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Dive into the research topics where David Carlos Shigueoka is active.

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Featured researches published by David Carlos Shigueoka.


Sao Paulo Medical Journal | 2010

Diagnostic accuracy of sonography for pleural effusion: systematic review

Alexandre Grimberg; David Carlos Shigueoka; Álvaro Nagib Atallah; Sergio Aron Ajzen; Wagner Iared

CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE The initial method for evaluating the presence of pleural effusion was chest radiography. Isolated studies have shown that sonography has greater accuracy than radiography for this diagnosis; however, no systematic reviews on this matter are available in the literature. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of sonography in detecting pleural effusion, by means of a systematic review of the literature. DESIGN AND SETTING This was a systematic review with meta-analysis on accuracy studies. This study was conducted in the Department of Diagnostic Imaging and in the Brazilian Cochrane Center, Discipline of Emergency Medicine and Evidence-Based Medicine, Department of Medicine, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp), São Paulo, Brazil. METHOD The following databases were searched: Cochrane Library, Medline, Web of Science, Embase and Literatura Latino-Americana e do Caribe em Ciências da Saúde (Lilacs). The references of relevant studies were also screened for additional citations of interest. Studies in which the accuracy of sonography for detecting pleural effusion was tested, with an acceptable reference standard (computed tomography or thoracic drainage), were included. RESULTS Four studies were included. All of them showed that sonography had high sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for detecting pleural effusions. The mean sensitivity was 93% (95% confidence interval, CI: 89% to 96%), and specificity was 96% (95% CI: 95% to 98%). CONCLUSIONS In different populations and clinical settings, sonography showed consistently high sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for detecting fluid in the pleural space.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2010

Use of Color Doppler Ultrasonography for the Prediction of Malignancy in Follicular Thyroid Neoplasms Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Wagner Iared; David Carlos Shigueoka; Júlio Cesar Cristófoli; Régis B Andriolo; Álvaro Nagib Atallah; Sergio Aron Ajzen; Orsine Valente

Objective. The purpose of this systematic review was to obtain summary estimates of the diagnostic accuracy of color Doppler ultrasonography (CDU) in predicting malignancy in thyroid follicular neoplasms (FNs). Methods. We searched Medical Subject Headings together with the search terms “follicular,” “thyroid,” and “Doppler” in the MEDLINE, Web of Science, and Excerpta Medica databases as well as the Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature database, after which we performed manual searches of the reference lists to locate additional studies. There were no language restrictions. We included studies that assessed the diagnostic accuracy of CDU in identifying malignancy in thyroid FNs. The assessments of the quality and extraction of data were performed by 3 independent reviewers. Results. We included 4 studies, which collectively evaluated 457 thyroid FNs, 67 of which had been classified as malignant based on the evaluation of surgical biopsy samples. Moderate, rich, predominant, or exclusive internal flow on CDU of thyroid FNs was considered indicative of malignancy. The overall sensitivity of CDU was 85% (95% confidence interval [CI], 74%–93%), with an overall specificity of 86% (95% CI, 82%–89%). The overall prevalence was 14.7%, and the positive and negative predictive values were 51% and 97%, respectively. The positive likelihood ratio was 6.07, and the negative likelihood ratio was 0.18. Conclusions. Predominant internal flow seen on CDU is associated with malignancy of thyroid FNs. Absence of internal flow or predominantly peripheral flow indicates a low probability of thyroid FN malignancy.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2003

A randomized double-blind study of the short-time treatment of obese patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease with ursodeoxycholic acid

Virgínia Nascimento dos Santos; Valéria Pereira Lanzoni; Jacob Szejnfeld; David Carlos Shigueoka; Edison Roberto Parise

