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Dive into the research topics where Jean Lekieffre is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean Lekieffre.


Circulation | 1999

Characterization of Different Subsets of Atrial Fibrillation in General Practice in France The ALFA Study

Samuel Lévy; Martine Maarek; Philippe Coumel; Louis Guize; Jean Lekieffre; Jean-Louis Medvedowsky; Alain Sebaoun

BACKGROUND The clinical presentation and causes of atrial fibrillation (AF) in the 1990s may differ from AF seen 2 to 3 decades ago. It was the objective of this prospective study to characterize various clinical presentations and underlying conditions of patients with AF observed in general practice in France. METHODS AND RESULTS The study population comprised 756 patients (19 to 95 years of age) with electrocardiographically documented AF subdivided into paroxysmal (<7 days), chronic (last episode >1 month) and recent onset AF(persistent >7 days and<1 month). Symptoms were present in 670 patients (88.6%). The relative prevalences of paroxysmal, chronic, and recent onset AF were 22.1%, 51.4%, and 26.4%, respectively. Cardiac disorders, present in 534 patients (70.6%), included hypertension (39.4%), coronary artery disease (16.6%), and myocardial diseases (15.3%) as the most common. Rheumatic valvular disease represented a common cause in women (25. 0%) but not in men (8.0%). The paroxysmal group differed by a high percentage of palpitations (79.0%) and a low percentage of underlying heart disease (53.9%). With a mean follow-up of 8.6+/-3.7 months, 28 patients (3.7%) died, including 6 fatal cerebrovascular accidents. Among the 728 patients who survived, congestive heart failure occurred in 30 patients (4.1%), and embolic complications occurred in 13 patients (1.8%). In the paroxysmal AF group, 13 patients (8.0%) developed chronic AF and 51 (31.3%) had AF recurrences. At the time of follow-up, 53 patients (14.3%) from the chronic AF group and 108 patients (55.7%) from the recent onset AF group were in sinus rhythm. CONCLUSIONS This large-scale study establishes the current demographic profile of out-of-hospital patients with AF and highlights some of the changes that have occurred in the past decades, including a particular shift in cardiac causes toward nonrheumatic AF. This study also demonstrates significant differences between various subsets of AF.


Circulation | 1997

Systemic Infection Related to Endocarditis on Pacemaker Leads Clinical Presentation and Management

Didier Klug; Dominique Lacroix; Christine Savoye; Luc Goullard; Daniel Grandmougin; Jean Luc Hennequin; Salem Kacet; Jean Lekieffre

BACKGROUND Endocarditis related to pacemaker (PM)-lead infection is a rare but serious complication of permanent transvenous pacing. To determine in which situations the diagnosis should be evoked and to determine optimal management, we reviewed our experience with endocarditis related to PM-lead infection. METHODS AND RESULTS Fifty-two patients were admitted for endocarditis related to PM-lead infection. The presentation was acute in 14 patients, with onset of symptoms in the first 6 weeks after the last procedure on the implant site, and chronic in 38 patients. Fever occurred in 86.5%. Clinical and/or radiological evidences of pulmonary involvement were observed in 38.4%. Pulmonary scintigraphy disclosed pulmonary infarcts in 31.2%. Local complications were found in 51.9%. Elevated C-reactive protein was found in 96.2%. A germ was isolated in 88.4% of patients and was a Staphylococcus in 93.5%. Transthoracic echocardiography demonstrated vegetations in only 23% of patients, whereas transesophageal echocardiography disclosed abnormal appearances on the PM lead in 94%. We systematically tried to ablate all the material. Two techniques were used: percutaneous ablation or surgical removal during extracorporeal circulation. All patients were treated with antibiotics after removal of the infected material. Two patients died before lead removal and 2 after surgical removal; the predischarge mortality was 7.6%, and the overall mortality was 26.9% after a follow-up of 20.1+/-13 months. CONCLUSIONS The diagnosis of endocarditis related to PM-lead infection should be suspected in the presence of fever, complications, or pulmonary lesions after PM insertion. Transesophageal echocardiography should be performed to look for vegetations. Staphylococci are involved in the majority of these infections. The endocardial system must be entirely removed and appropriate antibiotic therapy pursued for 6 weeks.


