Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 74
Filtrar
1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 55: e11543, 2022. tab, graf
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1364552

RESUMO

Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) could be a useful continuous, non-invasive technique for monitoring the effect of partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PaCO2) fluctuations in the cerebral circulation during ventilation. The aim of this study was to examine the efficacy of NIRS to detect acute changes in cerebral blood flow following PaCO2 fluctuations after confirming the autoregulation physiology in piglets. Fourteen piglets (<72 h of life) were studied. Mean arterial blood pressure, oxygen saturation, pH, glycemia, hemoglobin, electrolytes, and temperature were monitored. Eight animals were used to evaluate brain autoregulation, assessing superior cava vein Doppler as a proxy of cerebral blood flow changing mean arterial blood pressure. Another 6 animals were used to assess hypercapnia generated by decreasing ventilatory settings and complementary CO2 through the ventilator circuit and hypocapnia due to increasing ventilatory settings. Cerebral blood flow was determined by jugular vein blood flow by Doppler and continuously monitored with NIRS. A decrease in PaCO2 was observed after hyperventilation (47.6±2.4 to 29.0±4.9 mmHg). An increase in PaCO2 was observed after hypoventilation (48.5±5.5 to 90.4±25.1 mmHg). A decrease in cerebral blood flow after hyperventilation (21.8±10.4 to 15.1±11.0 mL/min) and an increase after hypoventilation (23.4±8.4 to 38.3±10.5 mL/min) were detected by Doppler ultrasound. A significant correlation was found between cerebral oxygenation and Doppler-derived parameters of blood flow and PaCO2. Although cerebral NIRS monitoring is mainly used to detect changes in regional brain oxygenation, modifications in cerebral blood flow following experimental PaCO2 changes were detected in newborn piglets when no other important variables were modified.

2.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 44(8): 778-785, Aug. 2011. ilus, tab
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS | ID: lil-595713

RESUMO

Meconium aspiration syndrome causes respiratory failure after birth and in vivo monitoring of pulmonary edema is difficult. The objective of the present study was to assess hemodynamic changes and edema measured by transcardiopulmonary thermodilution in low weight newborn piglets. Additionally, the effect of early administration of sildenafil (2 mg/kg vo, 30 min after meconium aspiration) on this critical parameter was determined in the meconium aspiration syndrome model. Thirty-eight mechanically ventilated anesthetized male piglets (Sus scrofa domestica) aged 12 to 72 h (1660 ± 192 g) received diluted fresh human meconium in the airway in order to evoke pulmonary hypertension (PHT). Extravascular lung water was measured in vivo with a PiCCO monitor and ex vivo by the gravimetric method, resulting in an overestimate of 3.5 ± 2.3 mL compared to the first measurement. A significant PHT of 15 Torr above basal pressure was observed, similar to that of severely affected humans, leading to an increase in ventilatory support. The vascular permeability index increased 57 percent, suggesting altered alveolocapillary membrane permeability. Histology revealed tissue vessel congestion and nonspecific chemical pneumonitis. A group of animals received sildenafil, which prevented the development of PHT and lung edema, as evaluated by in vivo monitoring. In summary, the transcardiopulmonary thermodilution method is a reliable tool for monitoring critical newborn changes, offering the opportunity to experimentally explore putative therapeutics in vivo. Sildenafil could be employed to prevent PHT and edema if used in the first stages of development of the disease.


Assuntos
Animais , Humanos , Recém-Nascido , Masculino , Água Extravascular Pulmonar/efeitos dos fármacos , Hipertensão Pulmonar/prevenção & controle , Síndrome de Aspiração de Mecônio/tratamento farmacológico , Piperazinas/administração & dosagem , Sulfonas/administração & dosagem , Vasodilatadores/uso terapêutico , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Pulmão/efeitos dos fármacos , Pulmão/patologia , Síndrome de Aspiração de Mecônio/patologia , Purinas/administração & dosagem , Sus scrofa , Fatores de Tempo , Termodiluição/métodos
3.
J Viral Hepat ; 11(1): 45-54, 2004 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14738557

