Cristiane Maria Cassol
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
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Publication
Featured researches published by Cristiane Maria Cassol.
Chest | 2012
Cristiane Maria Cassol; Denis Martinez; Fernando Augusto Boeira Sabino da Silva; Marcia Kraide Fischer; Maria do Carmo Sfreddo Lenz; Ângelo José Gonçalves Bós
BACKGROUND The severity of obstructive sleep apnea increases by influence of conditions that are more frequent in winter. The hypothesis that the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) of different patients undergoing polysomnography may be seasonally affected was tested. METHODS The retrospectively analyzed database included 7,523 patients of both sexes who underwent in-laboratory baseline polysomnography to investigate any complaint of disordered sleep, during 1 decade, between January 2000 and December 2009. Data on climate and air pollution were obtained from official organizations. AHI was the main outcome variable. Cosinor analysis, a statistical method for the investigation of time series, was used to detect seasonality. RESULTS The cosinor analysis confirmed the existence of a circannual pattern of AHI, with acrophase in winter and nadir during the summer. The seasonality is significant even after adjusting for sex, age, BMI, neck circumference, and relative air humidity. Median (25-75 interquartile range) AHI in the 6 months with colder weather was 17.8 (6.5-40.6/h), and in the warmer weather was 15.0 (5.7-33.2/h). The AHI correlated inversely with ambient temperature and directly with atmospheric pressure, relative air humidity, and carbon monoxide levels. Correlations with precipitation, particulate air matter < 10 μm, sulfur dioxide, and ozone were nonsignificant. CONCLUSIONS More sleep-disordered breathing events were recorded in winter than in other seasons. Cosinor analysis uncovered a significant seasonal pattern in the AHI of different patients undergoing polysomnography, independent of sex, age, BMI, neck circumference, and relative air humidity. This finding suggests that obstructive sleep apnea severity may be associated with other seasonal epidemiologic phenomena.
Chest | 2012
Cristiane Maria Cassol; Denis Martinez; Fernando Augusto Boeira Sabino da Silva; Marcia Kraide Fischer; Maria do Carmo Sfreddo Lenz; Ângelo José Gonçalves Bós
BACKGROUND The severity of obstructive sleep apnea increases by influence of conditions that are more frequent in winter. The hypothesis that the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) of different patients undergoing polysomnography may be seasonally affected was tested. METHODS The retrospectively analyzed database included 7,523 patients of both sexes who underwent in-laboratory baseline polysomnography to investigate any complaint of disordered sleep, during 1 decade, between January 2000 and December 2009. Data on climate and air pollution were obtained from official organizations. AHI was the main outcome variable. Cosinor analysis, a statistical method for the investigation of time series, was used to detect seasonality. RESULTS The cosinor analysis confirmed the existence of a circannual pattern of AHI, with acrophase in winter and nadir during the summer. The seasonality is significant even after adjusting for sex, age, BMI, neck circumference, and relative air humidity. Median (25-75 interquartile range) AHI in the 6 months with colder weather was 17.8 (6.5-40.6/h), and in the warmer weather was 15.0 (5.7-33.2/h). The AHI correlated inversely with ambient temperature and directly with atmospheric pressure, relative air humidity, and carbon monoxide levels. Correlations with precipitation, particulate air matter < 10 μm, sulfur dioxide, and ozone were nonsignificant. CONCLUSIONS More sleep-disordered breathing events were recorded in winter than in other seasons. Cosinor analysis uncovered a significant seasonal pattern in the AHI of different patients undergoing polysomnography, independent of sex, age, BMI, neck circumference, and relative air humidity. This finding suggests that obstructive sleep apnea severity may be associated with other seasonal epidemiologic phenomena.
Sleep and Breathing | 2011
Denis Martinez; Tiago Cataldo Breitenbach; Magali Santos Lumertz; Denise Lerias Alcântara; Neusa Sicca da Rocha; Cristiane Maria Cassol; Maria do Carmo Sfreddo Lenz
PurposeWe aimed to verify whether it is clinically useful to repeat the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) in individuals with suspected sleep-disordered breathing (SDB).MethodsIn this cross-sectional, prospective study, results of the repeated administration of the ESS were analyzed. In 929 consecutive patients, ESS was obtained as usual in the laboratory routine, immediately before the sleep study (ESS1) and was repeated in the morning, after the polysomnography (ESS2). ROC curve, classical psychometry, and item response theory (IRT) Rasch analysis were used to assess measurement properties of ESS.ResultsThe ESS1 score was (mean ± SD), 11 ± 5.1, and the ESS2, 13 ± 4.7 (p < 0.001). Change in ESS score is explained in multivariate analysis by age, but not by gender, educational level, change in Stanford Sleepiness Scale, symptoms of sleep disorder, or polysomnography results. Accuracy of an ESS score >10 to predict apnea–hypopnea index ≥5 increased from 56% (ESS1) to 72% (ESS2). IRT psychometric properties (unidimensionality, invariance, local independence) were maintained in ESS2.ConclusionsRepeating the administration of the Epworth Sleepiness Scale in a clinical setting increases its score and diagnostic accuracy and correlation with SDB variables, without changing the psychometric properties of the scale. This experiment indicates the clinical usefulness of repeating the ESS. The scale can be repeated at a negligible cost, before dismissing individual patients on the basis of a low ESS score, discontinuing a potentially lifesaving diagnostic and therapeutic process.
