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Dive into the research topics where Gilles D. Dreyfus is active.

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Featured researches published by Gilles D. Dreyfus.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Antegrade cerebral perfusion with cold blood: a 13-year experience

Jean Bachet; David Guilmet; B. Goudot; Gilles D. Dreyfus; Philippe Delentdecker; D. Brodaty; Claude Dubois

BACKGROUND In 1986 we introduced the technique of antegrade selective perfusion of the brain with cold blood during surgery of the aortic arch. METHODS Between January 1984 and March 1998, 171 patients (118 males and 53 females) aged 25 to 83 years (mean 56.5 +/- 17), underwent replacement of the transverse aortic arch with the aid of cold blood antegrade selective perfusion. One hundred twenty two patients (71.3%) with chronic lesions were operated on electively; 49 patients (28.6%) were operated on urgently for acute aortic dissection (42 patients) or for a ruptured chronic aneurysm (7 patients). Fifty-one patients (29.8%) had previously undergone a surgical procedure on the thoracic aorta. Mean duration of cardiopulmonary bypass was 121 minutes (range: 65-248); mean duration of cerebral perfusion was 60 minutes (range: 15-90), and mean duration of systemic circulatory arrest circuit was 32 minutes (range: 10-57). The electroencephalogram, routinely recorded, showed disappearance of electrical activity in a mean of 9 minutes (range: 3-16) initial return of electrical activity after a mean of 12 minutes (range: 1-35) and normalization in a mean time of 66 minutes. RESULTS All patients but 7 (4%) showed signs of normal awakening within 8 hours postoperatively. Six patients (3.5%) had fatal neurologic complications, and 16 patients (9.3%) had a non-fatal neurologic complications. Twenty-nine patients (16.9%) died during the postoperative hospital course. There was a significant difference between patients aged less than 60 years (9%) and patients older than 60 years (mortality rate 26.4%, p < 0.02). There was also a significant difference between patients undergoing an isolated replacement of the arch, and those in whom the replacement was extended to the descending aorta in whom mortality was 36.4% (chi2, p < 0.02). Lesion and gender had no significant influence on the outcome of the patients, nor had the duration of cardiopulmonary bypass, circulatory arrest, and cerebral perfusion. In particular, no correlation could be established between the duration of cerebral perfusion and the occurrence of neurologic complications. CONCLUSION The clinical results obtained throughout this experience have demonstrated that selective antegrade cerebral perfusion with cold blood provides excellent protection during surgery of the transverse aortic arch. In addition, it avoids the use of deep hypothermia and prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass and does not limit the time allowed to perform the aortic repair. In our opinion it is the technique of choice, especially in frail patients or those requiring a long and difficult procedure.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1990

Valve repair in acute endocarditis

Gilles D. Dreyfus; A. Serraf; Victor A. Jebara; Alain Deloche; Sylvain Chauvaud; Jean Paul Couetil; Alain Carpentier

Forty patients were operated on in the early phase of active endocarditis between 1980 and 1988. Indications for operation were heart failure (30 patients), severe valvular regurgitation (4), uncontrolled sepsis (2), septic emboli (3), and other (1 patient). Time between onset of endocarditis symptoms and operation ranged from 12 to 45 days (mean, 30 days). The aortic valve was involved in 3 patients; the mitral valve, in 28; both valves, in 7; and the tricuspid valve, in 2. There was no previous underlying valve pathology in 40%. Lesions found were cusp perforation (17 patients), annular abscess (4), vegetation (13), and chordal rupture (22). Positive blood cultures were found in 30 patients (75%). Bacterial findings were Streptococcus in 12 patients (30%), Staphylococcus in 15 (37.5%), gram-negative in 3 (7.5%), and unknown in 10 (25%). Criteria to perform valve repair were adequate antibiotic therapy for at least 1 week and large excision of all macroscopically involved tissues. In all cases, Carpentiers reconstructive techniques were used. Perioperative mortality was 2.5% (1 patient). Reoperation was necessary in 1 patient. Late mortality was 2.5% (1 patient). Repair was assessed either by angiography or by Doppler echocardiography before hospital discharge: 32 patients showed no regurgitation, whereas 7 had mild regurgitation (3 aortic, 4 mitral). Mean follow-up of 30 months was achieved in all survivors. There was no recurrence of endocarditis and no reoperation for valvular insufficiency. We conclude that valve repair in acute endocarditis is possible and effective in most instances.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1994

