José Carlos Felicetti
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
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Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2006
José da Silva Moreira; José de Jesus Peixoto Camargo; José Carlos Felicetti; Paulo Roberto Goldenfun; Ana Luiza Schneider Moreira; Nelson da Silva Porto
OBJECTIVE: To relate the experience of the staff at a health care facility specializing in the management of patients with aspiration lung abscess. METHODS: Diagnostic aspects and therapeutic results of 252 consecutive cases of lung abscess seen in patients hospitalized between 1968 and 2004. RESULTS: Of the 252 patients, 209 were male, and 43 were female. The mean age was 41.4 years, and 70.2% were alcoholic. Cough, expectoration, fever and overall poor health were seen over 97% of patients. Chest pain was reported by 64%, 30.2% presented digital clubbing, 82.5% had dental disease, 78.6% reported having lost consciousness at least once, and 67.5% presented foul smelling sputum. In 85.3% of the patients, the lung lesions were located either in the posterior segments of the upper lobe or in the superior segments of the lower lobe, and 96.8% were unilateral. Concomitant pleural empyema was seen in 24 (9.5%) of the patients. Mixed flora was identified in the bronchopulmonary or pleural secretions of 182 patients (72.2%). All patients were initially treated with antibiotics (mainly penicillin or clindamycin), and postural drainage was performed in 98.4% of cases. Surgical procedures were performed in 52 (20.6%) of the patients (drainage of empyema in 24, pulmonary resection in 22 and drainage of the abscess in 6). Cure was obtained in 242 patients (96.0%), and 10 (4.0%) died. CONCLUSION: Lung abscess occurred predominantly in male adults presenting dental disease and having a history of loss of consciousness (especially as a result of alcohol abuse). Most of the patients were treated clinically with antibiotics and postural drainage, although some surgical procedure was required in one-fifth of the study sample.
Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2006
Pablo Gerardo Sánchez; Giovani Schirmer Vendrame; Gabriel Ribeiro Madke; Eduardo Sperb Pilla; José de Jesus Peixoto Camargo; Cristiano Feijó Andrade; José Carlos Felicetti; Paulo Francisco Guerreiro Cardoso
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the impact that comorbidities have on the postoperative outcomes in patients submitted to lobectomy for the treatment of bronchial carcinoma. METHODS: A retrospective study of 493 patients submitted to lobectomy for the treatment of bronchial carcinoma was conducted, and 305 of those patients met the criteria for inclusion in the final study sample. The surgical technique used was similar in all cases. The Torrington-Henderson scale and the Charlson scale were used to analyze comorbidities and to categorize patients into groups based on degree of risk for postoperative complications or death. RESULTS: The postoperative (30-day) mortality rate was 2.9%, and the postoperative complications index was 44%. Prolonged air leakage was the most common complication (in 20.6%). The univariate analysis revealed that gender, age, smoking, neoadjuvant therapy and diabetes all had a significant impact on the incidence of complications. The factors found to be predictive of complications were body mass index (23.8 ± 4.4), forced expiratory volume in one second (74.1 ± 24%) and the ratio between forced expiratory volume in one second and forced vital capacity (0.65 ± 0.1). The scales employed proved efficacious in the identification of the risk groups, as well as in drawing correlations with morbidity and mortality (p = 0.001 and p < 0.001). In the multivariate analysis, body mass index and the Charlson index were found to be the principal determinants of complications. In addition, prolonged air leakage was found to be the principal factor involved in mortality (p = 0.01). CONCLUSION: Reductions in forced expiratory volume in one second, in the ratio between forced expiratory volume in one second and forced vital capacity, and in body mass index, as well as a Charlson score of 3 or 4 and a Torrington-Henderson score of 3, were associated with a greater number of postoperative complications in patients submitted to lobectomy for the treatment of bronchial carcinoma. Air leakage was found to be strongly associated with mortality.
