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Dive into the research topics where Francisco Javier González-Barcala is active.

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Featured researches published by Francisco Javier González-Barcala.


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

Lung cancer in never-smokers: a case–control study in a radon-prone area (Galicia, Spain)

María Torres-Durán; Alberto Ruano-Ravina; Isaura Parente-Lamelas; Virginia Leiro-Fernández; José Abal-Arca; Carmen Montero-Martínez; Carolina Pena-Álvarez; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; Olalla Castro-Añón; Cristina Martínez; María José Mejuto-Martí; Alberto Fernández-Villar; Juan Miguel Barros-Dios

The aim of the study was to assess the effect of residential radon exposure on the risk of lung cancer in never-smokers and to ascertain if environmental tobacco smoke modifies the effect of residential radon. We designed a multicentre hospital-based case–control study in a radon-prone area (Galicia, Spain). All participants were never-smokers. Cases had an anatomopathologically confirmed primary lung cancer and controls were recruited from individuals undergoing minor, non-oncological surgery. Residential radon was measured using alpha track detectors. We included 521 individuals, 192 cases and 329 controls, 21% were males. We observed an odds ratio of 2.42 (95% CI 1.45–4.06) for individuals exposed to ≥200 Bq·m−3 compared with those exposed to <100 Bq·m−3. Environmental tobacco smoke exposure at home increased lung cancer risk in individuals with radon exposure >200 Bq·m−3. Individuals exposed to environmental tobacco smoke and to radon concentrations >200 Bq·m−3 had higher lung cancer risk than those exposed to lower radon concentrations and exposed to environmental tobacco smoke. Residential radon increases lung cancer risk in never-smokers. An association between residential radon exposure and environmental tobacco smoke on the risk of lung cancer might exist. Residential radon exposure increases risk of lung cancer in never-smokers, ETS exposure may raise radon effect http://ow.ly/xRVte For editorial comments see page 850.


Respirology | 2014

Characteristics of patients with yellow nail syndrome and pleural effusion

Luis Valdés; John T. Huggins; Francisco Gude; Lucía Ferreiro; José Manuel Álvarez-Dobaño; Antonio Golpe; María E. Toubes; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; Esther San José; Steven A. Sahn

Yellow nail syndrome (YNS) can be associated with a pleural effusion (PE) but the characteristics of these patients are not well defined. We performed a systematic review across four electronic databases for studies reporting clinical findings, PE characteristics, and most effective treatment of YNS. Case descriptions and retrospective studies were included, unrestricted by year of publication. We reviewed 112 studies (150 patients), spanning a period of nearly 50 years. The male/female ratio was 1.2/1. The median age was 60 years (range: 0–88). Seventy‐eight percent were between 41–80 years old. All cases had lymphoedema and 85.6% had yellow nails. PEs were bilateral in 68.3%. The appearance of the fluid was serous in 75.3%, milky in 22.3% and purulent in 3.5%. The PE was an exudate in 94.7% with lymphocytic predominance in 96% with a low count of nucleated cells. In 61 of 66 (92.4%) of patients, pleural fluid protein values were >3 g/dL, and typically higher than pleural fluid LDH. Pleurodesis and decortication/pleurectomy were effective in 81.8% and 88.9% of cases, respectively, in the treatment of symptomatic PEs. The development of YNS and PE occurs between the fifth to eighth decade of life and is associated with lymphoedema. The PE is usually bilateral and behaves as a lymphocyte‐predominant exudate. The most effective treatments appear to be pleurodesis and decortication/pleurectomy.


Archivos De Bronconeumologia | 2011

Derrames pleurales eosinofílicos: incidencia, etiología y significado pronóstico

Lucía Ferreiro; Esther San José; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; José Manuel Álvarez-Dobaño; Antonio Golpe; Francisco Gude; Christian Anchorena; Marco F. Pereyra; Carlos Zamarrón; Luis Valdés