Myocardial viability assessment in ischemic cardiomyopathy: Benefits of coronary revascularization

Gilles D. Dreyfus; Denis Duboc; Antoine Blasco; Florence Vigoni; Claude Dubois; D. Brodaty; Philippe de Lentdecker; Jean Bachet; B. Goudot; Daniel Guilmet

Patients with ischemic heart disease, congestive heart failure, and low ejection fraction are usually referred for orthotopic heart transplantation. Based on results of myocardial viability assessment, we have prospectively used either coronary artery bypass grafting or orthotopic heart transplantation. From January 1990 to June 1992, among 50 patients initially referred for heart transplantation, 46 showing myocardial viability underwent bypass grafting. Forty-five of these 46 patients were men, and the mean age was 58 +/- 12 years (range, 40 to 70 years). Congestive heart failure was present in all patients, and dyspnea was the main symptom in 80% (37/46). Patients were selected according to three criteria. (1) Myocardial viability was primarily assessed by thallium scintigraphy for up to 24 hours (28/46 patients). When results were negative, patients underwent positron emission tomography (20/46 patients). (2) Regional left ventricular function was assessed using gated blood pool single-photon emission computed tomography combined with (3) full hemodynamic evaluation. Results were as follows: end-diastolic volume, 129 +/- 35 mL/m2; ejection fraction, 0.23 +/- 0.06; cardiac index, 2.4 +/- 0.62 L.min-1.m-2; mean pulmonary artery pressure, 26 +/- 0.90 mm Hg; and mean pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, 16 +/- 1.10 mm Hg. Operative mortality was 2.17% (1/46). During follow-up (mean duration, 18 months), there were three late cardiac-related deaths (arrhythmias) and two noncardiac-related deaths. The 40 long-term survivors are in New York Heart Association class II. Angiography (15 patients) or gated blood pool single photon emission tomography (32) showed improvement in mean ejection fraction to 0.39 +/- 0.13 (range, 0.22 to 0.46).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Circulation | 2012

Coronary artery bypass surgery with or without mitral valve annuloplasty in moderate functional ischemic mitral regurgitation: final results of the Randomized Ischemic Mitral Evaluation (RIME) trial.

K.M. John Chan; Prakash P. Punjabi; Marcus Flather; Riccardo Wage; Karen Symmonds; Isabelle Roussin; Shelley Rahman-Haley; Dudley J. Pennell; Philip J. Kilner; Gilles D. Dreyfus; John Pepper

Background—The role of mitral valve repair (MVR) during coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in patients with moderate ischemic mitral regurgitation (MR) is uncertain. We conducted a randomized, controlled trial to determine whether repairing the mitral valve during CABG may improve functional capacity and left ventricular reverse remodeling compared with CABG alone. Methods and Results—Seventy-three patients referred for CABG with moderate ischemic MR and an ejection fraction >30% were randomized to receive CABG plus MVR (34 patients) or CABG only (39 patients). The study was stopped early after review of interim data. At 1 year, there was a greater improvement in the primary end point of peak oxygen consumption in the CABG plus MVR group compared with the CABG group (3.3 mL/kg/min versus 0.8 mL/kg/min; P<0.001). There was also a greater improvement in the secondary end points in the CABG plus MVR group compared with the CABG group: left ventricular end-systolic volume index, MR volume, and plasma B-type natriuretic peptide reduction of 22.2 mL/m2, 28.2 mL/beat, and 557.4 pg/mL, respectively versus 4.4 mL/m2 (P=0.002), 9.2 mL/beat (P=0.001), and 394.7 pg/mL (P=0.003), respectively. Operation duration, blood transfusion, intubation duration, and hospital stay duration were greater in the CABG plus MVR group. Deaths at 30 days and 1 year were similar in both groups: 3% and 9%, respectively in the CABG plus MVR group, versus 3% (P=1.00) and 5% (P=0.66), respectively in the CABG group. Conclusions—Adding mitral annuloplasty to CABG in patients with moderate ischemic MR may improve functional capacity, left ventricular reverse remodeling, MR severity, and B-type natriuretic peptide levels, compared with CABG alone. The impact of these benefits on longer term clinical outcomes remains to be defined. Clinical Trial Registration—URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00413998.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1991