RESUMO

The aim of this study was to determine whether specific sequences of the phosphorylation homology domain (PePHD) region could be correlated with differences in response to antiviral therapy in patients infected with hepatitis C virus subtypes 1b, 2c, 3a and 4c/d. We included 43 patients (22 sustained responders and 21 nonresponders or relapsers) in the study, who were classified according to early viral decline during the first weeks of antiviral treatment and response at end of follow up. Type of mutations, mutation frequency, genetic diversity and phylogenetic relationships were compared at the PePHD and flanking regions. Phylogenetic trees showed that each sequence clustered together with those of the same subtype. Sequences from subtypes 1b and 4c/d resembled more closely the phosphorylation sites of protein kinase R and eIF2 alpha than sequences from genotypes 2c and 3a, the latter with higher response rates to interferon-alpha (IFN alpha) treatment. However, within specific subtypes, no separate clusters of responders and nonresponders were observed either at the beginning or at the end of follow up. We were not able to find any particular sequence or mutation in the PePHD region or in any other subregion of the fragment studied that allowed prediction of treatment response.


Assuntos
Antivirais/uso terapêutico , Hepacivirus/genética , Hepatite C Crônica/tratamento farmacológico , Hepatite C Crônica/virologia , Mutação , Proteínas do Envelope Viral/genética , Adulto , Motivos de Aminoácidos/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Antivirais/farmacologia , Farmacorresistência Viral/genética , Feminino , Variação Genética , Genótipo , Hepacivirus/classificação , Hepacivirus/efeitos dos fármacos , Hepacivirus/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Fosforilação , Filogenia , RNA Viral/química , Alinhamento de Sequência , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Proteínas do Envelope Viral/química , Carga Viral
5.
J Virol ; 74(2): 805-11, 2000 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10623742

RESUMO

The quasispecies nature of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is thought to play a central role in maintaining and modulating viral replication. Several studies have tried to unravel, through the parameters that characterize HCV circulating quasispecies, prognostic markers of the disease. In a previous work we demonstrated that the parameters of circulating viral quasispecies do not always reflect those of the intrahepatic virus. Here, we have analyzed paired serum and liver quasispecies from 39 genotype 1b-infected patients with different degrees of liver damage, ranging from minimal changes to cirrhosis. Viral level was quantified by real-time reverse transcription-PCR, and viral heterogeneity was characterized through the cloning and sequencing of 540 HCV variants of a genomic fragment encompassing the E2-NS2 junction. Although in 95% of patients, serum and liver consensus HCV amino acid sequences were identical, quasispecies complexity varied considerably between the viruses isolated from each compartment. Patients with HCV quasispecies in serum more complex (26%) than, less complex (28%) than, or similarly complex (41%) to those in liver were found. Among the last, a significant correlation between fibrosis and all the parameters that measure the viral amino acid complexity was found. Correlation between fibrosis and serum viral load was found as well (R = 0.7). With regard to the origin of the differences in quasispecies complexity between serum and liver populations, sequence analysis argued against extrahepatic replication as a quantitatively important contributing factor and supported the idea of a differential effect or different selective forces on the virus depending on whether it is circulating in serum or replicating in the liver.


Assuntos
Hepacivirus/classificação , Hepatite C/virologia , Fígado/virologia , Proteínas do Envelope Viral/genética , Proteínas não Estruturais Virais/genética , Adulto , Idoso , Aminoácidos , Sequência de Bases , DNA Viral , Feminino , Hepacivirus/genética , Hepatite C/sangue , Hepatite C/fisiopatologia , Humanos , Fígado/lesões , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Dados de Sequência Molecular
6.
J Virol ; 71(2): 1732-4, 1997 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8995709

RESUMO

We have analyzed the population of hepatitis C virus (HCV) sequences in paired liver and serum samples from four patients with chronic hepatitis C. Sequences from three different biopsy specimens from a liver explant from one patient were compared with each other and with the circulating sequences. Our results demonstrate that the circulating quasispecies does not necessarily reflect the viral population replicating in the liver and that this is not due to a macroscopic anatomic compartmentalization of HCV replication. This finding has important implications for the pathogenesis and natural history of chronic HCV infection.


