Virginia Gaxotte
university of lille
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Featured researches published by Virginia Gaxotte.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2009
A.-L. Hachulla; David Launay; Virginia Gaxotte; P. De Groote; Nicolas Lamblin; P. Devos; P.Y. Hatron; Jean-Paul Beregi; E. Hachulla
Objectives: To assess the prevalence and patterns of cardiac abnormalities as detected by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in systemic sclerosis (SSc). Methods: Fifty-two consecutive patients with SSc underwent cardiac MRI to determine morphological, functional, perfusion at rest and delayed enhancement abnormalities. Results: At least one abnormality on cardiac MRI was observed in 39/52 patients (75%). Increased myocardial signal intensity in T2 was observed in 6 patients (12%), thinning of left ventricle (LV) myocardium in 15 patients (29%) and pericardial effusion in 10 patients (19%). LV and right ventricle (RV) ejection fractions were altered in 12 patients (23%) and 11 patients (21%), respectively. LV diastolic dysfunction was found in 15/43 patients (35%). LV kinetic abnormalities were found in 16/52 patients (31%) and myocardial delayed contrast enhancement was detected in 11/52 patients (21%). No perfusion defects at rest were found. Patients with limited SSc had similar MRI abnormalities to patients with diffuse SSc. Seven of 40 patients (17%) without pulmonary arterial hypertension had RV dilatation. Conclusions: This study shows that MRI is a reliable and sensitive technique for diagnosing heart involvement in SSc and for analysing its mechanisms, including its inflammatory, microvascular and fibrotic components. Compared with echocardiography, MRI appears to provide additional information by visualising myocardial fibrosis and inflammation. RV dilatation appeared to be non-specific for pulmonary arterial hypertension but could also reflect myocardial involvement related to SSc. Further studies are needed to determine whether cardiac MRI abnormalities have an impact on the prognosis and treatment strategy.
The Lancet | 2000
Jean-Paul Beregi; Alain Prat; Virginia Gaxotte; Maxence Delomez; Eugene McFadden
Surgery for acute ischaemia complicating dissection of the descending aorta is associated with high mortality. We used an endovascular fenestration approach (scissor technique) to treat seven of 12 patients with ischaemic complications of descending aortic dissection; the remaining five patients were treated by stent implantation. Four of the 12 patients died (two in the fenestration group and two in the stenting group) in the days after the procedure. The remaining eight were symptom-free a mean of 9.4 (SD 8) months later. We suggest that the fenestration approach is a promising addition to endovascular treatment for patients with ischaemic complications of descending aortic dissection.
European Radiology | 2004
S. Willoteaux; C. Lions; Virginia Gaxotte; Z. Negaiwi; Jean-Paul Beregi
Aortic dissection is the most frequent cause of aortic emergency, and its outcome is still frequently fatal. The management of this pathology has changed with the development of endovascular means. Nowadays, imaging modalities are helpful in management decision-making by providing information such as identification of entry tears along the aorta and involvement of the visceral branches of the abdominal aorta. Multi-slice CT scanning now appears to be the modality of choice for complete examination of the entire aorta. We review the parameters of image acquisition and contrast injection; appearances on CT of acute and chronic dissection are illustrated. Diagnostic pitfalls in CT imaging of acute dissection are discussed. Imaging of the post-surgical aorta and of chronic dissection is outlined. Intra-mural hematoma and penetrating aortic ulcer are subtypes of aortic dissection, and their appearances on CT scanning are also presented.
Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2006
Virginia Gaxotte; Frédéric Thony; Hervé Rousseau; C. Lions; Philippe Otal; S. Willoteaux; Mathieu Rodière; Z. Negaiwi; Francis Joffre; Jean-Paul Beregi
Purpose: To evaluate aortic diameter outcomes after stent-graft implantation for aortic dissection in the descending thoracic aorta. Methods: Fifty patients with type A dissection after ascending aortic surgery (n = 10), type B dissection (n=34), or intramural hematoma (n = 6) underwent stent-graft repair in 3 centers. Thrombosis and aortic diameter were analyzed by computed tomographic angiography at different levels of the aorta before stent-graft implantation, at discharge, and at follow-up. Measurements were standardized. Results: In all, 67 stent-grafts were implanted for acute (n = 18) and chronic (n=32) dissection. Stent-graft placement was successfully performed with high technical success (100%) despite 4 major complications (iliac thrombosis in 2 cases, aortic rupture, and a type A dissection) in 3 (6%) patients. Complete thrombosis of the thoracic false lumen was observed in 42% and 63% of cases at discharge and at follow-up (mean 15 months), respectively. At follow-up, the diameters of the entire aorta (mean 5 mm, p<0.05) and the false lumen (mean 11 mm, p<0.0001) decreased. Diameters of the abdominal aorta remained stable in association with persistent false lumen perfusion at this level. Aortic diameter results were better in the subgroup of patients with intramural hematoma compared to patients with Marfan syndrome. Three early deaths unrelated to the stent-graft procedure occurred; 2 patients with partial thrombosis of the false lumen died in follow-up secondary to aortic diameter growth. Conclusion: Complete thrombosis of the false lumen by stent-graft coverage of the entry tear results in decreased diameter of the entire aorta. In patients with partial thrombosis of the false lumen, the aneurysm continues to enlarge.
Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2002
Stéphan Haulon; Claire Mounier-Vehier; Virginia Gaxotte; Mohamad Koussa; C. Lions; Ben Ahmed Haouari; Jean-Paul Beregi
Purpose: To evaluate the long-term results using the kissing stents technique for treatment of occlusive disease involving the aortoiliac bifurcation. Methods: One hundred six patients (97 men; mean age 52.5 ± 10.2 years, range 33–78) were treated with the kissing stents technique for bilateral aortoiliac stenosis (55, 51.9%), unilateral occlusion of the common iliac artery (CIA) with contralateral stenosis (47, 44.3%), and bilateral CIA occlusion (4, 3.8%). Clinical examination and duplex scans were performed prior to discharge and at 1, 6, and 12 months, followed by yearly examinations thereafter. Results: Bilateral stent implantation was successful in all patients. No major procedure-related complications were observed. Self-expanding stents were deployed in 62 (58.5%) patients and balloon-expandable devices in 44 (41.5%). Fifteen (7.1%) hematomas were observed at the 212 access sites. Mean follow-up was 30.1 ± 11.1 months (range 12–137). Duplex imaging diagnosed significant (>50%) restenosis in 15 (14.8%) of 101 patients and reocclusion in 4 (4%); 17 (89.5%) of these patients had recurrent symptoms and all were retreated (endovascular procedure in 18 and an aortobifemoral bypass in 1). Primary and secondary cumulative patency rates at 36 months were 79.4% and 97.7%, respectively. Balloon-expandable stents had a nonsignificantly higher patency rate compared to self-expanding stents. Conclusions: Based on our experience, aortoiliac endovascular reconstruction with the kissing stents technique is a safe and effective procedure, representing an alternative to conventional surgery in selected patients.
Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2003
Virginia Gaxotte; Benjamin Cocheteux; Stéphan Haulon; André Vincentelli; C. Lions; Mohamad Koussa; S. Willoteaux; Philippe Asseman; Alain Prat; Jean-Paul Beregi
Purpose: To propose a classification system based on the position and extension of the intimal flap to assist in the endovascular repair of aortic dissection complicated by a malperfusion syndrome. Methods: Forty-one patients (34 men; mean age 58 years, range 22–78) with 19 type A and 22 type B dissections complicated by a malperfusion syndrome were treated with stenting, fenestration, or both for the peripheral ischemia. A retrospective review of the preprocedural imaging studies (computed tomographic angiography and arteriography) was performed to determine and categorize the position of the aortic intimal flap. In type 1, the flap was either parallel to or perpendicular to the origin of the malperfused collateral artery; type 2 referred to extension of the dissection into the collateral vessel, while type 3 represented the presence or absence of an avulsed branch ostium. Results: Patients treated with stenting (n = 19) alone had type 2 or type 3 arterial dissections, whereas the 12 patients who were treated with fenestration alone had type 1 lesions. Ten patients treated with stenting and fenestration had arterial lesions in which a type 1 dissection was associated with types 2 or 3. Conclusions: This appearance-based imaging approach combined with the symptoms of malperfusion syndromes during aortic dissection can help guide the endovascular treatment strategy.
