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Dive into the research topics where Jean Pol Lanquart is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean Pol Lanquart.


Human Brain Mapping | 2009

Altered Sleep Brain Functional Connectivity in Acutely Depressed Patients

Samuel Leistedt; Nathalie Coumans; Martine Dumont; Jean Pol Lanquart; Cornelis J. Stam; Paul Linkowski

Recent evidence suggests that problems in information processing within neural networks may underlie depressive disease. In this study, we investigated whether sleep functional brain networks are abnormally organized during a major depressive episode (MDE). We characterized spatial patterns of functional connectivity by computing the “synchronization likelihood” (SL) of 19 sleep EEG channels in 11 acutely depressed patients [42 (20–51) years] and 14 healthy controls [32.9 (27–42) years]. To test whether disrupting an optimal pattern [“small‐world network” (SWN)] of functional brain connectivity underlies MDE, graph theoretical measures were then applied to the resulting synchronization matrices, and a clustering coefficient (C, measure of local connectedness) and a shortest path length (L, measure of overall network integration) were determined. In the depressed group, the mean SL was lower in the delta, theta and sigma frequency bands. Acutely depressed patients showed a significantly lower path length in the theta and delta frequency bands, whereas the cluster coefficient showed no significant changes. The present study provides further support that sleep functional brain networks exhibit “small‐world” properties. Sleep neuronal functional networks in depressed patients are characterized by a functional reorganization with a lower mean level of global synchronization and loss of SWN characteristics. These results argue for considering an MDE as a problem of neuronal network organization and a problem of information processing. Hum Brain Mapp, 2009.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2003

A study of the dynamic interactions between sleep EEG and heart rate variability in healthy young men

Fabrice Jurysta; P. van de Borne; Pierre-François Migeotte; Martine Dumont; Jean Pol Lanquart; Jean-Paul Degaute; Paul Linkowski

OBJECTIVE We investigated the interactions between heart rate variability and sleep electroencephalogram power spectra. METHODS Heart rate and sleep electroencephalogram signals were recorded in 8 healthy young men. Spectral analysis was applied to electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram recordings. Spectral components of RR intervals were studied across sleep stages. The cross-spectrum maximum was determined as well as coherencies, gains and phase shifts between normalized high frequency of RR intervals and all electroencephalographic frequency bands, calculated over the first 3 NREM-REM cycles. RESULTS RR intervals increased from awake to NREM and decreased during REM. Normalized low frequency decreased from awake to NREM and increased during REM while normalized high frequency evolved conversely. Low to high frequency ratio developed in opposition to RR intervals. Coherencies between normalized high frequency and power spectra were high for all bands. The gain was highest for delta band. Phase shift between normalized high frequency and delta differed from zero and modifications in normalized high frequency preceded changes in delta by 41+/-14 degrees. CONCLUSIONS Our study demonstrates that: (1) all electroencephalographic power bands are linked to normalized high frequency; (2) modifications in cardiac vagal activity show predominantly parallel changes and precede changes in delta band by a phase shift corresponding to a lead of 12+/-5 min.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2009

The impact of chronic primary insomnia on the heart rate ― EEG variability link

Fabrice Jurysta; Jean Pol Lanquart; V. Sputaels; Martine Dumont; Pierre-François Migeotte; Samuel Leistedt; Paul Linkowski; P. van de Borne

OBJECTIVE To determine if chronic insomnia alters the relationship between heart rate variability and delta sleep determined at the EEG. METHODS After one night of accommodation, polysomnography was performed in 14 male patients with chronic primary insomnia matched with 14 healthy men. ECG and EEG recordings allowed the determination of High Frequency (HF) power of RR-interval and delta sleep EEG power across the first three Non Rapid Eye Movement (NREM)-REM cycles. Interaction between normalized HF RR-interval variability and normalized delta sleep EEG power was studied by coherency analysis. RESULTS Patients showed increased total number of awakenings, longer sleep latency and wake durations and shorter sleep efficiency and REM duration than controls (p<.01). Heart rate variability across first three NREM-REM cycles and sleep stages (NREM, REM and awake) were similar between both groups. In each group, normalized HF variability of RR-interval decreased from NREM to both REM and awake. Patients showed decreased linear relationship between normalized HF RR-interval variability and delta EEG power, expressed by decreased coherence, in comparison to controls (p<.05). Gain and phase shift between these signals were similar between both groups. CONCLUSIONS Interaction between changes in cardiac autonomic activity and delta power is altered in chronic primary insomniac patients, even in the absence of modifications in heart rate variability and cardiovascular diseases. SIGNIFICANCE This altered interaction could reflect the first step to cardiovascular disorders.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2004

Interdependency between heart rate variability and sleep EEG: linear/non-linear?

