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Dive into the research topics where Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos is active.

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Featured researches published by Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos.


Sao Paulo Medical Journal | 2001

Primary aortoenteric fistula related to septic aortitis

Fábio Lambertini Tozzi; Erasmo Simão da Silva; Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos; Henrique Oscar de Azevedo Fagundes Neto; Marcos Lucon; Renato Micelli Lupinacci

CONTEXT Primary aortoenteric fistulas usually result from erosion of the bowel wall due to an associated abdominal aortic aneurysm. A few patients have been described with other etiologies such as pseudoaneurysm originating from septic aortitis caused by Salmonella. OBJECTIVE To present a rare clinical case of pseudoaneurysm caused by septic aortitis that evolved into an aortoenteric fistula. CASE REPORT A 65-year-old woman was admitted with Salmonella bacteremia that evolved to septic aortitis. An aortic pseudoaneurysm secondary to the aortitis had eroded the transition between duodenum and jejunum, and an aortoenteric fistula was formed. In the operating room, the affected aorta and intestinal area were excised and an intestine-to-intestine anastomosis was performed. The aorta was sutured and an axillofemoral bypass was carried out. In the intensive care unit, the patient had a cardiac arrest that evolved to death.


Clinics | 2010

An iron deficiency anemia of unknown cause: a case report involving gossypiboma

Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos; Fábio Gazelato de Mello Franco; Linda Ferreira Maximiano; João Augusto dos Santos Martines; Aloísio Felipe-Silva; Thiago Alexandre Kunitake

Gossypiboma (from [Latin] “gossypium” (cotton) and [Swahili] “boma” (place of concealment)) is defined as a mass of cotton matrix or sponge accidentally retained in the body postoperatively. Patients may be asymptomatic or may present non-specific clinical symptoms or serious complications in the early postoperative period as well as months or years after the operation. We present the case of a woman who sought medical attention due to uncharacteristic abdominal pain, weight loss and chronic refractory anemia. She had undergone gynecological operations 16 and 13 years prior.


Autopsy and Case Reports | 2016

Fatal pancreatic pseudocyst co-infected by Raoultella planticola: an emerging pathogen

Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos; Tiago Borges Guimarães; Silvana Maria Lovisolo

Raoultella planticola is an aerobic Gram-negative bacterium belonging to the Enterobacteriaceae family. Initially identified in the 1980s, its pathogenic potential was further recognized when the first case of bacteremia was reported. Since then, only a few infections caused by this pathogen have been described. Although considered an opportunistic agent, fatal outcomes are associated with the infection by this pathogen, since it is more prevalent among the patients with immunodeficiency. The authors report the case of a middle-aged man diagnosed with end-stage renal disease and alcoholic pancreatitis, who was admitted to the emergency department with septic shock. Physical examination disclosed peritoneal irritation and a laparotomy was undertaken. Purulent peritonitis was found as well as a retroperitoneal abscess, which was drained. The postoperative period was troublesome, and the patient died. The autopsy showed a ruptured, infected pancreatic cyst and purulent peritonitis, among other findings. The culture of the peritoneal fluid and two blood sample sets were positive for R. planticola. The authors call attention to the importance of this emerging pathogen associated with severe gastrointestinal infections.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1990

Mycobacterial subcutaneous arteritis

Consuelo Junqueira Rodrigues; Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos; Lais Lage Furtado-Mendonça; Rosa Maria Rodrigues Pereira; Berilo Langer; Jayme Diament; Ricardo Manoel de Oliveira; Wilson Cossermelli

The authors report three patients with subcutaneous erythematous nodules in different phases of development, unspecific systemic symptoms, positive PPD test, and normal chest X-rays. The histopathological study of the older nodules showed a granulomatous arteritis with a few acid-fast bacilli in the vascular wall. The nodules at an early phase showed an unspecific panniculitis with some acid-fast bacilli in apparently normal cutaneous vessels. These findings suggest that the mycobacterium has a vascular tropism and may cause a primary granulomatous arteritis.


Autopsy and Case Reports | 2015

Atypical behavioral and psychiatric symptoms: Neurosyphilis should always be considered.

Lucas Lonardoni Crozatti; Marcelo Houat de Brito; Beatriz Noele Azevedo Lopes; Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos

Syphilis still remains a major health concern worldwide because of the possibility of serious medical and psychological consequences, long-term disability, and death. Neurosyphilis (NS) may occur at any stage of infection. Its clinical presentation has been changing over recent years including psychiatric and neurocognitive symptoms. Several recent studies have described cases with these symptoms as the principal signs of NS. We present the case of neurosyphilis with a psychiatric presentation characterized by mood disturbance and auditory and visual hallucinations.


Autopsy and Case Reports | 2016

Indeterminate cell histiocytosis successfully treated with phototherapy.

Maria Claudia Nogueira Zerbini; Mirian Nacagami Sotto; Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos; Andre Neder Ramires Abdo; Juliana Pereira; José Antonio Sanches Júnior; Jade Cury Martins

First described in 1985, intermediate cell histiocytosis is a rare disorder of the cutaneous dendritic cell group with a varied clinical presentation and evolution. The pathologic substrate is constituted by the proliferation of indeterminate cells (ICs) that are immunophenotypically characterized by the positivity of CD1a, CD68, and faint/focal S100, plus the negativity for CD207 (langerin). The authors present the case of a healthy elderly woman who presented generalized dome-shaped reddish cutaneous nodules over her trunk, neck, face, and extremities over a period of 18 months. A laboratory and imaging work-up ruled out internal involvement. The skin biopsy was consistent with IC histiocytosis. The patient was treated with narrowband ultraviolet B phototherapy, which resulted in an excellent short-term outcome.


