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Dive into the research topics where Flavio Takeda is active.

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Featured researches published by Flavio Takeda.


Clinical Autonomic Research | 2005

The body mass index and level of resection: predictive factors for compensatory sweating after sympathectomy.

José Ribas Milanez de Campos; Nelson Wolosker; Flavio Takeda; Paulo Kauffman; Sergio Kuzniec; Fabio Biscegli Jatene; Sérgio Almeida de Oliveira

ObjectiveCompensatory sweating (CS) is the most common adverse event and the main cause of dissatisfaction among patients undergoing a VATS sympathectomy for the treatment of primary hyperhidrosis. It has been described that obese individuals experience more sweating than thinner ones. The aim of this study is to identify the Body Mass Index (BMI) and the level of resection as predictive factors for CS and its relation to levels of patient satisfaction following the procedure.MethodsFrom October 1998 to June 2003, 102 patients undergoing VATS sympathectomies (51 for palmar hyperhidrosis, PH, and 51 for axillary hyperhidrosis, AH) were prospectively surveyed. They were divided into three groups according to their BMI: Group I was composed of 19 patients with BMI<20 (9 patients with PH and 10 with AH); Group II was composed of 52 patients with 20 ≤BMI<25 (25 with PH and 27 with AH); and Group III was composed of 31 patients with BMI ≥ 25 (17 with PH and 14 with AH). Each procedure was simultaneously and bilaterally performed under general anesthesia using two 5.5mm trocars and a 30° optic system.ResultsPatients treated for PH (resection of T2-T3) had more severe CS than those with AH (resection of T3-T4) (p=0.007) and the greater the BMI, the greater the severity of the CS (p<0.001). No statistically significant difference was found between the BMI bands in relation to the degree of satisfaction (p=0.644), nor when we compared the degree of satisfaction to the degree of CS (p=0.316).ConclusionsThe greater the BMI, the more severe the CS, but this did not correlate with the patients’ level of satisfaction. Avoiding the resection of T2 sympathetic ganglia is also important in reducing the intensity of CS.


Clinics | 2005

Clinical and epidemiological features of oral cancer in a medical school teaching hospital from 1994 to 2002: increasing incidence in women, predominance of advanced local disease, and low incidence of neck metastases

Marcelo Doria Durazzo; Carlos Eugenio Nabuco de Araujo; José de Souza Brandão Neto; Andre Potenza; Pedro Gomes da Costa; Flavio Takeda; Cristina P Bianchi; Marcos Tavares; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Alberto Rosseti Ferraz

PURPOSE Description of clinical and epidemiological characteristics of patients who underwent surgery for oral cancer in a Medical School Teaching Hospital, and determination of differences with respect to other institutions and/or periods of time. METHOD The charts of patients undergoing surgery for oral cancer from 1994 to 2002 were reviewed. Data were collected in a spreadsheet in order to analyze clinical and epidemiological features.. RESULTS A total of 374 patients having undergone 406 operations was identified. Their ages varied from 14 to 94 years (mean = 57.4 years), with 255 men (68.2%), and 295 out 366 Caucasian (80.6%). A majority had tumors of the tongue and/or floor of mouth (55.6%), while 20.3% had lip cancer. Squamous cell carcinoma was found in 90.3%, and glandular carcinoma in 4%. T4 tumors in 39.6%, Tis or T1 lesions in 15.2% of all patients. Nearly 62% had no regional metastases, and the relative incidence in young patients (40 years or younger) reached 8.6%. CONCLUSION In spite of the predominance of locally advanced tumors, a majority of patients had no neck metastases. The 31.8% incidence in females indicates an increasing incidence of oral cavity cancer among women when compared to previous periods at the same institution.


