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Featured researches published by Guy Chazot.
Neuroendocrinology | 1994
Radwan Zaidan; Martine Geoffriau; Jocelyne Brun; Jacques Taillard; Catherine Bureau; Guy Chazot; Bruno Claustrat
A single physiological dose of melatonin (20 micrograms for 3 h given intravenously at different times of the day (04.00-12.00, 16.00 and 20.00 h) was able to shift the endogenous plasma melatonin profile of healthy volunteers under entrained conditions according to a phase-response curve (PRC). ANOVA showed an effect of the time of administration on the onset, the acrophase or the offset of the melatonin profiles. These profiles were significantly delayed when the infusion was administered at 12.00 h and advanced when the infusion was given at 20.00 h. Further, the AUCs evaluated on the nocturnal melatonin profiles were increased after the 04.00 h infusion (+20.5%, p < 0.05), whereas they were decreased after the 12.00 h infusion (-20%, p < 0.05). Lastly, no alteration was observed for cortisol rhythm, whatever the time of melatonin administration. These results, which show that according to a PRC the system regulating melatonin secretion is sensitive to a single short-term administration of the hormone given at a low dose, support the paradigm of the endogenous synchronizer melatonin.
Hormone Research in Paediatrics | 1998
Martine Geoffriau; Jocelyne Brun; Guy Chazot; Bruno Claustrat
Melatonin (MLT) is a methoxyindole secreted principally by the pineal gland. It is synthesized at night under normal environmental conditions. The endogenous rhythm of secretion is generated by the suprachiasmatic nuclei and entrained by the light/dark cycle. Light is able to both suppress or entrain MLT production on light schedule. The nyctohemeral rhythm of this hormone can be determined by repeated measurement of plasma or saliva MLT or urine sulfatoxy-MLT, the main hepatic metabolite. MLT can be considered as the output (the hand) of the endogenous clock. Since the regulating system follows a central and sympathetic nervous pathway, an abnormality at any level could unspecifically modify the MLT secretion, especially in patients with sympathalgia or dysautonomia. MLT plays the role of an endogenous zeitgeber on core temperature or sleep-wake cycle. Exogenous MLT is able to influence the endogenous secretion of the hormone according to a phase-response curve. There are practical implications for this property in situations when biological rhythms are disturbed (jet-lag syndrome, delayed sleep phase syndrome, insomnia in blind people, shift-work, insomnia in elderly people). Improvement of pharmaceutical forms (controlled release preparations) or development of MLT analogs could lead to decisive progress.
Cephalalgia | 1984
Guy Chazot; Bruno Claustrat; Jocelyne Brun; D. Jordan; Geneviève Sassolas; Bernard Schott
The temporal organization of plasma melatonin. cortisol. growth hormone (GH) and prolactin secretion was examined in healthy rested controls and in patients suffering from episodic cluster headache. Eleven patients with typical cluster headache (10 men, 1 female) and 8 male controls were studied over a 24–h period: blood was collected at 2–h intervals during the day and at l-h intervals at night. Plasma melatonin. cortisol, GH and prolactin levels were determined by radioimmunoassay. Most of the cluster headache patients showed a decrease in nocturnal melatonin secretion and the melatonin rhythm was even completely abolished in one patient. Chronobiological analysis of the cluster headache patients 24–h plasma melatonin profile showed a significant decrease in amplitude and mesor: these were 58.7 pg/ml and 34.4 pg/ml respectively in control subjects, versus 18.7 pg/ml and 17.6 pg/ml for the patients. In addition. patients showed a significant phase-advance in their melatonin rhythm For cortisol, the rhythm appeared slightly blunted in the cluster headache group and was significantly phase-advanced. The plasma prolactin profile showed no significant alteration, but for plasma GH the nocturnal peak was advanced in some patients: in the absence of sleep recording, however, no conclusion could be drawn. Results from this study suggest a neuroendocrine dysregulation in cluster headache in the endogenous clock which controls the pineal rhythmicity.
Biological Psychiatry | 1992
Bruno Claustrat; Jocelyne Brun; Michel David; Geneviève Sassolas; Guy Chazot
This study replicates the alleviation of jet-lag with melatonin in a simplified protocol for eastward flight. At 22-n hr (n is the time-lag between the North American departure point and France), subjects took either melatonin (8 mg, n = 15), or placebo (n = 15) on the day of the return flight and for 3 consecutive days. On day 8, self-ratings significantly discriminated between melatonin and placebo for global treatment efficacy, morning fatigue, and evening sleepiness.
