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Dive into the research topics where Jacques Berré is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacques Berré.


Critical Care Medicine | 1983

Serial lactate determinations during circulatory shock.

Jean Louis Vincent; Philippe Dufaye; Jacques Berré; Marc Leeman; Jean-Paul Degaute; Robert Kahn

The time course of lactacidemia was studied prospectively in 17 patients during fluid resuscitation for an episode of noncardiogenic shock, in 5 patients after grand mal seizures, and in 5 patients after successful CPR for cardiac arrest. The 9 patients in whom shock was reversed with fluid administration demonstrated a regular decrease in lactate concentrations, which exceeded 5% of the initial value during the first 60 min of treatment. In the other patients who expired despite similar therapy, lactacidemia was not significantly affected. During circulatory shock, repeated lactate determinations represent a more reliable prognostic index than an initial value taken alone. Changes in lactate concentration can provide an early and objective evaluation of the patients response to therapy.


Progress in Brain Research | 2005

The locked-in syndrome : what is it like to be conscious but paralyzed and voiceless?

Steven Laureys; Frédéric Pellas; Philippe Van Eeckhout; Sofiane Ghorbel; Caroline Schnakers; Fabien Perrin; Jacques Berré; Marie-Elisabeth Faymonville; Karl-Heinz Pantke; François Damas; Maurice Lamy; Gustave Moonen; Serge Goldman

The locked-in syndrome (pseudocoma) describes patients who are awake and conscious but selectively deefferented, i.e., have no means of producing speech, limb or facial movements. Acute ventral pontine lesions are its most common cause. People with such brainstem lesions often remain comatose for some days or weeks, needing artificial respiration and then gradually wake up, but remaining paralyzed and voiceless, superficially resembling patients in a vegetative state or akinetic mutism. In acute locked-in syndrome (LIS), eye-coded communication and evaluation of cognitive and emotional functioning is very limited because vigilance is fluctuating and eye movements may be inconsistent, very small, and easily exhausted. It has been shown that more than half of the time it is the family and not the physician who first realized that the patient was aware. Distressingly, recent studies reported that the diagnosis of LIS on average takes over 2.5 months. In some cases it took 4-6 years before aware and sensitive patients, locked in an immobile body, were recognized as being conscious. Once a LIS patient becomes medically stable, and given appropriate medical care, life expectancy increases to several decades. Even if the chances of good motor recovery are very limited, existing eye-controlled, computer-based communication technology currently allow the patient to control his environment, use a word processor coupled to a speech synthesizer, and access the worldwide net. Healthy individuals and medical professionals sometimes assume that the quality of life of an LIS patient is so poor that it is not worth living. On the contrary, chronic LIS patients typically self-report meaningful quality of life and their demand for euthanasia is surprisingly infrequent. Biased clinicians might provide less aggressive medical treatment and influence the family in inappropriate ways. It is important to stress that only the medically stabilized, informed LIS patient is competent to consent to or refuse life-sustaining treatment. Patients suffering from LIS should not be denied the right to die - and to die with dignity - but also, and more importantly, they should not be denied the right to live - and to live with dignity and the best possible revalidation, and pain and symptom management. In our opinion, there is an urgent need for a renewed ethical and medicolegal framework for our care of locked-in patients.


Critical Care Medicine | 2006

Albumin administration improves organ function in critically ill hypoalbuminemic patients: A prospective, randomized, controlled, pilot study*

Marc-Jacques Dubois; Carlos Orellana-Jimenez; Christian Melot; Daniel De Backer; Jacques Berré; Marc Leeman; Serge Brimioulle; Olivier Appoloni; Jacques Creteur; Jean Louis Vincent

Objective:To test the hypothesis that administration of albumin to correct hypoalbuminemia might have beneficial effects on organ function in a mixed population of critically ill patients. Design:Prospective, controlled, randomized study. Setting:Thirty-one-bed, mixed medicosurgical department of intensive care. Patients:All adult patients with a serum albumin concentration ≤30 g/L were assessed for eligibility. Principal exclusion criteria were expected length of stay <72 hrs, life expectancy <3 months or a do-not-resuscitate order, albumin administration in the preceding 24 hrs, or evidence of fluid overload. Interventions:The 100 patients were randomized to receive 300 mL of 20% albumin solution on the first day, then 200 mL/day provided their serum albumin concentration was <31 g/dL (albumin group), or to receive no albumin (control group). Measurements and Main Results:The primary outcome was the effect of albumin administration on organ function as assessed by a delta Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score from day 1 to day 7 (or the day of intensive care discharge or death, whichever came first). The two groups of 50 patients were comparable at baseline for age, gender, albumin concentration, and Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score. Albumin concentration did not change over time in the control group but increased consistently in the albumin group (p < .001). Organ function improved more in the albumin than in the control group (p = .026), mainly due to a difference in respiratory, cardiovascular, and central nervous system components of the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score. Diuretic use was identical in both groups, but mean fluid gain was almost three times higher in the control group (1679 ± 1156 vs. 658 ± 1101 mL, p = .04). Median daily calorie intake was higher in the albumin than in the control group (1122 [935–1158] vs. 760 [571–1077] kcal, p = .05). Conclusions:Albumin administration may improve organ function in hypoalbuminemic critically ill patients. It results in a less positive fluid balance and a better tolerance to enteral feeding.


