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Featured researches published by Leticia Fogagnolo.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2010

Avaliação do grau de incapacidade dos pacientes com diagnóstico de hanseníase em serviço de dermatologia do estado de São Paulo

Cinthia Janine Meira Alves; Jaison Antônio Barreto; Leticia Fogagnolo; Leticia Arsie Contin; Priscila Wolf Nassif

UNLABELLED IINTRODUCTION: Leprosy is a chronic infectious disease that can lead to physical incapacity. METHODS The medical records of 167 patients diagnosed with leprosy between 2003 and 2007 were reviewed. RESULTS Most of the patients (60%) presented physical incapacity at the time of diagnosis: 34% with grade I and 26% with grade II. It was observed that the degree of incapacity had a direct correlation with the duration of the disease. CONCLUSIONS Leprosy is still diagnosed late, which may contribute towards maintaining this endemic disease.


Anais Brasileiros De Dermatologia | 2011

Uso do teste ML-Flow como auxiliar na classificação e tratamento da hanseníase

Leticia Arsie Contin; Cinthia Janine Meira Alves; Leticia Fogagnolo; Priscila Wolf Nassif; Jaison Antônio Barreto; José Roberto Pereira Lauris; Maria Esther Salles Nogueira

BACKGROUND: The treatment of leprosy is defined by the classification of patients as paucibacillary (PB) or multibacillary (MB). The WHO (World Health Organization) classifies patients according to the number of lesions, but Ridley-Jopling (R & J) also uses complementary exams, which are difficult to use outside reference services. In 2003, a test called ML-Flow, an alternative to Elisa serology, was developed to help classify patients as PB or MB and decide about their treatment. OBJECTIVES: To assess the agreement between the ML-Flow test and slit skin smears, already largely used for MB detection, and to observe the efficacy of the ML-Flow test in the field. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A retrospective study evaluating the medical records of 55 patients who had not undergone previous treatment, diagnosed as PB or MB according to R & J and subjected to slit skin smears and the ML- Flow test. RESULTS: In MB patients, slit skin smears were positive in 80% of the cases, the ML-flow was positive in 82.5%. Among PB patients, the ML-Flow was positive in 37.5% and slit skin smears were negative in 100% of the cases. The agreement between skin smear and ML-Flow results was 87.5%, with a kappa value of 0.59, p <0.001. CONCLUSION: No laboratory test is 100% sensitive and specific for the correct classification of all forms of leprosy. The ML-Flow test is faster, easier to use, and less invasive than slit skin smears and therefore may be useful when making therapeutic decisions in areas of difficult access to reference services.


Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007

Vasculonecrotic reactions in leprosy

Leticia Fogagnolo; Elemir Macedo de Souza; Maria Letícia Cintra; Paulo Eduardo Neves Ferreira Velho

Multibacillary, lepromatous or borderline leprosy patients may present two types of vasculonecrotic reactions: Lucio phenomenon and that associated with erythema nodosum leprosum. Despite they can be distinguished through clinical and histological characteristics; both are often used as synonyms. It is said that leprosy reaction should be properly classified for therapeutic reasons, since it is well known that in Lucio phenomenon there is not a good response to thalidomide. The authors reported two cases of vasculonecrotic phenomena in lepromatous leprosy sharing clinical and histopathological characteristics of both reaction subtypes. The findings may indicate the spectral nature of the reaction phenomena in leprosy and emphasize the importance of the clinic-pathological correlation for proper classification. Our findings may contribute to the understanding of leprosy reactions pathogenesis, broaden the knowledge about their outcome with standard treatment, and provide the scientific background to design better therapeutic strategies for these complications.


Anais Brasileiros De Dermatologia | 2011

Hiperceratose epidermolítica: um seguimento de 23 anos de uso de retinoides orais

Priscila Wolf Nassif; Sadamitsu Nakandakari; Leticia Fogagnolo; Leticia Arsie Contin; Cinthia Janine Meira Alves

Epidermolytic hyperkeratosis is a form of ichthyosis normally resistant to topical treatments. Female patient monitored since 1978 diagnosed with epidermolytic hyperkeratosis. Clinical examination showed generalized hyperkeratosis and scaling. Given that no other treatments were available at the time, the patient was initially treated with keratolytic, systemic vitamin A and moisturizers, with no improvement. In 1986, with the development of oral retinoids, etretinate was introduced. In 1998 this was replaced by acitretin. The patient is receiving 25 mg/day after 23 years of using oral retinoids. Significant improvement of the condition and patients quality of life has been noted.