European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 1990
Mallo C; Radwan Zaidan; G. Galy; E. Vermeulen; Jocelyne Brun; Guy Chazot; Bruno Claustrat
SummaryThe pharmacokinetics of melatonin during the day-time has been studied in 4 healthy subjects after a bolus i.v. injection of 5 or 10 μg/person and after a 5 h infusion of 20 μg per person in 6 healthy subjects. In addition, a pinealomectomized patient whose nocturnal plasma melatonin had been abolished was investigated after the i. v. infusion — once during the night and once during the day.The clearance of melatonin from blood showed a biexponential decay. The pharmacokinetic parameters in the two studies were similar, except for the disappearance rate constant β and the apparent volume of distribution at steady-state (Vss). Supplementary peaks or troughs were superimposed on the plateau and the falling part of the profile. They were not due to stimulation of endogenous secretion, because they were also seen in the pinealomectomized patient.During the melatonin infusion, the plasma hormone level reached a steady-state after 60 and 120 min, and when it was equal to the nocturnal level. The infusion regime may be valuable in replacing blunted hormonal secretion in disease states.
Cephalalgia | 1995
Jocelyne Brun; Bruno Claustrat; P Saddier; Guy Chazot
Nocturnal melatonin excretion was studied throughout a complete menstrual cycle in 10 women with migraine without aura attacks associated with menses and 9 women controls. Urine melatonin was determined by radioimmunoassay. The mean nocturnal melatonin excretion throughout the cycle was significantly lower in the migraine patients than in controls. In the control group, melatonin excretion increased significantly from the follicular to the luteal phase, whereas no difference was observed in the migraine group. Results are discussed in view of the role of the pineal gland in the organization of biological rhythms and homeostasis in relation to environmental conditions.
Cephalalgia | 2004
Bruno Claustrat; Jocelyne Brun; C Chiquet; Guy Chazot; F Borson-Chazot
The present study examined the sensitivity to light of melatonin (MLT) secretion in familial migraine during a headache-free interval. Twelve female patients and 12 healthy controls were included in the trial. All subjects were studied twice. In each session, light exposure (300 lx) or placebo was randomly administered for 30 min between 00.30 and 01.00 h. Blood was sampled hourly between 20.00 and 24.00 h, and 02.00 and 04.00 h and every 15 min between 00.30 and 01.30 h. Plasma MLT levels were determined by radioimmunoassay. MLT suppression was more marked in the migraine group than in the control group [difference of area under curve (δAUC) = −53.8 ± 16.2 vs. 18.5 ± 12.7 pg/h/ml, P < 0.005; maximum of MLT suppression (δ) = −35.7 ± 10.2 vs.- 6.7 ± 5.8 pg/ml, P < 0.05]. These findings show a clear hypersensitivity to light in young female migraineurs during the headache-free period.
Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2009
José Leston; C. Mottolese; Jacques Champier; Anne Jouvet; Jocelyne Brun; Marc Sindou; Guy Chazot; Bruno Claustrat; Michelle Fèvre-Montange
Tumors of the pineal region (TPR) include different entities: germ cell tumors (GCT), pineal parenchymal tumors (PPT), meningiomas, and glial tumors. Except for GCT, there are no peripheral markers and histopathological diagnosis needs biopsy or surgery. We studied daily melatonin variations in twenty-nine patients with TPR and five with tectal plate glioma (TPG), used as controls, before and/or after surgery. Before surgery, a melatonin nycthemeral rhythm was observed in patients with TPG and TPR (one cyst, three PPT, one papillary tumor of the pineal region, two meningiomas, six gliomas). Melatonin rhythm was dramatically reduced for undifferentiated or invasive tumors. After surgery, the absence of melatonin variation in some cases could be the consequence of pineal damage by surgery. The contribution of determination of melatonin profiles to the diagnosis of TPR remains limited but of interest. The evidence for melatonin deficiency could justify melatonin administration to prevent the postpinealectomy syndrome.
Biological Psychiatry | 1985
Guy Chazot; Bruno Claustrat; Jocelyne Brun; Michèle Olivier
Presentation des resultats dune etude en double aveugle sur les effets antidepresseurs dune endorphine naturelle
Sleep Medicine Reviews | 2005
Bruno Claustrat; Jocelyne Brun; Guy Chazot