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Dive into the research topics where Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva is active.

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Featured researches published by Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva.


Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology | 2008

Endometriosis Lesions That Compromise the Rectum Deeper Than the Inner Muscularis Layer Have More Than 40% of the Circumference of the Rectum Affected by the Disease

Mauricio Simões Abrão; Sergio Podgaec; J.A. Dias; Marcelo Averbach; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Filomena Marino Carvalho

STUDY OBJECTIVE To estimate the relationship between the depth of lesions of rectal endometriosis and the percentage of the circumference of the bowel segment affected by the disease. DESIGN A prospective pathologic analysis of 45 surgical specimens of bowel endometriosis obtained by laparoscopic segmental resection of the rectosigmoid (Canadian Task Force classification II-1). SETTING Tertiary referral hospital. PATIENTS forty-five patients were submitted to a segmental resection of the rectum due to endometriosis between July 2004 and September 2006. INTERVENTIONS Morphometric aspects of endometriotic lesions were analyzed, such as size and thickness of the lesion, deepest layer of bowel affected by lesion, and percentage of circumference of bowel affected by endometriosis. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Results showed that in lesions that reached the submucous layer of the bowel, the circumference affected was 31.6% greater than in lesions that reached only the outer muscular layer, whereas in lesions that reached the mucous layer, the circumference affected was 52.5% greater than in those that reached the outer muscular layer of the bowel. In addition, 89.3% of lesions with an affected circumference greater than 40% were those affecting the submucous or mucous layers of the bowel. These results suggest that when a lesion reaches these 2 deepest layers of the rectosigmoid, risk increases that the circumference affected will be greater than 40% (relative risk = 1.5; 95% CI: 1.0-2.3; p = .03). CONCLUSION In endometriotic lesions affecting the rectosigmoid beyond the inner muscular layer of the bowel wall, more than 40% of the circumference of the rectosigmoid is affected by the disease, confirming the recommendation of segmental resection of the bowel for this form of the disease.


Kidney International | 2009

Regression of glomerular injury by losartan in experimental diabetic nephropathy.

Flávio Teles; Flavia G. Machado; Bianca Helena Ventura; Denise Maria Avancini Costa Malheiros; Clarice Kazue Fujihara; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Roberto Zatz

Many features of chronic kidney disease may be reversed, but it is unclear whether advanced lesions, such as adhesions of sclerotic glomerular tufts to Bowmans capsule (synechiae), can resolve during treatment. We previously showed, using a renal ablation model, that the renoprotective effect of the AT-1 receptor blocker, losartan, is dose-dependent. Here we determined if moderate and advanced glomerular lesions, associated with streptozotocin-induced diabetes, regress with conventional or high-dose losartan treatment. Using daily insulin injection for 10 months, we maintained diabetic adult male Munich-Wistar rats in a state of moderate hyperglycemia. Following this period, some rats continued to receive insulin with or without conventional or high-dose losartan for an additional 2 months. Diabetic rats pretreated with insulin for 10 months and age-matched non-diabetic rats served as controls. Mesangial expansion was found in the control diabetic rats and was exacerbated in those rats maintained on only insulin for an additional 2 months. Conventional and high-dose losartan treatments reduced this mesangial expansion and the severity of synechiae lesions below that found prior to treatment; however, the frequency of the latter was unchanged. There was no dose-response effect of losartan. Our results show that regression of mesangial expansion and contraction of sclerotic lesions is feasible in the treatment of diabetes, but complete resolution of advanced glomerulosclerosis may be hard to achieve.