Assuntos
Hepacivirus/isolamento & purificação , Hepatite C/virologia , Fígado/virologia , Doença Crônica , Hepacivirus/fisiologia , Humanos , Vírion , Replicação Viral
7.
J Perinat Med ; 25(3): 280-7, 1997.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9288665

RESUMO

Impact of surfactant administration, on neonatal mortality, morbidity and resource use, was assayed in a historically controlled study in 19 NICUs from 5 Latin American countries. Data from clinical records of infants with HMD were retrospectively reviewed for the previous 2 years (PRE phase n = 666 cases), and prospectively in cases that received surfactant (SURF phase, 348 cases). Birth weight stratified relative risk, with 95% confidence interval (RR +/-95% CI) for death, in the SURF as compared to the PRE was 0.60 (0.49-0.74), 0.79 (0.68-0.92) and 0.82 (0.71-0.94), for days 7, 28 and at discharge, respectively. At all ages mortality was significantly lower during SURF. Significant increases were observed in the occurrence of pulmonary interstitial emphysema, pulmonary hemorrhage, patent ductus arteriosus, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, intrahospital infection and necrotizing enterocolitis. Resource use increased significantly. It is concluded that the use of surfactant in the region is an important advance, and the efficacy of management of the late complications of the very premature and labile HMD survivors must increase. More attention should be given to thermal regulation, nutrition and management of infection in the survivors, before a more marked effect of surfactant can be seen.


Assuntos
Álcoois Graxos/uso terapêutico , Doença da Membrana Hialina/tratamento farmacológico , Recém-Nascido Prematuro , Fosforilcolina , Polietilenoglicóis/uso terapêutico , Surfactantes Pulmonares/uso terapêutico , Peso ao Nascer , Combinação de Medicamentos , Álcoois Graxos/administração & dosagem , Feminino , Humanos , Doença da Membrana Hialina/mortalidade , Mortalidade Infantil , Recém-Nascido , Terapia Intensiva Neonatal , América Latina , Masculino , Polietilenoglicóis/administração & dosagem , Estudos Prospectivos , Surfactantes Pulmonares/administração & dosagem , Estudos Retrospectivos
8.
N Engl J Med ; 334(9): 555-60, 1996 Feb 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8569822

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In the course of a study conducted in 1992 through 1994 of the efficacy of screening blood donors for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (HCV), we found that two patients had acquired hepatitis C after cardiac surgery, with the transmission apparently unrelated to blood transfusions. Because their surgeon had chronic hepatitis C, we sought to determine whether he was transmitting the virus to his patients. METHODS: Of 222 of the surgeon's patients who participated in studies of post-transfusion hepatitis between 1988 and 1994, 6 contracted postoperative hepatitis C, despite the use of only seronegative blood for transfusions. All six patients had undergone valve-replacement surgery. Analyses were performed to compare nucleotide sequences encompassing the hypervariable region at the junction between the coding regions for envelope glycoproteins E1 and E2 in the surgeon, the patients, and 10 controls infected with the same HCV genotype. RESULTS: The surgeon and five of the six patients with hepatitis C unrelated to transfusion were infected with HCV genotype 3; the sixth patient had genotype 1 and was considered to have been infected from another source. Thirteen other patients of the surgeon had transfusion-associated hepatitis C and were also infected with genotype 1. The average net genetic distance between the sequences from the five patients with HCV genotype 3 and those from the surgeon was 2.1 percent (range, 1.1 to 2.5 percent; P < 0.001), as compared with an average distance of 7.6 percent (range, 6.1 to 8.3 percent) between the sequences from the patients and those from the controls. The results of phylogenetic-tree analysis indicated a common epidemiologic origin of the viruses from the surgeon and the five patients. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide evidence that a cardiac surgeon with chronic hepatitis C may have transmitted HCV to five of his patients during open-heart surgery.


Assuntos
Infecção Hospitalar/transmissão , Hepacivirus/genética , Hepatite C/transmissão , Transmissão de Doença Infecciosa do Profissional para o Paciente , Cirurgia Torácica , Adulto , Idoso , Sequência de Bases , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Cardíacos , Doença Crônica , Infecção Hospitalar/virologia , Feminino , Genótipo , Hepacivirus/classificação , Hepatite C/virologia , Humanos , Masculino , Corpo Clínico Hospitalar , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia , Estudos Prospectivos , RNA Viral/análise , RNA Viral/genética , Espanha
9.
J Virol ; 68(5): 3425-36, 1994 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8151804

RESUMO

We have studied the distribution of viral sequences from the 5' noncoding region and from a fragment of the E2/NS2 region of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) genome in samples obtained before and after liver transplantation in two patients with HCV cirrhosis. The population of viral sequences in both regions were established by sequencing cloned PCR products. In both cases, the complexity of the viral quasispecies decreased after transplantation, although the consensus nucleotide and amino acid sequences remained unchanged. It is suggested that both positive and negative selection and random sampling events contribute substantially in shaping the genetic composition of HCV quasispecies and that recurrence of HCV infection may occur under equilibrium conditions.


