Edmundo Machado Ferraz
Federal University of Pernambuco
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American Journal of Infection Control | 1995
Edmundo Machado Ferraz; Álvaro Antônio Bandeira Ferraz; Helena Suely Torres D'Albuquerque Coelho; Valdilene Pereira Viana; Suzemires Márcia Lopes Sobral; Maria das Dores Marques Maia Vasconcelos; Tércio Souto Bacelar
From 1988 through 1992, we conducted a prospective study of postdischarge surgical wound infection surveillance in our institution. A total of 6604 patients were seen after discharge in a centralized outpatient clinic, supervised by the infection control commission. Wounds were inspected, stitches were removed, and dressings were changed. This care was followed by referral of patients to the appropriate specialized surgical clinic. Postdischarge patient return rates for the period studied ranged from 68.4% to 91.2%. Wound infection detection in the outpatient clinic ranged from 32.2% (20 patients in 1991) to 50% (44 patients in 1990) for general surgical procedures and 52.9% (18 patients in 1990) to 91.4% (32 patients in 1992) for cesarean sections. Most surgical wound infections (87.6%, 127 patients) were diagnosed between the first and fourteenth postoperative days. We conclude that centralized postdischarge surveillance, as practiced in our institution, has enhanced the retrieval of wound infection data. At present, there is no universally accepted strategy for monitoring postdischarge surgical wound infection; however, we must take a rigorous approach to detect patients at risk for infection in our continuous attempt to improve the quality of surgical and postoperative care.
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1992
Edmundo Machado Ferraz; Tércio Souto Bacelar; José Lamartine de Andrade Aguiar; Álvaro Antônio Bandeira Ferraz; Gilberto Pagnossin; José Edmilson Mazza Batista
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the incidence of wound infection in inguinal hernioplasties, incisional hernioplasties, splenectomies, and splenectomies performed in patients with hepatosplenic schistosomiasis, and to examine the relationship of surgical wound infection to antibiotic use, patient age, length of stay in the hospital prior to surgery, and the duration of the operation. DESIGN Retrospective surveillance study. RESULTS One thousand five hundred forty-two clean operations were analyzed. Comparing response (wound infection) and explanatory variables (age, length of hospital stay, duration of surgery, antibiotics, and surgery type), we found that age, use of antibiotics, and type of surgery were statistically significant, while length of hospital stay and duration of surgery were not significant. CONCLUSIONS From these results, we can predict that the probability of wound infection in surgical patients considering these significant variables is lower for patients ages 14 to 30 years and higher for patients ages 31 to 60 years and lower for patients with prophylactic antibiotic use (up to 72 hours of use) and higher for patients with prolonged use (more than 72 hours); and lower for patients undergoing inguinal heria, followed in ascending order by nonschistosomotic patients undergoing splenectomy in schistosomotic patients.
Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2007
Josemberg Marins Campos; Luciana Teixeira de Siqueira; Marconi Roberto de Lemos Meira; Álvaro Antônio Bandeira Ferraz; Edmundo Machado Ferraz; Murilo José de Barros Guimarães
Gastrobronchial fistula is a rare condition as a complication following bariatric surgery. The management of this condition requires the active participation of a pulmonologist, who should be familiar with aspects of the main types of bariatric surgery. Herein, we report the cases of two patients who presented recurrent subphrenic and lung abscess secondary to fistula at the angle of His for an average of 19.5 months. After relaparotomy was unsuccessful, cure was achieved by antibiotic therapy and, more importantly, by stenostomy and endoscopic dilatation, together with the use of clips and fibrin glue in the fistula. These pulmonary complications should not be treated in isolation without a gastrointestinal evaluation since this can result in worsening of the respiratory condition, thus making anesthetic management difficult during endoscopic procedures.
