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Dive into the research topics where Fernando de Souza M. Costa is active.

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Featured researches published by Fernando de Souza M. Costa.


Clinics | 2005

The influences of positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) associated with physiotherapy intervention in phase I cardiac rehabilitation

Audrey Borghi-Silva; Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Valéria Amorim Pires Di Lorenzo; Cláudio Ricardo de Oliveira; Sérgio Luzzi

PURPOSE To evaluate the effects of positive end expiratory pressure and physiotherapy intervention during Phase I of cardiac rehabilitation on the behavior of pulmonary function and inspiratory muscle strength in postoperative cardiac surgery. METHODS A prospective randomized study, in which 24 patients were divided in 2 groups: a group that performed respiratory exercises with positive airway expiratory pressure associated with physiotherapy intervention (GEP, n = 8) and a group that received only the physiotherapy intervention (GPI, n = 16). Pulmonary function was evaluated by spirometry on the preoperative and on the fifth postoperative days; inspiratory muscle strength was measured by maximal inspiratory pressure on the same days. RESULTS Spirometric variables were significantly reduced from the preoperative to the fifth postoperative day for the GPI, while the GEP had a significant reduction only for vital capacity (P < .05). When the treatments were compared, smaller values were observed in the GPI for peak flow on the fifth postoperative day. Significant reductions of maximal inspiratory pressure from preoperative to the first postoperative day were found in both groups. However, the reduction in maximal inspiratory pressure from the preoperative to the fifth postoperative day was significant only in the GPI (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that cardiac surgery produces a reduction in inspiratory muscle strength, pulmonary volume, and flow. The association of positive expiratory pressure with physiotherapy intervention was more efficient in minimizing these changes, in comparison to the physiotherapy intervention alone. However, in both groups, the pulmonary volumes were not completely reestablished by the fifth postoperative day, and it was necessary to continue the treatment after hospital convalescence.


Disability and Rehabilitation | 2010

Short-term supervised inpatient physiotherapy exercise protocol improves cardiac autonomic function after coronary artery bypass graft surgery – a randomised controlled trial

Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Rodrigo Polaquini Simões; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Camila Bianca Falasco Pantoni; Luciana Di Thommazo; Sérgio Luzzi; Aparecida Maria Catai; Ross Arena; Audrey Borghi-Silva

Objective. Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is accompanied by severe impairment of cardiac autonomous regulation (CAR). This study aimed to determine whether a short-term physiotherapy exercise protocol post-CABG, during inpatient cardiac rehabilitation (CR), might improve CAR. Design. Seventy-four patients eligible for CABG were recruited and randomised into physiotherapy exercise group (EG) or physiotherapy usual care group (UCG). EG patients underwent a short-term supervised inpatient physiotherapy exercise protocol consisting of an early mobilisation with progressive exercises plus usual care (respiratory exercises). UCG only received respiratory exercises. Forty-seven patients (24 EG and 23 UGC) completed the study. Outcome measures of CAR included linear and non-linear measures of heart rate variability (HRV) assessed before discharge. Results. By hospital discharge, EG presented significantly higher parasympathetic HRV values [rMSSD, high frequency (HF), SD1)], global power (STD RR, SD2), non-linear HRV indexes [detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA)α1, DFAα2, approximate entropy (ApEn)] and mean RR compared to UCG (p < 0.05). Conversely, higher values of mean HR, low frequency (LF) (sympathetic activity) and the LF/HF (global sympatho-vagal balance) were found in the UCG. Conclusions. A short-term supervised physiotherapy exercise protocol during inpatient CR improves CAR at the time of discharge. Thus, exercise-based inpatient CR might be an effective non-pharmacological tool to improve autonomic cardiac tone in patients post-CABG.


Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2011

LeFT-VeNTRICULAR FUNCTION AND AUTONOMIC CARDIAC ADApTATIONS AFTeR SHORT-TeRM INpATIeNT CARDIAC ReHABILITATION: A pROSpeCTIVe CLINICAL TRIAL

Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Rodrigo Polaquini Simões; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Camila Bianca Falasco Pantoni; Luciana Di Thommazo; Sérgio Luzzi; Othon Amaral-Neto; Aparecida Maria Catai; Ross Arena; Audrey Borghi-Silva