American Heart Journal | 1977

Pathology of sinoatrial node. Correlations with electrocardiographic findings in 111 patients

Claude Thery; Bernard Gosselin; Jean Lekieffre; Henri Warembourg

Histological study of the sinoatrial node (SAN) was performed in 111 patients in order to estabilsh correlations between the ECG findings and the anatomical lesions. This series includes both patients with sinus rhythm and patients with atrial arrhythmias. The results are as fololows: (a) the amount of nodal cells in the SAN was found to be inversely proportional to the age of the patients (p less than 0.001); (b) normal sinus rhythm was present in some cases with severe fibrosis of the SAN; (c) the present study does not support lesions of the SAN as responsible for atrial fibrillation; (d) chronic sinoatrial block was associated with extensive lesions of the approaches of the AV node or the AV node itself; (e) the auricular tachycardia-bradycardia syndrome was associated in most cases with both lesions of the main feature of the SAN lesion. The pathogenesis of these fibrotic lesions are discussed.


American Heart Journal | 1979

Coronary arteriography in acute transmural myocardial infarction

Michel E. Bertrand; Jean M Lefebvre; Christian L Laisne; Michel Rousseau; Alain G. Carré; Jean Lekieffre

Coronary arteriography was performed 16 +/- 3 days (range 7 to 21 days) in 106 patients with acute transmural myocardial infarction (61 posterior infarct, 45 anterior infarct). Coronary arteriography was performed without serious complications. Only 44% of patients with anterior infarct had total occlusion of the left anterior descending artery while a significant stenosis of the vessel was observed in the others -27% had a single vessel disease, 49% had two lesions and 22% had three lesions; one patient had angiographically normal coronary arteries. Among the patients with posterior infarction, 21% had one vessel disease and double or triple lesions accounted for 39% of each. Sixty per cent of patients with anterior infarction and 45% with posterior infarction had no collateral vessels. In the others patients collateral circulation had a protective effect only in anterior infarction. Age has no effect on the distribution and number of lesions nor on the development of a collateral circulation. The location and severity of the lesions were not different in patients who presented with arrythmias and those who did not.


Circulation | 1983

Persistent sinus nodal electrograms during abnormally prolonged postpacing atrial pauses in sick sinus syndrome in humans: sinoatrial block vs overdrive suppression.

P Asseman; B Berzin; D Desry; D Vilarem; P Durand; C Delmotte; E H Sarkis; Jean Lekieffre; C Thery

A transvenous electrode catheter technique was used for direct recording of bipolar sinus node electrograms during postpacing atrial pauses. Multiple repetitive local sinus node electrograms during atrial quiescence validate sinus node electrograms. Such atrial pauses with sinus node electrograms are due to sinoatrial block; atrial pauses without sinus node electrograms are due to overdrive suppression or improper recording. Eight consecutive patients were prospectively selected on the basis of a corrected sinus node recovery time greater than 1500 msec during diagnostic electrophysiologic evaluation. Six patients had atrial pauses with sinus node electrograms; three patterns of sinus node electrograms during atrial pauses were observed. We conclude that (1) sinus node electrogram recording is of value in understanding the mechanism underlying postpacing atrial pauses; (2) atrial pauses are usually (6/8) caused by sinoatrial block; (3) three patterns of sinus node electrograms are observed, thus making indirect interpretation unreliable.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1997

Asystolic cardiac arrest during head-up tilt test: incidence and therapeutic implications.