Clinics | 2005

Origin of adenocarcinoma in Barrett's esophagus: P53 and Ki67 expression and histopathologic background

Sergio Szachnowicz; Ivan Cecconello; Kiyoshi Iriya; Allan Garms Marson; Flavio Takeda; Joaquim Gama-Rodrigues

UNLABELLED Barretts esophagus is the substitution of squamous epithelium of the distal esophagus by columnar epithelium. Intestinal metaplasia in Barretts esophagus is considered to be the main risk factor for the development of adenocarcinoma. Diffuse adenocarcinoma and Barretts esophagus without intestinal metaplasia are rare, and reports on the subject are scarce. PURPOSE AND METHOD To estimate the prevalence of adenocarcinoma in 297 patients with Barretts esophagus, during the period of 1990 to 2002, and in 13 patients undergoing surgery, to conduct detailed macroscopic and microscopic analysis, with performance of immunohistochemical tests for p53 and Ki67, correlating the type of tumor with its adjacent epithelium. RESULTS In our patients with Barretts esophagus, there was a prevalence of 5.7% of adenocarcinoma. The tumors developed only when the Barretts esophagus segment was long (>3.0 cm). Tumors were located close to the squamous-columnar junction. The histological study revealed 2 patients (15.4%) with Barretts esophagus adjacent to a tumor with gastric metaplasia without the presence of intestinal metaplasia. Tumors were classified according to Nakamuras classification (23% differentiated pattern, and 77% undifferentiated pattern) and to Laurens classification (61% intestinal and 39% diffuse). The difference is due to the migration of microtubular and foveolar tumors of undifferentiated (gastric) pattern in Nakamuras classification to the Laurens intestinal type. The immunohistochemical test for Ki67 was strongly positive in all the patients, thus evidencing intense cell proliferation in both the columnar epithelium and tumor. Expression of p53 was negative in 67% of the adjacent columnar epithelia and 42% of the tumors, without any correlation between the tissue types. CONCLUSION Adenocarcinoma develops from mixed columnar epithelium, either intestinal or gastric, showing both the gastric and the intestinal patterns; thus, tumors can also grow in columnar epithelium without intestinal metaplasia. Barretts esophagus should be followed up for the possibility of progression to malignancy, especially when the segment is longer than 3 cm.


Clinics | 2005

Mitral valve annuloplasty with a bovine pericardial strip - 18-year results

Pablo Maria Alberto Pomerantzeff; Carlos Manuel de Almeida Brandão; João Marcelo Ancilon Albuquerque; Paola Y. Pomerantzeff; Flavio Takeda; Sérgio Almeida de Oliveira

PURPOSE Prosthetic annuloplasty rings are currently used in mitral reconstruction. Posterior annuloplasty with a bovine pericardial strip is a technique largely used in the Heart Institute of University of São Paulo Medical School. The purpose of the study was to analyze the late results of mitral valve repair with posterior annuloplasty using a bovine pericardial strip. METHODS Between January 1984 and December 2002, 273 patients underwent mitral valve repair with posterior pericardial annuloplasty in the Heart Institute of University of São Paulo Medical School. One hundred and forty four (52.7%) were women and ages ranged between 1 and 76 years (38.3 +/- 21.1). Rheumatic fever was present in 52.0% of the patients. Associated techniques were employed in 26.0% of the patients, and the most frequent was chordal shortening (9.2%). RESULTS Hospital mortality was 3.3% (9 patients), with the major cause being low cardiac output (6 patients). Actuarial survival was 55.1% +/- 16.8% in 18 years. During the 18-year follow-up: patients were free from the following: reoperation (59.1% +/- 13.9%, (percent +/- Standard Error), thromboembolism (97.4% +/- 2.3%), hemolysis (99.2% +/- 0.2%), and endocarditis (99.6% +/- 1.0%). In the late follow-up period, 83.9% were classified as New York Heart Association functional class I. CONCLUSIONS Late results with mitral valve repair with posterior annuloplasty using a bovine pericardial strip were satisfactory. The technique is feasible, reproducible, and cost effective.


