Tournier Lasserve; Valérie Krivosic
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE To analyze the location of familial retinal arterial tortuosity (fRAT) in the three-dimensional structure of retinal capillaries. PATIENTS AND METHODS Retrospective observational study. Twelve eyes of six patients (two of whom were brothers) were imaged by optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA). The data from their ocular and systemic examinations were recorded. RESULTS OCTA imaging clearly showed increased tortuosity of second- and third-order retinal arteries in all cases, visible in the superficial vascular plexus (SVP) up to the arteriole termination in the capillaries. No change was visible in the deep capillary plexus (DCP). CONCLUSIONS OCTA shows that fRAT affects all the course of the arterioles up to the capillaries in the SVP. The DCP does not show arteriolar tortuosity because it does not contain arterioles. [Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging Retina. 2018;49:397-401.].
Revue Neurologique | 2004
Frédérique Buffon; Nicolas Molko; Dominique Hervé; Raphaël Porcher; D. Le Bihan; I. Denghien; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Hugues Chabriat
Méthode : Neuf patients et 8 témoins ont été suivis par IRM (séquences pondérées en T1, T2 et diffusion). Les examens ont été répétés chez les patients 7 jours (J7), 1 mois (M1), 3 mois (M3) et 6 mois (M6) après la survenue d’une occlusion de l’artère cérébrale moyenne. Dans un premier temps, l’étude longitudinale des histogrammes de la diffusivité moyenne et de l’anisotropie (fractional anisotropy ou FA) a permis d’analyser l’évolution globale de ces paramètres au sein des deux hémisphères cérébraux. Dans un second temps, une analyse des images voxel à voxel à l’aide du logiciel SPM a été réalisée. Enfin, une mesure du volume de l’HC a été effectuée à partir des images anatomiques pondérées en T1.