Intensive Care Medicine | 1999

Management of nutrition in European intensive care units : results of a questionnaire

Jean-Charles Preiser; Jacques Berré; Yvon Carpentier; Philippe Jolliet; Claude Pichard; A. Van Gossum; Jean Louis Vincent

Objective: To describe the practical aspects of nutritional management in intensive care units (ICUs). Design: A 49-item questionnaire was sent to the physician members of the European Society for Intensive Care Medicine. The issues addressed included: medical environment, assessment of nutritional status and current practice for enteral and parenteral nutrition. Setting: 1608 questionnaires were sent in 35 European countries. Analysis: The answers were pooled and stratified by country. Results: 271 questionnaires were answered (response rate 17 %). Assessment of nutritional status was generally based on clinical (99 %) and biochemical (82 %) parameters rather than on functional (24 %), anthropometric (23 %), immunological (18 %) or questionnaire-based (11 %) data. Two thirds of 2774 patients hospitalised in the corresponding ICUs at the time the questionnaire was answered were receiving nutritional support; 58 % of those were fed by the enteral route, 23 % by the parenteral route and 19 % by combined enteral and parenteral. The preferred modality was enteral nutrition, instituted before the 48th h after admission, at a rate based on estimated caloric requirements. Specific and modified solutions were rarely used. Parenteral nutrition was less commonly used than enteral, although the practices differed between countries. It was mainly administered as hospital-made all-in-one solutions, at a rate based on calculated caloric requirements. Conclusions: European intensivists are concerned by the nutritional management of their patients. The use of nutritional support is common, essentially as early enteral feeding.


Journal of Chemotherapy | 2003

Disseminated Aspergillosis in Intensive Care Unit Patients: An Autopsy Study

George Dimopoulos; Michaël Piagnerelli; Jacques Berré; Brahim Eddafali; Isabelle Salmon; Jean Louis Vincent

Abstract Disseminated aspergillosis is an uncommon but frequently fatal disease in critically ill populations. With studies suggesting that the incidence of this disease is increasing, and with relatively few epidemiological data available in this population, we evaluated cases of disseminated aspergillosis identified at autopsy over a one-year period on a 31-bed mixed medico-surgical intensive care unit (ICU) of an academic university hospital. In 1999, there were 489 deaths out of 2984 ICU admissions, and 222 autopsies were performed. Post-mortem examination demonstrated disseminated aspergillosis involving non-contiguous organs in 6 (2.7%) autopsies and, of these, five patients (2.3% of total) had had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and had been treated with corticosteroids and mechanical ventilation for pulmonary infection. One patient also had granulocytopenia. In each patient, sputum and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cultures had been positive for Aspergillus fumigatus after ICU admission but this was considered as colonization and the patients were given fluconazole for suspected candidal infection. In conclusion, COPD patients treated with corticosteroids and presenting with pulmonary infection should be considered at risk for disseminated aspergillosis. The rapidly fatal outcome after ICU admission suggests that colonization with Aspergillus can occur before ICU admission.


Critical Care Medicine | 2005

Primer on medical management of severe brain injury.

Jean Louis Vincent; Jacques Berré

Objective:To review the current understanding of the medical management of severe brain injury. Data Source:The MEDLINE database, bibliographies of selected articles, and current English-language texts on the subject. Study Selection:Studies related to management of intracranial hypertension, traumatic brain injury, and brain edema. Data Extraction:All studies relevant to the subject under consideration were considered, with a focus on clinical studies in adults. Data Synthesis:Basic rules of resuscitation must apply, including adequate ventilation, appropriate fluid administration, and cardiovascular support. The control of intracranial pressure can be considered in three steps. The first step should be initial slight hyperventilation with a target PaCO2 of 35 mm Hg and cerebrospinal fluid drainage for intracranial pressure of >15–20 mm Hg. The second step should be mannitol or hypertonic saline and hyperventilation to target PaCO2 of 28–35 mm Hg. The third step should be barbiturate coma or decompressive craniectomy. Additional management issues, including seizure prophylaxis, sedation, nutritional support, use of hypothermia, and corticosteroids, are also discussed. Conclusions:Brain injury is frequently associated with the development of brain edema and the development of intracranial hypertension. However, with a coordinated, stepwise, and aggressive approach to management, focusing on control of intracranial pressure without adversely affecting cerebral perfusion pressure, outcomes can be good.


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 1993

Relationship of middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity to intensity during dynamic exercise in normal subjects

Jean-Jacques Moraine; Michel Lamotte; Jacques Berré; Georges Niset; Albert Leduc; Robert Naeije

SummaryCerebral blood flow has been reported to increase during dynamic exercise, but whether this occurs in proportion to the intensity remains unsettled. We measured middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity (νm) by transcranial Doppler ultrasound in 14 healthy young adults, at rest and during dynamic exercise performed on a cycle ergometer at a intensity progressively increasing, by 50 W every 4 min until exhaustion. Arterial blood pressure, heart rate, end-tidal, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PETCO2), oxygen uptake (


Critical Care Medicine | 2000

Enteral feeding with a solution enriched with antioxidant vitamins A, C, and E enhances the resistance to oxidative stress

Jean-Charles Preiser; André Van Gossum; Jacques Berré; Jean Louis Vincent; Yvon Carpentier


Critical Care Medicine | 1993

Relationship between oxygen uptake and oxygen delivery in septic patients: effects of prostacyclin versus dobutamine.

Daniel De Backer; Jacques Berré; Haibo Zhang; Robert Kahn; Jean Louis Vincent

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American Journal of Cardiology | 1988

Administration of enoximone in cardiogenic shock

Jean Louis Vincent; Eric Carlier; Jacques Berré; Charles W. Armistead; Robert Kahn; Eddie Coussaert; Francis Cantraine

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Jean Louis Vincent

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Christian Melot

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Robert Kahn

Free University of Brussels

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Philippe Dufaye

Free University of Brussels

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Jean-Paul Degaute

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Serge Goldman

Université libre de Bruxelles

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