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Dive into the research topics where Yves Juillière is active.

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Featured researches published by Yves Juillière.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999

Incidence, clinical and etiologic features, and outcomes of advanced chronic heart failure: the EPICAL study ☆

Faiez Zannad; Serge Briançon; Yves Juillière; Paul-Michel Mertes; Jean-Pierre Villemot; François Alla; Jean-Marc Virion

OBJECTIVES Characterize the incidence, clinical and etiologic features and outcomes of advanced congestive heart failure. BACKGROUND This condition is frequent, severe and costly, yet no population-based epidemiological data are available that take into account modern advances in diagnosis and therapy. METHODS The EPICAL (EPidemiologie de l’Insuffisance Cardiaque Avancee en Lorraine) study was based on a comprehensive registration of patients with ACHF (defined as hospital admission for presence of NYHA class III or IV symptoms, radiological and/or clinical signs of pulmonary congestion and/or signs of peripheral edema, left ventricular ejection fraction 60%) in patients aged 20–80 years during year 1994, in the community of the Lorraine region in France (n = 1,592,263). Average follow-up for readmission to hospital and mortality was 18 months (12–24 months). RESULTS From 2,576 registered patients, 499 were enrolled into the study among which, 358 were new presentations. This represents a crude incidence rate of 225 per million. 46.3% had a coronary heart disease. One-year mortality rate was 35.4% and the rate of mortality and/or readmission to hospital was 81%. Patients were admitted to hospital 2.05 times per year (64% of these for worsening heart failure), spending 27.6 days per year in hospital. Twenty received a heart transplant (4%). On discharge, 74.8% were using ACE inhibitors and 49.6% digitalis. CONCLUSIONS Mortality and hospitalization rate of advanced CHF remain very high despite recent therapeutic progress. Major therapeutic and managed-care research is required.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2006

Clinical profile, contemporary management and one-year mortality in patients with severe acute heart failure syndromes: The EFICA study☆

Faiez Zannad; Alexandre Mebazaa; Yves Juillière; Alain Cohen-Solal; Louis Guize; François Alla; Pierre Rougé; Patrick Blin; Marie‐Hélène Barlet; Laurence Paolozzi; Catherine Vincent; Michel Desnos; Kamran Samii

Little is known about the epidemiology of acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) in patients admitted to intensive and coronary care units (ICU/CCU). Observational data may improve disease management and guide the design of clinical trials.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999

Clinical StudiesIncidence, clinical and etiologic features, and outcomes of advanced chronic heart failure: the EPICAL study☆

Faiez Zannad; Serge Briançon; Yves Juillière; Paul-Michel Mertes; Jean-Pierre Villemot; François Alla; Jean-Marc Virion

OBJECTIVES Characterize the incidence, clinical and etiologic features and outcomes of advanced congestive heart failure. BACKGROUND This condition is frequent, severe and costly, yet no population-based epidemiological data are available that take into account modern advances in diagnosis and therapy. METHODS The EPICAL (EPidemiologie de l’Insuffisance Cardiaque Avancee en Lorraine) study was based on a comprehensive registration of patients with ACHF (defined as hospital admission for presence of NYHA class III or IV symptoms, radiological and/or clinical signs of pulmonary congestion and/or signs of peripheral edema, left ventricular ejection fraction 60%) in patients aged 20–80 years during year 1994, in the community of the Lorraine region in France (n = 1,592,263). Average follow-up for readmission to hospital and mortality was 18 months (12–24 months). RESULTS From 2,576 registered patients, 499 were enrolled into the study among which, 358 were new presentations. This represents a crude incidence rate of 225 per million. 46.3% had a coronary heart disease. One-year mortality rate was 35.4% and the rate of mortality and/or readmission to hospital was 81%. Patients were admitted to hospital 2.05 times per year (64% of these for worsening heart failure), spending 27.6 days per year in hospital. Twenty received a heart transplant (4%). On discharge, 74.8% were using ACE inhibitors and 49.6% digitalis. CONCLUSIONS Mortality and hospitalization rate of advanced CHF remain very high despite recent therapeutic progress. Major therapeutic and managed-care research is required.


American Heart Journal | 1995

Isolated myocardial bridges with angiographic milking of the left anterior descending coronary artery: A long-term follow-up study

Yves Juillière; Véronique Berder; Christine Suty-Selton; Philippe Buffet; Nicolas Danchin; Francois Cherrie

Among 7467 consecutive coronary angiograms performed during an 8-year period, 61 patients had a myocardial bridge of the left anterior descending coronary artery. The overall prevalence of myocardial bridges was 0.82% (from 0.41% to 1.16% per year). Among these patients, 26 had coronary artery disease, 4 had valvular heart disease, and 3 had cardiomyopathy. We studied the long-term outcome (11 +/- 3 years) of the other 28 patients with isolated milking at baseline. Two groups were constituted according to the percentage of systolic reduction of the left anterior descending coronary artery lumen: group A, < 50% (15 patients) and group B, > or = 50% (13 patients). During follow-up, 1 group A patient (cancer) and 2 group B patients (1 cancer and 1 suicide) died. Moreover, 1 group B patient was lost to follow-up. None of the patients sustained a myocardial infarction during follow-up. In group A patients, 71% felt very well or well and 50% had clinical symptoms; 64% took antianginal medications. In group B patients, 50% felt well and 70% had clinical symptoms; 50% took antianginal drugs. The long-term prognosis of isolated myocardial bridges of the left anterior descending coronary artery is good and is independent of the severity of systolic narrowing of internal lumen diameter.


