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Dive into the research topics where Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau is active.

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Featured researches published by Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau.


Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2009

Risk score to predict the outcome of patients with cerebral vein and dural sinus thrombosis.

José M. Ferro; Helena Bacelar-Nicolau; Teresa Rodrigues; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau; Patrícia Canhão; Isabelle Crassard; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Aurélio Pimenta Dutra; Ayrton Roberto Massaro; Marie-Anne Mackowiack-Cordiolani; Didier Leys; João Ramalho Fontes; Jan Stam; Fernando Barinagarrementeria

Background: Around 15% of patients die or become dependent after cerebral vein and dural sinus thrombosis (CVT). Method: We used the International Study on Cerebral Vein and Dural Sinus Thrombosis (ISCVT) sample (624 patients, with a median follow-up time of 478 days) to develop a Cox proportional hazards regression model to predict outcome, dichotomised by a modified Rankin Scale score >2. From the model hazard ratios, a risk score was derived and a cut-off point selected. The model and the score were tested in 2 validation samples: (1) the prospective Cerebral Venous Thrombosis Portuguese Collaborative Study Group (VENOPORT) sample with 91 patients; (2) a sample of 169 consecutive CVT patients admitted to 5 ISCVT centres after the end of the ISCVT recruitment period. Sensitivity, specificity, c statistics and overall efficiency to predict outcome at 6 months were calculated. Results: The model (hazard ratios: malignancy 4.53; coma 4.19; thrombosis of the deep venous system 3.03; mental status disturbance 2.18; male gender 1.60; intracranial haemorrhage 1.42) had overall efficiencies of 85.1, 84.4 and 90.0%, in the derivation sample and validation samples 1 and 2, respectively. Using the risk score (range from 0 to 9) with a cut-off of ≥3 points, overall efficiency was 85.4, 84.4 and 90.1% in the derivation sample and validation samples 1 and 2, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity in the combined samples were 96.1 and 13.6%, respectively. Conclusions: The CVT risk score has a good estimated overall rate of correct classifications in both validation samples, but its specificity is low. It can be used to avoid unnecessary or dangerous interventions in low-risk patients, and may help to identify high-risk CVT patients.


International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction | 2013

Alexithymia, Emotional Awareness and Perceived Dysfunctional Parental Behaviors in Heroin Dependents

Marco Torrado; Sílvia Soares Ouakinin; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau

The aim of this study was to analyse alexithymia and deficits in emotional awareness, in heroin addicts, and their relationship with perceptions of early parental interactions. The sample included 99 opiate dependent outpatients and 43 healthy controls. Assessment was performed using the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, the Levels of Emotional Awareness Scale, the Inventory for Assessing Memories of Parental Rearing Behavior, the Mini-Mental State Examination and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Findings suggest parental representations, which were mostly characterized by emotional unavailability and a rejection interaction pattern, significantly related to alexithymia. Emotional awareness was associated with the number of years of drug use and methadone level. Negative affect was associated with alexithymia but not to emotional awareness. Regression analyses emphasized the influence of perceived dysfunctional parenting behaviors in alexithymia and difficulties in identifying feelings, particularly an interaction with paternal rejection, moderated by self-reported anxiety. These results are discussed addressing comprehensive issues of emotion regulation and treatment strategies in heroin dependence.


Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2017

The Atlantic divide in coronary heart disease : epidemiology and patient care in the US and Portugal

Mf Lobo; Vanessa Azzone; Frederic S. Resnic; Bruno Melica; Armando Teixeira-Pinto; Luís Filipe Azevedo; Alberto Freitas; Cláudia Nisa; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau; Francisco Rocha-Gonçalves; José Pereira-Miguel; Altamiro Costa-Pereira; Sharon-Lise T. Normand