In order to determine the effect of ursodeoxycholic acid on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, 30 patients with body mass indices higher than 25, serum levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST) or gamma-glutamyltransferase (gamma-GT) at least more than 1.5 times the upper limit of normality, and hepatic steatosis demonstrated by ultrasonography were randomized into two groups of 15 patients to receive placebo or 10 mg kg-1 day-1 ursodeoxycholic acid for three months. Abdominal computed tomography was performed to quantify hepatic fat content, which was significantly correlated with histological grading of steatosis (r s = -0.83, P < 0.01). Patient body mass index remained stable for both groups throughout the study, but a significant reduction in mean ( +/- SEM) serum levels of ALT, AST and gamma-GT was observed only in the treated group (ALT = 81.2 +/- 9.7, 44.8 +/- 7.7, 48.1 +/- 7.7 and 52.2 +/- 6.3 IU/l at the beginning and after the first, second and third months, respectively, N = 14, P < 0.05). For the placebo group ALT values were 66.4 +/- 9.8, 54.5 +/- 7, 60 +/- 7.6 and 43.7 5 IU/l, respectively. No alterations in hepatic lipid content were observed in these patients by computed tomography examination (50.2 +/- 4.2 Hounsfield units (HU) at the beginning versus 51.1 +/- 4.1 HU at the third month). These results show that ursodeoxycholic acid is able to reduce serum levels of hepatic enzymes in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, but this effect is not related to modifications in liver fat content.


Radiologia Brasileira | 2007

Reprodutibilidade da classificação ultra-sonográfica de Niamey na avaliação da fibrose periportal na esquistossomose mansônica

Germana Titonelli Santos; Danilo Moulin Sales; Alberto Ribeiro de Souza Leão; José Eduardo Mourão Santos; Luciane Aparecida Köpke de Aguiar; Paulo Eugênio Brant; David Carlos Shigueoka; Ramiro Colleoni Neto; Giuseppe D'Ippolito

OBJETIVO: Medir a concordância intra- e interobservador da classificacao ultra-sonografica qualitativa para graduar a fibrose periportal adotada no encontro de Niamey em 1996. MATERIAIS E METODOS: No periodo de fevereiro de 2005 a marco de 2006 foi realizado estudo prospectivo, observacional e transversal em 30 pacientes esquistossomoticos, sem outras hepatopatias associadas, submetidos a ultra-sonografia abdominal e classificados segundo os criterios de Niamey. Os exames foram realizados por dois radiologistas de forma independente em diferentes momentos: durante o exame dinâmico (primeiro momento) e 30 e 90 dias depois (segundo e terceiro momentos) do exame, por meio da documentacao fotografica analisada em estacao de trabalho. A concordância intra- e interobservador foi avaliada pelo teste kappa. RESULTADOS: A concordância intra-observador medida pelo teste kappa foi 0,43 para o observador 1 e 0,57 para o observador 2. A concordância interobservador durante o estudo dinâmico e na avaliacao fotografica foi, respectivamente, de 0,46 e 0,71. CONCLUSAO: O uso do ultra-som para classificar a fibrose periportal segundo o protocolo de Niamey apresentou uma reprodutibilidade que variou de moderada a substancial.


Sao Paulo Medical Journal | 2011

Comparative evaluation of digital mammography and film mammography: systematic review and meta-analysis

Wagner Iared; David Carlos Shigueoka; Maria Regina Torloni; Fernanda Garozzo Velloni; Sergio Aron Ajzen; Álvaro Nagib Atallah; Orsine Valente

CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE Mammography is the best method for breast-cancer screening and is capable of reducing mortality rates. Studies that have assessed the clinical impact of mammography have been carried out using film mammography. Digital mammography has been proposed as a substitute for film mammography given the benefits inherent to digital technology. The aim of this study was to compare the performance of digital and film mammography. DESIGN Systematic review and meta-analysis. METHOD The Medline, Scopus, Embase and Lilacs databases were searched looking for paired studies, cohorts and randomized controlled trials published up to 2009 that compared the performance of digital and film mammography, with regard to cancer detection, recall rates and tumor characteristics. The reference lists of included studies were checked for any relevant citations. RESULTS A total of 11 studies involving 190,322 digital and 638,348 film mammography images were included. The cancer detection rates were significantly higher for digital mammography than for film mammography (risk relative, RR = 1.17; 95% confidence interval, CI = 1.06-1.29; I² = 19%). The advantage of digital mammography seemed greatest among patients between 50 and 60 years of age. There were no significant differences between the two methods regarding patient recall rates or the characteristics of the tumors detected. CONCLUSION The cancer detection rates using digital mammography are slightly higher than the rates using film mammography. There are no significant differences in recall rates between film and digital mammography. The characteristics of the tumors are similar in patients undergoing the two methods.