Digestive Surgery | 2001
Álvaro Antônio Bandeira Ferraz; Geraldo José Paraíso Wanderley; Miguel Arcanjo dos Santos; Carlos Augusto Mathias; José Guido Corrêa de Araújo Jr.; Edmundo Machado Ferraz
Background: The sympathetic nervous hyperactivity present in response to surgical stress has been implicated as an important component of the postoperative paralytic ileus. A randomized and prospective study was conducted, evaluating the effects of the preoperative beta-adrenergic blockade with propranolol in schistosomotic patients during the period of postoperative ileus. Methods: The study compared schistosomotic patients submitted, or not, to beta-adrenergic blockade. Basal cardiac frequency was determined and propranolol was used in a dose of 40 mg twice a day. The dose was adjusted weekly until a minimum decrease of 20% in cardiac frequency was achieved. Three coupled bipolar electrodes were placed in the left colon in both groups, and registration of myoelectric activity of the left colon was made twice a day during the period of postoperative ileus using a system of data collection (DATA Q Series 200). The electric signals were previously amplified, filtered and separated into Electric Control Activity (ECA) and Electric Response Activity (ERA). Results: The dose of propranolol varied from 80 to 160 mg/day. The proportional decrease in basal heart frequency varied from 20 to 33%, with an average of 25.4 ± 3.9% in the propranolol group, maintaining a mean of 24.3 ± 3.6% decrease in the postoperative period. Differences on clinical recovery of the postoperative ileus were not found. Significant differences on electromyographic patterns were not observed between the groups, except for the presence of a greater number of short-duration contractions in the second postoperative day in the beta-blocked group. Conclusion: The authors suggest that the preoperative beta-adrenergic blockade with propranolol does not determine myoelectric activity changes that could contribute to an earlier resolution of postoperative ileus.
Revista do Colégio Brasileiro de Cirurgiões | 2001
Edmundo Machado Ferraz; Álvaro Antônio Bandeira Ferraz; Tércio Souto Bacelar; Helena Suely T. D'Albuquerque; Maria das Dores Maia M. de Vasconcelos; Cristiano de Souza Leão
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was evaluate a methodology during 23 years in a public hospital used infection for control of surgeries. METHODS: A total of 42,274 surgeries in the General Surgery Division of the Clinics Hospital of the Pernambuco Federal University (January of 1977 until December 1999) were evaluated. The data were acquired through a active search system by the infection control nurse and an epidemiological search during the postoperative period, in the outpatient clinic that centralized all surgical patients after discharge. The infection control committee concentrated its action in the prevention emphasizing precise diagnosis of infections cases; corporal cleaning, control of associated infection, minimal preoperative period, care with the shaving; rigorous asepsia and antisepsia; adequate surgical technique; notification of the infection control results and the infection/surgeon/anesthetist rates; and a rigorous antimicrobial control. RESULTS: Wound infection rate dropped from 15-20% to the actual rate of 7.7%. Urinary infection was reduced from 18.2% to 0.4%, and the respiratory infection from 22.9% to 2.7%. The mortality related to infection was reduced from 2.8% to 0.9% and the rate of wound infection in clean surgeries from 12.8% to 3.4%. In the outpatient surgeries (27,580) the wound infection was 0.4% and the global mortality was 0.007%. CONCLUSION: The authors demonstrated that infection control is not made by expensive investments and equipaments, or computadorized ambient. Infection control is made, in our view, by political decision, manpower and motivation to control the infection control problem.
Arquivos De Gastroenterologia | 2003
Álvaro Antônio Bandeira Ferraz; Pedro Cavalcanti de Albuquerque; Edmundo Pessoa de Almeida Lopes; José Guido Corrêa de Araújo Jr.; Anderson Henrique Ferreira Carvalho; Edmundo Machado Ferraz
AIM To evaluate the degree of influence that periportal fibrosis has on clinical development and the long term results of surgical treatment on patients with hepatic-splenic schistosomiasis with previous gastrointestinal hemorrhages. METHODS During the period of 1992-1998, 111 patients underwent surgical treatment for the treatment of hepatic-splenic schistosomiasis with previous gastrointestinal hemorrhages. The degree of fibrosis was classified as: degree I - the portal spaces show a rich increase of young connective cells, a slight collagen production and a varying presence of inflammatory infiltrate. The periportal blade unchangeable (29/111); degree II - there is an expansion of the connective tissue with the emission of radial collagen septa, producing a star shaped aspect (38/111); degree III - the connective septa form bridges with other portal spaces or with the vein, with evident angiomatoid neo-formation (44/111). CONCLUSION The patients with periportal fibrosis degree I present recurrent hemorrhages statistically less than patients with periportal fibrosis degrees II and III, and that the intensity of the periportal fibrosis is not the only pathophysiological factor of the esophageal varices, gastric varices, prevalence of post-operative portal vein thrombosis and hematological and biochemical alterations of the patients with pure mansoni schistosomiasis.
