Johanne Detilleux
University of Liège
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Featured researches published by Johanne Detilleux.
Research in Veterinary Science | 2010
Isabelle Jeusette; D. Greco; F. Aquino; Johanne Detilleux; M. Peterson; V. Romano; C. Torre
The objectives of this clinical study were firstly, to assess the effects of breed/genetic group on body composition in dogs using Dual-X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) as the reference method and secondly, to check, in clinical field conditions, if methods easy to apply in veterinary practice [bioelectrical impedance (BIA), morphometric equations, body condition score and body mass index] can give similar body composition results to DEXA results, using canine breeds with very different genetic and morphologic backgrounds. 19 dogs from 6 breeds with different genetic origin were used. Results showed that breed differences exist regarding body composition in dogs. Body condition score and morphometric equation should be developed by breed or by groups of breeds for an accurate estimation of body composition of the various breeds of dogs with a different genetic background or morphology. Any of the other tested methodologies (BIA or morphometric equations) gave results in agreement with DEXA value, when dogs with different genetic background and morphologic characteristics are used, but BIA, eventually in combination with morphometric measurements, could be a method to develop to estimate fat-free mass in dogs of different breeds.
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine | 2002
Cécile Clercx; Dominique Peeters; Youssef Khelil; Kathleen McEntee; Alain Vanderplasschen; Frédéric Schynts; P. Hansen; Johanne Detilleux; Michael J. Day
Immunologic variables in dogs with eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy (EBP) have not been extensively evaluated. The aim of this study was to determine immunoglobulin (Ig) concentrations and to perform phenotypic subtyping of lymphocytes in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) and peripheral blood (PB) of 12 dogs with EBP at the time of diagnosis (TD) and to compare these data with those obtained in healthy dogs, as well as in EBP dogs after antibiotic therapy (TAB) and during corticosteroid treatment (TM). Matched samples of serum and BALF were used to determine Ig concentrations (IgG, IgM, and IgA) by capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), from which a secretory index (SI) was calculated. Lymphocyte subpopulations were studied in the BALF and PB by flow cytometry. Log values of BALF IgM and IgA were significantly higher (0.64+/-0.05 and 1.06+/-0.13, respectively) in EBP dogs at TD than in controls and then tended to decrease at TM (0.55+/-0.03 and 1.02+/-0.17, respectively). A calculated SI for IgA was not significantly increased. In the BALF of dogs with EBg the CD4: CD8 was significantly (P < .05) higher (22.6+/-30.3) than in controls (3.2+/-1.9), due to significantly higher CD4+ T cells and lower CD8+ T cells. At TM, the BALF T-cell percentages returned to normal (2.4+/-0.6). We propose that the influx of eosinophils into the airway of dogs with EBP is at least in part mediated by cytokines derived from CD4+ T cells. Further studies of canine cytokines and chemokines will help determine whether canine EBP involves type I hypersensitivity mechanisms regulated by Th2 lymphocytes.
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine | 2013
Aurélia Leroux; Johanne Detilleux; Charlotte Sandersen; Laura Borde; Rosa Houben; A. Al Haidar; Tatiana Art; Hélène Amory
BACKGROUND Risk factors for cardiac diseases in horses have not been explored in a large population of animals. OBJECTIVES To describe risk factors for various cardiac diseases in a hospital-based population of horses. ANIMALS Files of 3,434 horses admitted at the Internal Medicine Department of the Liege Equine Teaching Hospital between 1994 and 2011 were reviewed and of those, 284 were categorized as having moderate-to-severe cardiac disease. METHODS Observational study. After calculating prevalence for each cardiac disease, we tested whether breed (chi-square test) or sex, age, body weight (BW), and other cardiac diseases (logistic regressions) were risk factors (p < .05 significant). RESULTS Mitral regurgitation (MR, 4.4%), atrial fibrillation (AF, 2.3%), aortic regurgitation (AR, 2.1%), and tricuspid regurgitation (TR, 1.7%) were the most common cardiac abnormalities detected. Determinants were male sex and increasing age for AR (OR = 2.03, CI = 1.07-4.94), racehorses breed and middle-age for TR (OR = 4.36; CI = 1.10-17.24), and high BW for AF (OR = 3.54; CI = 1.67-7.49). MR was the most common valvular disease associated with AF, clinically important ventricular arrhythmia, pulmonary regurgitation (PR), and congestive heart failure (CHF). TR was also associated with AF, PR, and CHF; AR was not associated with CHF. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE Several previously suspected risk factors for a variety of equine cardiac diseases are statistically confirmed and other risk factors are highlighted in the studied hospital-based population. These observations should be taken into account in health and sports monitoring of horses presenting predisposing factors.
