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Dive into the research topics where Lilian Maria Lopes is active.

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Featured researches published by Lilian Maria Lopes.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2000

World experience of percutaneous ultrasound-guided balloon valvuloplasty in human fetuses with severe aortic valve obstruction

Thomas Kohl; Gurleen Sharland; Lindsey D. Allan; U. Gembruch; Rabih Chaoui; Lilian Maria Lopes; Paulo Zielinsky; James C. Huhta; Norman H. Silverman

Prenatal alleviation of severe fetal aortic valve obstructions by percutaneous ultrasound-guided balloon valvuloplasty has been performed to improve the fate of affected fetuses. The purpose of this study was to analyze the current world experience of these procedures in human fetuses. Data from 12 human fetuses were available for analysis. The mean gestational age at intervention was 29.2 weeks (range 27 to 33). The mean time period between initial presentation and intervention was 3.3 weeks (range 3 days to 9 weeks). Technically successful balloon valvuloplasties were achieved in 7 fetuses, none of whom had an atretic valve. Only 1 of these fetuses remains alive today. Of the 5 remaining technical failures, 1 patient with severe aortic stenosis underwent successful postnatal intervention and remains alive. Six patients who survived prenatal intervention died from cardiac dysfunction or at surgery in the first days or weeks after delivery. Four fetuses died early within 24 hours after the procedure, 1 from a bleeding complication, 2 from persistent bradycardias, and 1 at valvotomy after emergency delivery. Thus, the early clinical experience of percutaneous ultrasound-guided fetal balloon valvuloplasty in human fetuses with severe aortic valve obstruction has been poor due to selection of severe cases, technical problems during the procedure, and high postnatal operative mortality in fetuses who survived gestation. Improved patient selection and technical modifications in interventional methods may hold promise to improve outcome in future cases.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2011

Conjoined twins pregnancies: experience with 36 cases from a single center.

Maria de Lourdes Brizot; Adolfo Wenjaw Liao; Lilian Maria Lopes; Maria Okumura; M. S. Marques; Vera Lúcia Jornada Krebs; Regina Schultz; Marcelo Zugaib

To review a single center´s experience in the management of twin pregnancies with conjoined fetuses.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2004

Anomalia de Ebstein: resultados com a reconstrução cônica da valva tricúspide

José Pedro da Silva; José Francisco Baumgratz; Luciana da Fonseca; Jorge Yussef Afiune; Sonia Meiken Franchi; Lilian Maria Lopes; Daniel Marcelo Silva Magalhães; José Henrique Andrade Vila

OBJECTIVE: To assess the results of a technical modification of tricuspid valvuloplasty in Ebsteins anomaly. METHODS: From November 1993 to August 2002, 21 patients with Ebsteins anomaly of the tricuspid valve, with ages ranging from 20 months to 37 years (mean, 23 years), underwent a new technique of tricuspid valvuloplasty. This technique consisted of total or almost total detachment of the anterior tricuspid megaleaflet from the ventricular wall and valvular ring, transforming it into a cone, whose vertex remained fixed in the right ventricular tip, and the base was sutured to the tricuspid ring, after its plication, adjusting it to the size of the base of the cone (tricuspid ring), including the septal region. RESULTS: One (4.7%) patient with cardiomyopathy caused by chronic hypoxia died in the hospital due to low cardiac output. The mean follow-up lasted 4 years, and the recent echocardiograms showed good morphology of the right ventricle and tricuspid valve with mild or minimal insufficiency in 18 patients and moderate insufficiency in 2 patients. In 2 of the 3 patients with an anomalous bundle, it could be located and sectioned during surgery. No atrioventricular block occurred. CONCLUSION: The technique used was efficient in repairing tricuspid insufficiency and restoring right ventricular morphology, being applicable to all anatomic types of Ebsteins anomaly, except for Carpentier classification type D.


