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Dive into the research topics where Gilbert Ferretti is active.

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Featured researches published by Gilbert Ferretti.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2010

Intra-aortic balloon occlusion to salvage patients with life-threatening hemorrhagic shocks from pelvic fractures.

Thomas Martinelli; Frédéric Thony; Philippe Declety; Christian Sengel; Christophe Broux; J. Tonetti; Jean-François Payen; Gilbert Ferretti

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to describe a blinded intra-aortic balloon occlusion (IABO) procedure in pelvic fractures (PF) for patients with critically uncontrollable hemorrhagic shock (CUHS). METHODS Of 2,064 patients treated for PF, 13 underwent IABO during initial resuscitation to control massive pelvic bleeding leading to CUHS. Our IABO procedure consists of internal aortic occlusion without fluoroscopy, using a latex balloon inflated in the infrarenal aorta. Retrospectively collected data included demographics, fracture classification, additional injuries, blood transfusions, surgical interventions, angiographic procedure, physiologic parameters, and survival. RESULTS All balloons were successfully placed, and a significant increase in systolic blood pressure (70 mm Hg, p = 0.001) was observed immediately after IABO. Twelve of 13 patients became transferrable. Angiography performed after IABO was positive for arterial injury in 92% of patients, and 9 patients benefitted from arterial embolization. Survival rate was 46% (6 of 13) and was inversely related to the length of inflation (p = 0.026) and the mean Injury Severity Score (p = 0.011). CONCLUSION This IABO procedure can be life saving in the management of patients with CUHS from PF, permitting transport to angiography. However, the decision for such treatment must be as quickly as possible after trauma to reduce the time of occlusion.


European Respiratory Journal | 1996

Relationship between body mass index, age and upper airway measurements in snorers and sleep apnoea patients

P Mayer; Jean-Louis Pepin; G. Bettega; Daniel Veale; Gilbert Ferretti; C Deschaux; Patrick Levy

Anatomical pharyngeal and craniofacial abnormalities have been reported using upper airway imaging in snorers with or without obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). However, the influences of the age and weight of the patient on these abnormalities remain to be established. The aim of this study was, therefore, to evaluate in a large population of snorers with or without OSA, the relationship between body mass index (BMI), age and upper airway morphology. One hundred and forty patients were referred for assessment of a possible sleep-related breathing disorder and had complete polysomnography, cephalometry and upper airway computed tomography. For the whole population, OSA patients had more upper airway abnormalities than snorers. When subdivided for BMI and age, however, only lean or younger OSA patients were significantly different from snorers as regards their upper airway anatomy. The shape of the oropharynx and hypopharynx changed significantly with BMI both in OSA patients and snorers, being more spherical in the highest BMI group due mainly to a decrease in the transverse axis. On the other hand, older patients (> 63 yrs), whether snorers or apnoeics, had larger upper airways at all pharyngeal levels than the youngest group of patients (< 52 yrs). For the total group of patients, upper airway variables explained 26% of the variance in apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI), whereas in lean (BMI < 27 kg.m-2) or youngest (age < 52 yrs) subjects upper airway variables explained, respectively 69 and 55% of the variance in AHI. In conclusion, in lean or young subjects, upper airway abnormalities explain a major part of the variance in apnoea/hypopnoea index and are likely to play an important physiopathogenic role. This study also suggests that the shape of the pharyngeal lumen in awake subjects is more dependent on body mass index than on the presence of obstructive sleep apnoea. Further investigation looking at upper airway imaging for surgical selection in obstructive sleep apnoea should focus on lean and young patients.


European Journal of Radiology | 2004

Serial chest CT findings in interstitial lung disease associated with polymyositis–dermatomyositis

Olivier Bonnefoy; Gilbert Ferretti; Olivier Calaque; Max Coulomb; Hugues Begueret; Marie Beylot-Barry; François Laurent

