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Nathalie Kapel
Researcher at Paris Descartes University
Publications - 107
Citations - 3078
Nathalie Kapel is an academic researcher from Paris Descartes University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Short bowel syndrome & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 93 publications receiving 2518 citations. Previous affiliations of Nathalie Kapel include University of Paris.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Low-dose growth hormone in adult home parenteral nutrition–dependent short bowel syndrome patients: A positive study
TL;DR: Three weeks of low-dose GH significantly improved intestinal absorption in HPN-dependent SBS patients who were on a hyperphagic western diet.
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Differences in Alimentary Glucose Absorption and Intestinal Disposal of Blood Glucose After Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass vs Sleeve Gastrectomy
Jean-Baptiste Cavin,Anne Couvelard,Rachida Lebtahi,Robert Ducroc,Konstantinos Arapis,Eglantine Voitellier,Françoise Cluzeaud,Laura Gillard,Muriel Hourseau,Nidaa Mikail,Lara Ribeiro-Parenti,Nathalie Kapel,Jean-Pierre Marmuse,André Bado,Maude Le Gall +14 more
TL;DR: The intestine adapts differently to RYGB vs VSG, which increases intestinal glucose disposal and VSG delays glucose absorption; both contribute to observed improvements in glycemia.
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The intestinal microbiota regulates host cholesterol homeostasis
Tiphaine Le Roy,Tiphaine Le Roy,Emelyne Lécuyer,Benoit Chassaing,Benoit Chassaing,Benoit Chassaing,Moez Rhimi,Marie Lhomme,Samira Boudebbouze,Farid Ichou,Júlia Haro Barceló,Thierry Huby,Thierry Huby,Maryse Guerin,Maryse Guerin,Philippe Giral,Philippe Giral,Emmanuelle Maguin,Nathalie Kapel,Philippe Gérard,Karine Clément,Philippe Lesnik,Philippe Lesnik +22 more
TL;DR: It is indicated that the intestinal microbiota determines the circulating cholesterol level and may thus represent a novel therapeutic target in the management of dyslipidemia and cardiovascular diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tube feeding improves intestinal absorption in short bowel syndrome patients.
TL;DR: In patients with short bowel syndrome, continuous tube feeding (exclusively or in conjunction with oral feeding) following the postoperative period significantly increased net absorption of lipids, proteins, and energy compared with oral Feeding.
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A 5-day course of oral antibiotics followed by faecal transplantation to eradicate carriage of multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae: a randomized clinical trial.
Benedikt Huttner,Benedikt Huttner,V. de Lastours,M.W.M. Wassenberg,Nitsan Maharshak,A. Mauris,T. Galperine,V. Zanichelli,Nathalie Kapel,A. Bellanger,Flaminia Olearo,X. Duval,X. Duval,Laurence Armand-Lefevre,Yehuda Carmeli,Marc J. M. Bonten,Bruno Fantin,Stéphan Juergen Harbarth,Stéphan Juergen Harbarth,L. Colle,F. Kloosterman,W. van Bentum-Puijk,J. Vlooswijk,Antoine Andremont,M. Ben Hayoun,Etienne Canouï,Amélie Chabrol,N. Gamany,Matthieu Lafaurie,Agnès Lefort,Raphaël Lepeule,Z. Louis,E. Rondinaud,H. Sadou Yaye,L. Sarfati,Virginie Zarrouk,Caroline Brossier,L. Carrez,Vladimir Lazarevic,Gesuele Renzi,E. von Dach,S. Cohen Percia,R. Shvartz,Jonathan Lellouche +43 more
TL;DR: Non-absorbable antibiotics followed by FMT slightly decreased ESBL-E/CPE carriage compared with controls; this difference was not statistically significant, potentially due to early trial termination.