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Dive into the research topics where Rémy Beaujeux is active.

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Featured researches published by Rémy Beaujeux.


Stroke | 2011

Cannabis Use, Ischemic Stroke, and Multifocal Intracranial Vasoconstriction: A Prospective Study in 48 Consecutive Young Patients

Valérie Wolff; Valérie Lauer; Olivier Rouyer; François Sellal; Nicolas Meyer; Jean Sébastien Raul; Cécile Sabourdy; Fazel Boujan; Christine Jahn; Rémy Beaujeux; Christian Marescaux

Background and Purpose— Our objective was to evaluate the relationship between cannabis use and ischemic stroke in a young adult population. Methods— Forty-eight consecutive young patients admitted for acute ischemic stroke participated in the study. First-line screening was performed, including blood tests, cardiovascular investigations, and urine analysis for cannabinoids. If no etiology was found, 3D rotational angiography and cerebrospinal fluid analysis were performed. A control was planned through neurovascular imaging within 3 to 6 months. Results— In this series, there was multifocal intracranial stenosis associated with cannabis use in 21% (n=10). Conclusions— Multifocal angiopathy associated with cannabis consumption could be an important cause of ischemic stroke in young people.


Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy | 2011

Relevance of the anatomical location of the Adamkiewicz artery in spine surgery

Yann Philippe Charles; Bruno Barbe; Rémy Beaujeux; Fazel Boujan; Jean-Paul Steib

PurposeThe aim of this study was to describe the preoperative topography of the Adamkiewicz artery and the blood supply of the lumbosacral spinal cord in patients who underwent spinal surgery. The relevance for anterior approaches of the thoracolumbar spine was then analyzed.MethodsOne hundred consecutive spinal angiographies were reviewed. Surgical indications were: 26 vertebrectomies, 30 anterior fusions in fractures, 13 malunions, 16 anterior releases in scoliosis, 11 pedicle subtraction osteotomies and 4 thoracic disc hernias. The level and the side of the Adamkiewicz artery and the presence of additional radiculomedullary arteries were determined. Modifications of surgical planning owing to the Adamkiewicz artery were analyzed.ResultsThe Adamkiewicz artery was always located between T8 and L3, at T9 or T10 in 50%, and coming from the left side in 75% of the cases. Additional radiculomedullary arteries were found in 43% of the cases. A concordance between the topography of the Adamkiewicz artery and the planned surgical approach was noted in 15%, which led to ten side changings and three modifications of surgical technique with segmental vessel preservation. An ischemic syndrome of the anterior spinal cord did not occur.ConclusionsSpinal cord ischemia is rarely reported after segmental vessel ligation. Spinal angiography allows determining the topography of the Adamkiewicz artery safely. If the planned surgical approach is located at the same level, a contralateral approach or selective surgical techniques without vessel ligation could avoid possible damage to the Adamkiewicz artery if the pathology does not dictate the side and the extent of the surgical approach.


Neurosurgery | 2014

Solitaire AB stent-assisted coiling of wide-necked intracranial aneurysms: mid-term results from the SOLARE Study.

Benjamin Gory; Joachim Klisch; Alain Bonafe; Charbel Mounayer; Rémy Beaujeux; Jacques Moret; Boris Lubicz; R. Riva; Francis Turjman

BACKGROUND Endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms can be technically difficult when the neck is wide. The Solitaire AB stent (Covidien, Irvine, California), the only fully retrieved stent, assists in the coiling of wide-neck intracranial aneurysms. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the mid-term angiographic follow-up of wide-necked aneurysms treated with the Solitaire AB stent. METHODS SOLARE (SOLitaire Aneurysm Remodeling) is a consecutive, prospective study conducted in 7 European centers. A core laboratory evaluated the postoperative and mid-term (6 month ± 15 days) angiographic results by using the Raymond classification Scale. Recanalization was defined as worsening, and progressive thrombosis was defined as improvement in the Raymond scale score. RESULTS The mean width of the aneurysm sac was 7.5 mm, and the mean diameter of the aneurysm neck was 4.7 mm. Angiographic mid-term follow-up was obtained in 55 of 65 aneurysms (85.9%). Complete occlusion was achieved in 33 aneurysms (60%); a neck remnant was seen in 16 aneurysms (29.1%) and an aneurysm remnant in 6 aneurysms (10.9%). Of 55 aneurysms, recanalization was observed in 8 aneurysms (14.5%), and progressive thrombosis was observed in 17 aneurysms (30.9%). No bleeding or rebleeding was observed during the follow-up period. CONCLUSION Stent-assisted coiling of wide-necked intracranial aneurysms was found to be safe and effective with the Solitaire AB stent at 6-month follow-up. Angiographic results improve with time due to progressive thrombosis of the aneurysm.


Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2014

High Frequency of Intracranial Arterial Stenosis and Cannabis Use in Ischaemic Stroke in the Young

Valérie Wolff; Jean-Paul Armspach; Rémy Beaujeux; Monica Manisor; Olivier Rouyer; Valérie Lauer; Nicolas Meyer; Christian Marescaux; Bernard Geny

Background: Leading aetiologies of ischaemic stroke in young adults are cervico-cerebral arterial dissections and cardio-embolism, but the causes remain undetermined in a considerable proportion of cases. In a few reports, intracranial arterial stenosis has been suggested to be a potential cause of ischaemic stroke in young adults. The aim of our work was to evaluate the frequency, characteristics and risk factors of intracranial arterial stenosis in a prospective series of young ischaemic stroke patients. Methods: The study was based on a prospective consecutive hospital-based series of 159 patients aged 18-45 years who were admitted to our unit for an acute ischaemic stroke from October 2005 to December 2010. A structured questionnaire was used in order to assess common vascular risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, use of tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs, migraine, and, in women, oral contraceptive use. A systematic screening was performed, including the following: brain magnetic resonance imaging or, if not feasible, brain computed tomography scan, carotid and vertebral Duplex scanning and trans-cranial Doppler sonography, 3D time-of-flight magnetic resonance cerebral angiography or cerebral computed tomography angiography. Long-duration electrocardiography, trans-thoracic and trans-oesophageal echocardiography were performed and laboratory blood investigations were extensive. Urine samples were screened for cannabinoids, cocaine, amphetamine and methylene-dioxy-methamphetamine. When this initial work-up was inconclusive, trans-femoral intra-arterial selective digital subtraction angiography with reconstructed 3D images was performed. Results: In this series, 49 patients (31%) had intracranial arterial stenosis. Other defined causes were found in 91 patients (57%), including cardio-embolism in 32 (20%), cervical dissection in 23 (14%), extracranial atherosclerosis in 7 (4%), haematological disorders in 7 (4%), small vessel disease in 1, and isolated patent foramen ovale in 21 (13%); in 19 patients (12%), ischaemic stroke was related to an undetermined aetiology. Comparing risk factors between patients with intracranial arterial stenosis and those with other definite causes showed that there were only two significant differences: a lower age and a higher frequency of vasoactive substances (especially cannabis) in patients with intracranial arterial stenosis. All intracranial arterial stenosis in patients who used vasoactive substances were located in several intracranial vessels. Conclusions: Intracranial arterial stenosis may be an important mechanism of stroke in young patients and it should be systematically investigated using vascular imaging. Strong questioning about illicit drug consumption (including cannabis) or vasoactive medication use should also be performed. It should be emphasized for health prevention in young adults that cannabis use might be associated with critical consequences such as stroke.


Spine | 1997

Posterior lumbar epidural fat as a functional structure? Histologic specificities

Rémy Beaujeux; Wolfram-Gabel R; Pierre Kehrli; Michel Fabre; Jean-Louis Dietemann; Daniel Maitrot; P. Bourjat

Study Design. A topographic and histologic study was done to describe the location of the lumbar epidural fat and to find potential tissular specificities. Objectives. To search for possible histologic characteristics of posterior lumbar epidural fat, which so far has been described as semifluid tissue, and to determine whether posterior lumbar epidural fat is not a simple incidental tissue. Summary of Background Data. The lumbar epidural fat on two fetuses was studied. In adults, subcutaneous fat and posterior lumbar epidural fat were taken from seven corpses. The authors obtained 13 posterior lumbar epidural fat pads (two at L1-L2, three at L2-L3, six at L3-L4, and two at L4-L5) and four subcutaneous fat pads. Methods. The authors studied abdominal axial histologic sections in two fetuses, histologic multiplanar sections in seven adults, and semithin sections in four adults of posterior lumbar epidural fat and subcutaneous fat. Results. Fetal distribution of epidural fat was circumferential. Adult epidural fat distribution was limited to the posterior part of the vertebral canal and located at the disc level. Fascicles of connective tissue were less numerous and thinner in posterior lumbar epidural fat than in subcutaneous fat. Organized sliding spaces were found in the posterior epidural fat pad. Conclusions. Posterior lumbar epidural fat is not a simple incidental tissue and shows specific histologic features: sliding spaces and rarefaction of connective tissue that could explain semifluid features of the tissue. These characteristics suggest a functional role of posterior epidural fat in the lumbar spinal unit.


Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2016

Stroke Mimics in a Stroke Care Pathway Based on MRI Screening.

Véronique Quenardelle; Valérie Lauer-Ober; Ielyzaveta Zinchenko; Marc Bataillard; Olivier Rouyer; Rémy Beaujeux; Raoul Pop; Nicolas Meyer; Hervé Delplancq; Stéphane Kremer; Christian Marescaux; Bernard Geny; Valérie Wolff

Background: Since the use of tissue plasminogen activator for acute ischemic stroke (IS), stroke care pathways have been developed for patients with suspicion of acute stroke. The aim of this prospective observational study was to analyze the stroke mimic (SM) characteristics in patients who were part of our stroke care pathway. Methods: All consecutive patients admitted in the code stroke within a 1-year period were prospectively enrolled in this study. Patients with a sudden onset of neurological focal deficit in a time window less than 4H30 as indicated for intravenous thrombolysis, had been accepted in the pathway by a neurologist who was directly contactable by the prehospital emergency medical service 24 h per day. Patients arrived directly on the MRI site without passing by the emergency department. A clinical neurological evaluation and a brain MRI with tri-dimensional time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography were performed. The FAST score was calculated a posteriori. The final discharge diagnosis was concluded either immediately after both neurological examination and cerebrovascular neuroimaging or after other relevant investigations. We classified the discharge diagnosis into neurovascular diseases (NVDs) and into SM. Results: There were 1,361 consecutive patients admitted for suspicion of acute stroke. Sixty-two percent (n = 840) had an NVD including IS (n = 529), transient ischemic attacks (n = 236), intracranial hemorrhages (n = 68), cerebral venous thrombosis (n = 3) and neurovascular medullar pathologies (n = 4). SM represented 38% of cases (n = 521) and the most frequent discharge diagnosis was defined as headaches (18.6%), psychological disorders (16.7%), peripheral vertigo (11.9%) and epilepsy (10.6%). The comparison between the characteristics of the NVD and those of the SM groups showed some significant differences: in the SM group, women were more represented, patients were younger and the NIHSS was lower than in the NVD group. All cardiovascular risk factors were more represented in the NVD group. Concerning the symptoms, motor deficit, speech disturbances, homonymous lateral hemianopia and head and gaze deviation were more represented in the NVD group, whereas vertigo, non-systematized visual trouble, headache, confusion, weakness, neuropsychological symptoms, seizure and chest pain were significantly more frequent in the SM group. The negative predictive value of the FAST score was 64% and the positive predictive value was 76%. Conclusions: A rate of SM up to 38% of the code stroke system confirms the difficulty to distinguish clinically a stroke from another diagnosis. In this study, using cerebral MRI in first intention was of special interest in patients with acute neurological symptoms to differentiate an NVD from an SM.


Surgical Innovation | 2015

Gastric supply manipulation to modulate ghrelin production and enhance vascularization to the cardia: proof of the concept in a porcine model.

Michele Diana; Peter Halvax; Raoul Pop; Isabel Schlagowski; Gaetan Bour; Yu-Yin Liu; Andras Legner; Pierre Diemunsch; Bernard Geny; Bernard Dallemagne; Rémy Beaujeux; Nicolas Demartines; Jacques Marescaux

Introduction. Selective embolization of the left-gastric artery (LGA) reduces levels of ghrelin and achieves significant short-term weight loss. However, embolization of the LGA would prevent the performance of bariatric procedures because the high-risk leakage area (gastroesophageal junction [GEJ]) would be devascularized. Aim. To assess an alternative vascular approach to the modulation of ghrelin levels and generate a blood flow manipulation, consequently increasing the vascular supply to the GEJ. Materials and methods. A total of 6 pigs underwent a laparoscopic clipping of the left gastroepiploic artery. Preoperative and postoperative CT angiographies were performed. Ghrelin levels were assessed perioperatively and then once per week for 3 weeks. Reactive oxygen species (ROS; expressed as ROS/mg of dry weight [DW]), mitochondria respiratory rate, and capillary lactates were assessed before and 1 hour after clipping (T0 and T1) and after 3 weeks of survival (T2), on seromuscular biopsies. A celiac trunk angiography was performed at 3 weeks. Results. Mean (±standard deviation) ghrelin levels were significantly reduced 1 hour after clipping (1902 ± 307.8 pg/mL vs 1084 ± 680.0; P = .04) and at 3 weeks (954.5 ± 473.2 pg/mL; P = .01). Mean ROS levels were statistically significantly decreased at the cardia at T2 when compared with T0 (0.018 ± 0.006 mg/DW vs 0.02957 ± 0.0096 mg/DW; P = .01) and T1 (0.0376 ± 0.008mg/DW; P = .007). Capillary lactates were significantly decreased after 3 weeks, and the mitochondria respiratory rate remained constant over time at the cardia and pylorus, showing significant regional differences. Conclusions. Manipulation of the gastric flow targeting the gastroepiploic arcade induces ghrelin reduction. An endovascular approach is currently under evaluation.


