Angelina Maria Martins Lino
University of São Paulo
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Angelina Maria Martins Lino.
Neurology | 2014
Douglas Kazutoshi Sato; Dagoberto Callegaro; Marco Aurélio Lana-Peixoto; Patrick Waters; Frederico Jorge; Toshiyuki Takahashi; Ichiro Nakashima; Samira Apostolos-Pereira; Natália Talim; Renata Simm; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Tatsuro Misu; M I Leite; Masashi Aoki; Kazuo Fujihara
Objective: To evaluate clinical features among patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) who have myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibodies, aquaporin-4 (AQP4) antibodies, or seronegativity for both antibodies. Methods: Sera from patients diagnosed with NMOSD in 1 of 3 centers (2 sites in Brazil and 1 site in Japan) were tested for MOG and AQP4 antibodies using cell-based assays with live transfected cells. Results: Among the 215 patients with NMOSD, 7.4% (16/215) were positive for MOG antibodies and 64.7% (139/215) were positive for AQP4 antibodies. No patients were positive for both antibodies. Patients with MOG antibodies represented 21.1% (16/76) of the patients negative for AQP4 antibodies. Compared with patients with AQP4 antibodies or patients who were seronegative, patients with MOG antibodies were more frequently male, had a more restricted phenotype (optic nerve more than spinal cord), more frequently had bilateral simultaneous optic neuritis, more often had a single attack, had spinal cord lesions distributed in the lower portion of the spinal cord, and usually demonstrated better functional recovery after an attack. Conclusions: Patients with NMOSD with MOG antibodies have distinct clinical features, fewer attacks, and better recovery than patients with AQP4 antibodies or patients seronegative for both antibodies.
Annals of Neurology | 2005
Lúcia Inês Macedo-Souza; Fernando Kok; Silvana Santos; Simone Amorim; Alessandra Starling; Agnes L. Nishimura; Karina Lezirovitz; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Mayana Zatz
We report an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder in 25 white members from a large inbred Brazilian family, 22 of whom were evaluated clinically. This condition is characterized by (1) subnormal vision secondary to apparently nonprogressive congenital optic atrophy; (2) onset of progressive spastic paraplegia in infancy; (3) onset of progressive motor and sensory axonal neuropathy in late childhood/early adolescence; (4) dysarthria starting in the third decade of life; (5) exacerbated acoustic startle response; and (6) progressive joint contractures and spine deformities. Motor handicap was severe, and all patients were wheelchair bound after 15 years old. We performed a genome‐wide screen including 25 affected individuals and 49 of their unaffected relatives. Linkage was detected at 11q13 region with a maximum logarithm of odds score of +14.43, obtained with marker D11S1883. The candidate region, which lies between D11S1908 and D11S1889, encompasses ∼4.8Mb and has more than 100 genes and expressed sequences. We propose the acronym SPOAN (spastic paraplegia, optic atrophy, and neuropathy) for this complex syndrome. Ann Neurol 2005;57:730–737
Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2010
Tarso Adoni; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; P D da Gama; Samira Apostolos-Pereira; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Fernando Kok; Dagoberto Callegaro
Neuromyelitis optica has not been thoroughly studied in Brazilian patients following the discovery of NMO-IgG and its specific antigen aquaporin-4. In this study we aimed to describe the clinical NMO-IgG immunological status and neuroimaging characteristics of recurrent neuromyelitis optica in a series Brazilian patients. We undertook a retrospective study of 28 patients with recurrent neuromyelitis optica, according to 1999 Wingerchuk’s diagnostic criteria. Data on NMO-IgG status, clinical features, and MRI findings were analyzed. Three men and 25 women were evaluated. Median age at onset of disease was 26 years (range 7—55); median time of follow-up was 7 years (range 2—14). The mean time elapsed between the first and the second attack was 17 months (median 8.5; range 2—88). NMO-IgG was detected in 18 patients (64.3%). Four patients died due to respiratory failure. Most patients presented with cervical (36%) and cervical-thoracic myelitis (46.4%). Holocord lesion was the most common pattern of involvement (50%) on the axial plane. We did not find a statistical association between myelitis extension and NMO-IgG result. Our series of Brazilian patients showed a younger age of onset than previously reported. In our series, in contrast to previous reports, there was no correlation between the extension of myelitis and NMO-IgG positivity.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2008
Tarso Adoni; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Fernando Kok; Dagoberto Callegaro
OBJECTIVE To determine the seroprevalence of neuromyelitis optica antibody (NMO)-IgG in Brazilian patients with clinical diagnosis of relapsing neuromyelitis optica, also known as Devics disease. METHOD We determined NMO-IgG titers in 28 patients (25 of them females) that fulfilled the 1999 NMO diagnostic criteria proposed by Wingerchuk et al. RESULTS NMO-IgG was detected in 18 NMO patients (64.3%). CONCLUSION Our results showed that seroprevalence of NMO-IgG in Brazilian NMO patients was similar to the observed in other studies.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2009
Paulo Diniz da Gama; Luís dos Ramos Machado; José Antonio Livramento; Hélio Rodrigues Gomes; Tarso Adoni; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Rogério de Rizo Morales; Marco Aurélio Lana-Peixoto; Dagoberto Callegaro
The frequency of oligoclonal bands (OCB) restricted to the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) varies widely in different populations. The objective of this study was to determine the frequency of these OCB in a group of MS patients in the city of São Paulo. Techniques used to detect OCB consisted of isoelectric focusing followed by immunoblotting. Oligoclonal bands were found in 49 (54.4%) out of 90 patients with clinically definite MS; in (31.2%) of the 16 patients with clinically isolated syndrome; in 7 (17.9%) of 39 patients with inflammatory disorders of the central nervous system (IDCNS), and in none of the individuals with no neurological condition (control group). The specificity of the method was 100% when compared to the control group and 82.1% when compared to the IDCNS group. These results suggest that the frequency of CSF OCB is much lower in Brazilian MS patients from São Paulo city than that reported in MS series from Caucasian populations.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002
Marco Aurélio Lana-Peixoto; Dagoberto Callegaro; Marcos Aurélio Moreira; Gilberto Belisário Campos; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Alberto Alain Gabbai; Luiz Alberto Bacheschi; Walter Oleschko Arruda; Paulo Diniz da Gama; Ailton Melo; Fernando Coronetti Gomes da Rocha; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Maria Lucia Brito Ferreira; Luiz Ataíde Júnior
There has been unprecedented advances in knowledge of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the last few years. A new set of criteria for its diagnosis and a bunch of recent clinical trials with disease-modifying agents (DMA) have been published. All of that has made it necessary to update and expand the previous consensus for MS treatment as formulated by the Brazilian Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (BCTRIMS) two years ago. The BCTRIMS Expanded Consensus emphasizes the need to (1) consider MS treatment on an individual basis; (2) educate patients about the potential benefits and risks of treatment; (3) monitor drugs side effects; (4) have a signed Informed Consent Form; (5) consider the relative cost of the drug. The various clinical possibilities and the indications of the DMA and other immunointerventions are considered according to classes of evidences and types of recommendations. The BCTRIMS Expanded Consensus on Treatment of MS may turn out to be a model to other developing countries.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2009
Cristiane Borges Patroclo; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Paulo Eurípides Marchiori; Mario Wilson Iervolino Brotto; Maria Teresa Alves Hirata
We report four Brazilian siblings with Autosomal Dominant Hereditary Motor Sensory Neuropathy with Proximal Dominant Involvement (HMSN-P), a rare form of HMSN, that was characterized by proximal dominant muscle weakness and atrophy onset after the age of 30 years, fasciculation, arreflexia and sensory disturbances with autosomal dominant inheritance. Electrophysiological study and sural nerve biopsy were in the accordance with axonal sensory motor polyneuropathy and laboratorial analysis disclosed serum lipids and muscle enzymes abnormalities. Our report is the first done by a group outside Japan, where the disease initially seemed to be restricted and stressed the phenotypic variability from the original report.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2002
Marcello Caniello; Patrícia Baxter; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Leandro Gregorut Lima; Walkyria Pereira Pinto
A thirty three year-old, male patient was admitted at the Hospital of the São Paulo University School of Medicine, at the city of São Paulo, Brazil, with complaint of pains, tingling and decreased sensibility in the right hand for the last four months. This had progressed to the left hand, left foot and right foot, in addition to a difficulty of flexing and stretching in the left foot. Tests were positive for HBeAg, IgM anti-HBc and HBsAg, thus characterizing the condition of acute hepatitis B. The ALT serum level was 15 times above the upper normal limit. Blood glucose, cerebral spinal fluid, antinuclear antibodies (ANA) and anti-HIV and anti-HCV serum tests were either normal or negative. Electroneuromyography disclosed severe peripheral neuropathy with an axon prevalence and signs of denervation; nerve biopsy disclosed intense vasculitis. The diagnosis of multiple confluent mononeuropathy associated to acute hepatitis B was done. This association is not often reported in international literature and its probable cause is the direct action of the hepatitis B virus on the nerves or a vasculitis of the vasa nervorum brought about by deposits of immune complexes.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002
Dagoberto Callegaro; Marco Aurélio Lana-Peixoto; Marcos Aurélio Moreira; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Luiz Alberto Bacheschi; Walter Oleschko Arruda; Gilberto Belisário Campos; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Ailton Melo; Fernando Coronetti Gomes da Rocha; Maria Lucia Brito Ferreira; Luiz Ataíde Júnior; Damacio Ramón Kaimen Maciel
Since the sixties immunosuppressive agents have been used in the treatment of multiple sclerosis as there was cumulating evidence of the inflammatory nature of the disease. Cyclophosphamide, azathioprine and methotrexate have been the most frequently employed drugs whereas other agents such as cyclosporine and cladribine have been recently tested for RRMS. Mithoxantrone, on the other hand, was approved by the FDA for treatment of aggressive forms of the disease. Other immunointerventions such as plasma exchange and autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation have recently been employed in some special circumstances. This paper analyses the most important published data on the use of the immunosuppressive agents, plasma exchange and autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation according to the classes of evidences and types of recommendations of these drugs and immunointerventions. It provides sufficient information to support the guidelines expressed in the BCTRIMS Expanded Consensus on Treatment of MS.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002
Marcos Aurélio Moreira; Marco Aurélio Lana-Peixoto; Dagoberto Callegaro; Sérgio Roberto Haussen; Paulo Diniz da Gama; Alberto Alain Gabbai; Fernando Coronetti Gomes da Rocha; Angelina Maria Martins Lino
Multiple sclerosis is an inflammatory disease in which immunological mechanisms play an important role in causing demyelinating lesions in the central nervous system. A number of drugs acting in different stages of these mechanisms have been tested for its treatment. This paper analyses the most important clinical trials with glucocorticoids and immunomodulatory treatments, including human immunoglobulin, using the classes of evidences and types of recommendations as have been defined and widely accepted by the international scientific community. It aims to provide sufficient information to support the BCTRIMS Expanded Consensus on Treatment of MS.