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Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2000

Características clínicas laboratoriais de 104 casos de meningoencefalite criptocócica

Calil Darzé; Rita Lucena; Irenio Gomes; Ailton Melo

With the purpose of describing the clinical and laboratory characteristics of cryptococcus meningoencephalitis, we reviewed the records of 104 patients admitted with this diagnosis at Couto Maia Hospital, reference for patients with infectious diseases in Salvador-BA Northeastern Brazil, from 1972 to 1996. The patients age varied from 8 months to 79 years. Sixty-four (61.5%) patients were male. The duration of the disease varied from 2 to 150 days, average 27.7 days. The most common signs and symptoms were headache (92.7%), fever (84.4%) and neck stiffness (83.2%). The cell number in cerebrospinal fluid was greater than 4/mmx9e in 95.8% of the patients with lymphocyte predominance in 86.3% of the cases. The lethality rate was 42.7%.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2003

Cerebral infarction in autopsies of chagasic patients with heart failure

Roque Aras; José Alberto da Matta; Gildo Mota; Irenio Gomes; Ailton Melo

OBJECTIVEnTo determine the frequency of encephalic infarction and its contribution to lethality in patients with Chagas disease and heart failure.nnnMETHODSnMedical records and autopsy reports of patients with Chagas disease complicated by heart failure, who died at the Professor Edgar Santos Hospital of the Federal University of Bahia in the past 45 years were retrospectively analyzed. Data comprised information regarding the clinical history on hospital admission, complementary and anatomicopathological examinations, including the presence of encephalic infarction, the impaired region, and the cause of death.nnnRESULTSnOf the 5,447 autopsies performed, 524 were in patients with heart failure due to Chagas disease. The mean age was 45.7 years, and 51 (63%) patients were of the male sex. The frequency of encephalic infarction was 17.5%, corresponding to 92 events in 92 individuals, 82 (15.8%) of which involved the brain, 8 (1.5%) involved the cerebellum, and 2 (0.4%) involved the hypophysis.nnnCONCLUSIONnCerebral infarction has been a frequent finding in autopsies of chagasic patients with heart failure, and it has been an important cause of death in our region. The presence of cerebral infarction and its complications have been associated with death in 52% of the cases studied.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1996

Prognosis of bacterial meningitis in children

Irenio Gomes; Ailton Melo; Rita Lucena; Marco Heleno Cunha-Nascimento; Adriana C. Ferreira; Julieta Goes; Ismara Barreto; Neila Jones; Verônica Gaspari; Emília Katiane Embiruçu; Marielza Veiga

We studied the incidence and prognosis of acute neurologic complications in 281 children under 13 years of age with a diagnosis of acute bacterial meningitis. All the patients were examined daily by the same group of neurologists, using a standardized neurological examination. Patients with signs of encephalic lesions, unsatisfactory response to antibiotics or decreased level of consciousness were submitted to brain computer tomography. The overall lethality rate was 20.3% and cases whose causative agent was identified presented a higher lethality rate (23.7%) than those in which the agent was not found. The most important neurological abnormalities were meningeal signs (88.3%) followed by decreased consciousness (47.7%), irritability (35.2%), seizures (22.4%), fontanel bulging (20.6%) and cranial nerve palsy (14.2%). Seizures, cranial nerve palsy and the absence of meningeal signs were related to higher rates of lethality. Diminished consciousness, seizures, subdural effusion, abscess and hydrocephalus were the most important complications, respectively. We can conclude that acute bacterial meningitis continues to be an important health problem in developing countries and that public health measures will be necessary to minimize the impact of sequelae and reduce the mortality rate in children with that pathology.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002

Taeniasis and cysticercosis prevalence in a small village from Northeastern Brazil

Irenio Gomes; Marielza Veiga; Emília Katiane Embiruçu; Rosângela Rabelo; Bernardo Mota; Antonio Meza-Lucas; Raquel Tapia-Romero; Bertha Laura Carrillo-Becerril; Isabel Alcántara-Anguiano; Dolores Correa; Ailton Melo