Pediatric Cardiology | 2010

Investigating 22q11.2 Deletion and Other Chromosomal Aberrations in Fetuses With Heart Defects Detected by Prenatal Echocardiography

Fernanda Teixeira da Silva Bellucco; Sintia Iole Belangero; Leila Montenegro Silveira Farah; Maria Virgínia Lima Machado; Adriano Pastor Cruz; Lilian Maria Lopes; Marco Antonio Borges Lopes; Marcelo Zugaib; Mirlene C. S. P. Cernach; Maria Isabel Melaragno

Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common birth defect and the leading cause of mortality in the first year of life. In fetuses with a heart defect, chromosomal abnormalities are very frequent. Besides aneuploidy, 22q11.2 deletion is one of the most recognizable chromosomal abnormalities causing CHD. The frequency of this abnormality varies in nonselected populations. This study aimed to investigate the incidence of the 22q11.2 deletion and other chromosomal alterations in a Brazilian sample of fetuses with structural cardiac anomalies detected by fetal echocardiography. In a prospective study, 68 fetuses with a heart defect were evaluated. Prenatal detection of cardiac abnormalities led to identification of aneuploidy or structural chromosomal anomaly in 35.3% of these cases. None of the fetuses with apparently normal karyotypes had a 22q11.2 deletion. The heart defects most frequently associated with chromosomal abnormalities were atrioventricular septal defect (AVSD), ventricular septal defect (VSD), and tetralogy of Fallot. Autosomal trisomies 18 and 21 were the most common chromosomal abnormalities. The study results support the strong association of chromosome alterations and cardiac malformation, especially in AVSD and VSD, for which a chromosome investigation is indicated. In fetuses with an isolated conotruncal cardiopathy, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to investigate a 22q11.2 deletion is not indicated.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2007

Síndrome da hipoplasia do coração esquerdo: a influência da estratégia cirúrgica nos resultados

José Pedro da Silva; Luciana da Fonseca; José Francisco Baumgratz; Rodrigo Moreira Castro; Sonia Meiken Franchi; Cristina de Sylos; Liliane M. G. Pozzi Grassi; Cesar Augusto Mastrofrancisco Cattani; Lilian Maria Lopes; José Henrique Andrade Vila

OBJECTIVES To report a surgical strategy for the Norwood procedure in the hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) that enables short hypothermic circulatory arrest time and aortic arch reconstruction with autologous pericardium patch, and to compare the results of the modified Blalock-Taussig (mBT) shunt with the right ventricle-to-pulmonary artery (RV-PA) conduit procedures as the source of pulmonary blood flow. METHODS Retrospective study of 71 newborns with HLHS consecutively operated between March, 1999 and February, 2006. One technique for reconstruction of the neoaorta and two different techniques for reestablishment of the pulmonary blood flow were used: the mBT shunt in the first 37 newborns and RV-PA conduit in the last 34. Cannulation of the ductus arteriosus for arterial perfusion was the main part of the surgical strategy to reduce the hypothermic circulatory arrest time. RESULTS In-hospital survival for the entire cohort was 74.64%, or 67.57% and 82.35% for the mBT shunt and RV-PA conduit groups, respectively (p=0.1808). Mortality rates between the first and second palliation stages were 40% and 4.4% for the mBT shunt and RV-PA conduit groups, respectively (p=0.0054). Hypothermic circulatory arrest times were 45.79+/-1.99 min and 36.62+/-1.62 min (p=0.0012), respectively. Late coarctation of the aorta occurred in five patients (7.2%). CONCLUSION This surgical strategy resulted in short circulatory arrest time, low mortality and favorable morphology of the neoaorta, with low incidence of late coarctation of the aorta. The higher rate of survival to first palliation stage with the RV-PA conduit was not significant, but interstage mortality was statistically lower when compared with the modified Blalock-Taussig shunt procedure.