Surgery Today | 2008

Skip metastases in medullary thyroid carcinoma: A single-center experience

Marcos Tavares; Pedro Michaluart; Fábio Luiz de Menezes Montenegro; Sérgio Samir Arap; Maria Teresa Machado Sodré; Flavio Takeda; Lenine Garcia Brandão; Sergio P. A. Toledo; Alberto Rosseti Ferraz

PurposeTotal thyroidectomy (TT) with level VI and VII central neck dissection is the initial treatment for medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) without identifiable neck metastasis. Level II to V lateral neck dissection is performed if neck metastasis is present or suspected. We conducted this study to identify the frequency and clinical determinants of skip neck metastasis in MTC.MethodsWe reviewed the medical records of 32 patients who underwent TT and bilateral neck dissection for MTC. The clinical features were correlated with pN status in the central versus lateral compartments of the neck.ResultsNeck lymph node metastasis (pN+) was found in 20 patients (62.5%) and skip metastases were found in 7 (35%) patients. The sensitivity of the pN status of the central compartment of the neck to predict the pN status of the lateral compartment of the neck was 53.8% and specificity was 63.2%. We found pN+ in 90% of the patients with lymph nodes >15 mm in diameter versus 50% in those with lymph nodes <15 mm in diameter.ConclusionsThere is skip metastasis in MTC. It is unsafe to use the lymph node status of the central compartment of the neck to define the pN status of the lateral neck. A lymph node greater than 15 mm in diameter is related to pN status.


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2005

Anatomic study of gastric vascularization and its relationship to cervical gastroplasty

Flavio Takeda; Ivan Cecconello; Sergio Szachnowicz; Marcos Roberto Tacconi; Joaquim Gama-Rodrigues

The aim of this study was to perform an anatomic study of the stomach and its vascularization, evaluating the frequency of communication between the right gastroepiploic artery (RGEA) and the left gastroepiploic artery (LGEA), as well as their relationship to the length of the stomach without extramural (direct) vascularization in cervical gastroplasty. Forty-two fresh human cadaveric specimens were studied, and the presence of communication between the RGEA and the LGEA was observed in 26 of the dissected stomachs (61.9%). When communication was present (group 1), to a total length of 49.60 cm of greater curvature length, it was verified that approximately 16.48 cm of this curvature lacked direct extramural vascularization (33.20%). When there was non-communication (group 2), to a greater curvature length of approximately 45.41 cm, it was found that 18.96 cm of this curvature (gastric fundus) lacked direct extramural vascular perfusion (41.76%). Results obtained in both groups were tested for statistically significant differences by the Pearson correlation test (P < 0.05). A P value of 0.05 or less was considered statistically significant. It can be concluded that the presence of communication between the RGEA and the LGEA increases extramural vascularization in the great gastric curvature.


World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2009

Mucin pattern reflects the origin of the adenocarcinoma in Barrett's esophagus: a retrospective clinical and laboratorial study

Sergio Szachnowicz; Ivan Cecconello; Ulysses Ribeiro; Kiyoshi Iriya; Roberto El Ibrahim; Flavio Takeda; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett; Adriana V. Safatle-Ribeiro

BackgroundMucin immunoexpression in adenocarcinoma arising in Barretts esophagus (BE) may indicate the carcinogenesis pathway. The aim of this study was to evaluate resected specimens of adenocarcinoma in BE for the pattern of mucins and to correlate to the histologic classification.MethodsSpecimens were retrospectively collected from thirteen patients who underwent esophageal resection due to adenocarcinoma in BE. Sections were scored for the grade of intestinal metaplasia. The tissues were examined by immunohistochemistry for MUC2 and MUC5AC antibodies.ResultsEleven patients were men. The mean age was 61 years old (varied from 40 to 75 years old). The tumor size had a mean of 4.7 ± 2.3 cm, and the extension of BE had a mean of 7.7 ± 1.5 cm. Specialized epithelium with intestinal metaplasia was present in all adjacent mucosas. Immunohistochemistry for MUC2 showed immunoreactivity in goblet cells, while MUC5AC was extensively expressed in the columnar gastric cells, localizing to the surface epithelium and extending to a variable degree into the glandular structures in BE. Tumors were classified according to the mucins in gastric type in 7/13 (MUC5AC positive) and intestinal type in 4/13 (MUC2 positive). Two tumors did not express MUC2 or MUC5AC proteins. The pattern of mucin predominantly expressed in the adjacent epithelium was associated to the mucin expression profile in the tumors, p = 0.047.ConclusionBarretts esophagus adenocarcinoma shows either gastric or intestinal type pattern of mucin expression. The two types of tumors developed in Barretts esophagus may reflect the original cell type involved in the malignant transformation.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2014