Obesity Surgery | 2012
Cynthia Meira de Almeida Godoy; Alex L. Caetano; Kátia R. S. Viana; Eudes Paiva de Godoy; André Luis Costa Barbosa; Edmundo Machado Ferraz
BackgroundUnder the restrictive component, patients undergoing gastric bypass may have food intolerance with or without complications.MethodsThis study used quantitative, analytical, observational methodology with patients submitted to Roux-en-Y gastric bypass without the placement of a ring at Hospital Universitário do Rio Grande do Norte in the city of Natal, Brazil between July 2005 and August 2010. Out of 176 patients monitored after surgery by the interdisciplinary team, 47 took part in the study. Two questionnaires were applied to participants: one elaborated by Suter et al. and previously validated for assessment of food tolerance and another to characterize schooling and socioeconomic status. Evaluation of food tolerance considered patient satisfaction with eating, most accepted food types, and frequency of vomiting and/or regurgitation. After application of the first questionnaire, a score was generated, characterizing food intolerance.ResultsOf the 47 patients evaluated, 85.1% classified their degree of food satisfaction as good or excellent. Red meat was the most cited as being difficult to ingest (38.3%), representing a significant impact on overall tolerance level (P < 0.001); 48.9% of participants exhibited rare episodes of vomiting, which resulted in a mean food tolerance score of 23.02 (2.87 ± SD). Moreover, socioeconomic status showed a significant correlation with tolerance level (P = 0.032).ConclusionsThe degree of food tolerance observed in the study sample was better than that obtained in other investigations using similar methodology. The questionnaire proved to be useful in evaluating food quality and comparing postoperative results. Socioeconomic status was correlated with food tolerance level.
Obesity Surgery | 2009
Marconi Eduardo Sousa Maciel Santos; Nelson Studart Rocha; José Rodrigues Laureano Filho; Edmundo Machado Ferraz; Josemberg Marins Campos
Obstructive sleep apnea–hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS) is a complex disease with multifactorial etiology. It is marked by the occurrence of apnea and hypopnea events caused by repeated obstructions of the upper airways. OSAHS is strongly associated with obesity, and the prevalence of this disease in morbidly obese patients is very high. Nevertheless, not all patients with OSAHS are obese, and for this reason, there may be other anatomical predispositions to airway collapse. In obese patients, fatty deposition in the parapharyngeal region results in airway reduction and predisposes to airway collapse, worsened by neurologic loss of the normal dilator muscle tone of the neck. However, in nonobese patients, specific craniofacial characteristics such as posterior air pharyngeal space, tongue length, hyoid position, and maxillomandibular deficiencies may predispose some people to develop OSAHS. Treatment strategies for OSAHS patients vary from clinical treatment with continuous positive airway pressure, oral appliances, or medications for mild and moderate OSAHS patients, bariatric surgery for severe obese OSAHS patients to maxillomandibular advancement for obese or nonobese OSAHS patients.
The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2001
Fernando Cordeiro; Edmundo Machado Ferraz
TO THE EDITOR: The relationship of Helicobacter pylori to ulcer and gastritis is now well established. Epidemiological studies (1, 2, 3) and, more recently (4), an experimental study indicate that H. pylori is a risk factor for the development of adenocarcinoma of the stomach.
Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2010
Josemberg Marins Campos; Luis Fernando Evangelista; Álvaro Antônio Bandeira Ferraz; Manoel Galvão Neto; Eduardo Guimarães Hourmeaux de Moura; Paulo Sakai; Edmundo Machado Ferraz
BACKGROUND Silastic rings are used in gastric bypass procedures for the treatment of obesity, but ring slippage may lead to gastric pouch outlet stenosis (GPOS). Conventional management has been ring removal through abdominal surgery. OBJECTIVE To describe a novel, safe, minimally invasive, endoscopic technique for the treatment of GPOS caused by ring slippage after gastric bypass. DESIGN Case series. SETTING Federal University of Pernambuco and São Paulo University. PATIENTS This study involved 39 consecutive patients who were screened for inclusion. INTERVENTION Endoscopic dilation with an achalasia balloon. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS Technical success and safety of the procedure. RESULTS Among the 39 patients, 35 underwent endoscopic dilation at the ring slippage site for the relief of GPOS. The 4 patients who did not undergo endoscopic dilation underwent surgical removal of the ring, based on the exclusion criteria. The endoscopic approach was successful in 1 to 4 sessions in 100% of cases with radioscopic control (n = 12). The duration of the procedures ranged from 5 to 30 minutes, and the average internment was 14.4 hours. Dilation promoted either rupture (65.7%) or stretching (34.3%) of the thread within the ring, thereby increasing the luminal diameter of the GPOS. Complications included self-limited upper digestive tract hemorrhage (n = 1) and asymptomatic ring erosion (n = 4). There were no recurrences of obstructive symptoms during the follow-up period (mean of 33.3 months). LIMITATIONS This was not a randomized, comparison study, and the number of patients was relatively small. CONCLUSION The technique described promotes the relief of GPOS with low overall morbidity and avoids abdominal reoperation for ring removal.