Genetics Selection Evolution | 2007
Florence Jaffrézic; Dirk-Jan de Koning; Paul J. Boettcher; Agnès Bonnet; Bart Buitenhuis; R. Closset; Sébastien Déjean; Céline Delmas; Johanne Detilleux; Peter Dovč; Mylène Duval; Jean-Louis Foulley; Jakob Hedegaard; Henrik Hornshøj; Ina Hulsegge; Luc Janss; Kirsty Jensen; Li Jiang; Miha Lavric; Kim-Anh Lê Cao; Mogens Sandø Lund; Roberto Malinverni; Guillemette Marot; Haisheng Nie; Wolfram Petzl; M.H. Pool; Christèle Robert-Granié; Magali San Cristobal; Evert M. van Schothorst; Hans-Joachim Schuberth
A large variety of methods has been proposed in the literature for microarray data analysis. The aim of this paper was to present techniques used by the EADGENE (European Animal Disease Genomics Network of Excellence) WP1.4 participants for data quality control, normalisation and statistical methods for the detection of differentially expressed genes in order to provide some more general data analysis guidelines. All the workshop participants were given a real data set obtained in an EADGENE funded microarray study looking at the gene expression changes following artificial infection with two different mastitis causing bacteria: Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. It was reassuring to see that most of the teams found the same main biological results. In fact, most of the differentially expressed genes were found for infection by E. coli between uninfected and 24 h challenged udder quarters. Very little transcriptional variation was observed for the bacteria S. aureus. Lists of differentially expressed genes found by the different research teams were, however, quite dependent on the method used, especially concerning the data quality control step. These analyses also emphasised a biological problem of cross-talk between infected and uninfected quarters which will have to be dealt with for further microarray studies.
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine | 2006
Charlotte Sandersen; Johanne Detilleux; Brieuc De Moffarts; Gunther van Loon; Hélène Amory
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of combined atropine low-dose dobutamine stress test on left ventricular parameters in adult warmblood horses, to establish a potential protocol for pharmacological stress echocardiography. Seven healthy untrained warmblood horses aged 9 to 22 years were used. Heart rate (HR) and left ventricular B- and M-mode dimensions were recorded at baseline and during stress testing with 35 microg/kg atropine IV followed by incremental dobutamine infusion of 2 to 6 microg/kg/min. HR increased significantly (P < .05) during the pharmacological challenge, and a maximal HR of 156.6 +/- 12.5 bpm was reached at maximal dobutamine infusion rate. Systolic and diastolic interventricular septum thickness, systolic and diastolic left ventricular free wall thickness, and fractional shortening increased significantly and reached a maximum at the highest infusion rate (mean +/- SD: 4.51 +/- 0.27 versus 5.65 +/- 0.31 cm, 2.89 +/- 0.19 versus 3.78 +/- 0.10 cm, 3.72 +/- 0.34 versus 4.77 +/- 0.18 cm, 2.44 +/- 0.28 versus 3.11 +/- 0.34 cm, 34.98 +/- 3.82 versus 50.56 +/- 3.42%, respectively). Systolic and diastolic left ventricular internal diameter decreased significantly during dobutamine infusion. Left ventricular external and internal area were significantly lower at a dobutamine infusion rate of 2 microg/kg/min but no further decrease was observed during the subsequent steps. Systolic and diastolic myocardial area was significantly lower after the administration of dobutamine but not significantly different during dobutamine infusion, when compared to baseline values. This pharmacological stress test induced significant changes in left ventricular echocardiographic parameters in adult warmblood horses. Additional research should evaluate the value of this stress test in horses suffering from cardiac disease.
Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care | 2014
Laura Borde; Hélène Amory; Sigrid Grulke; Aurélia Leroux; Rosa Houben; Johanne Detilleux; C. Sandersen
Objective To assess the prognostic value of echocardiographic parameters of left ventricular (LV) function in horses with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). Design Prospective observational study. Setting Veterinary teaching hospital. Animals Forty-one horses admitted for colic with clinical evidence of SIRS. Interventions All horses underwent Doppler echocardiographic examination on admission. LV echocardiographic parameters, including pulsed-wave tissue Doppler imaging parameters, were compared between nonsurvivors (n = 29) and horses that survived to discharge (n = 12). Measurements and Main Results With comparable heart rate and LV preload estimate, LV stroke volume index, the velocity time integral, deceleration time, ejection time of Doppler aortic flow, and peak early diastolic myocardial velocity were lower in the nonsurviving than in the surviving horses, while pre-ejection period to ejection time ratio (PEP/ET) of Doppler aortic flow and the peak early diastolic filling velocity to peak early diastolic myocardial velocity ratio (E/Em) were higher (P < 0.05). A cut-off value of 0.26 for PEP/ET predicted mortality with 100% sensitivity and 42% specificity (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve: 0.71), whereas a cut-off value of 2.67 for E/Em predicted mortality with 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve: 0.89). Conclusions Echocardiography may provide prognostic information in colic horses with clinical evidence of SIRS. Especially, PEP/ET and E/Em could be useful markers of systolic and diastolic dysfunction, respectively, to detect horses with a high risk of death requiring more intensive cardiovascular monitoring as it has been reported in human patients with septic shock.OBJECTIVE To assess the prognostic value of echocardiographic parameters of left ventricular (LV) function in horses with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). DESIGN Prospective observational study. SETTING Veterinary teaching hospital. ANIMALS Forty-one horses admitted for colic with clinical evidence of SIRS. INTERVENTIONS All horses underwent Doppler echocardiographic examination on admission. LV echocardiographic parameters, including pulsed-wave tissue Doppler imaging parameters, were compared between nonsurvivors (n = 29) and horses that survived to discharge (n = 12). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS With comparable heart rate and LV preload estimate, LV stroke volume index, the velocity time integral, deceleration time, ejection time of Doppler aortic flow, and peak early diastolic myocardial velocity were lower in the nonsurviving than in the surviving horses, while pre-ejection period to ejection time ratio (PEP/ET) of Doppler aortic flow and the peak early diastolic filling velocity to peak early diastolic myocardial velocity ratio (E/Em) were higher (P < 0.05). A cut-off value of 0.26 for PEP/ET predicted mortality with 100% sensitivity and 42% specificity (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve: 0.71), whereas a cut-off value of 2.67 for E/Em predicted mortality with 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve: 0.89). CONCLUSIONS Echocardiography may provide prognostic information in colic horses with clinical evidence of SIRS. Especially, PEP/ET and E/Em could be useful markers of systolic and diastolic dysfunction, respectively, to detect horses with a high risk of death requiring more intensive cardiovascular monitoring as it has been reported in human patients with septic shock.