Lung Cancer | 2010
Tiago Noguchi Machuca; Paulo Francisco Guerreiro Cardoso; Spencer Marcantonio Camargo; Leonardo Signori; Cristiano Feijó Andrade; Ana Luiza Schneider Moreira; José da Silva Moreira; José Carlos Felicetti; José de Jesus Peixoto Camargo
BACKGROUND Bronchial carcinoid is an infrequent neoplasm with a neuroendocrine differentiation. Surgical treatment is the gold standard therapy, with procedures varying from sublobar resections to complex lung sparing broncoplastic procedures. This study evaluates the results of surgical treatment of bronchial carcinoids and its prognostic factors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Retrospective review of 126 consecutive patients who underwent surgical treatment for bronchial carcinoid tumors between December 1974 and July 2007. RESULTS There were 70 females (55%) and the mean age was 46 years, ranging from 17 to 81 years. Upon clinical presentation, 38 patients (30%) have had recurrent respiratory tract infection, 31 (24%) cough, 16 (12%) chest pain and 25 (20%) were asymptomatic. Preoperative bronchoscopic diagnosis was obtained in 74 cases (58.7%). The procedures performed were: 19 sublobar resections (14,9%), 58 lobectomies (46%), 8 bilobectomies (6.3%), 6 pneumonectomies (4.7%), 2 sleeve segmentectomies (1.5%), 26 sleeve lobectomies (20.6%) and 9 bronchoplastic procedures without lung resection (7.1%). Operative mortality was 1.5% (n = 2) and morbidity was 25.8% (n=32), including 12 respiratory tract infections and 4 reinterventions due to bleeding (3) and pleural empyema (1). Among the 112 patients available for follow-up, the overall survival at 3, 5 and 10 years was 89.2%, 85.5% and 79.8%, respectively. Five and 10-year survival for typical and atypical carcinoids were 91, 89% and 56, 47%, respectively. Overall disease-free survival at 5 years was 91.9% Statistical analysis showed that overall disease-free survival correlated with histology--typical vs. atypical--(p = 0.04) and stage (p = 0.02). CONCLUSION Surgery provides safe and adequate treatment to bronchial carcinoid tumors. Histology and stage were the main prognostic factors.
Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2007
Leandro Heusi dos Santos; Iana Oliveira e Silva Ribeiro; Pablo Gerardo Sánchez; Jorge Lima Hetzel; José Carlos Felicetti; Paulo Francisco Guerreiro Cardoso
OBJECTIVES: To determine the effect that the treatment of GERD has on the clinical management, as well as the respiratory function, of patients with asthma and to evaluate the clinical characteristics of this group of patients. METHODS: Patients with asthma and concomitant GERD, documented using 24 h pH-metry, were evaluated by means of quality of life questionnaires, as well as questionnaires related to respiratory and digestive symptoms. In addition, esophageal manometry, spirometry and the determination of peak expiratory flow were also performed prior to and after the study. Forty-nine individuals who were diagnosed with GERD by means of 24 h esophageal pH-metry were selected and participated in a clinical randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study, involving the administration of 40 mg/day of pantoprazol for 12 consecutive weeks. RESULTS: Forty-four individuals completed the study (n = 22 per group). There was significant improvement in the scores for respiratory symptoms and quality of life only in the group that received pantoprazol (p = 0.01 and p = 0.001, respectively). No respiratory function parameters changed in either group. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, the effective treatment of GERD improved patient quality of life, and the symptoms of asthma significantly decreased in the group that received the medication. There were no changes in pulmonary function parameters.