OBJECTIVE A retrospective study was carried out in two institutions to determine serial changes in the pattern, distribution, and extent of interstitial lung disease (ILD) associated with polymyositis (PM)-dermatomyositis (DM) using HRCT. SUBJECTS AND METHODS Twenty patients with PM-DM and clinical suspicion of ILD who underwent at least two serial HRCT examinations were retrospectively evaluated by two readers. Patients were classified according to the dominant CT pattern which was correlated with clinical evolution and underlying histology when available (n=6). RESULTS Patients were classified into four groups according to the dominant pattern: ground-glass attenuation and reticulation (group 1, n=9); honeycombing (group 2, n=4); airspace consolidation (group 3, n=4), and normal or almost normal lung (group 4, n=3). Under medical treatment, serial HRCT showed that the extent of areas of ground-glass opacities (group 1) decreased in five patients, stabilized in two, and increased in two. Pathologic findings demonstrated usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) in two cases and unspecified interstitial pneumonia in one. In group 2, extent of honeycombing increased in three cases and stabilized in one. In group 3, dramatic resolution of airspace consolidation occurred in three cases. Clinical deterioration with extensive consolidation at CT and diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) at histology occurred in one patient of each of the three previous groups. Lesions stayed invisible or progressed slightly in the fourth group. CONCLUSION In ILD associated with PM-DM, clinical deterioration and DAD in the follow-up can be observed whatever the HRCT pattern. However, unfavorable evolution is constant when honeycombing is present at the initial CT.


Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 1996

Case Report. Pulmonary Involvement in Niemann-pick Disease Subtype B: Ct Findings

Gilbert Ferretti; Sylvie Lantuejoul; Elisabeth Brambilla; Max Coulomb

We present a case of Niemann-Pick disease subtype B in which the excessive storage of sphingomyelin within lung interstitium and alveoli produced an infiltrative lung disease demonstrated on high-resolution CT (HRCT). HRCT findings were correlated to pathological features.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2013

Pleural Plaques and the Risk of Pleural Mesothelioma

Jean-Claude Pairon; François Laurent; Mickael Rinaldo; Bénédicte Clin; Pascal Andujar; Jacques Ameille; Patrick Brochard; Soizick Chamming's; Gilbert Ferretti; Françoise Galateau-Sallé; Antoine Gislard; Marc Letourneux; Amandine Luc; Evelyne Schorle; Christophe Paris

BACKGROUND The association between pleural plaques and pleural mesothelioma remains controversial. The present study was designed to examine the association between pleural plaques on computed tomography (CT) scan and the risk of pleural mesothelioma in a follow-up study of asbestos-exposed workers. METHODS Retired or unemployed workers previously occupationally exposed to asbestos were invited to participate in a screening program for asbestos-related diseases, including CT scan, organized between October 2003 and December 2005 in four regions in France. Randomized, independent, double reading of CT scans by a panel of seven chest radiologists focused on benign asbestos-related abnormalities. A 7-year follow-up study was conducted in the 5287 male subjects for whom chest CT scan was available. Annual determination of the number of subjects eligible for free medical care because of pleural mesothelioma was carried out. Diagnosis certification was obtained from the French mesothelioma panel of pathologists. Survival regression based on the Cox model was used to estimate the risk of pleural mesothelioma associated with pleural plaques, with age as the main time variable and time-varying exposure variables, namely duration of exposure, time since first exposure, and cumulative exposure index to asbestos. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS A total of 17 incident cases of pleural mesothelioma were diagnosed. A statistically significant association was observed between mesothelioma and pleural plaques (unadjusted hazard ratio (HR) = 8.9, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.0 to 26.5; adjusted HR = 6.8, 95% CI = 2.2 to 21.4 after adjustment for time since first exposure and cumulative exposure index to asbestos). CONCLUSION The presence of pleural plaques may be an independent risk factor for pleural mesothelioma.


Diagnostic and interventional imaging | 2014

Blunt splenic injury: Outcomes of proximal versus distal and combined splenic artery embolization

J. Frandon; Mathieu Rodière; Catherine Arvieux; M. Michoud; A. Vendrell; Christophe Broux; Christian Sengel; I. Bricault; Gilbert Ferretti; Frédéric Thony