UNLABELLEDnAlthough not considered as an endemic region, the Northeast of Brazil has the necessary conditions for the development of taeniasis-cysticercosis complex. In a previous paper, we demonstrated that Mulungu do Morro municipality, in the State of Bahia, has a high seroprevalence to cysticercosis in epileptic patients.nnnOBJECTIVEnto determine the prevalence of taeniasis and positive cysticercosis serology in the population of Mulungu do Morro.nnnMETHODnblood and stool samples were collected from a random sampling of the population, by family. The identification of antibodies against T. solium cysticerci was made by EITB and T. solium antigens were identified using a polyclonal antibody-capture ELISA.nnnRESULTSnthe cysticercosis seroprevalence was 1.6% (C.I. = 0.8 to 2.8%) and the taeniasis prevalence 4.5% (C.I. = 3.0 to 6.5%). Seropositivity to cysticercosis was higher among those who lived in a house of a person testing positive for coproantigen, p=0.017.nnnCONCLUSIONnour results demonstrate that the taeniasis-cysticercosis complex is endemic in Mulungu do Morro. We believe that all areas in the world with the same socio-economic and sanitary characteristics are likely to have high prevalence of this parasite.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1994

Mielopatias por HTLV-1 na cidade de Salvador, Bahia

Ailton Melo; Irenio Gomes; Kilma Mattos

Paraparesia espastica progressiva associada a HTLV-1 constitui-se em uma patologia com caracteristicas endemicas em varias regioes do Brasil. Em Salvador, 102 pacientes com mielopatias de diversas etiologias foram triados para HTLV-I/II com ELISA e Western blot em quatro hospitais gerais que assistem a populacao de baixa renda. Foram encontrados 36 pacientes com mielopatia associada a HTLV-I/II, o que esta de acordo com a elevada prevalencia dessa patologia em Salvador. Todos os pacientes com infeccao pelo HTLV-I/ II apresentavam paraparesia espastica progressiva, bexiga neurogenica associada, a graus variaveis de comprometimento sensitivo superficial e/ou profundo e sindrome do neuronio motor inferior. O exame de LCR mostrou pleocitose linfocitaria com aumento moderado de gama-globulinas e a ressonância magnetica mostrou graus variaveis de lesoes periventriculares e subcorticais associadas ou nao a atrofia da medula espinal toracica. O exame neurologico e os dados de ressonância magnetica sugerem que os pacientes com comprometimento neurologico por HTLV-I podem estar acometidos por graus variaveis de leucoencefalomieloneuropatia.Chronic myelopathy associated with human T-lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) has been described in several endemic areas in Brazil. In Salvador, 102 patients with myelopathy were screened for HTLV-I/II by ELISA and Western blot assays. We found 36 patients with HTLV-I/II associated myelopathy confirming the high prevalence of HAM in Salvador. The initial complaint of our patients were urinary urgency, back pain and progressive unsteadiness on walking. On examination all of them had a spastic paraparesis, variable degrees of lower motor neuron syndrome, deep and superficial sensitive syndrome. MRI analysis revealed lesions in the periventricular white matter in addition to atrophy of the thoracic spinal cord. Clinical and magnetic resonance findings reveal that the inflammatory lesions of HAM involve not only the spinal cord but also the brain and peripheral nervous system.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2000

Cysticercosis in epileptic patients of Mulungu do Morro Northeastern Brazil

Irenio Gomes; Marielza Veiga; Dolores Correa; Antonio Meza-Lucas; Olga Mata; Roberto Carlos Garcia; Alejandro Osornio; Rosângela Rabelo; Rita Lucena; Ailton Melo

With the aim to study the magnitude of infection by the metacestode of Taenia solium in a population of epileptic patients in the arid region of Bahia, Northeastern Brazil, we examined 200 consecutive cases who attended an ambulatory clinic in the disctrict of Mulungu do Morro. Sixty-six of the patients had a diagnosis of epilepsy. From them 10 (15.2%) presented antibodies against a specific fraction of antigens in Western blot, and 4 (6.0%) had circulating parasite products, as tested by capture ELISA. Only 1 case was positive for antibodies and antigens. We found that the frequency of seropositivity was related to the time without epileptic seizure. We conclude that cysticercosis is endemic in the region of Mulungu do Morro and that it is related to a benign form of epilepsy.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1997

Neuropatia vegetativa em pacientes com tolerância diminuída à glicose

Karla Freire Rezende; Ailton Melo; Judith Maria Dias Carreiro Pousada; Zulmira Freire Rezende; Norma L. Santos; Irenio Gomes