Dominique Lacroix; Claude Kouakam; Didier Klug; Laurence Guédon-Moreau; Guy Vaksmann; Salem Kacet; Jean Lekieffre

Occasionally, the cardioinhibitory response may be profond during tilt induced syncope. Whether this response is associated with more severe symptoms or predicts a poor response to pharmacotherapy remains controversial. The aim of this study was to characterize patients with vasovagally mediated asystole occurring during head‐up tilt test and to evaluate the respective interests of sequential pacing and β‐blockers to treat them. We performed 60° tilt testing in 179 consecutive patients with unexplained syncope (91 women and 88 men, age 36.6 ± 20.1 years). Asystole was defined as a ventricular pause > 5 seconds. All patients with tilt induced asystole received therapy with either β‐blockers or sequential pacing, the efficacy of which was evaluated with serial tilt tests. Of 77 patients with positive tilt test, 10 developed syncope related to asystole (mean duration 11.9 ± 4.9 s), 2 with spontaneous recovery, and 8 with seizures needing a brief cardiopulmonary resuscitation. When compared with patients without asystole, asystolic patients had more severe symptoms (seizures: 6/10 vs 9/67, P = 0.05, injury: 9/10 vs 27/67, P = 0.0048). In the first six patients in whom cardiac pacing was considered, syncope or presyncope still occurred despite atrioventricular pacing at 45 beats/min. Five of these 6 patients, as well as the remaining 4 asystolic patients, were tilted with β‐biockers: 3 patients became tilt‐negative; 3 were significantly improved; and 3 did not respond. During follow‐up (mean 22.7 ± 11.7 months) with every patient taking β‐blockers and seven having a permanent pacemaker, no syncopal recurrence was observed. Tilt‐induced asystole that may require resuscitative maneuvers occurs especially in patients with a history of seizures or injury. Therapy with β‐blockers is often effective to prevent induction of syncope as well as recurrences.


Journal of The Autonomic Nervous System | 1992

Effects of consecutive administration of central and peripheral anticholinergic agents on respiratory sinus arrhythmia in normal subjects

Dominique Lacroix; R. Logier; Salem Kacet; Jean-René Hazard; Jean Dagano; Jean Lekieffre

Respiratory sinus arrhythmia is thought to be vagally mediated, since it disappears after atropine, but the site of action of the drug (central vs. peripheral) accounting for this effect has not been elucidated. To investigate the effects of anticholinergic agents on respiratory arrhythmia, ten healthy subjects received an intravenous bolus of tropatepine (a presumed central antagonist) at a dose of 0.08 mg per kg of body weight, then, 7 min later, prifinium (a peripheral antagonist) at a dose of 0.1 mg per kg of body weight. Respiratory sinus arrhythmia during controlled breathing was evaluated as the area under the high-frequency peak of the heart rate variability spectrum coinciding with the respiratory frequency +/- 0.02 Hz. The power of this high-frequency peak decreased by 55% after tropatepine (P less than 0.05) with a concomitant increase of the mean RR interval from 930 to 1072 ms (P less than 0.01). When prifinium was added, a further but non-significant decrease of respiratory arrhythmia was observed, while the mean RR interval decreased from 1072 to 714 ms (P less than 0.01). The low-frequency components (0.05 to 0.15 Hz) of the power spectrum, significantly decreased (P less than 0.05) after infusion of both drugs. In conclusion, tropatepine depresses respiratory sinus arrhythmia with a paradoxical concomitant bradycardia. This suggests that tropatepine acts like a pure central muscarinic antagonist, in support of the hypothesis that a central cholinergic receptor is involved in the respiratory modulation of heart rate.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1979

Cineangiographic assessment of left ventricular function in the acute phase of transmural myocardial infarction

Michel E. Bertrand; Michel F. Rousseau; Jean M. Lablanche; Alain G. Carré; Jean Lekieffre