Clinics | 2005

Seroprevalence of hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus in Monte Negro in the Brazilian western Amazon region

Marcelo El Khouri; Leandro Savoy Duarte; Rafael Bernadon Ribeiro; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Luís Marcelo Aranha Camargo; Vera Aparecida dos Santos; Marcelo Nascimento Burattini; Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett

PURPOSE This study was carried out in Monte Negro (state of Rondônia), a village in the Brazilian western Amazon region, where a University of São Paulo Medical School program for medical student training in rural assistance took place. It aimed to determine the prevalence of hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus, to investigate risk factors for infection, and to evaluate the State immunization program against hepatitis B virus in the region. METHODS The study is a cross-sectional seroprevalence survey, comprising 267 volunteers who answered a comprehensive questionnaire and had blood samples collected, which were analyzed in São Paulo for the presence of antibodies against hepatitis B virus (Hbs Ag, anti-Hbs, and anti-Hbc) and hepatitis C virus using commercial kits. Data were stored in a specific data bank, and the association between seropositivity and potential risk factors was analyzed by means of uni-, bi-, and multi-variate analysis, considering +/- 5%. RESULTS The seroprevalence of hepatitis B virus was 61.79% and of hepatitis C virus was 0.38%. Statistical analysis on the data bank showed that the prevalence of hepatitis B virus rose significantly with age, especially after adolescence. Infection was higher in those coming from outside the state of Rondônia. Exposure to vaccination against hepatitis B virus was higher in younger individuals and in those who were born in Rondônia. CONCLUSION Monte Negro is a highly endemic region for hepatitis B virus but not for hepatitis C virus. Our results also provide indirect evidence indicating a significant improvement in the immunization program in Rondônia in recent years.


Environmental Research | 2010

The time course of vasoconstriction and endothelin receptor A expression in pulmonary arterioles of mice continuously exposed to ambient urban levels of air pollution

Giselli Matsumoto; Naomi Kondo Nakagawa; Rodolfo de Paula Vieira; Thais Mauad; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Carmen Diva Saldiva de André; Regiani Carvalho-Oliveira; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Maria Lúcia Bueno Garcia

The present study aimed to verify the time course of the effects of environmental levels of urban air pollution toxicity on lung arterioles. BALB/c mice (n=56) were continuously exposed to selective chambers equipped with (filtered, F) or without (non-filtered, NF) filter devices for particles and toxic gases for 24h/day, over 14, 21, 30 or 45 days. After exposure, we evaluated the lumen-wall relationship (an estimator of arteriolar narrowing), endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) and endothelin type A receptor (ETAr) expression in the vascular wall and inflammatory influx of the peribronchiolar area. Concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM<or=2.5 microg/m(3)), nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)), black smoke (BS), humidity and temperature in both the environment and inside the chambers were measured daily. Filters cleared 100% of BS and 97% of PM inside the F chamber. The arteriole wall of the lungs of mice from NF chamber had an increased ETAr expression (p<or=0.042) concomitant to a decrease in the lumen/wall ratio (p=0.02) on the early days of exposure, compared to controls. They also presented a progressive increment of inflammatory influx in the peribronchiolar area during the study (p=0.04) and decrement of the eNOS expression on the 45th day of exposure in both vascular layers (p<or=0.03). We found that after 14 days of exposure, the ambient levels of air pollutants in Sao Paulo induced vasoconstriction that was associated with an increase in ETAr expression. These vascular results do not appear to be coupled to the progressive inflammatory influx in lung tissue, suggesting a down-regulation of vasoconstrictive mechanisms through an imbalance in the cytokines network. It is likely that these responses are protective measures that decrease tissue damage brought about by continuous exposure to air pollutants.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Human Hemorrhagic Pulmonary Leptospirosis: Pathological Findings and Pathophysiological Correlations

Thales de Brito; Vera Demarchi Aiello; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Ana Maria Gonçalves da Silva; Wellington Luiz Ferreira da Silva; Jussara Bianchi Castelli; Antonio Carlos Seguro