PURPOSE To assess clinical outcomes of blunt splenic injuries (BSI) managed with proximal versus distal versus combined splenic artery embolization (SAE). MATERIALS AND METHODS All consecutive patients with BSI admitted to our trauma centre from 2005 to 2010 and managed with SAE were reviewed. Outcomes were compared between proximal (P), distal (D) or combined (C) embolization. We focused on embolization failure (splenectomy), every adverse events occurring during follow up and material used for embolization. RESULTS Fifty patients were reviewed (P n = 18, 36%; D n = 22, 44%; C n = 8, 16%). Mean injury severity score was 20. The technical success rate was 98%. Four patients required splenectomy (P n = 1, D n = 3, C n = 0). Clinical success rate for haemostasis was 92% (4 re-bleeds: P n = 2, D n = 2, C n = 0). Outcomes were not statistically different between the materials used. Adverse events occurred in 65% of the patients during follow up. Four percent of the patients developed major complications and 56% developed minor complications attributable to embolization. There was no significant difference between the 3 groups. CONCLUSION SAE had an excellent success rate with adverse events occurring in 65% of the patients and no significant differences found between the embolization techniques used. Proximal preventive embolization appears to protect in high-grade traumatic injuries.


Critical Care Medicine | 2012

Pulmonary embolism in mechanically ventilated patients requiring computed tomography: Prevalence, risk factors, and outcome.

Clémence Minet; Maxime Lugosi; Pierre Yves Savoye; Caroline Menez; Stéphane Ruckly; Agnès Bonadona; Carole Schwebel; Rebecca Hamidfar-Roy; Perrine Dumanoir; Claire Ara-Somohano; Gilbert Ferretti; Jean-François Timsit

Objective:To estimate the rate of pulmonary embolism among mechanically ventilated patients and its association with deep venous thrombosis. Design:Prospective cohort study. Setting:Medical intensive care unit of a university-affiliated teaching hospital. Patients:Inclusion criteria: mechanically ventilated patients requiring a thoracic contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan for any medical reason. Exclusion criteria: a diagnosis of pulmonary embolism before intensive care unit admission, an allergy to contrast agents, and age younger than 18 yrs. Interventions:All the mechanically ventilated patients requiring a thoracic computed tomography underwent the standard imaging protocol for pulmonary embolism detection. Therapeutic anticoagulation was given immediately after pulmonary embolism diagnosis. All the included patients underwent a compression ultrasound of the four limbs within 48 hrs after the computed tomography scan to detect deep venous thrombosis. Results:Of 176 included patients, 33 (18.7%) had pulmonary embolism diagnosed by computed tomography, including 20 (61%) with no clinical suspicion of pulmonary embolism. By multiple logistic regression, independent risk factors for pulmonary embolism were male gender, high body mass index, history of cancer, past medical history of deep venous thrombosis, coma, and high platelet count. Previous prophylactic anticoagulant use was not a risk factor for pulmonary embolism. Of the 176 patients, 35 (19.9%) had deep venous thrombosis by compression ultrasonography, including 20 (57.1%) in the lower limbs and 24 (68.6%) related to central venous catheters. Of the 33 pulmonary embolisms, 11 (33.3%) were associated with deep venous thrombosis. The pulmonary embolism risk was increased by lower-limb deep venous thrombosis (odds ratio 4.0; 95% confidence interval 1.6–10) but not upper-limb deep venous thrombosis (odds ratio 0.6; 95% confidence interval 0.1–2.9). Crude comparison of patients with and without pulmonary embolism shows no difference in length of stay or mortality. Conclusions:In mechanically ventilated patients who needed a computed tomography, pulmonary embolism was more common than expected. Patients diagnosed with pulmonary embolism were all treated with therapeutic anticoagulation, and their intensive care unit or hospital mortality was not impacted by the pulmonary embolism occurrence. These results invite further research into early screening and therapeutic anticoagulation of pulmonary embolism in critically ill patients.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2014

Asbestos exposure, pleural plaques, and the risk of death from lung cancer.

