C Foucault

French National Centre for Scientific Research, Lyon, Rhone-Alpes, France

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Publications (13)63.87 Total impact

  • Article: Coxiella burnetii infection of aortic aneurysms or vascular grafts: report of 30 new cases and evaluation of outcome.
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    ABSTRACT: Q fever is a zoonotic disease caused by Coxiella burnetii. Polymorphic, the disease may present as an acute or chronic infection. Vascular infections are the second most common form of chronic Q fever, following endocarditis. Herein, we studied the outcome of 30 new cases of aortic infection caused by C. burnetii using uni- and multivariate analyses. The outcome of ten cases previously reported by our team was also updated. Of these 40 patients, 32 had a follow-up of >or=3 years. Among them, the overall mortality was of 25% (8/32). Vascular rupture was significantly and independently (multivariate P=0.03) associated with a lethal issue, whereas vascular surgery was significantly associated with recovery (uni- and multivariate P<0.01). Our findings demonstrate the critical importance of surgery in the management of C. burnetii vascular infections.
    European Journal of Clinical Microbiology 10/2007; 26(9):635-40. · 2.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cerebral infarction: an unusual complication of Mediterranean spotted fever.
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    ABSTRACT: Mediterranean spotted fever is a rickettsiosis caused by Rickettsia conorii and transmitted by the brown dog tick. It is considered as a benign disease but 5% to 10% of patients present with a malignant form which is the result of a diffuse vasculitis. We report here the first case of Mediterranean spotted fever with cerebral vasculitis and thrombosis leading to a massive cerebral infarct and death.
    European Journal of Internal Medicine 12/2005; 16(7):525-7. · 2.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Multispacer typing technique for sequence-based typing of Bartonella quintana.
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    ABSTRACT: Bartonella quintana is a worldwide fastidious bacterium of the Alphaproteobacteria responsible for bacillary angiomatosis, trench fever, chronic lymphadenopathy, and culture-negative endocarditis. The recent genome sequencing of a B. quintana isolate allowed us to propose a genome-wide sequence-based typing method. To ensure sequence discrimination based on highly polymorphic areas, we amplified and sequenced 34 spacers in a large collection of B. quintana isolates. Six of these exhibited polymorphisms and allowed the characterization of 4 genotypes. However, the strain variants suggested by the noncoding sequences did not correlate with the results of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), which suggested a higher degree of variability. Modification of the PFGE profile of one isolate after nine subcultures confirmed that rearrangement frequencies are high in this species, making PFGE unreliable for epidemiological purposes. The low extent of sequence heterogeneity in the species suggests a recent emergence of this bacterium as a human pathogen. Direct typing of natural samples allowed the identification of a fifth genotype in the DNA extracted from a human body louse collected in Burundi. We have named the typing technique herein described multispacer typing.
    Journal of Clinical Microbiology 02/2005; 43(1):41-8. · 4.15 Impact Factor
  • Article: Molecular detection of Bartonella quintana DNA in the dental pulp of a homeless patient.
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    ABSTRACT: Dental pulp has been proposed as a suitable tissue sample for the identification of pathogenic organisms. Using PCR with two specific gene targets, Bartonella quintana DNA was detected in the dental pulp extracted from the tooth of a homeless patient. The patient had been bacteremic 6 months previously but was not when the tooth was sampled.
    European Journal of Clinical Microbiology 01/2005; 23(12):920-2. · 2.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Detection of Bartonella quintana by direct immunofluorescence examination of blood smears of a patient with acute trench fever.
    C Foucault, J M Rolain, D Raoult, P Brouqui
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    ABSTRACT: We report a case of Bartonella quintana acute symptomatic infection in a homeless man, presenting as a typical trench fever. B. quintana has been retrieved in erythrocytes in large clusters and in erythroblasts. Direct immunofluorescence of blood smears allows a rapid diagnosis.
    Journal of Clinical Microbiology 11/2004; 42(10):4904-6. · 4.15 Impact Factor
  • Article: Q fever and lymphadenopathy: report of four new cases and review.
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    ABSTRACT: Coxiella burnetii, the causative agent of Q fever, is responsible for various clinical syndromes, but lymphadenitis has been described during Q fever in only three recent case reports. Four new cases of acute Q fever associated with lymphadenopathy are reported here, and these cases are discussed along with the three previously reported cases. Coxiella burnetii was isolated for the first time from a lymph node. Q fever should be considered an etiologic agent of lymphadenitis.
