Joana Rodrigues
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Clinical Case Reports | 2015
Dalila Rocha; Joana Rodrigues; Jorge Sales Marques; Rui Pinto; Anabela Gomes
Aplasia cutis congenita is a disease in which skin, bone, and dura mater can be absent. In majority of the cases it affects the scalp. We report a baby girl born at term with a large scalp and skull defect measuring 9 × 10 cm. Conservative treatment led to complete epithelization.
Case reports in pediatrics | 2014
Joana Rodrigues; Dalila Rocha; Fátima Santos; Anabela João
Citrobacter koseri is a rare cause of neonatal meningitis with predisposal for brain abscesses, and therefore responsible for high mortality and serious neurologic sequelae in this age group. We present the evolution and outcome of four cases of C. koseri meningitis. One of them developed brain abscesses and another one died. The cases show the bacterias propensity for serious brain damage, despite early and adequate treatment, and the high risk of long-term neurologic complications in survivors, which imposes a close follow-up.
Journal of Maternal-fetal & Neonatal Medicine | 2018
Manuel R. G. Carrapato; Tatiana Pereira; Cláudia Silva; Joana Rodrigues; Ines Monteiro; Ana M. Azevedo; Joana Monteiro
Abstract Very preterm infants (VPT) and, especially extreme low gestational age (ELGA) preterms, often on the threshold of viability, make the headlines of both, the scientific as well as the popular press. However, all together they represent between 1 and 2% of all livebirths. Late preterms (LPT) those born between 34/07 and 36/06 weeks, on the other hand, may account for up to 80% of all preterms and for some 5–8% of all births. Although mortality is low they are prone to increasing neonatal morbidities posing a considerable medical, financial and psychosocial burden. In the last years, for many reasons, LPT appear to have increased considerably throughout the western world. But are LPT neonates all the same? In spite of overlapping gestational ages (GA) LPT may behave quite differently depending on circumstances surrounding their pre- and postnatal events. We can identify three different classes of LPT neonates: spontaneous late preterms (SpLPT) born in the absence of previous maternal illnesses and/or pregnancy related disorders; Induced LPT (IdLPT) due to maternal/fetal complications and those babies being born after 34-week gestation from postponed delivery at an earlier GA (PtLPT) – and they are quite different babies, with different behavior, despite a common and same gestational age.
Archive | 2010
A. V. de Resende; A. M. Coelho; Joana Rodrigues; F. C. dos Santos
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Phenomenology | 2018
R. Casana; Joana Rodrigues; F. E. P. dos Santos
Archive | 2017
R. Casana; Joana Rodrigues; F. E. P. dos Santos
NASCER E CRESCER - BIRTH AND GROWTH MEDICAL JOURNAL | 2017
Luciana Barbosa; Joana Cardoso; Joana Rodrigues; Maria José Dinis; Isabel Carvalho
Acta Pediátrica Portuguesa | 2017
Ana Azevedo; Joana Rodrigues; Isabel Nunes; Jorge Romariz; Cláudia Pedrosa; Fátima Praça; Herculano Costa
Nascer e Crescer | 2016
Joana Rodrigues; Ana Azevedo; Susana Tavares; Cristina Rocha; Ermelinda Santos Silva
NASCER E CRESCER - BIRTH AND GROWTH MEDICAL JOURNAL | 2016
Joana Rodrigues; Ana Azevedo; Susana Tavares; Cristina M. R. Rocha; Ermelinda Santos Silva