Circulation | 1998

Acute Hemodynamic Interaction of Aspirin and Ticlopidine With Enalapril Results of a Double-Blind, Randomized Comparative Trial

Christian Spaulding; Bernard Charbonnier; Alain Cohen-Solal; Yves Juillière; Eckhard Peter Kromer; Khaldoun Benhamda; Romain Cador; Simon Weber

BACKGROUND Coprescription of aspirin and ACE inhibitors is frequent in heart failure caused by coronary artery disease. Negative interaction between aspirin and enalapril has been reported, presumably through inhibition by aspirin of ACE inhibitor-induced prostaglandin synthesis. Ticlopidine is a potent antiplatelet agent without interaction with prostaglandin synthesis. METHODS AND RESULTS The objective of this study was to compare the influence of a coadministration of ticlopidine or aspirin on the hemodynamic effects of an ACE inhibitor (enalapril) in patients with chronic heart failure. Twenty patients with severe heart failure were enrolled in a double-blind comparative trial and allocated to ticlopidine (500 mg daily, 12 patients) or aspirin (325 mg daily, 8 patients). Hemodynamic evaluation was performed after 7 days of treatment, every hour for 4 hours after an oral administration of 10 mg of enalapril. Significant reductions in systemic vascular resistance were observed in the ticlopidine group, in contrast to no significant decrease in the aspirin group. A significant (P=0.03) time-by-treatment interaction indicated significant aspirin-enalapril drug interaction. Total pulmonary resistance decreased significantly in both groups, with no difference between patients assigned to aspirin or ticlopidine. CONCLUSIONS Enalapril reduced systemic vascular resistance more effectively when given in combination with ticlopidine than with aspirin. In contrast, the reduction in total pulmonary resistance is similar when enalapril is administered in combination with aspirin or ticlopidine. Negative aspirin-enalapril interaction on prostaglandin synthesis presumably alters vasodilatation in systemic vessels, whereas prostaglandin-independent actions of ACE inhibition such as pulmonary arterial vasodilatation are maintained.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2002

Self-rating of quality of life provides additional prognostic information in heart failure. Insights into the EPICAL study.

François Alla; Serge Briançon; Francis Guillemin; Yves Juillière; Paul-Michel Mertes; Jean-Pierre Villemot; Faiez Zannad

The relationship between quality of life (QoL) and survival have been poorly investigated. The aim of this study was to determine the value of QoL score as a prognostic factor in a prospective cohort of patients with advanced chronic heart failure (CHF).


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995

Long-term prediction of major ischemic events by exercise thallium-201 single-photon emission computed tomography: Incremental prognostic value compared with clinical, exercise testing, catheterization and radionuclide angiographic data

Pierre-Yves Marie; Nicolas Danchin; Jean F. Durand; Luc Feldmann; Alain Grentzinger; Pierre Olivier; Gilles Karcher; Yves Juillière; Jean Marc Virion; Daniel Beurrier; François Cherrier; Alain Bertrand

OBJECTIVES This study sought to evaluate the prognostic role of exercise thallium-201 (Tl-201) single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease. BACKGROUND Compared with planar Tl-201 scintigraphy, Tl-201 SPECT allows enhanced assessment of myocardial perfusion abnormalities. However, the long-term prognostic value of exercise Tl-201 SPECT has not been ascertained and compared with that of other techniques of investigation. METHODS Predictors of ischemic events were sought in 217 patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease who underwent exercise Tl-201 SPECT, coronary angiography and rest radionuclide angiography and who initially received medical therapy. Predictive values were determined using Cox proportional hazards regression models. RESULTS During a mean (+/- SD) follow-up period of 70 +/- 19 months, 29 patients had a major ischemic event (cardiac death or myocardial infarction). Total extent of exercise defects was the best independent predictor by Tl-201 SPECT of major events (p < 0.001) and provided additional prognostic information compared with clinical, exercise testing and catheterization variables (p < 0.02). Extent of reversible Tl-201 SPECT perfusion defects provided additional prognostic information compared with extent of irreversible defects (p < 0.001) and was the sole Tl-201 SPECT variable providing additional prognostic information compared with radionuclide left ventricular ejection fraction (p < 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Total extent of exercise Tl-201 SPECT defects is a powerful long-term predictor of major ischemic events that enhances the prediction provided by clinical, exercise testing and coronary angiographic data. In view of its prognostic significance, extent of reversible Tl-201 SPECT defects might provide original information about improving prognosis by coronary revascularization.