Abstract One hundred fifteen patients underwent hemodynamic investigation including left cineangiography during the acute phase of transmural myocardial infarction. Patients were classified into two groups: those with anterior myocardial infarction (48 patients) and those with inferior myocardial infarction (67 patients). There was a good correlation between the electrocardiographic site of infarction and the location of ventricular dyssynergy. The extent of abnormally contracting segment was 39.3 ± 2 percent (mean ± standard error of the mean) in anterior infarction and 28 ± 1.7 percent in inferior infarction. Left ventricular end-diastolic volume was normal in inferior infarction and slightly increased in anterior infarction. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was significantly increased in both groups. The increase in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was related to (1) depressed contractility as demonstrated by the significant reduction of ejection fraction and mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening; and (2) changes in left ventricular compliance with a large scatter to the left as well as to the right of the pressure-volume curve. There was no correlation between the extent of dyssynergy and changes in left ventricular end-diastolic compliance but there was a good linear correlation between ejection fraction and the extent of abnormally contracting segment. In the group with anterior infarction, for the same extent of dyssynergy, patients with a decreased end-diastolic compliance had a better ejection fraction than those with an increased end-diastolic compliance. Finally, the extent of infarction seems to be the principal factor determining the degree of ventricular functional impairment because patients with anterior or inferior myocardial infarction carefully matched for similar extent of infarction demonstrated no significant differences in the variables of ventricular performance.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1992

Signal-averaged electrocardiography and detection of heart transplant rejection: Comparison of time and frequency domain analyses

Dominique Lacroix; Salem Kacet; Pierre Savard; Franck Molin; Jean Dagano; Annie Pol; Jean Lekieffre

To evaluate the role of the signal-averaged electrocardiogram (ECG) in the detection of heart transplant rejection, findings on 277 ECGs were compared with those in 218 endomyocardial biopsy specimens in 25 patients followed up for a median duration of 5.2 months (range 7 days to 17.5 months). Signal-averaged ECGs obtained at intervals of 16.4 +/- 22.3 days were analyzed in the time domain before and after high pass filtering at 25 and 70 Hz. Frequency domain analysis was performed with use of a fast Fourier transform algorithm. Sixteen severe rejection episodes requiring treatment were observed. These episodes induced significant decreases in peak and root-mean-square voltages of both filtered and unfiltered QRS complexes, as well as in the total spectral area. Conversely, QRS duration and 50- to 250-Hz or 70- to 110-Hz spectral areas were not significantly altered. In 14 cases mild rejection episodes were observed that did not significantly alter any of the variables studied. The root-mean-square voltage of the 70-Hz high pass filtered QRS complex was found to be the most accurate variable in detecting rejection. Moreover, this variable was also the most reproducible in 10 healthy control subjects. The optimal rejection criterion was defined as an 11% decrease in voltage between two consecutive recordings. It provided 87.5% sensitivity with 78.4% specificity. In conclusion, the signal-averaged ECG is helpful in the management of heart transplant rejection. Frequency domain analysis of the QRS complex does not increase the accuracy of the technique compared with the time domain approach.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1991

Bipolar atrial triggered pacing to restore normal chronotropic responsiveness in an orthotopic cardiac transplant patient.

Salem Kacet; Franck Molin; Dominique Lacroix; Alain Prat; Annie Pol; Henri Warembourg; Jean Lekieffre

A not uncommon arrythmia in cardiac orthotopic transplantation patients is sinus node dysfunction with chronotropic incompetence. This is a result of the surgical procedure that denervates the donor heart while the native sinus node may be normal but isolated in the remnant of the recipient atrial wall that serves as the anastomotic site. We were able to restore “normal sinus node function” in a heart transplant patient utilizing a bipolar single chamber pacemaker programmed to the triggered mode. A single unipolar active fixation lead was positioned in each atria. Both leads were connected to a bipolar AAT pulse generator utilizing a Y adaptator. The native atrium with its innervated intact sinus node effectively drove the donor atrium and thus the heart.

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Dominique Lacroix

Lille University of Science and Technology

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Franck Molin

Université de Montréal

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