Martine Dumont; Fabrice Jurysta; Jean Pol Lanquart; Pierre-François Migeotte; Philippe van de Borne; Paul Linkowski

OBJECTIVE To investigate whether the interdependency between heart rate variability (HRV) and sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) power spectra is linear or non-linear. METHODS Heart rate and sleep EEG signals were recorded in 8 healthy young men. Spectral analysis was applied to electrocardiogram and EEG sleep recordings. Synchronization likelihood was computed over the first 3 non-rapid eye movement-rapid eye movement sleep cycles between normalized high frequency of RR intervals (RRI) and all electroencephalographic frequency bands. Comparison to surrogate data of different types was used to attest statistical significance of the coupling between RRI and EEG power bands and its linear or non-linear character. RESULTS Synchronization likelihood values were statistically greater than univariate surrogate synchronization for all sleep bands both at the individual and the group levels. With reference to multivariate surrogates, synchronization values were statistically greater at the group level and, in a majority of cases, for individual comparison except for sigma and beta bands. CONCLUSIONS While all electroencephalographic power bands are linked to normalized high frequency RRI band, this interdependency is non-linear for delta, theta and alpha bands. SIGNIFICANCE Non-linear description is required to capture the full interdependent dynamics of HRV and sleep EEG power bands.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2005

Progressive aging does not alter the interaction between autonomic cardiac activity and delta EEG power.

Fabrice Jurysta; P. van de Borne; Jean Pol Lanquart; Pierre-François Migeotte; Jean-Paul Degaute; Martine Dumont; Paul Linkowski

OBJECTIVE We tested the hypothesis that the reductions of the changes in the respective influence of the cardiac sympathetic and vagal activity control and delta EEG activity with aging alter the interactions between the heart rate variability (HRV) and the delta sleep EEG power band. METHODS A polysomnography was performed on 16 healthy young men and 19 healthy middle-aged men across the first 3 NREM-REM cycles. Spectral analysis was applied to electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram recordings. High Frequency (HF(nu)) of HRV as well as the maximum of cross-spectrum, coherency, gain and phase shifts between HF(nu) and delta sleep EEG power band were compared between both groups. RESULTS Young men experienced more deep sleep than middle-aged men (P<0.001). In middle-aged subjects, HF(nu) was lower than the HF(nu) of their younger counterparts (P<0.001), but they showed similar increases during NREM sleep and similar decreases during REM sleep as the young subjects. Cross-spectrum values, coherency, gain and phase shifts between HF(nu) and delta were identical between the two groups. Modifications in HF(nu) show parallel changes and precede changes in delta EEG band by a similar leads of 11+/-6min in young men and 9+/-7 min in middle-aged men (P=0.23). CONCLUSIONS Reduced changes in the respective influence of the cardiac sympathetic and vagal activity and delta EEG activity with progressive aging do not alter the relationship and phase difference between changes in the relative predominant cardiac vagal activity and delta power in middle-aged men. SIGNIFICANCE Interaction between the cardiac sympathetic and vagal activity with delta EEG activity is maintained in middle-aged men.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2007

Scale-free dynamics of the synchronization between sleep EEG power bands and the high frequency component of heart rate variability in normal men and patients with sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome.

Martine Dumont; Fabrice Jurysta; Jean Pol Lanquart; André Noseda; Philippe van de Borne; Paul Linkowski

OBJECTIVE To investigate the dynamics of the synchronization between heart rate variability and sleep electroencephalogram power spectra and the effect of sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome. METHODS Heart rate and sleep electroencephalogram signals were recorded in controls and patients with sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome that were matched for age, gender, sleep parameters, and blood pressure. Spectral analysis was applied to electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram sleep recordings to obtain power values every 20s. Synchronization likelihood was computed between time series of the normalized high frequency spectral component of RR-intervals and all electroencephalographic frequency bands. Detrended fluctuation analysis was applied to the synchronizations in order to qualify their dynamic behaviors. RESULTS For all sleep bands, the fluctuations of the synchronization between sleep EEG and heart activity appear scale free and the scaling exponent is close to one as for 1/f noise. We could not detect any effect due to sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome. CONCLUSIONS The synchronizations between the high frequency component of heart rate variability and all sleep power bands exhibited robust fluctuations characterized by self-similar temporal behavior of 1/f noise type. No effects of sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome were observed in these synchronizations. SIGNIFICANCE Sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome does not affect the interdependence between the high frequency component of heart rate variability and all sleep power bands as measured by synchronization likelihood.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2012

Ultra-slow delta power in chronic fatigue syndrome.

