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Featured researches published by Cláudio Higa.


Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2011

Biópsia aspirativa transtorácica por agulha fina guiada por TC de lesões pulmonares: resultados e complicações

Cristiano Dias de Lima; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Eduardo Haruo Saito; Cláudio Higa; Zanier José Fernando Cardona; Denise Barbosa dos Santos

OBJECTIVEnTo analyze the cytological findings of CT-guided percutaneous fine-needle aspiration biopsies of the lung, to demonstrate the diagnostic feasibility of the method in the investigation of pulmonary lesions, and to determine the complications of the procedure, evaluating its safety.nnnMETHODSnA retrospective analysis of 89 patients with various types of pulmonary lesions who underwent 97 procedures over a period of five years. The patients were divided into groups regarding the indication for the procedure: suspicion of primary lung cancer (stages IIIB or IV); suspicion of lung cancer (stages I, II, or IIIA) and clinical contraindications for surgery; suspicion of pulmonary metastasis from other organs; and pulmonary lesions with benign radiological aspect. All of the procedures were performed with 25-gauge needles and were guided by spiral CT. The final diagnosis was confirmed by surgical biopsy and clinical/oncological follow-up. For the analysis of complications, the total number of procedures was considered.nnnRESULTSnThe main indication for the procedure was suspicion of advanced-stage primary lung cancer. The accuracy of the method for malignant lesions was 91.5%. The lesion was confirmed as cancer in 73% of the patients. The major complication was pneumothorax (27.8%), which required chest tube drainage in 12.4% of the procedures.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe principal indication for CT-guided fine-needle biopsy was suspicion of primary lung cancer in patients who were not surgical candidates. The procedure has high diagnostic feasibility for malignant pulmonary diseases. The most prevalent complication was pneumothorax. However, in most cases, chest tube drainage was unnecessary. No deaths were related to the procedure.


Respiratory Care | 2012

CPAP increases 6-minute walk distance after lung resection surgery.

Flávio Pos Nery; Agnaldo José Lopes; Denise N Domingos; Renato F Cunha; Márcia dos G. Peixoto; Cláudio Higa; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Eduardo Haruo Saito

BACKGROUND: The application of CPAP has been used to minimize postoperative pulmonary complications after lung resection surgery. The aim of this study was to quantify both the CPAP effects upon lung function and functional capacity in early postoperative lung resection, as well as to evaluate if CPAP prolongs air leak through the chest drain. METHODS: Thirty patients in the postoperative period of lung resection were allocated into 2 groups: an experimental group, consisting of 15 patients who underwent a 10 cm H2O CPAP, and a 15 patient control group, who performed breathing exercises. Arterial blood gas analysis, peak expiratory flow (PEF), respiratory muscle strength, spirometry, and 6-min walk test (6MWT) were assessed in the preoperative period, and repeated postoperatively on the first and on the seventh day (6MWT was repeated only on the seventh day). RESULTS: Significant increases in PEF, muscle strength, and FEV1 between the first and seventh postoperative day were observed, both in the experimental and in the control group, whereas FVC and PaO2 increased significantly between the first and seventh postoperative day only in the experimental group. The average loss in 6-min walk distance (6MWD) from preoperative to postoperative day 7 in the experimental group was significantly lower than in control group. When comparing the 2 groups, only 6MWD was statistically different (P < .001). There was no air leakage increase through the drain with the early use of CPAP. CONCLUSION: When compared to breathing exercises, CPAP increases the 6MWD in postoperative lung resection patients, without prolonging air leak through the chest drain.


Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2014

Lung cancer with chest wall invasion: retrospective analysis comparing en-bloc resection and 'resection in bird cage'

Heron Teixeira Andrade dos Santos; Agnaldo José Lopes; Cláudio Higa; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Eduardo Haruo Saito

BackgroundInvasion of the chest wall per se is not a contraindication for tumor resection in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), provided there is no mediastinal lymph node or vital structure involvement. Although widely known to Brazilian surgeons, the ‘resection in bird cage’ technique has never been widely studied in terms of patient survival. Thus, the objective of this study was to evaluate the postoperative consequences and overall survival of extra-musculoperiosteal resection compared with en-bloc resection in NSCLC patients with invasion of the endothoracic fascia.MethodsBetween January 1990 and December 2009, 33 NSCLC patients with invasion of the thoracic wall who underwent pulmonary resection were retrospectively analyzed. Of the 33 patients evaluated, 20 patients underwent en-bloc resection and 13 underwent ‘resection in bird cage.’ For each patient, a retrospective case note review was made.ResultsThe median age at surgery, gender, indication, rate of comorbidities, tumor size and the degree of uptake in the costal margin were similar for both groups. The rate of postoperative complications and the duration of hospitalization did not differ between the groups. Regarding the outcome variables, the disease-free interval, rate of local recurrence, metastasis-free time after surgery, overall mortality rate, mortality rate related to metastatic disease, duration following surgery in which deaths occurred, and overall survival were also similar between groups. The cumulative survival curves between the ‘resection in bird cage’ and en-bloc resection and between stages Iau2009+u2009Ib and IIbu2009+u2009IIIau2009+u2009IV were not significantly different (pu2009=u20090.68 and pu2009=u20090.64, respectively). The cumulative metastasis-free survival curves were not significantly different between the two types of surgery (pu2009=u20090.38).ConclusionsIn NSCLC patients with invasion of the endothoracic fascia, ‘resection in bird cage’ is a less aggressive procedure that yields similar results in terms of morbidity and mortality compared with en-bloc resection. Thus, ‘resection in bird cage’ meets the oncologic principles of resection and does not adversely affect the patients in terms of cure.