Anais Brasileiros De Dermatologia | 2010

Síndrome de Ekbom secundária a transtorno orgânico: relato de três casos

Cinthia Janine Meira Alves; Antônio Carlos Ceribelli Martelli; Leticia Fogagnolo; Priscila Wolf Nassif

The Ekbom syndrome, also known as delusion of parasitosis or acarophobia is an obsessive phobic state in which the patient thinks, imagines or believes that his or her skin is infested by parasites. In the hallucinatory state, he/she removes parts of the skin, identifying them as parasites. It can be primary or secondary to other organic or psychiatric diseases. Generally speaking these patients take a long time to seek for medical support and the dermatologist is almost always the first physician to see them. Here we describe three patients with delusional parasitosis associated with organic disorders.


Anais Brasileiros De Dermatologia | 2011

Angioceratoma da vulva

Leticia Fogagnolo; Maria Letícia Cintra; Paulo Eduardo Neves Ferreira Velho

Angiokeratomas are benign tumors characterized by ectasia of blood vessels in the papillary dermis associated with acanthosis and hyperkeratosis of the epidermis. Dermatological examination of angiokeratomas of Fordyce is characterized by papular keratotic lesions of erythematous-violet color. They are more common in the scrotum, and vulvar involvement is rarely reported. Histopathology is particularly important to distinguish them from other benign and malignant tumors. The article reports the case of a middle-aged black woman with a history of chronic constipation, varicose veins of the lower limbs and cesarean section performed 20 years ago who had had multiple vulvar angiokeratomas for three months.


Clinical and Experimental Dermatology | 2014

Cytotoxic granules in distinct subsets of cutaneous lupus erythematosus

Leticia Fogagnolo; Tania Cristina Benetti Soares; C. G. Senna; Elemir Macedo de Souza; M. H. S. L. Blotta; Maria Letícia Cintra

In cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE), the pathogenetic role of cytotoxic granules has been demonstrated in the subacute and discoid subtypes, which show interface dermatitis, but little is known about tumid (T)CLE, which does not show this interface dermatitis, and evolves with minimal epidermal changes. We studied cytotoxic T lymphocytes and cytotoxic granules in discoid (n = 21), subacute (n = 17), and tumid (n = 21) CLE samples. Skin sections were immunohistochemically stained for CD8, CD56, perforin, granzyme A, granzyme B, and granulysin. Inflammatory cells containing the four subtypes of cytotoxic granules were found in all the three CLE forms; however, only the TCLE group showed a positive correlation between the density of CD8+ cells and each subtype of cytotoxic granule‐positive cells. In addition, only the TCLE group showed synergy between the densities of cells containing cytotoxic granule subtypes. Cytotoxic granules are important in the pathomechanism of TCLE. They may perform functions other than apoptosis, including maintenance of inflammation and dermal mucinous deposits in TCLE.


XXV Congresso de Iniciação Cientifica da Unicamp | 2017

LÚPUS ERITEMATOSO CUTÂNEO: ANÁLISE HISTOLÓGICA, IMUNOISTOQUÍMICA E DE IMUNOFLUORESCÊNCIA DIRETA COMPARATIVA ENTRE PACIENTES COM E SEM A FORMA SISTÊMICA, SEGUNDO DUAS CLASSIFICAÇÕES

Larissa Juliana Batista da Silva; Maria Letícia Cintra; Leticia Fogagnolo; Maria Heloísa de Souza Lima Blotta; Elemir Macedo de Souza

Resumo O lúpus eritematoso (LE) pode evoluir com lesões puramente cutâneas a doença sistêmica potencialmente fatal. Analisamos a expressão imunoistoquímica de marcadores de resposta inflamatória e anti-inflamatória, achados histológicos e de imunofluorescência direta em 3 formas de LE cutâneo, com o objetivo de correlacioná-los com a presença ou não de doença sistêmica, segundo duas classificações: a do American College of Rheumatology de 1982 e a do International Collaborating Clinics de 2012.


Anais Brasileiros De Dermatologia | 2011

Líquen estriado no adulto

Leticia Fogagnolo; Jaison Antônio Barreto; Cleverson Teixeira Soares; Fernanda Chagas de Alencar Marinho; Priscila Wolf Nassif


Journal of Dermatological Science | 2016

Immunomodulation in cutaneous lupus erythematosus subsets

Leticia Fogagnolo; Elemir Macedo de Souza; Maria Heloísa de Souza Lima Blotta; César Galusni Senna; Cleide Aparecida Moreira Silva; Maria Letícia Cintra

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Priscila Wolf Nassif

Universidade Estadual de Maringá

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C. G. Senna

State University of Campinas

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M. H. S. L. Blotta

State University of Campinas

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