Daniel Neu; Yves Y. Berquin; Jean Pol Lanquart; Robert R. Hoffmann; Olivier Mairesse; Roseanne Armitage

The role of sleep in patients diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome is not fully understood. Studies of polysomnographic and quantitative sleep electroencephalographic (EEG) measures have provided contradictory results, with few consistent findings in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). For the most part, it appears that delta EEG activity may provide the best discrimination between patients and healthy controls. A closer examination of delta activity in the very slow end of the frequency band is still to be considered in assessing sleep in CFS. The present preliminary study compared absolute and relative spectral power in conventional EEG bands and ultra-slow delta (0.5-0.8Hz) between 10 young female patients with the CFS and healthy controls without psychopathology. In absolute measures, the ultra-slow delta power was lower in CFS, about one-fifth that of the control group. Other frequency bands did not differ between groups. Relative ultra-slow delta power was lower in patients than in controls. CFS is associated with lower ultra-slow (0.5-0.8Hz) delta power, underscoring the importance of looking beyond conventional EEG frequency bands. From a neurophysiological standpoint, lower ultra-slow wave power may indicate abnormalities in the oscillations in membrane potential or a failure in neural recruitment in those with CFS.


Journal of Computational Physics | 1982

Error attenuation in Abel inversion

Jean Pol Lanquart

Abstract A data approximation technique is presented for solving numerically the Abel integral equation. The side-on intensity is developed in a set of even powers. The optimization of the number of terms in the expansion makes it possible to control the smoothing of the data, and thereby strongly reduces the effects of experimental errors. The results are compared with those obtained by other methods, demonstrating the utility of this technique.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2010

Altered interaction between cardiac vagal influence and delta sleep EEG suggests an altered neuroplasticity in patients suffering from major depressive disorder.

Fabrice Jurysta; Chantal Kempenaers; J. Lancini; Jean Pol Lanquart; P. van de Borne; Paul Linkowski

Jurysta F, Kempenaers C, Lancini J, Lanquart J‐P, van de Borne P, Linkowski P. Altered interaction between cardiac vagal influence and delta sleep EEG suggests an altered neuroplasticity in patients suffering from major depressive disorder.


BMC Pulmonary Medicine | 2013

Long-term CPAP treatment partially improves the link between cardiac vagal influence and delta sleep

Fabrice Jurysta; Chantal Kempenaers; Jean Pol Lanquart; André Noseda; Philippe van de Borne; Paul Linkowski

BackgroundContinuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment improves the risk of cardiovascular events in patients suffering from severe sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) but its effect on the link between delta power band that is related to deep sleep and the relative cardiac vagal component of heart rate variability, HFnu of HRV, is unknown. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that CPAP restores the link between cardiac autonomic activity and delta sleep across the night.MethodsEight patients suffering from severe SAHS before and after 4 ± 3 years of nasal CPAP treatment were matched with fourteen healthy controls. Sleep EEG and ECG were analysed to obtain spectral sleep and HRV components. Coherence analysis was applied between HFnu and delta power bands across the first three sleep cycles.ResultsSleep characteristics and spectral HRV components were similar between untreated patients, treated patients and controls, with the exception of decreased Rapid Eye Movement duration in untreated patients. Coherence and gain values between HFnu and delta EEG variability were decreased in untreated patients while gain values normalized in treated patients. In patients before and during long-term CPAP treatment, phase shift and delay between modifications in HFnu and delta EEG variability did not differ from controls but were not different from zero. In healthy men, changes in cardiac vagal activity appeared 9 ± 7 minutes before modifications in delta sleep.ConclusionsLong-term nasal CPAP restored, in severe SAHS, the information between cardiovascular and sleep brainstem structures by increasing gain, but did not improve its tightness or time shift.

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Paul Linkowski

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Gwenolé Loas

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Philippe Hubain

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Matthieu Hein

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Fabrice Jurysta

Free University of Brussels

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P. van de Borne

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Xavier Montana

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Julien Mendlewicz

Free University of Brussels

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