Radiologia Brasileira | 2013

Quando a fase de equilíbrio pode ser suprimida nos exames de tomografia computadorizada de abdome

Priscila Silveira Salvadori; Manuel Cerqueira Costa; Ricardo Francisco Tavares Romano; Breno Vitor Tomaz Galvão; Rodrigo da Fonseca Monjardim; Elisa Almeida Sathler Bretas; Lucas Torres Rios; David Carlos Shigueoka; Rogério Pedreschi Caldana; Giuseppe D'Ippolito

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the role of the equilibrium phase in abdominal computed tomography. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective, cross-sectional, observational study reviewed 219 consecutive contrast-enhanced abdominal computed tomography images acquired in a three-month period, for different clinical indications. For each study, two reports were issued - one based on the initial analysis of non-contrast-enhanced, arterial and portal phases only (first analysis), and a second reading of these phases added to the equilibrium phase (second analysis). At the end of both readings, differences between primary and secondary diagnoses were pointed out and recorded, in order to measure the impact of suppressing the equilibrium phase on the clinical outcome for each of the patients. The extension of the exact Fishers test was utilized to evaluate the changes in the primary diagnosis (p 0.999). As regards secondary diagnoses, changes after the second analysis were observed in five cases (2.3%). CONCLUSION: For clinical scenarios such as cancer staging, acute abdomen and investigation for abdominal collections, the equilibrium phase is dispensable and does not offer any significant diagnostic contribution.


Radiologia Brasileira | 2008

Mensuração do volume de fluxo portal em pacientes esquistossomóticos: avaliação da reprodutibilidade do ultra-som Doppler

Alberto Ribeiro de Souza Leão; José Eduardo Mourão Santos; Danilo Sales Moulin; David Carlos Shigueoka; Ramiro Colleoni; Giuseppe D'Ippolito

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the reproducibility of Doppler ultrasonography in the measurement of portal blood flow volume in schistosomal patients. MATERIALS AND METHODOS: Prospective, transversal, observational and self-paired study evaluating 21 patients with hepatosplenic schistosomiasis submitted to Doppler ultrasonography performed by three independent observers for measurement of portal blood flow. Pairwise interobserver agreement was calculated by means of the intraclass correlation coefficient, paired t-test and Pearsons correlation coefficient. RESULTS: Interobserver agreement was excellent. Intraclass correlation ranged from 80.6% to 93.0% (IC at 95% [65.3% ; 95.8%]), with the Pearsons correlation coefficient ranging between 81.6% and 92.7% with no statistically significant interobserver difference regarding the mean portal blood flow volume measured by Doppler ultrasonography (p = 0.954 / 0.758 / 0.749). CONCLUSION: Doppler ultrasonography has demonstrated to be a reliable method for measuring the portal blood flow volume in patients with portal hypertension secondary to schistosomiasis, with a good interobserver agreement.


Sao Paulo Medical Journal | 2015

Whole-body diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging versus FDG-PET/CT for initial lymphoma staging: systematic review on diagnostic test accuracy studies

Rodrigo Regacini; Andrea Puchnick; David Carlos Shigueoka; Wagner Iared; Henrique Manoel Lederman

CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE Positron emission tomography with [18]F-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (FDG-PET/CT) has been advocated as the method of choice for lymphoma staging, since it enables whole-body analysis with high sensitivity for detection of affected areas and because it combines capacities for anatomical and functional assessment. With technological advances, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has emerged as an alternative to FDG-PET/CT. This systematic review with meta-analysis aimed to compare whole-body diffusion-weighted MRI (WB-MRI) with FDG-PET/CT for lymphoma staging. DESIGN AND SETTING Systematic review on diagnostic test accuracy studies conducted at a public university. METHODS The Medline, Scopus, Embase and Lilacs databases were searched for studies published up to September 2013 that compared WB-MRI and FDG-PET/CT for lymphoma staging. The reference lists of included studies were checked for any relevant additional citations. RESULTS Six studies that evaluated the initial lymphoma staging in 116 patients were included. WB-MRI and FDG-PET/CT agreed in 90.5% of the cases (κ = 0.871; P < 0.0001). In most of the studies, when there was disagreement between the methods, WB-MRI overstaged in relation to FDG-PET/CT. The sensitivity of WB-MRI and FDG-PET/CT, in comparison with the clinical-radiological standard, ranged from 59 to 100% and from 63 to 100% respectively. CONCLUSION WB-MRI is a highly sensitive method for initial lymphoma staging. It has excellent agreement with FDG-PET/CT and is a great alternative for managing lymphoma patients, without using ionizing radiation or an intravenous contrast agent.