OBJECTIVE Cardiac rehabilitation is associated with cardiac autonomic and physiological benefits. However, it is unclear whether baseline left ventricular function (LVF) impacts on training-induced cardiac autonomic adaptations. The aim of this study was to assess the cardiac autonomic adaptations in patients with varying left ventricular function profiles undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting and cardiac rehabilitation. DESIGN Assessor-blinded prospective trial. PATIENTS Forty-four patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting, divided into normal LVFN (≥ 55%, n = 23) or reduced LVFR (35-54%, n = 21) were evaluated. METHOD Cardiac autonomic function was evaluated by heart rate variability indexes obtained both pre- and post-cardiac rehabilitation. All patients participated in a short-term (approximately 5 days) supervised inpatient physiotherapy program. RESULTS There were differences in heart rate variability indexes, correlation dimension and SD2 according to time and group (e.g. interaction time (effect of cardiac rehabilitation) vs group (LVFN vs LVFR), p = 0.04). Simple main effects analysis showed that the LVFR group benefited to a greater degree from cardiac rehabilitation compared with the LVFN group. Heart rate variability indexes increased significantly in the former group compared with the latter. CONCLUSION Among post-coronary artery bypass grafting patients engaged in short-term inpatient rehabilitation, those with reduced left ventricular function are most likely to have better cardiac autonomic adaptations to exercise-based rehabilitation.


Sleep Medicine | 2014

Heart rate variability and cardiorespiratory coupling in obstructive sleep apnea: elderly compared with young

Renata Trimer; R. Cabidu; L.L.M. Sampaio; R. Stirbulov; D. Poiares; Solange Guizilini; Anna M. Bianchi; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Renata Gonçalves Mendes; A. Delfino; Ross Arena; Audrey Borghi-Silva

INTRODUCTION Aging is known to be a major contributing factor to the increased risk of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). With aging, breathing undergoes significant changes during sleep, increasing the prevalence of apnea events, which affects heart rate variability (HRV) and cardiorespiratory coupling (CRC). OBJECTIVES To compare HRV and CRC during wakefulness and sleep between young and elderly patients with and without OSA; and to determine whether the presence of OSA in young and elderly patients has a different impact on HRV and CRC during sleep. METHODS One hundred subjects, 50 young (mean age, 27 ± 9; 20 normal and 30 OSA) and 50 elderly (mean age, 65 ± 7; 20 normal and 30 OSA), underwent polysomnography. Spectral, cross-spectrum, and HRV parameters were analyzed during wakefulness and sleep. RESULTS The spectral analysis indicated that age affected HRV, with higher values of low frequency (P < 0.05) in elderly subjects during wakefulness and an interaction between the presence of OSA and age. OSA influenced HRV during sleep with lower LF/HF ratios during stage 2 (S2) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep (P <0.05), with an interaction between the presence of OSA and age in REM sleep. Elderly patients had significantly lower percent tachogram power coherent with respiration (%TPCR) during wakefulness (P < 0.05), and OSA led to lower %TPCR during S2. CONCLUSIONS Age and OSA have an unfavorable impact on HRV, with reduced autonomic modulation during wakefulness, S2, and REM sleep. Age affects CRC during wakefulness and the presence of OSA affects CRC during sleep.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Are complexity metrics reliable in assessing HRV control in obese patients during sleep

Ramona Cabiddu; Renata Trimer; Audrey Borghi-Silva; Matteo Migliorini; Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Antonio D. Oliveira; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Anna M. Bianchi

Obesity is associated with cardiovascular mortality. Linear methods, including time domain and frequency domain analysis, are normally applied on the heart rate variability (HRV) signal to investigate autonomic cardiovascular control, whose imbalance might promote cardiovascular disease in these patients. However, given the cardiac activity non-linearities, non-linear methods might provide better insight. HRV complexity was hereby analyzed during wakefulness and different sleep stages in healthy and obese subjects. Given the short duration of each sleep stage, complexity measures, normally extracted from long-period signals, needed be calculated on short-term signals. Sample entropy, Lempel-Ziv complexity and detrended fluctuation analysis were evaluated and results showed no significant differences among the values calculated over ten-minute signals and longer durations, confirming the reliability of such analysis when performed on short-term signals. Complexity parameters were extracted from ten-minute signal portions selected during wakefulness and different sleep stages on HRV signals obtained from eighteen obese patients and twenty controls. The obese group presented significantly reduced complexity during light and deep sleep, suggesting a deficiency in the control mechanisms integration during these sleep stages. To our knowledge, this study reports for the first time on how the HRV complexity changes in obesity during wakefulness and sleep. Further investigation is needed to quantify altered HRV impact on cardiovascular mortality in obesity.


Obesity Surgery | 2014

Heart Rate Variability and Cardio-respiratory Coupling During Sleep in Patients Prior to Bariatric Surgery

Renata Trimer; Ramona Cabiddu; Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; A. D. Oliveira; Audrey Borghi-Silva; Anna M. Bianchi