Journal of Maternal-fetal & Neonatal Medicine | 2016

Fetal ductus arteriosus constriction and closure: analysis of the causes and perinatal outcome related to 45 consecutive cases

Lilian Maria Lopes; Milene Carvalho Carrilho; Rossana Pulcineli Vieira Francisco; Marco Antonio Borges Lopes; Vera Lúcia Jornada Krebs; Marcelo Zugaib

Abstract Objective: The aim of this study was to analyze the causes and perinatal outcome related to fetal ductus arteriosus constriction or closure at a single center over a 26-year period. Methods: This was a retrospective analysis of 45 consecutive cases of constriction (n = 41) and closure (n = 4) from 1987 through 2013. Patients were divided into Group A (maternal use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID), n = 29), Group B (idiopathic, n = 8), and Group C (other drugs not previously described, n = 8). Results: The median gestational age at diagnosis was 34 weeks (range, 27–38), mean systolic and diastolic velocity in the ductus arteriosus was 2.01 ± 0.66 m/s and 0.71 ± 0.46 m/s, respectively. Among the 29 cases of NSAIDs, 27.5% (8/29) have taken a single day use and 75% multiple days/doses. Right ventricular dilatation was present in 82.2% of the fetuses, tricuspid insufficiency in 86.6%, and heart failure in 22.2%. Neonatal persistent pulmonary hypertension occurred in 17.7% of the patients. Late follow-up showed all 43 survivors alive and healthy with only two deaths from unrelated causes. Conclusions: The results of this study indicate that clinically significant ductal constriction may follow maternal exposure to single doses of NSAIDs. Unknown causes or other new substances were also described, such as naphazoline, fluoxetine, isoxsuprine, caffeine and pesticides. Echocardiographic diagnosis of ductal constriction led to an active medical approach that resulted in low morbidity of this group of patients.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2012

Pulmonary root translocation in malposition of great arteries repair allows right ventricular outflow tract growth

José Pedro da Silva; Luciana da Fonseca da Silva; Lilian Maria Lopes; Luiz Felipe P. Moreira; Luiz Fernando Caneo; Sonia Meiken Franchi; Alessandro Cavalcanti Lianza; José Francisco Baumgratz; Jefferson Duarte Flavio Magalhaes

OBJECTIVE Optimal surgical treatment of patients with transposition of the great arteries (TGA), ventricular septal defect (VSD), and pulmonary stenosis (PS) remains a matter of debate. This study evaluated the clinical outcome and right ventricle outflow tract performance in the long-term follow-up of patients subjected to pulmonary root translocation (PRT) as part of their surgical repair. METHODS From April 1994 to December 2010, we operated on 44 consecutive patients (median age, 11 months). All had malposition of the great arteries as follows: TGA with VSD and PS (n = 33); double-outlet right ventricle with subpulmonary VSD (n = 7); double-outlet right ventricle with atrioventricular septal defect (n = 1); and congenitally corrected TGA with VSD and PS (n = 3). The surgical technique consisted of PRT from the left ventricle to the right ventricle after construction of an intraventricular tunnel that diverted blood flow from the left ventricle to the aorta. RESULTS The mean follow-up time was 72 ± 52.1 months. There were 3 (6.8%) early deaths and 1 (2.3%) late death. Kaplan-Meier survival was 92.8% and reintervention-free survival was 82.9% at 12 years. Repeat echocardiographic data showed nonlinear growth of the pulmonary root and good performance of the valve at 10 years. Only 4 patients required reinterventions owing to right ventricular outflow tract problems. CONCLUSIONS PRT is a good surgical alternative for treatment of patients with TGA complexes, VSD, and PS, with acceptable operative risk, high long-term survivals, and few reinterventions. Most patients had adequate pulmonary root growth and performance.


World Journal for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery | 2015

Mixed type total anomalous pulmonary venous connection: early results and surgical techniques.

