As I understand it, the Tebbe Reaction can replace a carbonyl group with a C=CH2 group and works with a wide variety of carbonyls (including esters and lactones). The Takai Reaction instead replaces the carbonyl group with a C=CHX group, where X is a halogen. However, my understanding is that the unmodified Takai reaction only works on aldehydes (and possibly some ketones). Does anyone know of a successful use of the Takai reaction, or a modified version of either reaction to replace the carbonyl group in a lactone with C=CHX?