Transplantation | 2010
Jorge Neumann; Heloisa Tarrasconi; A. Bortolotto; Tiago Noguchi Machuca; Raquel Lisiane Canabarro; Heloísa Coutinho Sporleder; Sandra Fernandes; Sadi Marcelo Schio; Clarisse Costa; Spencer Marcantonio Camargo; Letícia Sanchez; José de Jesus Peixoto Camargo; Fabíola Adélia Perin; José Carlos Felicetti; Tatiana Michelon
on treatment, the poorly functioning area signifying the abscess cavity showed a reduction in size with alteration of shape and a decline in R2* value within, whereas T1-weighted and T2-weighted images showed only minimal changes (Fig. 1). Functional changes preceded morphologic changes as the abscess became gradually enclosed by normal functioning renal tissue. Prednisolone perhaps reduced the surrounding fibrosis as described by Haramaki et al. (4) No hypermetabolizing tissue was seen around the abscess as might be expected in a pyogenic abscess with surrounding inflammation. Using its ability to estimate tissue oxygen bioavailability, BOLD MRI can distinguish between acute rejection and acute tubular necrosis in a setting of early renal allograft dysfunction (5, 6). Although this technique cannot quantify absolute tissue oxygen levels because of the nonlinear relationship between R2* values and the partial pressure of oxygen, it could be used in various clinical situations to monitor renal oxygenation. This is the first report of the use of BOLD MRI to demonstrate the functional changes associated with a healing tuberculous abscess in a renal allograft. More studies may be required to obtain any further conclusion. This ability to combine functional with morphologic imaging heralds a new horizon and could emerge as a useful tool for vascular and functional assessment of the kidneys.
Jornal Brasileiro De Pneumologia | 2008
Spencer Marcantonio Camargo; José de Jesus Peixoto Camargo; Sadi Marcelo Schio; Letícia Sanchez; José Carlos Felicetti; José da Silva Moreira; Cristiano Feijó Andrade
OBJECTIVE To evaluate post-operative complications in living lobar lung transplant donors. METHODS Between September of 1999 and May of 2005, lobectomies were performed in 32 healthy lung transplant donors for 16 recipients. The medical charts of these donors were retrospectively analyzed in order to determine the incidence of postoperative complications and alterations in pulmonary function after lobectomy. RESULTS Twenty-two donors (68.75%) presented no complications. Among the 10 donors presenting complications, the most frequently observed complication was pleural effusion, which occurred in 5 donors (15.6% of the sample). Red blood cell transfusion was necessary in 3 donors (9.3%), and 2 donors underwent a second surgical procedure due to hemothorax. One donor presented pneumothorax after chest tube removal, and one developed respiratory infection. There were two intra-operative complications (6.25%): one donor required bronchoplasty of the middle lobe; and another required lingular resection. No intra-operative mortality was observed. Post-operative pulmonary function tests demonstrated an average reduction of 20% in forced expiratory volume in one second (p < 000.1) compared to pre-operative values. CONCLUSIONS Lobectomy in living lung transplant donors presents high risk of post-operative complications and irreversible impairment of pulmonary function. Careful pre-operative evaluation is necessary in order to reduce the incidence of complications in living lobar lung transplant donors.
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2004
Cristiano Feijó Andrade; Lucas Krieger Martins; Tiago Antônio Tonietto; Cristiano Koefender; Luis Carlos Anflor; Nilton Brandão da Silva; José Carlos Felicetti; José de Jesus Peixoto Camargo; Elaine Aparecida Felix Fortis; Paulo Francisco Guerreiro Cardoso
Abstract Background The purpose of this study was to evaluate canine lungs obtained from non–heart-beating donors after unilateral lung transplantation subjected to partial liquid ventilation with perfluorodecalin. Methods Twelve donor dogs were killed and kept under mechanical ventilation for 3 hours. Heart–lung blocs were harvested after retrograde pulmonary hypothermic flush with Perfadex. Left lung grafts were randomly transplanted into 12 weight-matched recipient animals. Animals were divided into 2 groups: control (standard mechanical ventilation, n = 6) and PLV (partial liquid ventilation, n = 6). Forty-five minutes after transplantation, the animals in the PLV group received perfluorodecalin (15 ml/kg) via orotracheal tube. All animals received volume-controlled ventilation (Fio 2 1.0, PEEP 5 cm H 2 O) over 6 consecutive hours. Thereafter, blood-gas analysis, ventilatory mechanics and hemodynamics were registered at 30-minute intervals. After 6 hours of reperfusion the animals were killed and the transplanted lungs were extracted to obtain the wet/dry weight ratio. Results There were significant differences in pulmonary arterial pressure, which were higher in control group animals ( p 2 than those in the PLV group ( p 2 ( p p Conclusions PLV with perfluorodecalin yields functional results compatible with life in this model. Nonetheless, pulmonary gas exchange and mechanics were superior after reperfusion in animals given conventional mechanical ventilation up to 6 hours after left lung allotransplantation.