Obesity is associated with increased cardiac risk of morbidly and mortality and for the development and progression of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Severity of obesity negatively affects the heart rate variability (HRV) in patients with indication for bariatric surgery (BS). The purpose of this study is to determine if the severity of obesity alters the autonomic cardiac regulation and the cardio-respiratory coupling during sleep using spectral analysis of HRV and respiration variability signals (RS) in patients prior to BS. Twenty-nine consecutive preoperative BS and ten subjects (controls) underwent polysomnography. The spectral and cross-spectral parameters of the HRV and RS were computed during different sleep stages (SS). Spectral analysis of the HRV and RV indicated lower respiration regularity during sleep and a lower HRV in obese patients (OP) during all SS when compared with controls (p < 0.05). Severely (SO) and super-obese patients (SOP) presented lower values of low frequency/high frequency (LF/HF) ratio and LF power during REM sleep and higher HF power (p < 0.05), while morbidly obese (MO) patients presented lower LF/HF ratio and LF power in SS-S2 and higher HF power when compared to controls (p < 0.05). The cross-spectral parameters showed that SOP presented lower percentage of tachogram power coherent with respiration in SS-S3 when compared to controls (p < 0.05). Patients prior to BS presented altered HRV and RV in all SS. SO, MO, and SOP presented altered cardio-respiratory coupling during sleep, and these alterations are related with severity of obesity and OSA parameters.


Disability and Rehabilitation | 2014

Is applying the same exercise-based inpatient program to normal and reduced left ventricular function patients the best strategy after coronary surgery? A focus on autonomic cardiac response

Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Rodrigo Polaquini Simões; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Camila Bianca Falasco Pantoni; Luciana Di Thommazo-Luporini; Sérgio Luzzi; Othon Amaral-Neto; Ross Arena; Aparecida Maria Catai; Audrey Borghi-Silva

Abstract Purpose: To assess whether the same exercise-based inpatient program applied to patients with normal and reduced left ventricular function (LVF) evokes a similar cardiac autonomic response after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). Method: Forty-four patients post-CABG, subgrouped according to normal LVF [LVFN: n = 23; left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ≥ 55%] and reduced LVF (LVFR: n = 21; LVEF 35–54%), were included. All initiated the exercise protocol on post-operative day 1 (PO1), following a whole progressive program until discharge. Cardiac autonomic response was assessed by the indices of heart rate variability (HRV) at rest and during exercise (extremity range of motion and ambulation). Results: During ambulation, lower values of HRV indices were found in the LVFR group compared with the LVFN group [standard deviation of all RR (STDRR; 6.1 ± 2.7 versus 8.9 ± 4.7 ms), baseline width of the RR histogram (TINN; 30.6 ± 14.8 versus 45.8 ± 24.9 ms), SD2 (14.8 ± 8.0 versus 21.3 ± 9.0 ms), Shannon entropy (3.6 ± 0.5 versus 3.9 ± 0.4) and correlation dimension (0.08 ± 0.2 versus 0.2 ± 0.2)]. Also, when comparing the ambulation to rest change, lower values were observed in the LVFR group for linear (STDRR, TINN, RR TRI, rMSSD) and non-linear (SD2 and correlation dimension) HRV indices (p < 0.05). On PO1, we observed only intra-group differences between rest and exercise (extremity range of motion), for mean intervals between heart beats and heart rate. Conclusion: For patients with LVFN, the same inpatient exercise protocol triggered a more attenuated autonomic response compared with patients with LVFR. These findings have implications as to how exercise should be prescribed according to LVF in the early stages following recovery from CABG. Implications for Rehabilitation Exercise-based inpatient program, performed by post-CABG patients who have normal left ventricular function, triggered a more attenuated cardiac autonomic response compared with patients with reduced left ventricular function. Volume of the inpatient exercises should be prescribed according to the left ventricular function in the early stages following recovery from CABG.


Sleep and Breathing | 2014

Is there a chronic sleep stage-dependent linear and nonlinear cardiac autonomic impairment in obstructive sleep apnea?

Renata Trimer; Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Luciana Maria Malosá Sampaio; A. Delfino; Ross Arena; Federico Aletti; Manuela Ferrario; Audrey Borghi-Silva


European Respiratory Journal | 2017

Association between COPD and OSA: impact on cardiorespiratory dynamics during sleep

Renata Trimer; Ramona Cabiddu; Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Antônio Delfino de Oliveira Junior; Anna M. Bianchi; Audrey Borghi-Silva


Journal of Respiratory and CardioVascular Physical Therapy | 2016

Corralation between desaturation indices of oxygen saturation variability in severe obstructive sleep apnea: a pilot study

Paula Angélica Ricci; Fernando de Souza M. Costa; Antônio Delfino de Oliveira Junior; Renata Gonçalves Mendes; Ramona Cabiddu; Ross Arena; Audrey Borghi-Silva

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Audrey Borghi-Silva

Federal University of São Carlos

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Renata Gonçalves Mendes

Federal University of São Carlos

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Ross Arena

American Physical Therapy Association

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Aparecida Maria Catai

Federal University of São Carlos

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Renata Trimer

Federal University of São Carlos

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Rodrigo Polaquini Simões

Federal University of São Carlos

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Ramona Cabiddu

Federal University of São Carlos

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Luciana Di Thommazo

Federal University of São Carlos

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