INTRODUCTION Eosinophilic pleural effusion (EPE) has been associated with less risk for malignancy with a potential causal relationship with the presence of air and/or blood in the pleural space. However, these theories have fallen by the wayside in the light of recent publications. OBJECTIVES To determine the incidence and etiology of EPE and to observe whether the eosinophils in the pleural liquid (PL) increase in successive thoracocenteses. PATIENTS AND METHODS We analyzed 730 PL samples from 605 patients hospitalized between January 2004 and December 2010. RESULTS We identified 55 samples with EPE from 50 patients (8.3%). The most frequent etiologies of EPE were: unknown (36%) and neoplasm (30%). There were no significant differences in the incidence of neoplasms between the non-eosinophilic pleural effusions (non-EPE) (25.9%) and the EPE (30%) (p=0.533). One hundred patients (16.5%) underwent a second thoracocentesis. Out of the 9 who had EPE in the first, 6 maintained EPE in the second. Out of the 91 with non-EPE in the first thoracocentesis, 8 (8.8%) had EPE in the repeat thoracocentesis. The percentage of eosinophils did not increase in the successive thoracocenteses (p=0.427). In the EPE, a significant correlation was found between the number of hematites and eosinophils in the PL (r=0.563; p=0.000). CONCLUSIONS An EPE cannot be considered an indicator of benignancy, therefore it should be studied as any other pleural effusion. The number of eosinophils does not seem to increase with the of repetition of thoracocentesis and, lastly, the presence of blood in the PL could explain the existence of EPE.


European Journal of Public Health | 2013

Exposure to paracetamol and asthma symptoms.

Francisco Javier González-Barcala; S. Pertega; Teresa Perez Castro; Manuel Sampedro; Juan Sanchez Lastres; Miguel Angel San Jose Gonzalez; Luis Bamonde; Luciano Garnelo; Luis Valdés; Jose-M Carreira; Jose Moure; Angel Lopez Silvarrey

BACKGROUND Paracetamol is one of the factors that have been associated with the observed increase in asthma prevalence in the last few years. The influence of environmental or genetic factors in this disease may be different in some countries than in others. The purpose of this study was to analyse the relationship between the paracetamol consumption and asthma prevalence in our community. METHODS A cross-sectional study was conducted on more than 20,000 children and adolescents in Galicia, Spain. The International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood methodology was used to collect the information on asthma symptoms in children, paracetamol consumption, body mass index (BMI), pets in the home, education level of the mother and parental asthma and smoking habits. The influence of paracetamol consumption on the prevalence of asthma symptoms was calculated using logistic regression, adjusted for the other parameters included in the study. RESULTS After adjusting for gender, BMI, having a cat or dog, maternal education, parental asthma and smoking, in 6- to 7-year-old children, the consumption of paracetamol during the first year of life is associated with asthma [odds ratio (OR) 2.04 (1.79-2.31) for wheezing at some time]. Paracetamol consumption in the previous year leads to a significant increase in the probability of wheezing at some time [OR 3.32 (2.51-4.41)] in young children and adolescents [OR 2.12 (1.68-2.67)]. CONCLUSIONS Paracetamol consumption is associated with a significant increase in asthma symptoms. The effect is greater the more often the drug is taken.


European Journal of Internal Medicine | 2012

Recent epidemiological trends in tuberculous pleural effusion in Galicia, Spain

Luis Valdés; Lucía Ferreiro; Elena Cruz-Ferro; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; Francisco Gude; María I. Ursúa; José Manuel Álvarez-Dobaño; Antonio Golpe; María E. Toubes; José Paniagua; José A. Taboada-Rodríguez; Joan B. Soriano

OBJECTIVE Knowledge on the distribution and determinants of tuberculous pleural effusions (TBPE) is incomplete. We aimed to describe the epidemiological trends and individual characteristics of TBPE in Galicia, Spain, over a 10-year period (2000-2009). DESIGN A retrospective, observational study based on epidemiological data obtained from the Galician Tuberculosis Register. RESULTS There were 1835 cases of TBPE (16.3% of the total 11,241 TB cases reported). The number and incidence of TBPE decreased significantly during the study period, from (262 and 9.6/100,000 inhabitants in 2000, to 133 and 4.8 in 2009, respectively; P<.001 for both). The mean annual decrease in TBPE incidence was 6.9%, and 50% overall. TBPE mainly affected males (63.5%), precisely 61.2% young males between 15 and 44 years. Twenty-five percent had lung involvement (chest X-ray), and 41.7% had a positive sputum culture. A significant increase (P<.001) was observed during the study in the percentage of patients who had more TB risk factors. CONCLUSIONS The incidence of TBPE decreased significantly during the study period, with no changes in epidemiological characteristics, and with trends similar to the total number of TB cases. The introduction of the Galician Prevention and Control Plan (GPCP) for tuberculosis appears to be effective for better control of TB.