Jean-Claude Pairon; Pascal Andujar; Mickaël Rinaldo; Jacques Ameille; Patrick Brochard; Soizick Chamming’s; Bénédicte Clin; Gilbert Ferretti; Antoine Gislard; François Laurent; Amandine Luc; Pascal Wild; Christophe Paris

RATIONALE Although asbestos is a well-known lung carcinogen, the pleural plaque-lung cancer link remains controversial. OBJECTIVES This study was designed to examine this link in asbestos-exposed workers. METHODS A 6-year follow-up was conducted to study lung cancer mortality in the 5,402 male subjects participating in an asbestos-related disease screening program conducted from October 2003 to December 2005 in four French regions. Chest computed tomography (CT) scan was performed in all subjects with randomized, independent, double reading of CT scans focusing on benign asbestos-related abnormalities. Cox model survival regression analysis was used to model lung cancer mortality according to the presence of pleural plaques, with age as the main time variable, adjusting for smoking and asbestos cumulative exposure index. All statistical tests were two-sided. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Thirty-six deaths from lung cancer were recorded. Lung cancer mortality was significantly associated with pleural plaques in the follow-up study in terms of both the unadjusted hazard ratio of 2.91 (95% confidence interval = 1.49-5.70) and the adjusted hazard ratio of 2.41 (95% confidence interval = 1.21-4.85) after adjustment for smoking and asbestos cumulative exposure index. CONCLUSIONS Pleural plaques may be an independent risk factor for lung cancer death in asbestos-exposed workers and could be used as an additional criterion in the definition of high-risk populations eligible for CT screening.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2013

Prediction of lobar collateral ventilation in 25 patients with severe emphysema by fissure analysis with CT.

Emilie Reymond; Adrien Jankowski; Christophe Pison; Jean-Luc Bosson; Marion Prieur; Wahju Aniwidyaningsih; Gilbert Ferretti

OBJECTIVE Reducing pulmonary volume through implantation of endobronchial valves is a major interest to improve exercise tolerance and survival in patients with severe emphysema. The primary aim of this study was to evaluate how well CT-determined fissure integrity predicts interlobar collateral ventilation. The secondary objective was to show whether there is a relationship between the size of fissural defects and the presence of collateral ventilation. MATERIALS AND METHODS Thirty patients with heterogeneous emphysema (postbronchodilator forced expiratory volume in 1 second [FEV1] = 20-50% predicted and > 50% of emphysema in a lobe) underwent collateral ventilation measurements with a catheter through an occlusive balloon within this target lobe during flexible endoscopy. Two senior thoracic radiologists studied the fissures on thoracic high-resolution CT. RESULTS Collateral ventilation was successfully measured in 37 target lobes in 25 patients. The fissures surrounding the 37 target lobes were evaluated on CT. For the detection of collateral ventilation, the presence of a fissural defect on CT has a sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 95%, 44%, 69%, and 88%, respectively. There was a statistically significant difference in the area of the defect between patients with collateral ventilation and those without collateral ventilation (p = 0.04). CONCLUSION Analysis of pulmonary fissures using CT is useful before endoscopic volume reduction because results are well correlated to endoscopic measurements of collateral ventilation. Further study with clinical outcomes is mandatory to determine if and when one test or the other or both should be used in patient selection.


European Journal of Radiology | 2011

Non-severe pulmonary embolism: Prognostic CT findings

Anne-Line Moroni; Jean-Luc Bosson; Noélie Hohn; Françoise Carpentier; Gilles Pernod; Gilbert Ferretti

The goal of this study was to retrospectively evaluate CT cardiovascular parameters and pulmonary artery clot load score as predictors of 3-month mortality in patients with clinically non-severe pulmonary embolism (PE). We included 226 CT positive for PE in hemodynamically stable patients (112 women; mean age 67.1 years ± 16.9). CT were independently reviewed by two observers. Results were compared with occurrence of death within 3 months using Cox regression. Twenty-four (10.6%) patients died, for whom 9 were considered to be due to PE. Interobserver agreement was moderate for the shape of interventricular septum (κ = 0.41), and for the ratio between the diameters of right and left ventricle (RV/LV) (κ = 0.76). Observers found no association between interventricular septum shape and death. A RV/LV diameter ratio >1 was predictive of death (OR, 3.83; p < 0.01) only when we also took into account the value of the embolic burden (< 40%). In a multivariate model, CT cardiovascular parameters were not associated with death. Concomitant lower limb DVT and comorbid conditions were important predictors of death. In clinically non-severe PE, a RV/LV diameter ratio >1 is predictive of death when the embolic burden is low (< 40%).

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Adrien Jankowski

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Ivan Bricault

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Max Coulomb

University of Grenoble

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Gilles Pernod

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Emile Reyt

University of Grenoble

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