Assuntos
Hepacivirus/genética , Hepatite C/microbiologia , Proteínas do Envelope Viral/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Sequência de Bases , Variação Genética , Humanos , Cirrose Hepática/microbiologia , Transplante de Fígado , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , Seleção Genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos , Homologia de Sequência do Ácido Nucleico , Especificidade da Espécie , Proteínas não Estruturais Virais/genética
10.
J Heart Lung Transplant ; 12(2): 230-8, 1993.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8476895

RESUMO

This study is designed to test the hypothesis that specific morphologic attributes of peripheral blood mononuclear cells, measurable by flow cytometry, are correlated with the timing and the intensity of allograft injury during the development of heart rejection. A pig model of major histocompatibility complex-mismatched heterotopic heart transplantation with (n = 5) and without (n = 5) cyclosporine administration was monitored serially be telemetered electrocardiography and endomyocardial biopsies. Flow cytometric analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells revealed the emergence of a discrete subpopulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (7.8% +/- 1.0% and 8.5% +/- 0.9% before transplantation to 16.5% +/- 1.3% and 19.4% +/- 3.0% after transplantation in the untreated and the cyclosporine-treated groups, respectively, p < 0.05), exhibiting characteristic changes in forward and 90-degree light scatter, indicative of increased cell size and granularity, and possibly representing monocytes or large granular lymphocytes. Lymphocyte cell surface-marker studies indicated that 62% of these cells are DH59B+ (monocyte/granulocyte). Because intracellular free calcium is an important second messenger in lymphocyte activation we measured intracellular free calcium by flow cytometry using fluo-3. This subpopulation of cells was found to have similar intracellular free calcium when compared to normal-sized lymphocytes (104 +/- 7 nmol/L versus 101 +/- 5 nmol/L, respectively). We conclude that this lymphocyte subset detected by flow cytometry represents specifically reactive cells that are associated with incipient allograft rejection.


Assuntos
Rejeição de Enxerto/patologia , Transplante de Coração , Leucócitos Mononucleares/ultraestrutura , Miocárdio/patologia , Animais , Biópsia , Cálcio/metabolismo , Ciclosporina/uso terapêutico , Eletrocardiografia , Citometria de Fluxo , Subpopulações de Linfócitos , Miocárdio/metabolismo , Suínos , Transplante Heterotópico
12.
Montevideo; Latin American Center for Perinatology and Human Development; 1993. 110 p. (CLAP 1203.02).
Monografia em Espanhol | LILACS | ID: lil-139190
13.
Montevidéu; Centro Latino Americano de Perinatologia e Desenvolvimento Humano; 1993. s.p (CLAP 1203.03).
Monografia em Português | LILACS | ID: lil-139193
15.
In. Anon. Congreso Uruguayo de Pediatría. s.l, s.n, 1993. p.s.p. (CLAP 1287).
Monografia em Espanhol | LILACS | ID: lil-139196
19.
J & G rev. epidemiol. comunitária ; 3(1): 49-52, ene.-mar. 1992. tab
Artigo em Espanhol | LILACS | ID: lil-312030

RESUMO

A pesar de que la Historia Clínica es una pieza fundamental para un sistema de información adecuado y para un mejor ardenamiento de los servicios de salud, son notorias las deficiencias de que ésta adolece en la mayoría de los países de Latinoamérica. Como respuesta a ese problema, a inicios de la década de los ï70, el Centro Latinoamericano de Perinatología y Desarrollo Humano (CLAP) con sede en Montevideo, propuso un modelo de Historia Clínica Perinatal (HCPB) adoptado luego por varios países del Continente. Despues de dos años de trabajo, el equipo técnico del CLAP elaboró el Sistema Informático Perinatal. En esta tarea intervinieron obstetras, neonatólogos, sanitaristas, enfermeras, ingenieros de sistemas, bioestadístas y otros profesionales


Assuntos
Humanos , Assistência Perinatal/estatística & dados numéricos , Prontuários Médicos/estatística & dados numéricos , Sistemas de Informação Hospitalar/estatística & dados numéricos , Uruguai
20.
Montevideo; Centro Latinoamericano de Perinatología y Desarrollo Humano; 1992. 44 p. (CLAP 1253).
Monografia em Espanhol | LILACS | ID: lil-139167
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA