Arnaldo Moreira da Silva
Federal University of Uberlandia
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Publication
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Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1995
Julia Maria Costa-Cruz; Ademir Rocha; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Azarias T. de Moraes; Aparecida H.B. Guimarães; Eliana Chaves Salomäo; Tânia Machado Alcântara
3937 autopsies were performed between 1971 and 1993 in the Servico de Anatomia Patologica of the Hospital de Clinicas of the Fundacao de Assistencia, Estudo e Pesquisa de Uberlândia, Universidade Federal de Uberlândia, in Minas Gerais, Brazil. At this Service of Pathology are realized all the autopsies of the municipal district of Uberlândia. The analysis of 2862 concluded autopsy reports, of death above the age of one year, disclosed 39 cases (1.4%) of cysticercosis. The age range was 16 to 83 years and 66.6% were males; 82.1 % of the patients were from Minas Gerais State, 15.4% were from Goias State, and in one case (2.5%) the origin was not registered. From these 39 cases, 35 (89.7%) showed central nervous system involvement, isolated or in association to other clinical forms of the disease; in 9 occurred the isolated or associated cardiac form; in 4 the muscular form, isolated or associated, was found; 4 presented the isolated or associated visceral form. In only 7 (17.9%) cases, the cysticercosis was assumed to be the direct cause of the death.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1997
Aércio Sebastião Borges; Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Marco Túlio Alvarenga Silvestre; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Ademir Rocha
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is one of the main causes of death in adults worldwide. More commonly than in the general population, in patients with AIDS there is substantial disagreement between causes of death which are clinically suspected and those established by postmortem examination. The findings of 52 postmortem examinations were compared to the premortem (clinical) diagnoses, and there was 46% agreement between them. Fifty two percent of the patients had more than one postmortem diagnosis, and 48% had at least one AIDS-related disease not suspected clinically. Cytomegalovirus infection was the commonest (30.7%) autopsy finding, but not a single case had been suspected premortem. Bacterial infection, tuberculosis, and histoplasmosis were also common, sometimes not previously suspected, postmortem findings. This study shows that multiple infections occur simultaneously in AIDS patients, and that many among them are never suspected before the postmortem examination. These findings suggest that an aggressive investigation of infections and cancers should be done in patients with AIDS, particularly in those who do not respond to therapy of an already recognized condition.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1996
JoséRoberto Mineo; Ademir Rocha; Julia Maria Costa-Cruz; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Deise Aparecida de Oliveira Silva; Maria do Rosário de Fátima Gonçalves-Pires; Edison Reis Lopes; Edmundo Chapadeiro
Levels of total and specific anti-Trypanosoma cruzi immunoglobulin E (IgE) were determined by immunoenzymatic assay among 101 samples of pericardial fluid from patients who had died in one trypanosomiasis endemic area in central Brazil. These samples were divided into 6 groups. Group I, 17 samples from patients with the cardiac form of Chagas disease; group II, 11 samples from patients with the digestive form of Chagas disease, presenting megaoesophagus and/or megacolon; group III, 41 samples from patients with the indeterminate form of Chagas disease; group IV, 4 samples from patients with both cardiac and digestive forms of Chagas disease; group V, 5 samples from patients who suddenly died and were seropositive for T. cruzi antibodies; group VI, 23 samples, used as a control group, which came from patients seronegative for T. cruzi antibodies. Significantly high levels of total IgE were observed in groups I, II, III, IV and V when compared with group VI (mean concentrations 708-1157 iu/mL compared with 394 iu/mL). In groups I-V, 32 samples (41%) had specific anti-T. cruzi IgE antibodies. The individual percentage positivity rates in these groups were 64.7% (group I), 45.4% (group II), 34.1% (group III), nil (group IV), and 40.0% (group V). A significant correlation between total IgE and specific anti-T. cruzi IgE was observed only in the samples from patients with the cardiac form of Chagas disease (group I).
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2000
Ademir Rocha; Omar Ferreira Miguel; Hugo Marcelo Ribeiro Barbosa; Ignez Candelori; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Edison Reis Lopes
The occurrence of Trypanosoma cruzi intracellular clusters and phlebitis was searched for on pampiniform plexus vein walls of chronic chagasic patients. For this purpose, 23 pairs of spermatic cords, epididymides and testes (17 from chagasic patients and 6 from non-chagasic controls) were obtained, at autopsy. Trypanosoma cruzi was investigated by immuno-histochemistry on slides obtained from several sections of the gonads and vessels of each case. Only discrete and focal undetermined chronic phlebitis was observed, with no parasites, in 5 chagasics (bilateral in 3) and 2 controls (c2: p < 0.10), and discrete mononuclear interstitial infiltration in the funiculi of 13 chagasics and 5 controls (c2: p < 0.75). In conclusion, on the contrary to that published regarding the supra-renal central veins, it seems that the hormonal environment provided by testosterone does not favor the infection of the gonadal vessel wall.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1994
Ademir Rocha; Antonio Carlos Oliveira Meneses; Oliveira De Meneses; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Marcius K. N. Burgarelli; Eros Antonio de Almeida; Gilberto Turcato; Konradin Metze; Edison Reis Lopes
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1993
Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Ademir Rocha; Marcius K. N. Burgarelli; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Maria Irma Seixas Duarte; Fernando Schmitt
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1993
Ademir Rocha; Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Marcos Augusto de Moraes Silva; Marcius K. N. Burgarelli; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Leandro Pajuaba de Moura; Reinaldo Ugrinovich; Cesar Noronha Raffin
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1988
Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Maria Inês Machado; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Ademir Rocha; Julia Maria Costa-Cruz; Maria do Rosário de Fátima Gonçalves
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1996
Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Luiz Eduardo Ramirez; Marlene Vargas; Edmundo Chapadeiro; Zigman Brener
Arquivos De Gastroenterologia | 1994
Luciana de Ameida França; Elaine Travaglia Santos; Ademar Margonari Carvalho; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Ademir Rocha
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Maria do Rosário de Fátima Gonçalves-Pires
Federal University of Uberlandia
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