Autopsy and Case Reports | 2015

Lemierre's syndrome due to intratumoral abscess of the uvula.

Hassan Rahhal; Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos; Cristiane Rúbia Ferreira; Aloísio Felipe-Silva

Lemierre’s syndrome (LS), described in detail in 1936, used to be a life-threatening entity until the advent of antibiotics. Tonsillitis or pharyngitis are the main primary infections and oropharyngeal anaerobic flora is the predominant etiology. However, other primary site infections, as well as other microbiological agents have been reported since the first description. Inflammatory symptoms in the neck and marked findings on physical examination predominate the majority of cases. Nonetheless, the authors report the case of a 54-year-old man with a history of dysphagia followed by cough, purulent expectoration, and fever. The bad condition of his dentition was noteworthy. During the diagnostic work-up, an ulcerated lesion in the uvula and a middle lobe pneumonia were disclosed. Streptococcus viridans was isolated from blood culture. On the fifth day of hospitalization, the patient died after a copious episode of hemoptysis. The autopsy findings depicted an abscess within a squamous cell carcinoma of the uvula, pharyngitis with carotid sheath spreading accompanied by pylephlebitis and thrombosis of the internal jugular vein up to the innominate vein, surrounded by an abscess in the mediastinum. Alveolar hemorrhage and pneumonia were also present. We conclude that the ulcerated carcinoma of the uvula housed an abscess, facilitated by the poor oral hygiene, which triggered LS and the descending mediastinitis. Pulmonary involvement was due to the septic embolism from the internal jugular vein. We would like to highlight the uvula abscess as the primary site of infection in this case of LS with S. viridans as the causative agent.


Autopsy and Case Reports | 2015

The pedagogical value of autopsy.

Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos; Luiz Otávio Savassi Rocha

Knowledge of human anatomy was acquired through dissections of the human body that may have begun as long as 4000 years ago, in Babylonian times. Later documentation was in Egyptian times (3000 BC-1600 BC), as exemplified with the Ebers and other papyri. Around 300 BC, the Greek physician, Herophilus (335-280 BC), wrote a treatise on human anatomy and Erasistratus (304-250 BC), his student and colleague at the medical school of Alexandria, produced the first description, albeit brief, of liver cirrhosis observing that the liver of a man who died with anasarca (“hydrops”) was “as hard as a rock”, contrasting it with the soft consistency of the liver of another man who died from the bite of a poisonous snake. This description is evidence of Erasistratus’s ability, based on observation, to correlate the diseased organ with the consequence of its involvement and may be the first example of a clinicopathological correlation.


Autopsy and Case Reports | 2015

Immune thrombocytopenia and autoimmune thyroid disease: a controversial overlap

Guilherme Nader Marta; Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos

Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is an entity characterized by a platelet count of less than 100 × 109/L in the absence of other causes of thrombocytopenia, such as viral infections, rheumatic diseases, or drugs. Grave’s disease is also an autoimmune condition in which thrombocytopenia is often observed. Moreover, in the literature, many reports show a marked interference of the thyroid dysfunction (mainly hyperthyroidism) in the control of thrombocytopenia. Although this issue still remains debatable, the authors report the case of a young woman with a previous diagnosis of ITP with a brilliant initial response to corticotherapy. Some years after this diagnosis, the patient presented thyrotoxicosis due to Grave’s disease and the thrombocytopenia relapsed, but this time there was no response to the glucocorticoids. Only after the radioiodine I-131 thyroid ablation the control of thrombocytopenia was achieved. The authors call attention to this overlap and for testing thyroid function in every patient with an unexpected negative response to corticotherapy.


Autopsy and Case Reports | 2015

Budd–Chiari Syndrome: an unnoticed diagnosis

Camila Kruschewsky Falcão; Gustavo C. Freitas Fagundes; Gustavo Checolli Lamos; Aloísio Felipe-Silva; Silvana Maria Lovisolo; João Augusto dos Santos Martines; Fernando Peixoto Ferraz de Campos

Budd–Chiari syndrome (BCS) encompasses a group of disorders caused by the obstruction to the hepatic venous outflow at the level of the small or large hepatic veins, the inferior vena cava, or any combination thereof. Clinical manifestation of the subacute form is characterized by supramesocolic abdominal discomfort, abdominal distension, fever, and lower limbs edema. Imaging work-up with hepatic Doppler ultrasound and abdominal computed tomography (CT) enables the diagnosis in the majority of cases. Treatment comprises long-term anticoagulation associated with measures that attempt to re-establish the flow in the thrombosed vessel (thrombolysis or angioplasty) or through the venous blood flow bypasses (transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt or surgical bypass); however, the outcome is often dismal. The authors report the case of a 37-year-old woman presenting a 2-month history of dyspeptic complaints and abdominal distention. Fever was present at the beginning of symptoms. The laboratory work-up disclosed mild hepatic dysfunction, and the ultrasound showed evidence of chronic liver disease. Despite a thorough etiologic investigation, diagnosis was missed and, therefore, management could not be directed towards the physiopathogenetic process. The outcome was characterized by portal hypertension and esophageal varices bleeding. The patient died and the autopsy findings were characteristic of BCS, although an abdominal CT, close to death, had showed signs consistent with this diagnosis. The authors highlight the importance of knowledge of this entity, the diagnostic methods, and the multidisciplinary approach. BCS should be considered whenever investigating etiology for chronic or acute hepatopathy.

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Stephen A. Geller

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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