European Radiology | 2001
B. Cocheteux; C. Mounier-Vehier; Virginia Gaxotte; Eugene McFadden; J. P. Francke; Jean-Paul Beregi
Abstract Helical CT angiography is increasingly used for the evaluation of the kidneys and the renal vessels. Knowledge of the potential variants in renal and renal vascular anatomy and of their appearances on helical CT are thus indispensable for radiologists who perform and interpret such examinations. We report six cases of anatomic variants that we encountered in our tertiary referral centre over the past 5 years, during which time we have performed 4850 helical CT angiograms, including 1432 renal artery examinations. These represent rarer anomalies in renal vascularization, most of which were associated with renal malformations (horseshoe kidney with or without cortical torsion, renal malrotation, single kidney, and thoracic origin of a renal artery). We present the helical CT findings and discuss the possible embryological mechanisms and the practical implications of these abnormalities for the radiologist.
Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2003
Virginia Gaxotte; Brigitte Laurens; Stéphan Haulon; C. Lions; Claire Mounier-Vehier; Jean-Paul Beregi
Purpose: To report the results of a multicenter feasibility study of the Jostent balloon-expandable stent-graft in the treatment of renal and iliac artery lesions. Methods: Twenty-three patients (17 men; mean age 62 years, range 38–80) with lesions in the renal (n = 12) or iliac arteries (n = 12) were enrolled in 6 centers over a 1-year period. Preprocedural computed tomography (CT) and angiography were performed in all patients. The Jostent device was implanted in the 24 arteries to treat 11 in-stent stenoses, 2 arterial ruptures, 2 aneurysms, 2 dissections, 2 ulcerated stenoses, and 5 chronic occlusions. Follow-up included color duplex ultrasound examination on the day after the procedure and at 6 months; patients with renal artery stent-grafts were also evaluated with CT angiography. Results: Twenty-seven stent-grafts were deployed successfully in the 24 (100%) arteries. Seven (30%) patients required adjunctive procedures to address 1 acute in-stent thrombosis, 2 dissections, and 4 in-stent residual stenoses. At 6-month follow-up, 2 (8.3%) restenoses occurred in the renal arteries; these were treated successfully using balloon angioplasty. Conclusions: These data suggest that a balloon-expandable stent-graft may be safe and useful in patients with selected peripheral indications.
Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2004
S. Willoteaux; Ziad Negawi; C. Lions; Virginia Gaxotte; Jean-Paul Beregi
Purpose: To present an optimized protocol for acquisition and reconstruction of multidetector computed tomographic angiographic (CTA) images of the stents most commonly used in renal arteries. Technique: CTA was performed on a 16-detector row CT scanner using 0.75-mm collimation. Multiplanar reformatted images perpendicular to the stents and 2-dimensional curved reformatted images were displayed. Two different view windows (“vascular” and “stent”) were used, each adapted to the stent density, the vascular wall density, and the aortic enhancement. Five different types of stainless steel balloon-expandable stents were examined; all caused discernable artifacts. These artifacts became more prominent as the stent density increased, becoming most significant when 2 stents were positioned one inside the other. The “stent” window allowed better appreciation of the stent shape and its position compared to the aortic wall and ostial calcifications. The “vascular” window afforded a better view of the vascular lumen, in addition to visualizing the stent in several planes. Conclusions: Multidetector CTA using dedicated acquisition and reconstruction protocols is capable of visualizing the vascular lumen of different types of renal stents while avoiding metallic artifacts.
Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2005
Thomas Caramella; Annie Lahoche; Z. Negaiwi; C. Lions; S. Willoteaux; Valerie Boivin; Virginia Gaxotte; Jean-Paul Beregi
Purpose: To report the fortuitous discovery of a false aneurysm 7 years after cutting balloon angioplasty for severe renal artery fibromuscular dysplasia in a child. Case Report: A 3-year-old girl with neurofibromatosis was referred to our institution because of high blood pressure (220/160 mmHg). Computed tomography identified coarctation of the aorta and severe bilateral renal artery stenoses. The coarctation was successfully resected. One month later, bilateral renal artery angioplasty with a 3-mm balloon was unsatisfactory, so a second angioplasty one month later was done with a 3.25-mm cutting balloon. This procedure was complicated by a minimal arterial rupture, which resolved spontaneously after inflation of a regular balloon. Normal blood pressure was restored. The child was lost to follow-up until 7 years later, when recurrent hypertension (200 mmHg systolic) prompted referral again. Arteriography showed a very severe stenosis on the right side and a 30-mm false aneurysm of the left renal artery at the rupture site. Due to her age, the patient underwent surgery, which brought the blood pressure under control. Conclusions: False aneurysm of the renal arteries is a rare complication of percutaneous angioplasty. In a child, the cutting balloon would appear to be contraindicated for concentric dysplastic stenoses that are resistant to regular balloon angioplasty.