Jornal De Pneumologia | 2003

Timectomia estendida por cirurgia torácica videoassistida e cervicotomia no tratamento da miastenia

Eduardo Haruo Saito; Cláudio Higa; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Gérson Canedo de Magalhães; Luiz Carlos Aguiar Vaz; Vicente Faria Cervante

* Trabalho realizado na Faculdade de Ciencias Medicas da Universida-de do Estado do Rio de Janeiro – UERJ/HUPE.1. Professor Adjunto Doutor – Disciplina de Cirurgia Toracica. Titulode especialista pela Sociedade Brasileira de Cirurgia Toracica.2. Professor Assistente – Disciplina de Cirurgia Toracica. Titulo de es-pecialista pela Sociedade Brasileira de Cirurgia Toracica.3. Professor Adjunto Doutor – Disciplina de Cirurgia Toracica. Titulode especialista pela Sociedade Brasileira de Cirurgia Toracica.


The Journal of Surgery | 2015

Prospective Analysis of Patients with Axillary, Palmar and Axillary-Palmar Hyperhidrosis who Underwent Bilateral R4-R5 Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Sympathicotomy

Jesús Alej; ro Segura Martínez; Agnaldo José Lopes; Cláudio Higa; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Adriano Arnóbio José da Silva e Silva; Eduardo Haruo Saito

Background: Video-assisted thoracoscopic sympathicotomy is a safe, effective and minimally invasive procedure, and its emergence greatly changed hyperhidrosis treatment. However, the possibility of standardizing interruption levels on the sympathetic chain has not yet been evaluated. This study sought to evaluate the frequency of compensatory sweating and the recurrence and satisfaction rates after bilateral R4-R5 video-assisted thoracoscopic sympathicotomy in patients with primary focal hyperhidrosis with involvement of the axillary, palmar, or both regions. nMethods: From November 2010 to February 2013, an observational prospective cohort study was conducted with 42 patients who underwent bilateral video-assisted thoracoscopic sympathicotomy. During the procedure, electrocautery was performed along the sympathetic chain at the levels R4-R5, and the nerve of Kuntz and the path between levels R4-R5 were also sectioned. nResults: No cases in which the video-assisted thoracoscopy had to be converted to thoracotomy were observed. Compensatory sweating was observed in 47.6% of patients within the first six months after surgery, decreasing to 30.9% at the end of this period. Hyperhidrosis recurrence occurred in only two patients. In total, 24.1% of patients with associated plantar hyperhidrosis reported that the condition disappeared after surgery. The satisfaction rate was 89.7% in the immediate postoperative period. nConclusions: The frequency of compensatory sweating, the recurrence rate of symptoms and the satisfaction rate after sectioning by cauterization with electrocautery at the R4-R5 levels were similar to those reported for other types of interruption and other levels studied. Moreover, the interruption level adopted also had beneficial effects on plantar hyperhidrosis.


Carcinogenesis | 2002

CYP2A6/2A7 and CYP2E1 expression in human oesophageal mucosa: regional and inter-individual variation in expression and relevance to nitrosamine metabolism

Wagner Godoy; Rodolpho M. Albano; Emanuela Moraes; Paulo Roberto Alves de Pinho; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Eduardo Haruo Saito; Cláudio Higa; Ivan Mathias Filho; Cleber Dario Pinto Kruel; Carlos Cauduro Schirmer; Richard Ricachenevsky Gurski; Matti A. Lang; Luis Felipe Ribeiro Pinto


Archive | 2011

Biópsia aspirativa transtorácica por agulha fina guiada por TC de lesões pulmonares: resultados e complicações* Results and complications of CT-guided transthoracic fine-needle aspiration biopsy of pulmonary lesions

Cristiano Dias de Lima; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Eduardo Haruo Saito; Cláudio Higa; Denise Barbosa dos Santos


Archive | 2011

Thymectomy by Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery in Myasthenia Gravis Timectomia por Cirurgia Torácica Vídeo-Assistida na Miastenia Gravis

Eduardo Haruo Saito; Cláudio Higa; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Máximo Dias Júnior; Marcos Alexandre Balieiro; Ivan Mathias Filho; Rodrigo Teixeira Lima


Archive | 2011

Results and complications of CT-guided transthoracic fine-needle aspiration biopsy of pulmonary lesions* Biópsia aspirativa transtorácica por agulha fina guiada por TC de lesões pulmonares: resultados e complicações

Cristiano Dias de Lima; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Eduardo Haruo Saito; Cláudio Higa; Denise Barbosa dos Santos


Pulmäo RJ | 2006

Ressecção de hemangioma de pleura por cirurgia torácica vídeo-assistida (CTVA)

Eduardo Haruo Saito; Luciana Ribeiro de Araujo; Pedro Henrique Diegues; Rodolfo Acatauassú Nunes; Cláudio Higa

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Eduardo Haruo Saito

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Agnaldo José Lopes

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Carlos Cauduro Schirmer

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Cleber Dario Pinto Kruel

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Denise N Domingos

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Flávio Pos Nery

Rio de Janeiro State University

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