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Ajouter le résultat dans votre panier Affiner la rechercheDiabète de type 2 chez l'enfant / Fagot Campagna A in Médecine clinique pour les pédiatres [Médecine Clinique pour les Pédiatres], N° 7 (09/2003)
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Titre : Diabète de type 2 chez l'enfant Type de document : Article scientifique Auteur(s) : Fagot Campagna A Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DMCT Année de publication : 2003 Article en page(s) : 15-9 Langues : Français (fre)
in Médecine clinique pour les pédiatres [Médecine Clinique pour les Pédiatres] > N° 7 (09/2003) . - 15-9Mots-clés : Diabète non insulinodépendant ; Obésité ; Amérique du Nord ; Etats Unis ; Canada ; Japon ; Ethnie ; Australie ; Nouvelle Zélande ; Hongkong ; Bengla Desh ; Inde ; Hongrie ; Angleterre ; France ; Registre ; Glycémie ; Glycosurie ; Enfant Mots-clés : LYBIE Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=5066 [article]Emergence of Clostridium difficile-associated disease in North America and Europe / Kuijper EJ in Clinical microbiology and infection [Clin Microbiol Infect], Vol. 12, N° Suppl 6 (10/2006)
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Titre : Emergence of Clostridium difficile-associated disease in North America and Europe Type de document : Article scientifique Auteur(s) : Kuijper EJ ; Coignard B ; Tull P Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DMI Année de publication : 2006 Article en page(s) : 2-18 Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Clinical microbiology and infection [Clin Microbiol Infect] > Vol. 12, N° Suppl 6 (10/2006) . - 2-18Mots-clés : Clostridium difficile ; Maladie émergente ; Test dépistage ; Amérique du Nord ; Europe Résumé : The clinical spectrum of Clostridium difficile-associated disease (CDAD) ranges from diarrhoea to severe life-threatening pseudomembranous colitis. Although not always associated with previous antibiotic exposure, it is in the majority of cases. CDAD is recognised increasingly in a variety of animal species and in individuals previously not considered to be predisposed. C. difficile can be transmitted via personal contact or environmentally. The role of patients and healthcare workers who are symptom-free but colonised with C. difficile in the intestinal tract is unclear. C. difficile, with more than 150 PCR ribotypes and 24 toxinotypes, has a pathogenicity locus (PaLoc) with genes encoding enterotoxin A (tcdA) and cytotoxin B (tcdB). Genes for the binary toxin are located outside the PaLoc, but the role of this toxin is unclear. The recently completed genome sequence of C. difficile 630 revealed a large proportion of 11% of mobile genetic elements, mainly in the form of conjugative transposons. Diagnostic assays include tests for the detection of C. difficile products or genes and culture methods for isolation of a toxin-producing bacterium. Enzyme immunoassays to detect toxin in faeces are widely available, with varying sensitivities and specificities. Despite practical drawbacks and sensitivity less than 100%, the cell cytototoxicity assay is still considered to be the standard. Rapid diagnostic assays are available on a limited scale and require much improvement. Molecular tests enable the detection of carriers of toxigenic and non-toxigenic strains, as does culture. It is highly recommended to culture C. difficile from toxin-positive faeces samples and to store isolates for future characterisation and typing. The financial impact of CDAD on the healthcare system is substantial (euro5-15 000/case in England and $1.1 billion/year in the USA). Assuming a European Union population of 457 million, the potential cost of CDAD can be estimated to be euro3000 million/year, and is expected to almost double over the next four decades. In North America, increasing rates of CDAD have been reported in Canada and the USA since March 2003, involving a more severe course, higher mortality, increased risk of relapse and more complications. This increased virulence is presumably associated with higher levels of toxin production by fluoroquinolone-resistant strains belonging to PCR ribotype 027, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) type NAP1, REA(restriction endonuclease analysis) type BI and toxinotype III. In Europe, outbreaks of CDAD due to the new, highly virulent strain of C. difficile PCR ribotype 027, toxinotype III have been recognised in 75 hospitals in England, 16 hospitals in The Netherlands, 13 healthcare facilities in Belgium and nine healthcare facilities in France. These outbreaks are very difficult to control, and preliminary results from case-control studies indicate a correlation with fluoroquinolones and cephalosporins. Information concerning community-acquired cases of ribotype 027 is lacking, and data concerning its incidence in nursing homes are limited. European countries should first develop early-warning and response capabilities at a national level. Depending on the nature of the notifications received, countries should implement laboratory-based or patient-based surveillance systems in specific, targeted populations. PMID Pubmed : Pubmed : 16965399 Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=4288 [article]Europe's initial experience with pandemic (H1N1) 2009 - mitigation and delaying policies and practices / Nicoll A in Eurosurveillance. European communicable disease monthly [Euro Surveill], Vol. 14, N° 29 (23/07/2009)