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES We aimed to compare access to new health technologies to treat coronary heart disease (CHD) in the health systems of Portugal and the US, characterizing the needs of the populations and the resources available. METHODS We reviewed data for 2000 and 2010 on epidemiologic profiles of CHD and on health care available to patients. Thirty health technologies (16 medical devices and 14 drugs) introduced during the period 1980-2015 were identified by interventional cardiologists. Approval and marketing dates were compared between countries. RESULTS Relative to the US, Portugal has lower risk profiles and less than half the hospitalizations per capita, but fewer centers per capita provide catheterization and cardiothoracic surgery services. More than 70% of drugs were available sooner in the US, whereas 12 out of 16 medical devices were approved earlier in Portugal. Nevertheless, at least five of these devices were adopted first or diffused faster in the US. Mortality due to CHD and myocardial infarction (MI) was lower in Portugal (CHD: 72.8 vs. 168 and MI: 48.7 vs. 54.1 in Portugal and the US, respectively; age- and gender-adjusted deaths per 100000 population, 2010); but only CHD deaths exhibited a statistically significant difference between the countries. CONCLUSIONS Differences in regulatory mechanisms and price regulations have a significant impact on the types of health technologies available in the two countries. However, other factors may influence their adoption and diffusion, and this appears to have a greater impact on mortality, due to acute conditions.


International Journal for Quality in Health Care | 2017

A comparison of in-hospital acute myocardial infarction management between Portugal and the United States: 2000–2010

Mf Lobo; Vanessa Azzone; Luís Filipe Azevedo; Bruno Melica; Alberto Freitas; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau; Francisco Rocha-Gonçalves; Cláudia Nisa; Armando Teixeira-Pinto; José Pereira-Miguel; Frederic S. Resnic; Altamiro Costa-Pereira; Sharon-Lise T. Normand

Objective To compare healthcare in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) treatment between contrasting health systems using comparable representative data from Europe and USA. Design Repeated cross-sectional retrospective cohort study. Setting Acute care hospitals in Portugal and USA during 2000-2010. Participants Adults discharged with AMI. Interventions Coronary revascularizations procedures (percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery). Main Outcome Measures In-hospital mortality and length of stay. Results We identified 1 566 601 AMI hospitalizations. Relative to the USA, more hospitalizations in Portugal presented with elevated ST-segment, and fewer had documented comorbidities. Age-sex-adjusted AMI hospitalization rates decreased in USA but increased in Portugal. Crude procedure rates were generally lower in Portugal (PCI: 44% vs. 47%; CABG: 2% vs. 9%, 2010) but only CABG rates differed significantly after standardization. PCI use increased annually in both countries but CABG decreased only in the USA (USA: 0.95 [0.94, 0.95], Portugal: 1.04 [1.02, 1.07], odds ratios). Both countries observed annual decreases in risk-adjusted mortality (USA: 0.97 [0.965, 0.969]; Portugal: 0.99 [0.979, 0.991], hazard ratios). While between-hospital variability in procedure use was larger in USA, the risk of dying in a high relative to a low mortality hospital (hospitals in percentiles 95 and 5) was 2.65 in Portugal when in USA was only 1.03. Conclusions Although in-hospital mortality due to an AMI improved in both countries, patient management in USA seems more effective and alarming disparities in quality of care across hospitals are more likely to exist in Portugal.


TPM. Testing, Psychometrics, Methodology in Applied Psychology | 2014

Clustering of variables with a three-way approach for health sciences

Helena Bacelar-Nicolau; Fernando C. Nicolau; Áurea Sousa; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau

© 2014 Cises This work is distributed with License Creative Commons Attribution-Non commercial-No derivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-BC-ND 4.0)


Sleep and Breathing | 2018

Decrease of perforin positive CD3+γδ-T cells in patients with obstructive sleep disordered breathing

Richard Staats; Raquel Rodrigues; André Barros; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau; Margarida Aguiar; Dina Fernandes; S. Moreira; André E. S. Simões; Bruno Silva-Santos; J. Rodrigues; Cristina Bárbara; António Bugalho de Almeida; Luis F. Moita

