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Featured researches published by M Thicoïpé.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2001

Epidemiology of severe brain injuries: a prospective population-based study

Francoise Masson; M Thicoïpé; Paul Aye; Tarak Mokni; Pierre Senjean; Valérie Schmitt; Paul-Henri Dessalles; Michel Cazaugade; Pierre Labadens

BACKGROUND The aim of this prospective study was to estimate annual incidences of hospitalization for severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) (maximum Abbreviated Injury Score in the head region [HAIS] 4 or 5) in a defined population of 2.8 million. METHODS Severe TBI patients were included in the emergency departments in the 19 hospitals of the region. A prospective data form was completed with initial neurologic state, computed tomographic scan lesions, associated injuries, length of unconsciousness, and length of stay in acute care centers. Outcome at the time the patient left acute hospitalization was retrospectively assessed from medical notes. RESULTS During the 1-year period (1996), 497 residents fulfilled the inclusion criteria, leading to an annual incidence rate of 17.3 per 100,000 population; 58.1% were HAIS5. Mortality rate was 5.2 per 100,000. Men accounted for 71.4% of cases. Median age was 44 years, with a quarter of patients more than 70 years old. Traffic accidents were the most frequent causes (48.3%), but falls accounted for 41.8% of all patients. Age and severity were different according to the major categories of external causes. In HAIS5 patients, 86.5% were considered as comatose (coma lasting more than 24 hours or leading to immediate death) but only 60.9% had an initial Glasgow Coma Scale score < 9. In the HAIS4 group, 7.2% had an initial Glasgow Coma Scale score < 9. Fatality rates were 30.0% in the whole study group, 7.7% in HAIS4, 12.8% in HAIS5 without coma, and 51.2% in HAIS5 with coma. CONCLUSION This study shows a decrease in severe TBI incidence when results are compared with another study conducted 10 years earlier in the same region. This is because of a decrease in traffic accidents. However, this results in an increase in the proportion of falls in elderly patients and an increase in the median age in our patients. This increased age influences the mortality rate.


Brain Injury | 2003

Epidemiology of traumatic comas: a prospective population-based study.

Francoise Masson; M Thicoïpé; Tarak Mokni; Paul Aye; P Erny; P. Dabadie

Objective : Most studies on patients with severe brain injury (SBI) are based on data from specialized centres. This prospective epidemiologic study included all patients in a defined region with a coma lasting more than 24 hours or leading to a death. Methods : All patients with a SBI admitted to an emergency department in the region were included during a 1-year period. A data form was completed with initial neurological state, CT scan lesions and associated injuries. Outcome at the end of acute hospitalization was assessed from medical notes. Results : Two hundred and forty-eight patients were registered. Annual incidence was 8.5/100 000 population. Median age was 41 years. Traffic crashes were the most frequent cause (59%). Falls occurred in 30% (16% from a high level, 14% from one level). Initial GCS was above 8 in 31%, and patients with a neurological deterioration were older (52 vs 32 years). Death occurred in 52% of the cohort. Outcome was related to CT scan diagnosis, delay before eye opening and delay before obeying commands. Conclusion. This population-based cohort of patients with SBI was different from patients selected in trauma centres. The patients were older, more often injured in falls and their mortality rate remained very high.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1992

Posttraumatic disablement: a prospective study of impairment, disability, and handicap.

Pierre Maurette; Francoise Masson; Viviane Nicaud; Michel Cazaugade; Bertrand Garros; Laurence Tiret; M Thicoïpé; Philippe Erny

This study was designed to evaluate both the frequency and the course of impairments, disabilities, and handicaps resulting from trauma. It was conducted in Aquitaine, France, on a sample of 1005 trauma patients (mean ISS, 10.5 +/- 0.3) in which severe trauma (ISS > 25) was rather overrepresented (169 of 1005). A prospective follow-up of disablement according to the WHO classification was based on medical examinations performed 6 and 12 months after the trauma. Of 664 survivors reviewed at 6 months, the findings were cross tabulated with Injury Severity Score (ISS) and age. There was a good relationship between ISS and the mean length of stay in the hospital (r = 0.46; p < 0.001), the duration of rehabilitation, and the time away from work or school. Out of this sample of 1005 patients with rather major injuries, 73% of the survivors suffered from at least one impairment, with a consistently lower frequency in children whatever the severity. At least one disability was encountered in 52.3% of these patients depending on both ISS and age. Handicap was noted in at least 26% of the cases. Between the sixth month and the end of the first year, the minimal handicap regression was 35.8%, whereas the minimal regression of the disability rate was 19.5%. The best improvement was observed essentially in the low ISS categories. Whereas for minor trauma the course of disablement seems to be fixed 1 year after the injury, such is not the case for severe trauma.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2015

Air pollution and activation of mobile medical team for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