Total orthotopic heart transplantation: An alternative to the standard technique

Gilles D. Dreyfus; Victor A. Jebara; Sherban Mihaileanu; Alain Carpentier

An alternative technique of total orthotopic heart transplantation is described. Complete excision of the recipients atria is undertaken. Ventricular as well as atrial orthotopic transplantation is performed.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999

Cardiac Metaiodobenzylguanidine uptake in patients with moderate chronic heart failure : Relationship with peak oxygen uptake and prognosis

Alain Cohen-Solal; Yves Esanu; Damien Logeart; Fabienne Pessione; Claude Dubois; Gilles D. Dreyfus; René Gourgon; Pascal Merlet

OBJECTIVES This prospective study was undertaken to correlate early and late metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) cardiac uptake with cardiac hemodynamics and exercise capacity in patients with heart failure and to compare their prognostic values with that of peak oxygen uptake (VO2). BACKGROUND The cardiac fixation of MIBG reflects presynaptic uptake and is reduced in heart failure. Whether it is related to exercise capacity and has better prognostic value than peak VO2 is unknown. METHODS Ninety-three patients with heart failure (ejection fraction <45%) were studied with planar MIBG imaging, cardiopulmonary exercise tests and hemodynamics (n = 44). Early (20 min) and late (4 h) MIBG acquisition, as well as their ratio (washout, WO) were determined. Prognostic value was assessed by survival curves (Kaplan-Meier method) and uni- and multivariate Cox analyses. RESULTS Late cardiac MIBG uptake was reduced (131+/-20%, normal values 192+/-42%) and correlated with ejection fraction (r = 0.49), cardiac index (r = 0.40) and pulmonary wedge pressure (r = -0.35). There was a significant correlation between peak VO2 and MIBG uptake (r = 0.41, p < 0.0001). With a mean follow-up of 10+/-8 months, both late MIBG uptake (p = 0.04) and peak VO2 (p < 0.0001) were predictive of death or heart transplantation, but only peak VO2 emerged by multivariate analysis. Neither early MIBG uptake nor WO yielded significant insights beyond those provided by late MIBG uptake. CONCLUSIONS Metaiodobenzylguanidine uptake has prognostic value in patients with wide ranges of heart failure, but peak VO2 remains the most powerful prognostic index.


Circulation Research | 2004

Program of Cell Survival Underlying Human and Experimental Hibernating Myocardium

Christophe Depre; Song-Jung Kim; Anna S. John; Yan Hong Huang; Ornella E. Rimoldi; John Pepper; Gilles D. Dreyfus; Vinciane Gaussin; Dudley J. Pennell; Dorothy E. Vatner; Paolo G. Camici; Stephen F. Vatner

Hibernating myocardium refers to chronically dysfunctional myocardium in patients with coronary artery disease in which cardiac viability is maintained and whose function improves after coronary revascularization. It is our hypothesis that long-term adaptive genomic mechanisms subtend the survival capacity of this ischemic myocardium. Therefore, the goal of this study was to determine whether chronic repetitive ischemia elicits a gene program of survival protecting hibernating myocardium against cell death. Accordingly, we measured the expression of survival genes in hibernating myocardium, both in patients surgically treated for hibernation and in a chronic swine model of repetitive ischemia reproducing the features of hibernation. Human hibernating myocardium was characterized by an upregulation of genes and corresponding proteins involved in anti-apoptosis (IAP), growth (VEGF, H11 kinase), and cytoprotection (HSP70, HIF-1&agr;, GLUT1). In the swine model, the same genes and proteins were upregulated after repetitive ischemia, which was accompanied by a concomitant decrease in myocyte apoptosis. These changes characterize viable tissue, because they were not found in irreversibly injured myocardium. Our report demonstrates a novel mechanism by which the activation of an endogenous gene program of cell survival underlies the sustained viability of the hibernating heart. Potentially, promoting such a program offers a novel opportunity to salvage postmitotic tissues in conditions of ischemia.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Surgery for acute type A aortic dissection: the Hopital Foch experience (1977–1998)

Jean Bachet; B. Goudot; Gilles D. Dreyfus; D. Brodaty; Claude Dubois; Philippe Delentdecker; Daniel Guilmet