Genetics Selection Evolution | 2007
Dirk-Jan de Koning; Florence Jaffrézic; Mogens Sandø Lund; Michael Watson; C.E. Channing; Ina Hulsegge; M.H. Pool; Bart Buitenhuis; Jakob Hedegaard; Henrik Hornshøj; Li Jiang; Peter Sørensen; Guillemette Marot; Céline Delmas; Kim-Anh Lê Cao; Magali San Cristobal; Michael Denis Baron; Roberto Malinverni; Alessandra Stella; Ronald M. Brunner; Hans-Martin Seyfert; Kirsty Jensen; Daphné Mouzaki; David Waddington; Ángeles Jiménez-Marín; Mónica Pérez-Alegre; Eva Pérez-Reinado; R. Closset; Johanne Detilleux; Peter Dovč
Microarray analyses have become an important tool in animal genomics. While their use is becoming widespread, there is still a lot of ongoing research regarding the analysis of microarray data. In the context of a European Network of Excellence, 31 researchers representing 14 research groups from 10 countries performed and discussed the statistical analyses of real and simulated 2-colour microarray data that were distributed among participants. The real data consisted of 48 microarrays from a disease challenge experiment in dairy cattle, while the simulated data consisted of 10 microarrays from a direct comparison of two treatments (dye-balanced). While there was broader agreement with regards to methods of microarray normalisation and significance testing, there were major differences with regards to quality control. The quality control approaches varied from none, through using statistical weights, to omitting a large number of spots or omitting entire slides. Surprisingly, these very different approaches gave quite similar results when applied to the simulated data, although not all participating groups analysed both real and simulated data. The workshop was very successful in facilitating interaction between scientists with a diverse background but a common interest in microarray analyses.
Veterinary Record | 2014
Sébastien Vandeputte; Johanne Detilleux; Frédéric Rollin
In cattle, ingestion of sufficient good quality colostrum during the first hours of life is essential for the future health and performance of the calf (Rauprich and others 2000). However, colostrum quality, reflected by its IgG content, can vary widely among individual cows (Gulliksen and others 2008). As the colostrum quality cannot be predicted by its physico-chemical characteristics (Maunsell and others 1999), it is crucial to assess its IgG concentration before administration to the calf. Currently, several methods exist to measure the IgG content of colostrum, both directly and indirectly, but few of them are transposable to farm conditions. The use of a brix refractometer (BR) has been described for the assessment of the colostrum quality in dairy cattle (Bielmann and others 2008, 2010, Chigerwe and others 2008, Morrill and others 2012, Quigley and others 2013). To date, no such studies have been performed in beef cows while colostrum volume and quality differ widely between dairy and beef cows. It is recognised that colostrum produced by beef breeds is frequently of higher quality than dairy breeds colostrum, even if its volume is lower (Guy and others 1994, Lorenz and others 2011). Therefore, the selection and distribution of higher colostrum quality are important to ensure the transfer of a sufficient mass of IgG to the beef calf. The aim of this study was first to assess the use of a …
The Open Veterinary Science Journal | 2010
Sébastien Vandeputte; Johanne Detilleux; S. Carel; B. Bradfer; Hugues Guyot; Frédéric Rollin
The purpose of this study was to evaluate, under field conditions, the efficacy of an european registered bovine concentrated lactoserum (Locatim) in 3 farms with neonatal diarrhoea in calves. A total of 117 healthy Belgian Blue (BB) calves were allocated in 2 groups. Two thirds of the calves received Locatim orally immediately after birth and maternal colostrum one hour later (treated group), while control calves only received maternal colostrum. Every day during 14 days, mental status, faeces consistency, suckling reflex and hydration status of each calf were monitored. Individual blood samples were assessed for passive transfer and specific Escherichia coli antibodies against strains F5, CS31A, F17 and F41. Faecal samples from diarrheic and non diarrheic calves were analysed for rotavirus, bovine coronavirus, Cryptosporidium parvum and Escherichia coli F5. Locatim had no significant effect on the onset, duration and incidence of diarrhoea. The mean serum IgG concentration of 23.1 ± 7.8 mg/ml indicates a good IgG transfer. Only the CS31A strain titer was significantly higher in the treated group. The major identified causative agent of diarrhoea was C. parvum. In conclusion, Locatim only has a slight effect when IgG transfer is optimal, but could be justified when specific antibodies lacking in colostrum are needed.
Research in Veterinary Science | 2005
Isabelle Jeusette; Johanne Detilleux; Haruki Shibata; Masayuki Saito; Tsutomu Honjoh; Agathe Delobel; Louis Istasse; Marianne Diez