Catherine Pradeau; Virginie Rondeau; Emilie Lévèque; Pierre-Yves Guernion; Eric Tentillier; M Thicoïpé; Patrick Brochard

BACKGROUND The association between air pollution exposure and cardiovascular events is well established, and the effect of short-term exposure on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has received some attention. The effect of air pollution exposure and the activation of mobile intensive care units (MICUs) for cardiac arrest have never been studied. OBJECTIVE We analyzed associations between air pollutants and MICU activation for OHCA. METHOD This is a retrospective study including 4558 patients with OHCA and MICU activation from 2007 to 2012. A time-stratified case crossover design was used. Particulate matter (PM) of median aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 μm (PM2.5), less than 10 μm, and ozone were the 3 main pollutants used to determine the effects of pollution exposure on the event. RESULTS A daily average increase of 27.6 μg/m(3) in ozone was associated with an increase of MICU activation for OHCA the following day (odds ratio [OR], 1.13; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.03-1.22). For women, a daily average increase of 27.6 μg/m(3) in ozone was associated with an increase of MICU activation for OHCA the following day (OR, 1.19; 95% CI, 1.01-1.37). An hourly average increase of 10.5 μg/m(3) in PM2.5 was associated with an increase of MICU activation for OHCA in the current hour (OR, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.02-1.19). For men, an increase in PM2.5 was associated with an increase in MICU activation for OHCA the current hour (OR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.01-1.20). No association was found with PM of median aerodynamic diameter less than 10 μm. CONCLUSION An association was found between air pollution and MICU activation for OHCA (ozone and PM2.5).


Annales Francaises D Anesthesie Et De Reanimation | 1998

Coagulopathie évocatrice d'une fibrinolyse primaire après traumatisme crânien avec mort cérébrale

J Bonnemaison; M Thicoïpé; Florence Dixmerias; V Guérin

Coagulopathies associated with severe head trauma are usually of disseminated intravascular coagulation type with secondary fibrinolysis. We report a case whose semeiology was in part suggestive of a primary fibrinolysis.


Annales Francaises D Anesthesie Et De Reanimation | 1995

Rupture bronchique bilatérale: problèmes de prise en charge ventilatoire

François Sztark; M Thicoïpé; J.F. Favarel-Garrigues; Velly Jf; P. Lassié

Resume Les auteurs rapportent l’observation d’une rupture bronchique bilaterale post-traumatique chez un polytraumatise âge de 39 ans. Lon de la thoracotomie droite pour rupture de la bronche souche droite, une rupture partielle de la bronche souche gauche a ete mise en evidence, du fait de la deterioration rapide de la fonction respiratoire lors de l’intubation selective a gauche. Cette situation exceptionnelle doit etre connue, car les consequences ventilatoires peroperatoires peuvent devenir dramatiques. Les moyens d’y faire face sont rappeles.


Annales Francaises D Anesthesie Et De Reanimation | 1988

Variations de la pression intracrânienne chez le traumatisé crânien grave en hémodialyse

M Thicoïpé; H.P. Stoïber; Pierre Maurette; A Léger; Jf Cochard

Two cases of acute post-traumatic renal failure in severely head injured patients are reported. An increase in intracranial pressure (ICP) was shown up by continuous monitoring during haemodialysis: it was more important during conventional haemodialysis than during continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration. Although this effect is well known experimentally, few cases of continuous ICP pressure monitoring have been reported in head injury patients undergoing haemodialysis. The increase in ICP is explained in the dog as a result of blood-brain differences in urea concentration and osmolality leading to an increase in cerebral spinal fluid volume and cerebral tissue swelling. If dialysis is necessary in these patients, it should be carried out early and progressively, the patients ICP being monitored continuously.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 1990

The Epidemiology of Head Trauma in Aquitaine (France), 1986: A Community-Based Study of Hospital Admissions and Deaths

Laurence Tiret; Elizabeth Hausherr; M Thicoïpé; Bertrand Garros; Pierre Maurette; Jean-Pierre Castel; F. Hatton


Annales Francaises D Anesthesie Et De Reanimation | 1998

Traitement médicamenteux de la lésion médullaire traumatique au stade aigu

M.E. Petitjean; Vincent Pointillart; Florence Dixmerias; L Wiart; François Sztark; P. Lassié; M Thicoïpé; P. Dabadie


Resuscitation | 2008

Use of the intubating laryngeal mask airway in emergency pre-hospital difficult intubation.

Eric Tentillier; Claire Heydenreich; Anne-Marie Cros; Valérie Schmitt; Jean-Michel Dindart; M Thicoïpé

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P. Lassié

University of Bordeaux

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P. Dabadie

University of Bordeaux

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F. Masson

University of Bordeaux

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P Erny

University of Bordeaux

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Emilie Lévèque

Université Bordeaux Segalen

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