Gláucio Furlanetto; Beatriz H. S. Furlanetto; Sandra R. C. Henriques; Lilian Maria Lopes; Eduardo T. Miranda; Carolina M. G. Porto; Maria Emilia N. T. Pereira; Cláudia Carolina Vieira Davini; Elssi C. Espinosa

Introduction: The mixed total anomalous pulmonary connection is a rare type of congenital cardiopathy. The occurrence of multiple connections of the pulmonary veins has important implication in the diagnosis and surgical planning. These types of total anomalous pulmonary venous connection (TAPVC) and the infracardiac have higher surgical mortality. Methods: Between December 1994 and July 2013, a total of 58 children underwent surgical treatment of TAPVC. Twenty-five (43.1%) patients had supracardiac connection, 15 (25.8%) patients had intracardiac type, 12 (20.6%) patients had a mixed type, and 6 (10.3%) patients had an infracardiac type. In children with mixed TAPVC, four (33.3%) patients had type I, five (41.6%) patients had type II, and three (25.0%) patients had type III. The diagnosis of TAPVC was performed in all patients using Doppler echocardiography, and they underwent cardiopulmonary bypass with aorta-bicaval cannulation and lately we use mild hypothermia with normal flow. The drainage channels were ligated in all patients. Results: The immediate surgical results were as follows: one (16.6%) death in the infracardiac group, four (16.0%) deaths in the supracardiac group, one (8.3%) death in the mixed group, and no death in the cardiac group (no statistical difference, P = .488). Conclusion: In this series of patients, the mixed TAPVC could be corrected only with preoperative two-dimensional Doppler echocardiography with good immediate results, and we believe that the use of computed angiotomography combined with three-dimensional reconstruction may improve the surgical outcome mainly in the mixed and infracardiac group of TAPVC.


Pediatric Cardiology | 1996

Fetal idiopathic ventricular tachycardia with nonimmune hydrops: Benign course

Lilian Maria Lopes; Sang Choon Cha; M. I. Scanavacca; V. M. L. Tuma-Calil; Marcelo Zugaib

A case of idiopathic ventricular tachycardia of left ventricular origin in a hydropic fetus is presented. The accuracy of fetal echocardiography for diagnosing this type of arrhythmia is emphasized, as is its importance in determining appropriate postnatal treatment which in this case resulted in an unusually benign course.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2010

Atriosseptostomia por cateter balão guiada pela ecocardiografia em unidade de terapia intensiva neonatal

Lilian Maria Lopes; Christiane Kawano; Salvador André Bavaresco Cristóvão; Célia Toshie Nagamatsu; Luciana da Fonseca; Beatriz Helena Sanchez Furlanetto; Gláucio Furlanetto; José Pedro da Silva; José Armando Mangione

BACKGROUND The bedside two-dimensional echocardiography (2-D ECHO) has been successfully used to guide the balloon atrial septostomy, speeding up the procedure and preventing the risks of transportation to the hemodynamics laboratory. OBJECTIVE To assess the results of the bedside balloon atrial septostomy in cyanotic neonates. METHODS Between January/1997 and July/2008, 102 atrioseptostomies by balloon catheter guided by echocardiography were carried out and saturation levels, defect diameter, oxygen saturation, clinical-laboratory response and complications related to the procedure were evaluated. RESULTS Of 102 cases of bedside Rashkind septostomy, 98 met the inclusion criteria, with 90 neonates in Group A (Rashkind procedure in the preoperative phase) and 8 in Group B (procedure at the postoperative phase). There was a predominance of the male sex (75%), mean age was 8.3 ± 9.3 days and the mean weight was 3,100 ± 1,100 g; the transposition of the great arteries was the most frequent congenital heart disease (n = 74). When comparing the levels of saturation pre and post-procedure (65.9 ± 19.5% and 86 ± 9.7%) and the diameter of the interatrial septal defect pre and post-procedure (2.3 ± 1.0 mm and 5.5 ± 1.3 mm) there was a statistically significant difference (p < 0.001). When comparing the levels of saturation and the diameter of the interatrial septal defect between the group of survivors vs non-survivor, there was no statistically significant difference (p > 0.05). CONCLUSION The balloon atrial septostomy guided by the echocardiography reduces the risks by allowing the effective palliative procedure to be carried out promptly in cyanotic neonates, in addition to presenting lower hospital costs.

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Marcelo Zugaib

University of São Paulo

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Luciana da Fonseca

Federal University of São Paulo

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Regina Schultz

University of São Paulo

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Sang Choon Cha

University of São Paulo

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