    European Journal of Clinical Microbiology 11/2004; 23(10):759-64. · 2.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Randomized open trial of gentamicin and doxycycline for eradication of Bartonella quintana from blood in patients with chronic bacteremia.
    C Foucault, D Raoult, P Brouqui
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    ABSTRACT: Chronic Bartonella quintana bacteremia is known to occur in homeless people exposed to lice. We present here the results of an open randomized trial performed to evaluate the efficacy of doxycycline in combination with gentamicin in the eradication of B. quintana bacteremia. From 1 January 2001 to 1 April 2002, homeless people with blood cultures positive for B. quintana were randomized to receive either no treatment (untreated controls) or a combination of gentamicin (3 mg/kg of body weight/day intravenously for 14 days) and doxycycline (200 mg/day orally for 28 days). Patients were evaluated from the results of blood cultures performed between day 28 (the end of treatment) and day 90 postinclusion. Intention-to-treat analysis of 20 included patients showed eradication of bacteremia in 7 out of 9 treated patients versus 2 out of 11 untreated controls (P = 0.01). In the per-protocol analysis, eradication was obtained for 7 out of 7 treated patients versus 2 out of 9 untreated controls (P = 0.003). This study demonstrates the efficiency of the combination of doxycycline and gentamicin in eradicating B. quintana bacteremia.
    Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 08/2003; 47(7):2204-7. · 4.84 Impact Factor
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    Article: Erythroblast cells as a target for Bartonella quintana in homeless people.
    J M Rolain, C Foucault, P Brouqui, D Raoult
    Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 07/2003; 990:485-7. · 3.15 Impact Factor
  • Article: Bartonella quintana Bacteremia among Homeless People.
    C Foucault, K Barrau, P Brouqui, D Raoult
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    ABSTRACT: Bartonella quintana infections have recently reemerged, predominantly among the homeless populations in cities in both Europe and the United States. B. quintana can cause trench fever, endocarditis, and chronic bacteremia; the human body louse is the only known vector. Homeless people who presented to the emergency departments of University Hospital in Marseilles, France, were studied, as were those who had been admitted to other medical facilities in the city since 1 January 1997. Samples of blood and body lice were collected for culture for B. quintana and for serological testing. Bartonella bacteremia was associated with sweats, evidence of louse infestation, serological tests that were positive for B. quintana, and high titers of B. quintana antibody. Bacteremia was also associated with being homeless for <3 years. Asymptomatic, prolonged bacteremia (duration, up to 78 weeks) and intermittent bacteremia were found to occur. Data obtained regarding antibiotic regimens showed that treatment with gentamicin and doxycycline was effective in preventing relapses of bacteremia.
    Clinical Infectious Diseases 09/2002; 35(6):684-9. · 9.15 Impact Factor
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    Article: Infections in the homeless.
    D Raoult, C Foucault, P Brouqui
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    ABSTRACT: Homeless people in developed countries have specific problems predisposing them to infectious diseases. Respiratory infections and outbreaks of tuberculosis and other aerosol transmitted infections have been reported. Homeless intravenous drug users are at an increased risk of contracting HIV, and hepatitis B and C infections. Skin problems are the main reason the homeless seek medical attention, and these commonly include scabies, pediculosis, tinea infections, and impetigo. Many foot disorders are more prevalent in the homeless including ulcers, cellulitis, erysipelas, and gas gangrene. The louse transmitted bacteria Bartonella quintana has recently been found to cause clinical conditions in the homeless such as urban trench fever, bacillary angiomatosis, endocarditis, and chronic afebrile bacteraemia. Treatment of homeless people is complicated by financial constraints, self-neglect, and lack of adherence. Patients with serious and contagious illnesses should be hospitalised. Physicians should be aware of these specific issues to enhance care.
    The Lancet Infectious Diseases 10/2001; 1(2):77-84. · 17.39 Impact Factor
  • Article: Q fever 1985-1998. Clinical and epidemiologic features of 1,383 infections.