Childs Nervous System | 2015

Flow control using ScepterTM balloons for Onyx embolization of a vein of Galen aneurysmal malformation

Raoul Pop; Monica Manisor; Valérie Wolff; Pierre Kehrli; Christian Marescaux; Rémy Beaujeux

PurposeWe present a technical development of the endovascular treatment technique for vein of Galen aneurysmal malformation, using Onyx™ (ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer) delivered under flow control through double-lumen balloon microcatheters.Materials and methodsAn 11-month-old patient that initially presented with increasing head circumference was diagnosed with mural type vein of Galen aneurysmal malformation. Complete cure was obtained in a single endovascular treatment session. Onyx was delivered simultaneously through two double-lumen balloon microcatheters (Scepter™, Microvention, Terumo Group). In both arterial feeders, balloon inflation occluded the high-flow arterial-venous shunting and thus facilitated the controlled propagation of the embolic product in the afferent artery and the shunt point while preventing distal migration into the venous system.ResultsTwo years post-procedure, MR imaging showed persistent occlusion of arterial-venous shunts with complete regression of the venous dilatation. On clinical examination, the patient had no neurological deficits, and no cognitive impairment was detected at neuropsychological testing.ConclusionThe use of double-lumen balloon microcatheters for flow control during delivery of Onyx represents a viable alternative for the endovascular treatment of vein of Galen aneurysmal malformations.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2015

Foramen magnum dural arteriovenous fistula presenting with epilepsy.

Raoul Pop; Monica Manisor; Ziad Aloraini; Salvatore Chibarro; F. Proust; Véronique Quenardelle; Valérie Wolff; Rémy Beaujeux

Intracranial dural arteriovenous fistulas (dAVFs) with perimedullary drainage represent a rare subtype of intracranial dAVF. Patients usually experience slowly progressive ascending myelopathy and/or lower brainstem signs. We present a case of foramen magnum dural arteriovenous fistula with an atypical clinical presentation. The patient initially presented with a generalised tonic-clonic seizure and no signs of myelopathy, followed one month later by rapidly progressive tetraplegia and respiratory insufficiency. The venous drainage of the fistula was directed both to the left temporal lobe and to the perimedullary veins (type III + V), causing venous congestion and oedema in these areas and explaining this unusual combination of symptoms. Rotational angiography and overlays with magnetic resonance imaging volumes were helpful in delineating the complex anatomy of the fistula. After endovascular embolisation, there was complete remission of venous congestion on imaging and significant clinical improvement. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a craniocervical junction fistula presenting with epilepsy.


Case Reports | 2016

Aneurysmal wall imaging in a case of cortical superficial siderosis and multiple unruptured aneurysms

Bertrand Yalo; Raoul Pop; Ielyzaveta Zinchenko; Mihaela Diaconu; Salvatore Chibbaro; Monica Manisor; Valérie Wolff; Rémy Beaujeux

We report a case of interhemispheric and bifrontal cortical superficial siderosis in association with two intracranial aneurysms. The patient had no clinical history suggestive of aneurysm rupture, no feature of amyloid angiopathy or other apparent etiology for cortical siderosis. We performed high resolution brain MRI with dark blood T1 sequences before and after IV contrast injection. An anterior communicating aneurysm showed partial wall enhancement on the posterior wall whereas a left posterior communicating aneurysm did not. In the light of recent reports of the association of wall enhancement with unstable aneurysms, we considered wall enhancement to be a marker of inflammation and remodeling of the aneurysm wall, resulting in chronic hemorrhagic suffusion in the subarachnoid spaces. To our knowledge, this is the first report offering proof for a possible link between apparently unruptured aneurysms and cortical siderosis.

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Valérie Wolff

University of Strasbourg

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Raoul Pop

University of Strasbourg

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Monica Manisor

University of Strasbourg

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Olivier Rouyer

University of Strasbourg

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Pierre Kehrli

University of Strasbourg

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Nicolas Meyer

University of Strasbourg

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Michele Diana

University of Strasbourg

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Andras Legner

University of Strasbourg

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