Background Leptospirosis is a re-emerging zoonosis with protean clinical manifestations. Recently, the importance of pulmonary hemorrhage as a lethal complication of this disease has been recognized. In the present study, five human necropsies of leptospirosis (Weil‘s syndrome) with extensive pulmonary manifestations were analysed, and the antibodies expressed in blood vessels and cells involved in ion and water transport were used, seeking to better understand the pathophysiology of the lung injury associated with this disease. Principal Findings Prominent vascular damage was present in the lung microcirculation, with decreased CD34 and preserved aquaporin 1 expression. At the periphery and even inside the extensive areas of edema and intraalveolar hemorrhage, enlarged, apparently hypertrophic type I pneumocytes (PI) were detected and interpreted as a non-specific attempt of clearence of the intraalveolar fluid, in which ionic transport, particularly of sodium, plays a predominant role, as suggested by the apparently increased ENaC and aquaporin 5 expression. Connexin 43 was present in most pneumocytes, and in the cytoplasm of the more preserved endothelial cells. The number of type II pneumocytes (PII) was slightly decreased when compared to normal lungs and those of patients with septicemia from other causes, a fact that may contribute to the progressively low PI count, resulting in deficient restoration after damage to the alveolar epithelial integrity and, consequently, a poor outcome of the pulmonary edema and hemorrhage. Conclusions Pathogenesis of lung injury in human leptospirosis was discussed, and the possibility of primary non-inflammatory vascular damage was considered, so far of undefinite etiopathogenesis, as the initial pathological manifestation of the disease.


Annals of Anatomy-anatomischer Anzeiger | 2013

Immune cell profile in infants' lung tissue.

Angela Batista Gomes Santos; Daniella Binoki; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Bianca B. Araujo; Irene den Otter; Raquel Annoni; Michael Tsokos; Renato T. Stein; Pieter S. Hiemstra; Klaus F. Rabe; Anette Solveig Debertin; Thomas Tschernig; Thais Mauad

Little is known about the normal immune cell profile in the lungs of infants without pulmonary disease. Normal lung samples obtained at autopsy of 10 infants that died either due to incidental or inflicted causes or non-pulmonary diseases were stained for antibodies against B and T lymphocytes, macrophages, NK cells, cytotoxic cells, dendritic cells and mast cells. Cells were quantified in the airway epithelial layer, inner layer (between the epithelium and the outer smooth muscle border), outer layer (between the outer smooth muscle border and the external limits of the airway) and alveolar septa. Basement membrane or alveolar septa lengths were assessed by image analysis. Results were expressed as cells/mm. The median age of patients was 6.8 months, ranging from 11 to 840 days. The inner layer of the airways was the region with the smallest density of cells. There was a predominance of cells related to the innate immunity such as CD56+, Granzyme B+ and CD68+ cells in the epithelial layer and alveolar parenchyma. The outer layer and the lung parenchyma presented the highest cellular density. There were very few CD4+ T cells or dendritic cells in most of the lung compartments. The numbers of CD3+ T and granzyme B+ cells correlated positively with age. There was a compartmentalization of immune cells along airways and parenchyma, which may be related to the development of innate and acquired lung defense mechanisms.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2004

Abnormal alveolar attachments with decreased elastic fiber content in distal lung in fatal asthma.

Thais Mauad; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Mario A. Santos; Lea T. Grinberg; Fabíola Del Carlo Bernardi; Milton A. Martins; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Marisa Dolhnikoff


Fertility and Sterility | 2006

Deeply infiltrating endometriosis affecting the rectum and lymph nodes

Mauricio Simões Abrão; Sergio Podgaec; J.A. Dias; Marcelo Averbach; Ray Garry; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Filomena Marino Carvalho


Fertility and Sterility | 2017

Differential transcript profile of cumulus cells of infertile women with and without initial endometriosis who underwent ovarian stimulation

C.M. da Luz; Juliana Meola; M.G. Da Broi; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; Jessica Rodrigues Plaça; Wilson A. Silva; Rui Alberto Ferriani; P.A. Navarro


Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology | 2007

233: Endometriotic Lesions Affecting the Rectum Beyond the Inner Muscular Layer Affect More Than 40% of the Circumference of the Rectosigmoid Colon

Sergio Podgaec; Mauricio Simões Abrão; Filomena Marino Carvalho; J.A. Dias; Luis Fernando Ferraz da Silva; M.R. Hopkins; Douglas J. Creedon; Abimbola O. Famuyide; Marcelo Averbach

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J.A. Dias

University of São Paulo

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Sergio Podgaec

University of São Paulo

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Thais Mauad

University of São Paulo

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Anis Gamne

University of São Paulo

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