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Titre : Europe's initial experience with pandemic (H1N1) 2009 - mitigation and delaying policies and practices Type de document : Article scientifique Auteur(s) : Nicoll A ; Coulombier D Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : 6 p. Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Eurosurveillance. European communicable disease monthly [Euro Surveill] > Vol. 14, N° 29 (23/07/2009) . - 6 p.Mots-clés : Nouvelle grippe A (H1N1) ; Situation épidémiologique ; Transmission ; Prévention maladie transmissible ; Distanciation ; Population exposée risque ; Europe ; Royaume Uni ; Amérique du Nord Résumé : Europe has experienced more than two months of the first transmissions and outbreak of the 2009 pandemic of A(H1N1)v. This article summarises some of the experience to date and looks towards the expected autumn increases of influenza activity that will affect every country. To date the distribution of transmission has been highly heterogenous between and within countries, with one country the United Kingdom (UK) experiencing the most cases and the highest transmission rates. Most infections are mild but there are steadily increasing numbers of people needing hospital care and more deaths are being reported. An initial difference in practice between Europe and North America was over case-finding and treatment with some authorities in Europe using active casefinding, contact tracing and treatment/prophylaxis with antivirals to try and delay transmission. This article details the history of this practice in the past two months and explains how and why countries are moving to mitigation, especially treating with antivirals those at higher risk of experiencing severe disease. PMID Pubmed : Pubmed : 19643049 Corpus : Grippe A(H1N1) Lien(s) externe(s) : http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleId=19279 Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=8912 [article]Documents numériques
143_GAAdobe Acrobat PDFInternational comparison of performance measures for screening mammography : can it be done ? / Ancelle Park R in Journal of medical screening [J Med Screen], Vol. 11, N° 4 (16/07/2004)
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Titre : International comparison of performance measures for screening mammography : can it be done ? Type de document : Article scientifique Auteur(s) : Ancelle Park R ; Yankaskas BC ; Klabunde CN ; Rennert G ; Wang H ; Fracheboud J ; Pou J ; Bulliard JL Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DMCT Année de publication : 2004 Article en page(s) : 187-93 Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Journal of medical screening [J Med Screen] > Vol. 11, N° 4 (16/07/2004) . - 187-93Mots-clés : Mammographie ; Femme ; Enquête épidémiologique ; Etude comparée ; Amérique du Nord ; Cancer ; Australie ; Belgique ; France ; Danemark ; Angleterre ; Finlande ; Grèce ; Hongrie ; Islande ; Israël ; Italie ; Japon ; Luxembourg ; Pays Bas ; Norvège ; Portugal ; Suède ; Suisse ; Uruguay ; Etats Unis ; Canada Résumé : Objective: Published screening mammography performance measures vary across countries. An international study was undertaken to assess the comparability of two performance measures: the recall rate and positive predictive value (PPV). These measures were selected because they do not require identification of all cancers in the screening population, which is not always possible. Setting: The screening mammography programs or data registries in 25 member countries of the International Breast Cancer Screening Network (IBSN). Methods: In 1999 an assessment form was distributed to IBSN country representatives in order to obtain information on how screening mammography was performed and what specific data related to recall rates and PPV were collected. Participating countries were then asked to provide data to allow calculation of recall rates, PPV and cancer detection rates for screening mammography by age group for women screened in the period 1997¿1999. Results: Twenty-two countries completed the assessment form and 14 countries provided performance data. Differences in screening mammography delivery and data collection were evident. For most countries, recall rates were higher for initial than for subsequent mammograms. There was no consistent relationship of initial to subsequent PPV, although PPV generally decreased as the recall rate increased. Recall rates decreased with increasing age, while PPV increased as age increased. Conclusion: Similar patterns for mammography performance measures were evident across countries. However, the development of a more standardized approach to defining and collecting data would allow more valid international comparisons, with the potential to optimize mammography performance. At present, international comparisons of performance should be made with caution due to differences in defining and collecting mammography data. PMID Pubmed : Pubmed : 15624239 Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=5617 [article]Organisation de la surveillance des infections France, détection et investigation de l'épidémie à C. difficile 027 en 2006. Séminaire franco-québécois sur les infections à Clostridium difficile, mercredi 28 novembre 2007, Centre des congrès de la Villette, Cité des sciences et de l'industrie, Paris / Barbut F
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Titre : Organisation de la surveillance des infections France, détection et investigation de l'épidémie à C. difficile 027 en 2006. Séminaire franco-québécois sur les infections à Clostridium difficile, mercredi 28 novembre 2007, Centre des congrès de la Villette, Cité des sciences et de l'industrie, Paris Type de document : Communication écrite-orale Auteur(s) : Barbut F ; Coignard B Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DMI Editeur : Saint-Maurice : Institut de veille sanitaire Année de publication : 2007 Pagination : 6 p. Langues : Français (fre) Mots-clés : Clostridium difficile ; Infection nosocomiale ; Epidémie ; Réseau surveillance ; Alerte sanitaire ; Cas groupés ; Amérique du Nord ; Europe ; France ; Nord Pas de Calais Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=1023 Documents numériques
9905_PSAdobe Acrobat PDFLe point sur le virus de la nouvelle grippe A(H1N1)v. Numéro spécial. Chronique d'un début de pandémie / Enouf V in BEHWeb, N° 1 (29/06/2009)
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PermalinkA variety of respiratory viruses found in symptomatic travellers returning from countries with ongoing spread of the new influenza A(H1N1)v virus strain / Follin P in Eurosurveillance. European communicable disease monthly [Euro Surveill], Vol. 14, N° 24 (18/06/2009)
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