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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Elizondo is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Elizondo.


Translational neurodegeneration | 2014

Cardiovascular risk factors and frontotemporal dementia: a case–control study

A. Golimstok; N. Campora; Juan Ignacio Rojas; Maria Cecilia Fernandez; Cristina Elizondo; Enrique R. Soriano; Edgardo Cristiano

Cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) were widely described as related to dementia. There are very few studies regarding this association in FTD. The objective of the study was to compare the frequency of CRF in our population with FTD and controls. 100 consecutive subjects with FTD diagnosis according to Lund-Manchester clinical criteria and 200 controls matched by age and sex were included between January 2003 to February 2007 at the Cognitive and Behavior Unit of Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires. Clinical evaluation, laboratory tests, brain images (CT/MRI), neuropsychological and neuropsychiatric assessment were performed. Multiple regression analysis was performed to analyze the association in CRF between FTD patients vs. controls. The mean age in FTD was 69.7 ± 0.9 vs. 70.1 ± 0.8 in controls (p 0.12). No difference in gender was observed between cases and controls. No differences were identified between patients and controls regarding hypertension (HTA) (65% vs. 67,3% p 0.44); dyslipidemia (57% vs. 54.7% p 0.74); obesity (39% vs. 27.6% p 0.14) and hypothyroidism (26% vs. 17.1% p 0.1). A significant difference was observed for Diabetes Mellitus (39% vs. 22.6% p 0.001). In our population, Diabetes Mellitus was associated as an independent risk factor for FTD. To our knowledge this is the first report in which CRF were evaluated prospectively in FTD patients. More studies are needed to confirm this finding in larger populations.


Journal of The American Society of Hypertension | 2015

Comparison of atenolol versus bisoprolol with noninvasive hemodynamic and pulse wave assessment.

Lucas S. Aparicio; José Alfie; Jessica Barochiner; Paula E. Cuffaro; Diego Giunta; Cristina Elizondo; Juan J. Tortella; Margarita S. Morales; Marcelo A. Rada; Gabriel Waisman

We aimed to compare atenolol versus bisoprolol regarding general hemodynamics, central-peripheral blood pressure (BP), pulse wave parameters, and arterial stiffness. In this open-label, crossover study, we recruited 19 hypertensives, untreated or with stable monotherapy. Patients were randomized to receive atenolol (25-50 mg) or bisoprolol (2.5-5 mg), and then switched medications after 4 weeks. Studies were performed at baseline and after each drug period. In pulse wave analyses, both drugs significantly increased augmentation index (P < .01) and ejection duration (P < .02), and reduced heart rate (P < .001), brachial systolic BP (P ≤ .01), brachial diastolic BP (P ≤ .001), and central diastolic BP (P ≤ .001), but not central systolic BP (P ≥ .06). Impedance cardiographic assessment showed a significantly increased stroke volume (P ≤ .02). There were no significant differences in the effects between drugs. In conclusion, atenolol and bisoprolol show similar hemodynamic characteristics. Failure to decrease central systolic BP results from bradycardia with increased stroke volume and an earlier reflected aortic wave.


Surgery | 2018

Extended antibiotic therapy versus placebo after laparoscopic cholecystectomy for mild and moderate acute calculous cholecystitis: A randomized double-blind clinical trial

Martin de Santibañes; Juan Glinka; Pablo Pelegrini; Fernando A. Alvarez; Cristina Elizondo; Diego Giunta; Laura Barcán; Lionel Simoncini; Nora Cáceres Dominguez; Victoria Ardiles; Oscar Mazza; Rodrigo Sánchez Clariá; Eduardo De Santibanes; Juan Pekolj

Background: Acute calculous cholecystitis (ACC) is the most common complication of cholelithiasis. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) is the gold standard treatment in mild and moderate forms. Currently there is consensus for the use of antibiotics in the preoperative phase of ACC. However, the need for antibiotic therapy after surgery remains undefined with a low level of scientific evidence. Methods: The CHART (Cholecystectomy Antibiotic Randomised Trial) study is a single‐center, prospective, double blind, and randomized trial. Patients with mild to moderate ACC operated by LC were randomly assigned to receive antibiotic (amoxicillin/clavulanic acid) or placebo treatment for 5 consecutive days. The primary endpoint was postoperative infectious complications. Secondary endpoints were as follows: (1) duration of hospital stay, (2) readmissions, (3) reintervention, and (4) overall mortality. Results: In the per‐protocol analysis, 6 of 104 patients (5.8%) in the placebo arm and 6 of 91 patients (6.6%) in the antibiotic arm developed postoperative infectious complications (absolute difference 0.82 (95% confidence interval, −5.96 to 7.61, P = .81). The median hospital stay was 3 days. There was no mortality. There were no differences regarding readmissions and reoperations between the 2 groups. Conclusion: Although this trial failed to show noninferiority of postoperative placebo compared to antibiotic treatment after LC for mild and moderate ACC within a noninferiority margin of 5%, the use of antibiotics in the postoperative period does not seem justified, because it was not associated with a decrease in the incidence of infectious and other types of morbidity in the present study.


