Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira
Federal University of Pará
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Publication
Featured researches published by Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira.
Current HIV Research | 2012
Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira; Aldemir B. Oliveira-Filho; Lucinda Assunção Souza; Letiano Vieira da Silva; Marluísa de Oliveira Guimarães Ishak; Ricardo Ishak; Antonio Carlos Rosário Vallinoto
This study aimed to describe the epidemiological, immunological and molecular features of infection by the human T-lymphotropic virus-1/2 (HTLV-1/2) in individuals with HIV-1 in an urban area of Piaui State, Brazil. Exclusion criteria included patients under 18 years of age, pregnant women or Amerindians. Of 805 individuals analyzed by the serological method (ELISA) for the detection of anti-HTLV-1/2, 18 (2.24%) were positive, but only 13 (1.61%) were confirmed by PCR. The RFLP analysis revealed that nine (1.12%) of these subjects were positive for HTLV-1 and four (0.5%) for HTLV-2. The mean age of these co-infected individuals was 50.9±9.1 years, and a significant association was found with age (above 40 years: p = 0.002), minor surgeries (p = 0.004) and blood transfusion (p = 0.031). Quantification of the T CD4+/CD8+ lymphocytes and the HIV-1 viral load showed no significant association of T CD8 + lymphocyte levels with co-infection in the patients with HIV-1/HTLV-1. The sequencing of the LTR region and phylogenetic analysis indicated that the nine HTLV-1 strains belong to the Transcontinental subgroup of the Cosmopolitan group (1a), with a 83% (neighbor-joining) bootstrap value. The HTLV-2 strains were identified as subtype HTLV-2c, supported by a bootstrap value of 79%. Further studies in other population subgroups, such as blood donors and drug users, will be necessary to clarify the dissemination of HTLV-1/2 in Piau and elucidate the developmental profile of the virus in the region.
Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics Biology and Medicine | 2005
P. M. Gonçalves Pereira; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira; M. F. Secca
Oblique magnetic resonance imaging of the temporal lobe (tilted orientation) requires a stable reference line with minimum variability. In the clinical setting, where several observers carry out examination of the patients, there is a need to assure minimum inter-observer variability, in order to obtain comparable tilted anatomical planes. This is particularly relevant when performing quantitative imaging (qMRI) of the hippocampus, amygdala and para-hippocampal cortices. In this study, eight experienced observers tested the stability of four sagittal reference lines by manually tracing the posterior commissure-obex (PC-OB) line, the line tangential to the anterior surface of the pons at its most convex point and the lines orthogonal to the main axis of both hippocampi, in ten exams of healthy subjects. The stability of the tracing was assessed by comparing the inter-observer variability expressed by the variances of the measurements. The observers’ performance was assessed by comparing the precision of the tracing for each line. We tested the results statistically using Bartlett’s test (analysis of the variances of the four lines) followed by Fischer–Snedecor (in order to compare the two lines that had the smallest variance). The PC-OB line and the line tangential to the anterior surface of the pons had smaller inter-observer variances than the orthogonal lines (p<0.01). In addition, the variance of the PC-OB line was smaller than that of the line tangential to the pons (p<0.01). There were no significant intra-observer differences in the precision of tracing of any of the lines. We show quantitatively that the PC-OB line is the scout reference that yields the smallest inter-observer variance. Thus, this line should be preferred to improve the reproducibility of temporal lobe imaging while performing tilted coronal and axial sequences, to make quantitative assessments of the hippocampus, amygdala and para-hippocampal cortices.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2006
P.M. Gonçalves Pereira; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira; P. Rosado
Archives of Virology | 2012
Aldemir B. Oliveira-Filho; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira; Jairo A. A. Castro; Letiano Vieira da Silva; Antonio Carlos Rosário Vallinoto; José Alexandre Rodrigues de Lemos
Revista De Neurologia | 2006
P. M. Goncalves Pereira; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira; Ricardo Insausti
Archives of Virology | 2014
Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira; Roseane M. C. Lima Verde; Luiz Marcelo Pinheiro; Marcos G. Benchimol; Ana Luisa E. D. Aragão; José Alexandre Rodrigues de Lemos; Aldemir B. Oliveira-Filho; Antonio Carlos Rosário Vallinoto
Revista Eletrônica Acervo Saúde | 2018
Thiago Oliveira Rodrigues; Rita de Cássia Meneses Oliveira; Arionildo Batista Moraes; Camylla Martins Silva; Henrique Luz Guedes; Pedro Simão da Silva Azevedo; Roseane Mara Cardoso Lima Verde; Ruan Pablo Nunes Araújo; Matheus Hipólito do Nascimento; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira
Brazilian Journal of Biological Sciences | 2018
Aline Cristina Figueiredo Lima; Joaquim Nylson Santos Silva; Roseane Mara Cardoso Lima Verde; Matheus Hipólito do Nascimento; Joacilda da Conceição Nunes; Leonardo Ferreira Soares; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira
Brazilian Journal of Biological Sciences | 2017
Sávio Freire da Silva; Roseane Mara Cardoso Lima Verde; José Felipe Pinheiro do Nascimento Vieira; Leonardo Ferreira Soares; Matheus Hipólito do Nascimento; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira
Saúde em Foco | 2016
Ruy Roberto Porto Ascenso Rosa; Maria do Socorro Viana do Nascimento; Roseane Mara Cardoso Lima Verde; Leonardo Ferreira Soares; Symonara Karina Medeiros Faustino; Evaldo Hipólito de Oliveira