American Heart Journal | 1991

DIAGNOSTIC VALUE OF VENTRICULAR STIMULATION IN PATIENTS WITH IDIOPATHIC DILATED CARDIOMYOPATHY

Béatrice Brembilla-Perrot; Joël Donetti; Arnaud Terrier De La Chaise; N. Sadoul; Etienne Aliot; Yves Juillière

To assess the response to programmed ventricular stimulation and the clinical outcome, we performed a prospective study in 103 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. The protocol used up to three extrastimuli delivered at two right ventricular sites during sinus rhythm and ventricular pacing at 100 and 150 beats/min and was repeated during infusion of 1 to 4 micrograms/min of isoproterenol. Sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT) was induced in 8 of 11 patients with spontaneous sustained VT, in none of 35 patients without significant ventricular arrhythmias during Holter monitoring, and in 9 of 56 patients with salvos of ventricular premature beats. Isoproterenol infusion facilitated the induction of two episodes of sustained VT in patients with spontaneous sustained VT; however, in all but one of the remaining patients, induction of ventricular tachyarrhythmias was not impaired. During the follow-up period there were eight sudden deaths among patients who initially had syncope, inducible sustained VT, or both and three episodes of sustained VT in patients who initially had nonsustained VT but inducible sustained VT. Isoproterenol infusion can be used to safely facilitate induction of ventricular tachyarrhythmias in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. The induction of sustained VT was associated with a poor prognosis.


Heart | 1997

Clinical and bacteriological characteristics of infective endocarditis in the elderly.

Christine Selton-Suty; Bruno Hoen; A. Grentzinger; P. Houplon; M. Maignan; Yves Juillière; Nicolas Danchin; P. Canton; Cherrier F

OBJECTIVE: To determine the clinical and bacteriological features of infective endocarditis in the elderly. DESIGN: Prospective case series. SETTING: A university hospital that is both a referral and a primary care centre. PATIENTS: 114 consecutive patients treated for infective endocarditis from November 1990 to December 1993: 25 were > 70 years of age (group 1) and 89 were < 70 years old (group 2). RESULTS: Location of infective endocarditis, clinical signs, and symptoms were similar in the two groups, except for a lower occurrence of embolic episodes in the elderly (group 1:8%, group 2: 28%; P < 0.04). A higher rate of infective endocarditis on intracardiac prosthetic devices was noted in group 1 (group 1: 52%, group 2: 25%; P < 0.05). The distribution of causative micro-organisms showed a higher proportion of bacteria from the gastrointestinal tract in the elderly (group D streptococci and enterococci: 48% in group 1 v 20% in group 2) and the presumed portal of entry was more often digestive (group 1: 50%, group 2: 17%; P = 0.01). Elderly patients were less often operated on (group 1: 24%, group 2: 43%; P = 0.07) and their mortality rate was higher (group 1: 28%, group 2: 13%; P = 0.08). CONCLUSIONS: Infective endocarditis in patients over 70 often occurs in those with intracardiac prosthetic devices and is more often due to bacteria from the gastrointestinal tract. Its prognosis appears to be worse than in younger subjects.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1996

Effect of late percutaneous angioplastic recanalization of total coronary artery occlusion on left ventricular remodeling, ejection fraction, and regional wall motion

Nicolas Danchin; Michael Angioi; Romain Cador; Olivier Tricoche; Olivier Dibon; Yves Juillière; Cuillière M; François Cherrier

The clinical benefit of late recanalization of complete coronary occlusion is debated. Left ventricular (LV) function and volumes are major prognostic determinants in patients with coronary artery disease. We sought to assess comprehensively the evolution of global and regional LV function and LV volumes after percutaneous recanalization of chronic complete coronary artery occlusions. A consecutive series of 55 patients who underwent successful percutaneous recanalization of a chronic (> or = 10 days), total (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction trial flow grade 0) occlusion of the left anterior descending or dominant right coronary arteries, and in whom a complete angiographic evaluation was available before angioplasty and at follow-up was studied. At follow-up, 38 patients had a patent artery (group 1) and 17 had a reocclusion (group 2). Baseline parameters were similar in the 2 groups. In group 1, LV ejection fraction increased from 55 +/- 14% to 62 +/- 13% (p <0.001), with an increase in fractional shortening in the occluded artery territory (0.43 +/- 0.30 to 0.71 +/- 0.34, p <0.001), while LV end-diastolic volume remained unchanged. In group 2, ejection fraction and regional wall motion were unchanged, while LV end-diastolic volume index increased (86 +/- 22 ml/m2 to 99 +/- 34 ml/m2, p <0.02). The evolution in LV global and regional function was similar in patients with or without previous myocardial infarction; however, prevention of LV remodeling was observed only in patients with previous infarction. Maintained potency after successful recanalization of totally occluded coronary arteries improves global and regional LV function and, in patients with previous myocardial infarction, avoids LV remodeling.

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Patrick Jourdain

Paris Descartes University

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François Alla

École Normale Supérieure

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Michael Angioi

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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