Sleep Medicine | 2012
Marcia Kraide Fischer; Denis Martinez; Cristiane Maria Cassol; Laura Rahmeier; Luciana Rodrigues Vieira
BACKGROUND Overnight increases in neck circumference - attributed to rostral fluid displacement - correlate with the severity of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). No studies were found investigating the relationship between OSA severity and recumbence-related immediate changes in neck circumference. We evaluated the relationship of OSA severity with immediate recumbence-related and overnight changes in neck circumference in obese and nonobese subjects. METHODS Male patients undergoing full-night in-laboratory polysomnography had their neck and ankle circumferences determined before and after sleep, both while standing and supine. Circumference changes were calculated by the difference between standing and recumbent positions (Immediate Change) and between before and after sleep (Overnight Change). RESULTS Immediate Change in neck circumference showed a linear significant correlation with apnea-hypopnea index (AHI; r=0.37373; p=0.012) and with lowest O2 saturation (r=-0.35355; p=0.017). In a multivariate model to predict AHI, adjusting for age and obesity, Immediate Change in neck circumference is the only significant regressor (beta=0.34; p=0.03). The Overnight Change in neck circumference correlated neither with the AHI nor with the lowest SaO2. CONCLUSION Correlation of AHI with the immediate increase in neck circumference on assuming recumbence indicates that fast components of tissue displacement, besides overnight fluid displacement, may have implications in the pathogenesis of OSA.
Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2008
Denis Martinez; Cristiane Maria Cassol
Recently, Martinez-Lavin [1] proposed a model of sympathetically maintained neuropathic pain syndrome that has the merit of scrutinizing possible mechanisms behind the central sensitization model [2]. Eisinger [3], in an editorial comment, raises the issue of heterogeneity permeating Martinez-Lavins proposition. Since it is difficult to establish a traumatic trigger event in all cases, Eisinger considers multicausality as more reasonable than a single post-traumatic etiology for all cases. Felix and Fontenele [4] further explored this venue, speculating that the orthostatic intolerance symptoms seen in the majority of fibromyalgia patients are a consequence of sympathetic hyperactivity. The idea that a COMT val-158-met polymorphism may cause higher cathecolamine levels has been explored [5]. Loevinger and colleagues [6] have shown that the metabolic syndrome is more common in individuals with fibromyalgia who also have higher body mass index, blood pressure, and waist-to-hip ratio than controls. Interestingly, elevated body mass index, blood pressure, and waist-to-hip ratio are associated with sleep-disordered breathing. We recently reported in a study that 50% of the women with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome or upper airway resistance syndrome had chronic pain and more than 11 tender points when pressed with 4 kgf/cm2 [7]. Guille-minault and colleagues [8] reported orthostatic intolerance in patients with upper airway resistance syndrome. We believe that the authors investigating this theme should discuss the possibility of sleep-disordered breathing being the missing link between fibromyalgia, pain, disturbed sleep, alpha-delta sleep, hypotension, sympathetic hyperactivity, and metabolic syndrome. We are conducting investigations into whether exposition to the typical stress of sleep-disordered breathing – with repeated arousal episodes and hypoxemia – has fibromyalgia as a possible outcome. Our preliminary results underline the need to consider and further explore this hypothesis.
Clinical & Biomedical Research | 2015
Denis Martinez; Roberto Pacheco da Silva; Cristiane Maria Cassol; Gabriel Natan Pires
Introduction: Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a proposed mental disorder still controversial. This condition is prevalent in northern latitudes, but few studies have been conducted at locations in the southern hemisphere. It is usually assessed by the Seasonal Pattern Assessment Questionnaire (SPAQ). This study aimed to evaluate, through on-line questionnaire, the hypothesis that, in the Brazilian population, latitude and longitude influence SPAQ scores. Methods: An advertisement was posted on a sleep medicine website inviting visitors to investigate seasonal patterns of behavior and mood, using a Brazilian Portuguese version of the SPAQ. The geographic coordinates of the place of residence of each respondent were analyzed as a continuous variable or distributed in quartiles of latitude and longitude. The psychometric properties of the SPAQ were assessed by reliability and factor analyses. Results: Answers from 1001 respondents out of 1045 were considered eligible. High SPAQ scores were observed in 287 respondents, equally distributed among all latitude and longitude quartiles. Data collected in different seasons and during daylight saving time did not differ significantly in any of the scores for SPAQ dimensions. No correlations between SPAQ scores and latitude or longitude were observed. Psychometric properties of the SPAQ were preserved in all geographic locations. Conclusion: The finding of similar SPAQ scores at a wide latitude range defies the concept of SAD symptoms as latitude or longitude-dependent phenomena.
Sleep and Breathing | 2012
Denis Martinez; Cristini Klein; Laura Rahmeier; Roberto Pacheco da Silva; Cintia Zappe Fiori; Cristiane Maria Cassol; Sandro Cadaval Gonçalves; Angelo José Gonçalves Bós
Sleep and Breathing | 2012
Denis Martinez; Roberto Pacheco da Silva; Cristini Klein; Cintia Zappe Fiori; Daniela Massierer; Cristiane Maria Cassol; Angelo José Gonçalves Bós; Miguel Gus
Archive | 2009
Gustavo Neves de Araújo; Cristini Klein; Marcia Kraide Fischer; Renata Schenkel Rivera Kaminski; Cintia Zappe Fiori; Cristiane Maria Cassol; Daniela Massierer; Laura Rahmeier; Tássia Machado Medeiros; Fernanda Schäfer Hackenhaar; Benfatto; Denis Martinez
Chest | 2012
Denis Martinez; Cristiane Maria Cassol; Fernando Augusto Boeira Sabino da Silva
Collaboration
Dive into the Cristiane Maria Cassol's collaboration.
Renata Schenkel Rivera Kaminski
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
View shared research outputsFernando Augusto Boeira Sabino da Silva
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
View shared research outputs