Jornal De Pneumologia | 2003
José da Silva Moreira; Nelson da Silva Porto; José de Jesus Peixoto Camargo; José Carlos Felicetti; Paulo Francisco Guerreiro Cardoso; Ana Luiza Schneider Moreira; Cristiano Feijó Andrade
BACKGROUND: Bronchiectasis is a frequently found disease in medical practice in Brazil leading to significant morbidity and decrease in quality of life of the affected individuals. OBJECTIVES: To study diagnostic and therapeutic aspects in a series of hospitalized patients with bronchiectasis in a department of pulmonary diseases. METHOD: Signs, symptoms, microbiological and radiographic data, and therapeutic results were studied in 170 hospitalized patients between 1978 and 2001 - females 62.4%, males 37.6%, and aged from 12 to 88 years (mean age 36.8 yrs). Previous history of pneumonia in childhood was detected in 52.5% of the patients, tuberculosis in 19.8%; 8.8% had bronchial asthma, and 2 had Kartageners syndrome. RESULTS: The most common symptoms were cough (100.0%), expectoration (96.0%) and pulmonary rales (66.0%). The pulmonary lesions were unilateral in 46.5% of the cases. Pneumococcus, H. influenzae or mixed flora were found in 85.0% of the examined sputa. All 170 patients received antibiotics and postural drainage, and 88 of them (younger and with a higher functional reserve) were also submitted to pulmonary resections (82 unilateral and 6 bilateral). Two deaths occurred, and repetitive hospitalizations were more frequent among the clinically treated patients. The follow up showed that most of the surgically treated patients had significant symptoms improvement and rarely needed to be re-hospitalized. CONCLUSIONS: In the majority of the patients, lung resection surgery improved permanently the prolonged bronchopulmonary symptoms of patients with bronchiectasis, differently from the patients who received only clinical treatment.
Jornal De Pneumologia | 2000
João Antônio Bonfadini Lima; Gilberto Bueno Fischer; José Carlos Felicetti; Jose A. M. Flores; Christina N. Penna; Eduardo Ludwig
Objective: The aim of this study was to detect late sequelae of foreign body aspiration in the respiratory tract of children. Methods: This study included children admitted from 1987 to 1999 to Hospital da Crianca Santo Antonio, of Porto Alegre, with clinical symptoms of foreign body aspiration to the respiratory tract confirmed by chest X-ray and bronchoscopy. Thirty days after the extraction of the foreign body a perfusion lung scan with technetium was performed. Results: 77% of the foreign bodies were organic materials. In 65% of children the aspiration event occurred at least 7 days before referral. The main location of foreign body was in the right lower lobe bronchus. Perfusion lung scans were performed in 24 patients. In 67% of them reduction in lung perfusion was detected. A chance of sequelae was 3.8 times greater in those patients who had the foreign body removed after 7 days from the aspiration event. Conclusion: This study showed that children that have had foreign body aspiration may have perfusion sequelae in their lungs even after removal of the foreign body. These sequelae were more frequent if the removal was delayed in 7 days of aspiration. Pediatricians must keep this in mind at the follow-up of children that have had foreign body aspiration.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2003
Cristiano Feijó Andrade; Spencer Marcantonio Camargo; Marcelo Zanchet; José Carlos Felicetti; Paulo Francisco Guerreiro Cardoso
Aortopulmonary paraganglioma is a rare tumor of the mediastinum. The only effective treatment is complete resection, which may pose a surgical challenge because of its proximity to the heart, great vessels, and trachea, often rendering a complete resection difficult to achieve. We report a case in which the tumor was excised under cardiopulmonary bypass and resulted in massive bleeding only controlled by means of packing the pleural cavity during 48 hours, known as damage control strategy. The patient survived and has been disease-free for 2 years.
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Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre
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