IntroductionSleep related breathing disorders (SRBD) cause sleep fragmentation, intermittent hypoxia or a combination of both leading to homeostasis perturbations, including in the immune system. We investigated whether SRBD patients with or without intermittent hypoxia show substantial differences in perforin and granzyme-B positive peripheral blood lymphocytes.MethodsA total of 87 subjects were included and distributed as follows: 24 controls (C), 19 patients with respiratory effort related arousals due to increased upper airway resistance (UAR) without hypoxic events, 24 obese patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) (oOSA), and 20 without obesity (noOSA). After polysomnographic recording, we analyzed in fasting blood samples routine hematologic and biochemical parameters and the percentage of lymphocytes containing the proteins perforin and granzyme-B (GrB). Kruskal-Wallis tests and a posteriori multiple comparisons were applied for statistical analysis of results.ResultsPerforin-positive γδ-cells revealed significant differences between groups (p = 0.017), especially between the Control group and the oOSA (p-value = 0.04); the remaining SRBD groups also showed differences from the control (C vs UAR: p = 0.08; C vs noOSA = 0.09), but they did not raise to statistical significance. There were no differences among the SRBD groups. Granzyme-B cells were decreased in SRBD patients, but the differences were not statistically significant. No additional statistical significant result was found in the other investigated lymphocyte subsets.ConclusionsObstructive sleep-disordered breathing is associated with a decrease in perforin-positive CD3+γδ-T cells. Although this finding was detected in lean patients without intermittent hypoxia, the reduction was only statistically significant in obese patients with severe OSA. Because CD3+γδ-T cells play an important role in the control of tumor cells, our findings are directly relevant for the study of the association of OSA and cancer.


Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal | 2018

Picturing inequities for health impact assessment: linked electronic records, mortality and regional disparities in Portugal

Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau; Teresa Rodrigues; Elisabete Fernandes; Mf Lobo; Cláudia Nisa; Vanessa Azzone; Armando Teixeira-Pinto; Altamiro Costa-Pereira; Sharon-Lise T. Normand; José Pereira Miguel

Abstract Health impact assessment (HIA) focuses on minimizing inequities when studying the effects of a policy on the population’s health. Nevertheless, it is seldom simultaneously quantified, multivariate, and visually graphically comprehensible for non-statisticians. This paper aims to address that gap, assessing a policy promoting the quality of Electronic Health Records, linking hospital and primary health care data (Blood Pressure, Cholesterol, Triglycerides, Waist Circumference, Body Mass Index) to mortality outcomes and regional inequities. Acute Myocardial Infarction patients admitted in the hospital are then followed regularly in Portuguese NHS Primary Care. Regional disparities regarding recorded information are observed and different association patterns with mortality identified, ranked, and visualized through adjusted ORs for sex, age, and indicators of severity of hospital admission, complemented with multivariate correspondence analysis. A pathway to handling equity within quantitative HIA shows that complexity in data and methods may generate simplicity and clarity through visual graphical aids. Tackling Big Data with Data Science in HIA may even be at the center of future health reforms, assessing impacts of health promotion and chronic disease policies.


Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine | 2015

Stress reactivity, distress and attachment in newly diagnosed breast cancer patients

Sílvia Ouakinin; Susana Eusébio; Marco Torrado; Hugo Silva; Isabel Nabais; Graça Gonçalves; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau

Research on psycho-oncology increased across literature during the last decades, pointing to links between biological, psychosocial and behavioural factors in cancer beginning and progression. This study aimed to characterize a sample of recently breast-cancer-diagnosed women, compared to a control group, regarding their stress reactivity at a psychological and autonomic levels, anger regulation and attachment styles. Eighty-seven females (52 breast cancer patients and 33 controls) respectively from Portuguese public hospitals and general population were recruited. They were assessed through psychometric measures (distress, attachment styles and anger regulation) and psychophysiological parameters of reactivity were collected. The breast cancer patients studied seem to be less anxious in their attachment patterns compared to healthy people, but they report significant distress while facing a threatening situation. This clinical group also shows lower psychophysiological reactivity, both at the baseline and confronted with different emotional eliciting stimuli. Self-directed anger was associated with the presence of anxious attachment schemes and strictly linked to the appraised distress. A predictive model suggests the impact of this pattern of anger management and an anxious attachment style in the emotional disturbance reported by these patients. Findings suggest that insecure attachment schemes, dysfunctional anger regulation strategies and a lack of psychophysiological activation may be discussed as relevant factors that modulate emotional distress associated with the diagnosis of breast cancer.


Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering | 2009

Measuring similarity of complex and heterogeneous data in clustering of large data sets

Helena Bacelar-Nicolau; Fernando C. Nicolau; Áurea Sousa; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau


3rd Stochastic Modeling Techniques and Data Analysis International Conference (SMTDA2014 | 2014

On cluster analysis of complex and heterogeneous data

Helena Bacelar-Nicolau; Fernando C. Nicolau; Áurea Sousa; Leonor Bacelar-Nicolau

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Áurea Sousa

University of the Azores

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