Radiologia Brasileira | 2009

Avaliação do volume de fluxo portal em pacientes esquistossomóticos: estudo comparativo entre ressonância magnética e ultrassom Doppler

Alberto Ribeiro de Souza Leão; Danilo Moulin Sales; José Eduardo Mourão Santos; Edson Minoru Nakano; David Carlos Shigueoka; Giuseppe D'Ippolito

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the agreement between Doppler ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging as well as the interobserver reproducibility of both methods in the measurement of portal blood flow in schistosomal patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A cross-sectional, observational, self-paired study evaluated 21 patients with schistosomiasis mansoni submitted to measurement of portal blood flow with phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging and Doppler ultrasonography. RESULTS: A poor intermethod agreement was observed (intraclass correlation coefficient: 34.5% [CI 95%]). On the other hand, the interobserver reproducibility was excellent in the evaluation by magnetic resonance imaging (intraclass correlation coefficient: 99.2% [CI 95%] / Pearsons correlation coefficient: 99.2% / portal blood flow = 0.806) and by Doppler ultrasonography (intraclass correlation coefficient: 80.6 to 93.0% [CI 95%] / Pearsons correlation coefficient: 81.6% to 92.7% / portal blood flow = 0.954, 0.758 and 0.749). CONCLUSION: There is a poor intermethod agreement in the measurement of portal blood flow. Nevertheless, contrast-phase magnetic resonance imaging and Doppler ultrasonography demonstrated to be reproducible methods presenting excellent interobserver agreement in the quantification of portal blood flow in patients with hepatosplenic schistosomiasis-related portal hypertension


Acta Tropica | 2008

Anicteric cholangiopathy in schistosomiasis patients

Paulo Eugênio Brant; Luciane Kopke-Aguiar; David Carlos Shigueoka; Danilo Moulin Sales; Giuseppe D’Ippolito; Maria Kouyoumdjian; Durval Rosa Borges

UNLABELLED We previously reported that in anicteric patients with the isolated form of schistosomiasis (without co-morbidities) an ursodeoxycholic acid-sensitive increase in serum gamma-glutamyltransferase activity (gammaGT) occurs. We now describe the presence of cholangiopathy in these patients. METHODS Sixteen adult anicteric patients with the isolated form of schistosomiasis mansoni were carefully selected: nine with increased gammaGT and seven with normal gammaGT. High sensitive C-reactive protein (CRP), to exclude inflammatory status, hyaluronic acid (HA), and other laboratory parameters were determined. The ultrasonographic study measured spleen length, portal vein and splenic vein diameters, and the portal flow. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) images were interpreted by a blind observer. MRCP was deemed abnormal when focal narrowing and/or paucity of second and third order biliary branches and/or irregularities in the contours of biliary pathways were identified. RESULTS Both groups (normal and elevated gammaGT) have preserved hepatic function tests (HA, serum albumin, prothrombin time) and clinical significant portal hypertension (low platelet count and ultrasonographic parameters). MRCP was abnormal in all patients with elevated gammaGT but in only 3 of the 7 patients with normal gammaGT (p=0.003). CONCLUSION Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography characterized a cholangiopatic disorder in anicteric patients with the isolated form of schistosomiasis, even preceding laboratory test alterations.

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Sergio Aron Ajzen

Federal University of São Paulo

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Giuseppe D'Ippolito

Federal University of São Paulo

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Wagner Iared

Federal University of São Paulo

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Danilo Moulin Sales

Federal University of São Paulo

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Edson Minoru Nakano

Federal University of São Paulo

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Jacob Szejnfeld

Federal University of São Paulo

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Ramiro Colleoni

Federal University of São Paulo

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Ramiro Colleoni Neto

Federal University of São Paulo

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