Lymph node distribution in the central compartment of the neck: An anatomic study

Marcos Tavares; José Arnaldo Shiomi da Cruz; Daniel Reis Waisberg; Sergio Pereira Almeida Toledo; Flavio Takeda; Claudio Roberto Cernea; Vera Luiza Capelozzi; Lenine Garcia Brandão

Dissection of the central compartment of the neck (CCN) is performed for proven or suspected lymph node metastases of thyroid carcinoma. During this procedure, the recurrent laryngeal nerves and the parathyroid glands are at risk. The purpose of this study was to determine the anatomic distribution of the lymph nodes in the CCN.


World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2013

Primary malignant melanoma of the esophagus: a rare and aggressive disease

Flavio Morita; Ulysses Ribeiro; Rubens Sallum; Marcos Roberto Tacconi; Flavio Takeda; Julio Rafael Mariano da Rocha; Giovanna de Sanctis Callegari Ligabó; Evandro Sobrosa de Melo; Wilson Modesto Pollara; Ivan Cecconello

Primary malignant melanoma of the esophagus is an uncommon tumor, with approximately 300 cases having been reported thus far. The purpose of this study was to describe a case of a 60 year-old man with a 10 month history of progressive dysphagia and thoracic pain, the investigations of which led to a diagnosis of primary malignant melanoma of the esophagus. The patient underwent a transhiatal esophagectomy with subcarinal lymphadenectomy, and isoperistaltic gastric tube replacement of the esophagus. Nine months after surgery, he developed ischemic colitis, and metastasis in the mesentery was diagnosed. His disease progressed and he died one year after the esophagectomy. A review of the literature was performed.


Clinics | 2006

Study of the traction resistance of mitral valve chordae tendineae

Fredterico Lafraia Lobo; Flavio Takeda; Carlos Manuel de Almeida Brandão; Domingo Marcolino Braile; Fabio Biscegli Jatene; Pablo Maria Alberto Pomerantzeff

OBJECTIVE To determinate the extension and the resistance of the primary mitral valve chordae tendineae when submitted to traction. The importance of keeping the integrity of papillary muscle, chordae tendineae, and mitral valve cuspid when the replacement of this valve occurs is clear, but the knowledge of the maximum resistance that a primary tendinea chorda can withstand is not known. METHODS Eight hearts were dissected, and one hundred and thirty two primary human chordae tendineae were measured (length and thickness) and submitted to traction under controlled conditions so that the absolute resistance, resistance relative to thickness (relative resistance), and elongation could be measured. RESULTS The correlation between the elongation at the moment of rupture and the thickness was equal to 1.54 + 17.02 x thickness (P = 0.026); and to absolute resistance was equal to 0.95 + 1.42 x resistance (P < 0.001); and to the resistance relative to thickness (relative resistance) was equal to 1.95 + 0.08 x relative resistance (P = 0.009). The correlation between the absolute resistance and the thickness was equal to 0.26 + 14.53 x thickness (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION The resistance of primary mitral valve chordae tendineae is associated with its thickness and elongation at the moment of rupture, but is not associated with the length. The elongation at the moment of rupture shows a relationship with the resistance relative to thickness (relative resistance) and with the thickness of the primary chordae tendineae, but not with the length of the chordae tendineae.

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Rubens Sallum

University of São Paulo

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Andre Duarte

University of São Paulo

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