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    ABSTRACT: In order to describe the clinical features and the epidemiologic findings of 1,383 patients hospitalized in France for acute or chronic Q fever, we conducted a retrospective analysis based on 74,702 sera tested in our diagnostic center, National Reference Center and World Health Organization Collaborative Center for Rickettsial Diseases. The physicians in charge of all patients with evidence of acute Q fever (seroconversion and/or presence of IgM) or chronic Q fever (prolonged disease and/or IgG antibody titer to phase I of Coxiella burnetii > or = 800) were asked to complete a questionnaire, which was computerized. A total of 1,070 cases of acute Q fever was recorded. Males were more frequently diagnosed, and most cases were identified in the spring. Cases were observed more frequently in patients between the ages of 30 and 69 years. We classified patients according to the different clinical forms of acute Q fever, hepatitis (40%), pneumonia and hepatitis (20%), pneumonia (17%), isolated fever (17%), meningoencephalitis (1%), myocarditis (1%), pericarditis (1%), and meningitis (0.7%). We showed for the first time, to our knowledge, that different clinical forms of acute Q fever are associated with significantly different patient status. Hepatitis occurred in younger patients, pneumonia in older and more immunocompromised patients, and isolated fever was more common in female patients. Risk factors were not specifically associated with a clinical form except meningoencephalitis and contact with animals. The prognosis was usually good except for those with myocarditis or meningoencephalitis as 13 patients died who were significantly older than others. For chronic Q fever, antibody titers to C. burnetii phase I above 800 and IgA above 50 were predictive in 94% of cases. Among 313 patients with chronic Q fever, 259 had endocarditis, mainly patients with previous valvulopathy; 25 had an infection of vascular aneurysm or prosthesis. Patients with endocarditis or vascular infection were more frequently immunocompromised and older than those with acute Q fever. Fifteen women were infected during pregnancy; they were significantly more exposed to animals and gave birth to only 5 babies, only 2 with a normal birth weight. More rare manifestations observed were chronic hepatitis (8 cases), osteoarticular infection (7 cases), and chronic pericarditis (3 cases). Nineteen patients were observed who experienced first a documented acute infection, then, due to underlying conditions, a chronic infection. To our knowledge, we report the largest series of Q fever to date. Our results indicate that Q fever is a protean disease, grossly underestimated, with some of the clinical manifestations being only recently reported, such as Q fever during pregnancy, chronic vascular infection, osteomyelitis, pericarditis, and myocarditis. Our data confirm that chronic Q fever is mainly determined by host factors and demonstrate for the first time that host factors may also play a role in the clinical expression of acute Q fever.
    Medicine 03/2000; 79(2):109-23. · 4.35 Impact Factor
  • Article: Actin mediates Encephalitozoon intestinalis entry into the human enterocyte-like cell line, Caco-2.
    C Foucault, M Drancourt
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    ABSTRACT: Microsporidia are spore-forming obligate intracellular eucaryotes that parasitize eukaryotic cells. Encephalitozoon intestinalis (formerly Septata intestinalis) is a microsporidian species of emerging medical importance, responsible for chronic diarrhoea in immunocompetent patients and enteritis and systemic infections in HIV-1 infected patients. Infection of host enterocytes has been demonstrated in HIV-1-infected patients. However, the mechanisms of entry of E. intestinalis into host enterocytes have not been studied and remain hypothetically based on diacytosis, a model involving the injection of microsporidian sporoplasm through the polar tubule into the host cell. An electron microscopy based study recently challenged this hypothesis. We studied the entry of E. intestinalis into intestinal epithelial cells by infecting the human enterocyte-like cell line Caco-2. Entry was mediated by directed phagocytosis, as suggested by the inhibiting effect of cytochalasin D on E. intestinalis uptake, colocalization of E. intestinalis and F-actin and engulfment of E. intestinalis into Caco-2 cell protrusions. Confocal- and electron microscopy observations also suggested that after initial contacts through the posterior pole of the microsporidian spore, the basolateral surface of Caco-2 cells may be the portal of entry for E. intestinalis sporoplasm. Our observations allowed us to propose a new, actin-based model to describe the entry of microsporidia into enterocytes.
    Microbial Pathogenesis 03/2000; 28(2):51-8. · 1.94 Impact Factor
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    Article: Purification of Encephalitozoon cultures contaminated by mycoplasmas by murine intraperitoneal inoculation.
    O Ridoux, C Foucault, M Drancourt
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    ABSTRACT: Encephalitozoon species are strict intracellular microsporidia. Cocultures with eukaryotic cell lines can become accidently contaminated by mycoplasmas. We propose a decontamination protocol based on differential cell targeting after intraperitoneal inoculation in mice. Mycoplasma-free microsporidia were isolated from the brains and spleens of inoculated mice 24 h postinoculation by using the centrifugation shell vial system. Identification was confirmed by direct sequencing of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA.
    Journal of Clinical Microbiology 09/1998; 36(8):2380-2. · 4.15 Impact Factor