Global Spine Journal | 2018

Analysis of Postoperative Complications in Spinal Surgery, Hospital Length of Stay, and Unplanned Readmission: Application of Dindo-Clavien Classification to Spine Surgery

Gaston Camino Willhuber; Cristina Elizondo; Pablo Slullitel

Study Design: Retrospective study. Level of evidence III. Objective: Postoperative complications in spine surgery are associated with increased morbidity, hospital length of stay, and health care costs. Registry of complications in orthopedics and the spine surgery is heterogeneous. Methods: Between July 2016 and June 2017, 274 spinal surgeries were performed, the presence of postoperative complications was analyzed at 90 days (according to the classification of Dindo-Clavien, grades I-V), hospital length of stay, surgical complexity (low, medium, and high), unplanned readmission, and risk factors were evaluated. Results: A total of 79 patients suffered a complication (28.8%), of them 21 (26.7%) were grade I, 24 (30.3%) were grade II, 4 (5.7%) were grade IIIA, and 29 (37.3%) were grade IIIB. There were no IV and V grade cases. The most frequent complication was excessive pain followed by deep wound infection and anemia. Surgical complexity and surgical time were significantly associated with the risk of developing a complication. The average number of hospital length of stay in patients without and with complications were 2.7 and 10.6, respectively, and the unplanned readmission rate was 11%. Conclusions: Registry of postoperative complications allows the correct standardization and risk factors required to establish measures to decrease them, the application of Dindo-Clavien classification was useful for the purpose of our study.


Endocrinología, Diabetes y Nutrición | 2018

Pacientes hospitalizados con hiperglucemia de estrés: incidencia de diabetes y mortalidad al seguimiento

María Paula Russo; María Florencia Grande Ratti; Diego Giunta; Cristina Elizondo

INTRODUCTION The study objective was to estimate during post-discharge follow-up the incidence of diabetes and to ascertain mortality in hospitalized patients, classified during follow-up as having stress hyperglycemia (SH) or normoglycemia (NG) based on blood glucose levels. MATERIAL AND METHODS A retrospective cohort of non-diabetic adults with SH (> 140mg/dl and HbA1c <6.5%) or NG (all blood glucose values ≤ 140mg/dl) was used. RESULTS There were 3981 patients with NG and 884 with SH. During the observation period (median follow-up of 1.83 years), there were 255 cases of diabetes and 831 deaths. The cumulative incidence of diabetes per year was 1.59% (95% CI: 1.23-2.06) in patients with NG and 7.39% (95% CI: 5.70-9.56) in those with SH. SH was significantly associated to diabetes (crude HR 1.33, 95% CI: 1.13-1.73, p .025), even after adjusting for age and sex (adjusted HR 1.38, 95% CI 1.06-1.78, p .014). The mortality rate at one year was 10.07% (95% CI: 9.18-11.05) in NG patients and 13.24% (95% CI: 11.17-15.65) in SH patients. The sub-hazard ratio of developing diabetes considering death as a competitive event was 1.41 (95% CI 1.29-1.53, p <.001). CONCLUSIONS SH is a risk factor for diabetes. There were no differences in mortality during follow-up, but death appears to be a competitive event in development of diabetes in this population.


Revista Medica De Chile | 2017

Descripción de las características del fenómeno Crowding en la Central de Emergencia de Adultos, en un hospital universitario de alta complejidad: estudio de cohorte retrospectiva

Diego Giunta; Ana Soledad Pedretti; Cristina Elizondo; María Florencia Grande Ratti; Fernán Gonzalez Bernaldo de Quirós; Gabriel Waisman; Héctor J Peroni; Bernardo Martinez