Impaired glucose tolerance (1GT) is a clinical situation characterized by mild hyperglicemia, which is estimated to afflict 7.8% of the Brazilian population. Diabetic neuropathy is the most common: complication in diabetes mellitus and it is related to morbidity and lethality in this disease. The associatior between IGT and peripheral neuropathy is still a matter of great concern. PURPOSE AND METHOD: In order to determine if IGT is associated with autonomic neuropathy a cross-sectional study in 44 patients with impaired glucose tolerance test (Group 1) was performed. The patients were compared to 43 control individuals (Group 2). Every patient in each group underwent anamnesis and standardized autonomic tests which consisted of hear) frequency test, Valsalva maneuver, postural test and sinus arrythmia. Routine hematologic exams as well as GTT were also made. RESULTS: Patients in group 1 had more systemic arterial hypertension, centripetal obesity, fasting and post-feeding hyperglicemia and dyslipidemia when compared with group 2. When we analysed the autonomic tests, the sinus arrythmia test was abnormal in 54.5% of the patients in group 1 and in 32.5% in group 2 (p=0.0039) and the Valsalva maneuver was abnormal in 34.1% of group 1 and in 7% of group 2 (p=0.004). The postural test was not different in both groups (p=0.334). CONCLUSION: Our results show that the involvement of the autonomic nervous system was more frequent in patients with IGT when compared to controls. These findings can explair the increased lethality due to vasculopathies observed in this group of patients and also alert physicians to care for patients with impaired glucose tolerance test.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2003

Transmissão vetorial da doença de Chagas em Mulungu do Morro, Nordeste do Brasil

Roque Aras; Irenio Gomes; Marielza Veiga; Ailton Melo

A serological survey was carried out to determine the prevalence of Chagas disease in municipality. The following variables were analyzed to identify the form of transmission of this disease: age, sex, clinical and transfusional history, degree of kinship and serology. Within the 863 municipalities we studied, we identified 265 individuals, with serology testing done on them and on their respective mothers. Of these, 232 tested negative serology for Chagasdisease and 33 (14.2%) positive. We found 9 (3.9%) patients, of 14.3 years. average age with vectorial transmission and 24 (10.3%), of 26.6 years. average age with probable, vertical and vectorial transmission. When we compare the two groups in regard to age averages and manner of transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi, we encounter a statistical significance. Our results suggest the existence of an active, vectorial transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi in Mulungu do Morro.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002

Aspectos clínicos e laboratoriais de meningite piogênica em lactentes

Rita Lucena; Irenio Gomes; Eduardo Cardoso; Julieta Goes; Luciana Nunes; Adriana Cardoso; Bernardo Rodrigues; Murilo Souza; Marco Antônio Novaes; Ailton Melo

OBJECTIVE: to describe clinical and laboratorial characteristics of acute bacterial meningitis in infants. METHOD: data from the prospective follow-up of infants with acute bacterial meningitis, admitted at the Hospital Couto Maia between March and December 1997, were analyzed with specific statistical software. RESULTS: acute bacterial meningitis was more prevalent in infants with ages varying from 6 months to 1 year. The most frequent etiologic agent was Haemophilus influenzae. The global lethality was 25.9% and among the survivors 39.3% left the hospital with some abnormality in the neurological exam compatible with the brain involvement. CONCLUSION: acute bacterial meningitis in infants is a high lethality disease that in the majority of cases can be prevented. We consider of great relevance the adoption of health prevention strategies in order to reduce the incidence of this disease.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1998

Fatores prognósticos de letalidade na meningoencefalite tuberculosa

Ceuci Nunes; Sérgio Souza da Cunha; Irenio Gomes; Rita Lucena; Dilcinéia Moraes; Ailton Melo

In order to describe the lethality predictors of patients with tuberculous meningoencephalitis, records of 231 patients were analysed. Ages ranged from less than 1 year to 68 years. Ninety-seven patients (42%) were four years old or less. Apart from 73.2% of patients whose diagnosis was performed by clinical and epidemiologic criteria associated with response to specific therapy, 26.8% had diagnostic confirmation through cerebrospinal fluid (culture, bacilloscopy, PCR) or necropsy. The lethality predictors were: less than 4 years of age, seizures, and severe alterations of consciousness.

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Ailton Melo

Federal University of Bahia

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Rita Lucena

Federal University of Bahia

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Marielza Veiga

Federal University of Bahia

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Julieta Goes

Federal University of Bahia

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Kilma Mattos

Federal University of Bahia

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Roque Aras

Federal University of Bahia

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Rosângela Rabelo

Federal University of Bahia

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Virgínia Freitas

Federal University of Bahia

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