Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho
University of São Paulo
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Clinics | 2005
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.
American Journal of Surgery | 1996
Gilberto Vaz Teixeira; Leila Antonangelo; Luiz Paulo Kowalski; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Alberto Rosseti Ferraz; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho
BACKGROUND Argyrophilic nucleolar organizer regions (AgNORs) represent a tissue marker of cell proliferative activity. The purpose of this study was to assess the prognostic value of AgNORs expression in oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). METHODS The AgNORs area/nucleus was studied in paraffin sections by means of digital image analysis in 43 cases of stage II oral tongue and floor of the mouth SCC. RESULTS Time free of disease was considered a dependent variable of a binary indicator of AgNORs expression (7.77 microns2/nucleus as a cut-off point). High AgNORs level was associated with a statistically significant negative effect on recurrence-free interval of disease in a Cox proportional hazards models controlled for occult lymph node metastasis, involvement of the surgical margins, thickness of the lesion, and vascular invasion. CONCLUSIONS The AgNORs area increased the capability of predicting which patients have a high risk of recurrence of cancer, and its evaluation may provide useful information for the therapeutic approach to the oral tongue and floor of the mouth SCC.
Clinics | 2012
Fábio Luiz de Menezes Montenegro; Delmar Muniz Lourenço Junior; Marcos Tavares; Sérgio Samir Arap; Climério Pereira Nascimento Junior; Ledo Mazzei Massoni Neto; André Fernandes d'Alessandro; Rodrigo A. Toledo; Flavia L. Coutinho; Lenine Garcia Brandão; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Anói Castro Cordeiro; Sergio Pereira Almeida Toledo
Most cases of sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism present disturbances in a single parathyroid gland and the surgery of choice is adenomectomy. Conversely, hyperparathyroidism associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (hyperparathyroidism/multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1) is an asynchronic, asymmetrical multiglandular disease and it is surgically approached by either subtotal parathyroidectomy or total parathyroidectomy followed by parathyroid auto-implant to the forearm. In skilful hands, the efficacy of both approaches is similar and both should be complemented by prophylactic thymectomy. In a single academic center, 83 cases of hyperparathyroidism/multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 were operated on from 1987 to 2010 and our first surgical choice was total parathyroidectomy followed by parathyroid auto-implant to the non-dominant forearm and, since 1997, associated transcervical thymectomy to prevent thymic carcinoid. Overall, 40% of patients were given calcium replacement (mean intake 1.6 g/day) during the first months after surgery, and this fell to 28% in patients with longer follow-up. These findings indicate that several months may be needed in order to achieve a proper secretion by the parathyroid auto-implant. Hyperparathyroidism recurrence was observed in up to 15% of cases several years after the initial surgery. Thus, long-term follow-up is recommended for such cases. We conclude that, despite a tendency to subtotal parathyroidectomy worldwide, total parathyroidectomy followed by parathyroid auto-implant is a valid surgical option to treat hyperparathyroidism/multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1. Larger comparative systematic studies are needed to define the best surgical approach to hyperparathyroidism/multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1.
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2000
Celso U. M. Friguglietti; Evandro Sobroza de Mello; Inês Vieira de Castro; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Venâncio Avancini Ferreira Alves
Thyroid follicular neoplasms (adenoma and carcinoma) may pose considerable difficulties to the differential diagnosis. Because such a distinction is not possible at fine‐needle aspiration, surgery is often necessary. Clinical information such as age, sex, and node size is important in case of suspected carcinoma. Follicular carcinoma is characterized by capsular invasion, vascular invasion, and metastatic dissemination mainly by the hematogenic pathway. This invasion depends on collagen degradation in capsule and in subendothelial basement membrane. Collagen degradation has been widely researched in the angiogenesis process and in the hematogenic dissemination mechanism. In this study, we performed clinical and histopathologic assessment of 74 follicular neoplasms, as well as immunohistochemical reactions for CD‐34 protein to estimate angiogenesis and for metalloproteinase‐9, an enzyme that degrades type IV collagen.
Revista do Hospital das Clínicas | 2000
Vergilius José Furtado de Araujo Filho; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Lenine Garcia Brandão; Luiz Roberto Medina dos Santos; Alberto Rosseti Ferraz
UNLABELLED We prospectively studied the effects of the ligation of the inferior thyroid artery (ITA) on postoperative hypoparathyroidism in 48 patients who underwent functional subtotal thyroidectomy. Patients were randomized into two groups: A, with bilateral ligation of the ITA and B, without ligation of the ITA. Parathyroid function was checked preoperatively and after surgery by clinical examination and measurement of total calcium, intact PTH, urinary calcium, and AMPc. RESULTS A significant incidence of postoperative hypocalcemia occurred: 17% in group A and 13% in B on the 4th postoperative day. Six months later, the incidence was 5% in Group A and 0% in Group B. These differences were not statistically significant between the two groups, and neither were any of the other clinical and laboratory observations. CONCLUSION The ligation of the ITA was not an important causal factor for the occurrence of postoperative hypocalcemia after subtotal thyroidectomy.
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 1999
Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Rui M. B. Maciel; Mirian H. Takahashi; Vania N. Alberti; Inês Vieira de Castro; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Marcelo Doria Durazzo; Alberto Rosseti Ferraz
Several tumor factors are associated with papillary thyroid cancer. Most studies do not compare the expressions of these factors in the primary tumors and in their associated cervical metastasis.
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2012
Claudio Roberto Cernea; Flávio C. Hojaij; Dorival De Carlucci; Marcos Tavares; Vergilius José Furtado de Araujo Filho; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Lenine Garcia Brandão
Chyle fistulas may occur after left neck dissections that include level IV, due to injury of the thoracic duct or of 1 of its major branches. Despite being unusual, this complication carries substantial postoperative morbidity and even mortality. So far, no effective intraoperative maneuver has been reported to detect this fistula at the end of a neck dissection. In this cohort study, we sought to describe a simple new maneuver, intraoperative abdominal compression, which can effectively help to identify an open major lymphatic duct on level IV at the end of a neck dissection.
Rev. bras. cir. cabeça pescoço | 1993
Luiz Roberto Medina dos Santos; Claudio Roberto Cernea; Luiz P. Kowalski; Paulo Campos Carneiro; Miriam Nakagami Sotto; Sunao Nishio; Flávio Hojaij; Augusto Dutra Júnior; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Lenine Garcia Brandão; Marcos Tavares; Vergilius José F Araújo; Erivelto Martinho Volpi; Anói Castro Cordeiro; Alberto Rosseti Ferraz
Rev. bras. cir. cabeça pescoço | 2008
Fábio Luiz de Menezes Montenegro; Gustavo Nunes Bento; Evandro Sobroza de Mello; Sérgio Samir Arap; Carlos Eduardo Santa Ritta Barreira; Luciene M. dos Reis; Fabiana Giorgeti Graciolli; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Lenine Garcia Brandão; Rita de Cássia T. Martin; Vanda Jorgetti; Alberto Rosseti Ferraz; Anói Castro Cordeiro
Rev. med. (Säo Paulo) | 1998
Fábio Luiz de Menezes Montenegro; Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho; Anói Castro Cordeiro