Crowding in Emergency Departments (ED), results from the imbalance between the simultaneous demand for health care and the ability of the system to respond. The NEDOCS scale (National Emergency Department Crowding Scale) measures the degree of crowding in an ED. Aim: To describe ED Crowding characteristics, using the NEDOCS scale, in an Argentinean hospital. Material and Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted with all adult patient consultations between July 2013 and July 2014 at the ED of Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires. We included all hours in the analysis period (365 days x 24 h = 8,760). The NEDOCS value was calculated for each hour using an automatic algorithm and was quantified in a six points score. Levels 4 (overcrowded), 5 (severely overcrowded) and 6 (dangerously overcrowded) were defined as overcrowding. Contour plots analysis was applied to identify patterns. Results: During the study period, 124,758 visits to the ED were registered. Overcrowding was present in 57.7% (5,055) of the analyzed hours. A predominance of scores between four and five was observed between 10:00 and 24:00 hours. The months with predominance of overcrowding were June, July and August (southern winter). Conclusions: The calculation of the NEDOCS score and the analysis of its temporal distribution are highly relevant to identify opportunities for improvement and to develop mechanisms to prevent the highest categories of overcrowding


Revista Española de Cirugía Ortopédica y Traumatología | 2017

Factores asociados a recidiva de hernia de disco lumbar luego de una microdiscectomía

G. Camino Willhuber; G. Kido; Maximiliano Mereles; J. Bassani; Matias Petracchi; Cristina Elizondo; Marcelo Gruenberg; Carlos Sola

INTRODUCTION Lumbar disc hernias are a common cause of spinal surgery. Hernia recurrence is a prevalent complication. OBJECTIVE To analyse the risk factors associated with hernia recurrence in patients undergoing surgery in our institution. MATERIALS AND METHODS Lumbar microdiscectomies between 2010 and 2014 were analysed, patients with previous surgeries, extraforaminales and foraminal hernias were excluded. Patients with recurrent hernia were the case group and those who showed no recurrence were the control group. RESULTS 177 patients with lumbar microdiscectomy, of whom 30 experienced recurrence (16%), and of these 27 were reoperated. Among the risk factors associated with recurrence, we observed a higher rate of disc height, higher percentage of spinal canal occupied by the hernia and presence of degenerative facet joint changes; we observed no differences in sex, body mass index or age. DISCUSSION Previous studies show increased disc height and young patients as possible factors associated with recurrence. CONCLUSION In our series we found that the higher rate of disc height, the percentage of spinal canal occupied by the hernia and degenerative facet joint changes were associated with hernia recurrence.


Geriatric Orthopaedic Surgery & Rehabilitation | 2016

Institutional Registry of Elderly Patients With Hip Fracture in a Community-Based Tertiary Care Hospital in Argentina (RIAFC)

Javier Benchimol; Fernando Fiorentini; Cristina Elizondo; Bruno Rafael Boietti; Guido Carabelli; Jorge Barla; Carlos Sancineto; Gabriel Waisman; Diego Giunta

Background: A clinical registry encompasses a selective set of rigorously collected and stored clinical data focused on a specific condition. Hip fracture is a common complication of osteoporosis in elderly patients. Hip fracture substantially increases the risk of death and major morbidity in the elderly patients. Limited data regarding hip fracture are available from Latin America and Argentina. The purpose of this project is to create an institutional registry of elderly patients with hip fracture in order to obtain data that reveal the impact of this disease in our environment, allowing us to evaluate different strategies of patient’s care and clinical outcomes. Objective: To describe the implementation of an institutional registry of elderly patients with hip fracture in Argentina. Methods: In this article, we described the creation, implementation, and data management of a prospective registry of elderly patients with hip fracture. The registry contains information on baseline demographics, comorbidities, laboratory, and radiological data. Follow-up at 3 and 12 months postfracture is done by phone interview to assess physical function, readmissions, and morbi-mortality. Clinical Trials registry number NCT02279550. Conclusion: In this project, we have created a hip fracture registry. We hope that this registry will provide valuable data that can lead us to new lines of research, addressed to answer questions raised in clinical practice.


Medicina-buenos Aires | 2010

Proyecto institucional para la educación médica continua en investigación clínica

Nora Fuentes; Diego Giunta; Valeria Pazo; Cristina Elizondo; Silvana Figar; Fernán Gonzalez Bernaldo de Quirós


Hpb | 2018

Extended antibiotic therapy versus placebo after laparoscopic cholecystectomy for mild and moderate acute calculous cholecystitis a randomized double-blind clinical trial

M. de Santibañes; Juan Glinka; Fernando A. Alvarez; Cristina Elizondo; Diego Giunta; Victoria Ardiles; R. Sanchez Claria; Oscar Mazza; E. de Santibañes; Juan Pekolj

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Diego Giunta

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Gabriel Waisman

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Nora Fuentes

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Valeria Pazo

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Juan Pekolj

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Laura Barcán

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Bernardo Martinez

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Bruno L. Ferreyro

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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