Aller au contenu principal
Retour à l'annuaire
Rhumatologue

Docteur Elom TAY

📍 Rouen (76)HospitalierRPPS 10101920113

✨ Profil synthétique

IA · 04/05/2026

Le Docteur Elom TAY est un rhumatologue hospitalier à Rouen, auteur de publications sur PubMed, notamment des cas cliniques et des revues générales. Ses travaux académiques portent sur diverses pathologies rhumatologiques. Il contribue ainsi à la documentation et à la compréhension de ces affections.

Expertises présumées

  • Rhumatologie hospitalière
  • Étude de cas cliniques
  • Revue de littérature médicale
  • Pathologies inflammatoires
  • Maladies auto-immunes
  • Gestion des cas complexes
  • Médecine basée sur les preuves

Synthèse automatique à partir des sources publiques (HAL, OpenAlex, theses.fr, ClinicalTrials.gov, FAI²R, ANS). Pas une évaluation clinique. Le médecin peut corriger via son compte.

Diplômes

🎓 DES & spécialité ordinale

  • DES Rhumatologie
  • Rhumatologie (SM)

🎓 Diplômes

  • DE Docteur en médecine

Source : Annuaire Santé ANS (FHIR Practitioner.qualification) · Mises à jour quotidiennes.

Localisation

Adresses géocodées via la Base Adresse Nationale (api-adresse.data.gouv.fr). Précision indicative.

Lieu de consultation

Tarifs & secteur de conventionnement

Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).

Prendre rendez-vous & contact

Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).

Top publications · les plus citées

  • 1
    Smith-specific regulatory T cells halt the progression of lupus nephritis

    Nature communications · 2024

    📚 37 citations🎯 RCR 6.54Top 5% NIH🔓 Open Access📄 PDF gratuit ↗
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    Abstract Antigen-specific regulatory T cells (Tregs) suppress pathogenic autoreactivity and are potential therapeutic candidates for autoimmune diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Lupus nephritis is associated with autoreactivity to the Smith (Sm) autoantigen and the human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-DR15 haplotype; hence, we investigated the potential of Sm-specific Tregs (Sm-Tregs) to suppress disease. Here we identify a HLA-DR15 restricted immunodominant Sm T cell epitope using biophysical affinity binding assays, then identify high-affinity Sm-specific T cell receptors (TCRs) using high-throughput single-cell sequencing. Using lentiviral vectors, we transduce our lead Sm-specific TCR into Tregs derived from patients with SLE who are anti-Sm and HLA-DR15 positive. Compared with polyclonal mock-transduced Tregs, Sm-Tregs potently suppress Sm-specific pro-inflammatory responses in vitro and suppress disease progression in a humanized mouse model of lupus nephritis. These results show that Sm-Tregs are a promising therapy for SLE.

  • 2
    An orthopaedic surgeon's guide to ultrasound imaging of the healthy, pathological and postoperative shoulder

    Orthopaedics & traumatology, surgery & research : OTSR · 2018

    📚 28 citations🎯 RCR 2.56Top 20% NIH
  • 3
    The diversity of neuroimmune circuits controlling lung inflammation

    American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology · 2023

    📚 10 citations🎯 RCR 1.55🔓 Open Access
    Lire l'abstract Crossref ↓

    It is becoming increasingly appreciated that the nervous and immune systems communicate bidirectionally to regulate immunological outcomes in a variety of organs including the lung. Activation of neuronal signaling can be induced by inflammation, tissue damage, or pathogens to evoke or reduce immune cell activation in what has been termed a neuroimmune reflex. In the periphery, these reflexes include the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway, sympathetic reflex, and sensory nociceptor-immune cell pathways. Continual advances in neuroimmunology in peripheral organ systems have fueled small-scale clinical trials that have yielded encouraging results for a range of immunopathologies such as rheumatoid arthritis. Despite these successes, several limitations should give clinical investigators pause in the application of neural stimulation as a therapeutic for lung inflammation, especially if inflammation arises from a novel pathogen. In this review, the general mechanisms of each reflex, the evidence for these circuits in the control of lung inflammation, and the key knowledge gaps in our understanding of these neuroimmune circuits will be discussed. These limitations can be overcome not only through a better understanding of neuroanatomy but also through a systematic evaluation of stimulation parameters using immune activation in lung tissues as primary readouts. Our rapidly evolving understanding of the nervous and immune systems highlights the importance of communication between these cells in health and disease. This integrative approach has tremendous potential in the development of targeted therapeutics if specific challenges can be overcome.

Publications scientifiques (5) — classées par pathologie

Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).

Transversal4

Case report / série1

Revue générale1

Partager cette fiche

in LinkedIn🟢 WhatsApp✉ Email

Données ANS publiques (Licence Ouverte 2.0) · Enrichissements MonRhumato 100 % opt-in · Toute personne référencée peut demander la suppression ou la rectification.