Archivos De Bronconeumologia | 2013

Contaminación del aire interior y su impacto en la patología respiratoria

Luis Carazo Fernández; Ramón Fernández Álvarez; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; José Antonio Rodríguez Portal

Humans spend a considerable amount of their time breathing air inside enclosed spaces in which, due to various sources, there may be contaminants that deteriorate the air quality. This is an important risk factor for the health of the general population. This review evaluates the contaminants that are present in the air of indoor air spaces, describing the sources that generate them as well as the physiopathological mechanisms and the diseases that they may cause in the respiratory system.


Archivos De Bronconeumologia | 2012

Exposición a radón residencial y cáncer de pulmón en nunca fumadores. Resultados preliminares del estudio LCRINS

Alberto Ruano-Ravina; Luciana Prini-Guadalupe; Juan Miguel Barros-Dios; José Abal-Arca; Virginia Leiro-Fernández; Ana Isabel González-Silva; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; Carolina Pena; Carmen Montero-Martínez; Cristina Martínez-González; María José Mejuto-Martí; Alejandro Veres-Racamonde

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVE Residential radon is the second most important risk factor for lung cancer and the first among never-smokers. The objective of this study is to report the concentrations of residential radon in a series of never-smoker cases recruited in a multicenter study of cases and controls in northwestern Spain. In this study, all the hospitals in the Spanish province of Galicia and one from Asturias participated. PATIENTS AND METHODS The present article includes a series of cases with residential radon measurements. All the subjects were personally interviewed, 3 ml of blood were taken from each, and they were each given instructions about how to place a residential radon detector in their homes. RESULTS Sixty-nine case subjects were recruited, 84% of whom were women with a mean age of 71, and 81% of whom had adenocarcinoma. The average concentration of residential radon in the cases was 237 Bq/m(3), while the average concentration in the Galician population is 79 Bq/m(3). No relationship was observed between the concentration of residential radon and either sex or age at the time of diagnosis of the cases, but there was a tendency towards having a greater concentration in those diagnosed with small-cell and large-cell carcinoma. CONCLUSIONS The concentrations of residential radon in the cases included are very high at about three times the average concentration of residential radon to which the general population of Galicia is exposed.


Archivos De Bronconeumologia | 2011

Valor diagnóstico de los niveles del N-terminal pro-péptido natriurético cerebral en los derrames pleurales de origen cardiaco

Luis Valdés; Esther San José; Antonio Pose; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; José Manuel Álvarez-Dobaño; Lucía Ferreiro; Christian Anchorena; Marco F. Pereyra; José Ramón González-Juanatey; Steven A. Sahn

INTRODUCTION The diagnosis of cardiogenic pleural effusion (PE) is often difficult to make. The objective of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels in PE patients with heart failure, in pleural fluid (PF) and blood (B), and to compare the cholesterol in pleural fluid (CHOL PF) and in serum (CHOL S) with the Light criteria. PATIENTS AND METHODS All the biomarkers were evaluated in 398 PF (26.9% transudates). The area under the curve (AUC) quantified the overall diagnostic precision. The diagnostic precision of the different parameters was also assessed using the ROC curves. RESULTS The AUC of the ROC for pleural fluid NT-proBNP was 0.894, with no significant differences with CHOL PF (0.914) or with the Light criteria (0.896). The sensitivity, specificity, the positive probability ratio (PPR) and negative probability ratio (NPR) were 85.1% (94.1% for CHOL PF), 79.9% (90.2% for the Light criteria), 4.24 (7.27 for the Light criteria) and 0.19 (0.07 for CHOL PF), respectively. The combination of NT-proBNP in PF ≥ 276 pg/ml and CHOL PF ≤ 57 mg/dL managed to classify the highest number PE correctly (sensitivity 97.8%, specificity 85.4%). CONCLUSIONS The diagnostic yield of NT-proBNP in cardiogenic PE is not superior to the CHOL LP or the Light criteria, although it could be diagnostic in transudates of another origin.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2016