BACKGROUND In 1977, we proposed the use of gelatin-resorcinol-formol (GRF) biological glue during surgery for acute type A aortic dissection. METHODS From January 1977 to March 1998, 204 patients (146 men and 58 women) aged from 15 to 79 years (mean 54 +/- 11) underwent emergency operation for type A aortic dissection in our institution. One hundred sixty-five patients (84%) were operated on within 48 h after the onset of symptoms. Twenty-eight patients (13.7%) had Marfans syndrome. In 43 patients (23%), the aortic valve was replaced either independently (6, 3%) or by means of a composite graft (37, 18.1%). Because of the location of the intimal tear, aortic replacement included the transverse arch in 60 patients (29.4%). RESULTS Hospital mortality was 21% (39 patients): 25% in patients with arch replacement and 19.4% in patients without arch replacement (ns). One hundred sixty-one patients were discharged and followed from 2 months to 21 years postoperatively (mean 85 +/- 66 months). During this interval, 25 patients (15.5%) required reoperation for a total of 33 reoperations. Seven patients (28%) died at reoperation. Upon univariate analysis, presence of Marfans syndrome (p < 0.05) and absence of arch replacement (p < 0.02) were risk factors for reoperation. Emergency operation (p < 0.01) and thoracoabdominal replacement (p < 0.04) were risk factors for death at reoperation. The actuarial freedom from reoperation (Kaplan-Meier, confidence interval 95%) is 96.1% (90.9%-98.2%) at 1 year, 87.6% (79.8%-92.7%) at 5 years, 80.9% (70.8%-88.1%) at 10 years, and 66.4% (51.1%-78.9%) at 15 years. A total of 39 patients (24.3%) died during follow-up. The presence of Marfans syndrome (p < 0.01), reoperation (p < 0.02), stroke (p < 0.05), and cardiac failure (p < 0.05) were risk factors for late mortality. The actuarial late survival including hospital mortality is 71.5% (64.3%-77.8%) at 1 year, 66% (58.3%-73%) at 5 years, 56.4% (47.7%-64.7%) at 10 years, and 46.3% (36.4%-56.5%) at 15 years. CONCLUSIONS The GRF glue has proven extremely useful during emergency initial surgery for acute type A dissection, making the procedure much easier and safer. As a result of this operative improvement, the use of the GRF glue seems to have had a beneficial influence on late results, but these also depend upon the patients basic condition.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Tricuspid leaflet augmentation to address severe tethering in functional tricuspid regurgitation

Gilles D. Dreyfus; Shahzad G. Raja; Kok Meng John Chan

This paper describes a technique for treating severe tricuspid regurgitation due to severe tethering of the tricuspid valve leaflets. The anterior tricuspid leaflet is augmented by use of an autologous pericardial patch, which increases its size, and hence its surface area of coaptation, allowing increased leaflet coaptation to occur with reduced tension within the right ventricle. A Carpentier-Edwards annuloplasty ring is then implanted. We have successfully performed this operation in 15 patients with severe tricuspid regurgitation due to severe leaflet tethering and have achieved complete elimination of tricuspid regurgitation with good coaptation of the tricuspid leaflets. We describe this simple and easily reproducible technique to treat severe tricuspid regurgitation due to tethering of the tricuspid valve leaflets.


Asian Cardiovascular and Thoracic Annals | 2005

Modulation of Systemic Inflammatory Response after Cardiac Surgery

Shahzad G. Raja; Gilles D. Dreyfus

Cardiac surgery and cardiopulmonary bypass initiate a systemic inflammatory response largely determined by blood contact with foreign surfaces and the activation of complement. It is generally accepted that cardiopulmonary bypass initiates a whole-body inflammatory reaction. The magnitude of this inflammatory reaction varies, but the persistence of any degree of inflammation may be considered potentially harmful to the cardiac patient. The development of strategies to control the inflammatory response following cardiac surgery is currently the focus of considerable research efforts. Diverse techniques including maintenance of hemodynamic stability, minimization of exposure to cardiopulmonary bypass circuitry, and pharmacologic and immunomodulatory agents have been examined in clinical studies. This article briefly reviews the current concepts of the systemic inflammatory response following cardiac surgery, and the various therapeutic strategies being used to modulate this response.

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Shahzad G. Raja

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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E.J. Birks

Imperial College London

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John Pepper

Imperial College London

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