Chargement de la fiche…
Chargement de la fiche…
MonRhumato.fr utilise des cookies pour mesurer l'audience (statistiques) et améliorer le site. Aucune donnée de santé identifiable n'est jamais collectée. Politique de confidentialité.
Votre choix est conservé 13 mois (durée max CNIL). Vous pouvez le modifier à tout moment via Préférences cookies.
2 raisons identifiées
Praticien-chercheur
13 articles scientifiques publiés — formation continue solide
Délais de RDV courts dans la région
86.1 rhumatos / 100 000 hab. — département bien doté
✨ Génération du profil synthétique IA en cours…
HOPITAL LA PORTE VERTE
6 AV FRANCHET D ESPEREY BP 455, 78004 VERSAILLES CEDEX
Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).
Données ANS publiques (Licence Ouverte 2.0) · Enrichissements MonRhumato 100 % opt-in · Toute personne référencée peut demander la suppression ou la rectification.
Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).
International journal of geriatric psychiatry · 2005
AbstractObjectiveAlthough depression is known to be frequently associated with dementia, it is nonetheless under‐diagnosed and under‐treated among this patient population. Its effect on outcome for dementia patients is thought to be substantial, because depression appears to induce higher than normal rates of disability as well as supplementary cognitive decline. The aim of this study was to measure the impact of major depression on the institutionalization rate of community‐dwelling dementia patients.DesignProspective cohort study.SettingParis, France.ParticipantsThree‐hundred forty‐eight consecutive dementia outpatients of a geriatric clinic (mean age: 81 years, 69.8% women, 65.5% dementia of Alzheimer's type, mean baseline MMSE score: 20.5), followed between 1997 and 2002 (mean follow‐up: 20.5 months).ResultsTwenty‐five percent of the patients met the criteria of major depression at baseline, and only 30.3% of these received antidepressant medication. Major depression at baseline was independently associated with nursing home admission within one year of the baseline assessment. Antidepressant medication tended to protect against this outcome, but not to a statistically significant extent.ConclusionsMajor depression at baseline is an independent risk factor for early institutionalization of dementia sufferers. Early institutionalization is defined in this study as nursing home placement within a year of diagnosis with dementia at our specialized outpatient center. The study highlights the need for better management of depression among dementia outpatients. Further investigation is needed to evaluate the protective effect of antidepressant medication (and/or non‐pharmacological therapies) on the institutionalization rate. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
International journal of geriatric psychiatry · 2008
AbstractObjectivesThis study sought to identify the influence of medical symptoms and diseases on the risk of nursing home placement in a prospective cohort of newly diagnosed community‐dwelling patients with dementia.Study design and settingThis study included 348 patients with dementia, consecutively diagnosed, recruited and followed at a geriatric outpatient center (mean age: 81 years, 65.5% with Alzheimer's disease, mean baseline MMSE score: 20.5, mean follow‐up: 20.5 months).ResultsAfter adjustment for factors commonly associated with institutionalization in this population, hip fracture in the 3 years preceding diagnosis, acute congestive heart failure during follow‐up and weight loss of more than 5% in any year during follow‐up were independently associated with nursing home placement.ConclusionThis study confirms the independent contribution of specific medical symptoms and diseases to earlier institutionalization of patients with dementia. These results stress the importance of better knowledge of the specific characteristics of hip fracture, weight loss and congestive heart failure in the context of dementia, to make more effective prevention possible in this patient population. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Joint bone spine · 2003
Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).
BMC geriatrics · 2026 · Journal Article
Esser R, Esteban M, Larbaneix M, Farges C, et al.
Journal of clinical medicine · 2026 · Journal Article
Esser R, Mondragon A, Larbaneix M, Esteban M, et al.
Annales de cardiologie et d'angeiologie · 2025 · Journal Article
Esteban M, Maurou O, Harboun M, Nisse Durgeat S, et al.
Annales de cardiologie et d'angeiologie · 2022 · Observational Study
Georges JL, Gaulupeau V, Chanut A, Merceron A, et al.
International journal of geriatric psychiatry · 2008 · Journal Article
Harboun M, Dorenlot P, Cohen N, Steinhagen-Thiessen E, et al.
International journal of geriatric psychiatry · 2005 · Journal Article
Dorenlot P, Harboun M, Bige V, Henrard JC, et al.
Journal of medical Internet research · 2026 · Journal Article
Esser R, Maurou O, Larbaneix M, Mondragon A, et al.
Journal of clinical medicine · 2026 · Journal Article
Esser R, Larbaneix M, Mondragon A, Esteban M, et al.
Soins. Gerontologie · 2014 · Journal Article
Caplier A, Fernandes CM, Cabanes E, Harboun M, et al.
Joint bone spine · 2003 · Journal Article
Beauvais C, Wybier M, Chazerain P, Harboun M, et al.
Heart, lung & circulation · 2026 · Journal Article
Maurou O, Genet B, Harboun M, Mondragon A, et al.
BMC geriatrics · 2026 · Journal Article
Esser R, Esteban M, Larbaneix M, Farges C, et al.
Heart, lung & circulation · 2026 · Journal Article
Maurou O, Genet B, Harboun M, Mondragon A, et al.
Intensive care medicine · 2004 · Journal Article
Lamer C, Harboun M, Knani L, Moreau D, et al.
Drugs & aging · 2026 · Journal Article
Esser R, Maurou O, Larbaneix M, Mondragon A, et al.
International journal of geriatric psychiatry · 2005 · Journal Article
Dorenlot P, Harboun M, Bige V, Henrard JC, et al.