Characteristics of patients with pseudochylothorax—a systematic review

Adriana Lama; Lucía Ferreiro; María E. Toubes; Antonio Golpe; Francisco Gude; José Manuel Álvarez-Dobaño; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; Esther San José; Nuria Rodríguez-Núñez; Carlos Rábade; Carlota Rodríguez-García; Luis Valdés

BACKGROUND Pseudochylothorax (PCT) (cholesterol pleurisy or chyliform effusion) is a cholesterol-rich pleural effusion (PE) that is commonly associated with chronic inflammatory disorders. Nevertheless, the characteristics of patients with PCT are poorly defined. METHODS A systematic review was performed across two electronic databases searching for studies reporting clinical findings, PE characteristics, and the most effective treatment of PCT. Case descriptions and retrospective studies were included. RESULTS The review consisted of 62 studies with a total of 104 patients. Median age was 58 years, the male/female ratio was 2.6/1, and in the 88.5% of cases the etiology was tuberculosis (TB) or rheumatoid arthritis (RA). PE was usually unilateral (88%) and occupied greater than one-third of the hemithorax (96.3%). There was no evidence of pleural thickening in 20.6% of patients, and 14 patients had a previous PE. The pleural fluid (PF) was an exudate, usually milky (94%) and with a predominance of lymphocytes (61.1%). The most sensitive tests to establish the diagnosis were the cholesterol/triglycerides ratio (CHOL/TG ratio) >1, and the presence of cholesterol crystals (97.4% and 89.7%, respectively). PF culture for TB was positive in the 34.1% of patients. Favorable outcomes with medical treatment, therapeutic thoracentesis, decortication/pleurectomy, pleurodesis, thoracic drainage and thoracoscopic drainage were achieved in 78.9%, 47.8%, 86.7%, 66.6%, 37.5% and 42.9%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS PCT is usually tuberculous or rheumatoid, unilateral and the PF is a milky exudate. The presence of cholesterol crystals and a CHOL/TG ratio >1 are the most sensitive test for the diagnosis. The lack of pleural thickening does not rule out PCT. Treatment should be sequential, treating the underlying causes, and assessing the need for interventional techniques.


Environmental Research | 2014

Leisure time activities related to carcinogen exposure and lung cancer risk in never smokers. A case-control study

Alberto Ruano-Ravina; José Antonio García-Lavandeira; María Torres-Durán; Luciana Prini-Guadalupe; Isaura Parente-Lamelas; Virginia Leiro-Fernández; Carmen Montero-Martínez; Francisco Javier González-Barcala; Cristina Martínez; Olalla Castro-Añón; María José Mejuto-Martí; Juan Miguel Barros-Dios

We aim to assess the relationship between leisure time activities related to exposure to carcinogenic substances and lung cancer risk in a hospital-based case-control study performed in never smokers. We included never smoking cases with anatomopathologically confirmed lung cancer and never smoking controls undergoing trivial surgery, at 8 Spanish hospitals. The study was conducted between January 2011 and June 2013. Participants were older than 30 and had no previous neoplasms. All were personally interviewed focusing on lifestyle, environmental tobacco smoke exposure, occupational history and leisure time activities (including duration of such activities). Results were analyzed through logistic regression and adjusted also by residential radon and education level. We included 513 never smokers, 191 cases and 322 controls. The OR for those performing the studied leisure time activities was 1.43 (95%CI 0.78-2.61). When we restricted the analysis to those performing do-it-yourself activities for more than 10 years the OR was 2.21 (95%CI 0.93-5.27). Environmental tobacco smoke exposure did not modify this association. The effect for the different lung cancer histological types was very close to significance for adenocarcinoma but only when these activities were performed for more than 10 years. We encourage health professionals to recommend protective measures for those individuals while performing these hobbies to reduce the risk of lung cancer.

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Luis Valdés

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Alberto Ruano-Ravina

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Juan Miguel Barros-Dios

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Virginia Leiro-Fernández

University Hospital Complex Of Vigo

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Carlos Rábade

University of Santiago de Compostela

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