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Dive into the research topics where Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2008

Spinal cord injury: epidemiologycal study of 386 cases with emphasis on those patients admitted more than four hours after the trauma

Manoel Baldoino Leal-Filho; Guilherme Borges; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Karoline da Silva Dantas; Ricardo Keyson Paiva de Morais; Carlos Rogério Nogueira dos Santos; Sumihara de Sousa Mendes; Luciana Maria Ribeiro Pinheiro

We studied 386 cases of spinal cord injury to analyze the follow up of the patients admitted most of the time more than four hours, the majority of the injuries happening far from the attending health service and first specialized care received long after the accident. This is a clinical study based on data collected during hospitalization of the patients, operated or not, in a Brazilian public health service. The lesion mainly seen was fracture and dislocation, isolated or on multiple levels, and the most important clinical complications were due to respiratory failure and hypotension, especially because 73.8% were from outside and they were admitted more then four hours after the trauma. The mortality rate was 11.9%, but just 2.1% had undergone a surgery. The complications resulted in major risk of death when the trauma was at the cervical level and the patients were over 50 years old, especially when admitted more than four hours after the trauma. We emphasize the importance of the first health care concerning the clinical treatment, aiming to reduce the mortality rate.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2004

SCHWANOMA DE PLEXO BRAQUIAL Relato de dois casos

Manoel Baldoino Leal Filho; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Karoline da Silva Dantas; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Ricardo Keyson Paiva de Morais; Raimundo Gerônimo da Silva Júnior

Schwannomas, neurinomas or neurilemmomas are benign peripheral nerve tumors. The literature report some cases associated with neurofibromatosis 2. We report two cases of cervical schwannoma originating from the brachial plexus unassociated with neurofibromatosis. A 31-year-old woman presented with a mass in the right supraclavicular region, irradiating pain and distal tingling to percussion (Tinels sign) for 6 months. And a 52-year-old woman presented with pain in the cervical region and right arm for one year. Both the patients underwent to a microsurgery with total resection of the lesion. Histology of the surgical specimen confirmed the diagnosis of schwannoma. Postoperatively, the patients had a good recovery.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2015

WEST NILE FEVER IN BRAZIL: SPORADIC CASE, SILENT ENDEMIC DISEASE OR EPIDEMIC IN ITS INITIAL STAGES?

Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Amaríles de Souza Borba; Herlon Clístenes Lima Guimarães; Kelsen Dantas Eulálio; Linduarte Leitão de Albuquerque-Neto; Maria do Amparo Salmito; Oriana Bezerra Lima

During the initial reports in some countries of Africa and Asia and until the 1990s, West Nile fever (WNF) was only considered a “minor” public health problem. The disease gained awareness after outbreaks occurred in Israel, Australia and European countries and, in particular, due to the large number of people and animals affected in the United States of America between the end of the 1990s and the beginning of the new century. Thereafter, signs of West Nile virus (WNV) circulation were detected in the Cayman Islands, El Salvador, Guatemala, Belize, Colombia, Venezuela, and Argentina. However, viral isolation was rarely achieved, and records of human, equine and avian morbidity in Latin America are lacking. Moreover, for unclear reasons, there was no correspondence between the expansion of the geographic range of viral circulation and the occurrence of significant animal or human morbidity by WNF in these regions. Given the evidence of WNV circulation in South American countries beginning in 2003, the Brazilian Ministry of Health adopted the reporting of suspected human cases of WNF. In parallel with the implementation of surveillance strategies for monitoring the introduction of the virus into the country, Brazilian researchers posed the question: “West Nile Encephalitis: our next epidemic?”. Between 2002 and 2013, serological evidence of viral circulation was found in horses and birds in the Amazon and Pantanal regions. Serological surveys conducted in the states of Rio Grande do Sul (2002) and Rio Grande do Norte (2003), which included a significant number of birds of various species, found no evidence of WNV circulation in the country. In 2010, despite the negative results of the study “Is West Nile virus a potential cause of central nervous system infection in Brazil?”, SOARES et al. concluded that “With the recent activity in Argentina, it is fundamental to continue to monitor for this virus as an emerging cause of neurological disease in South America”. Similarly, in early 2014 FIGUEIREDO & FIGUEIREDO advised: “It is necessary to improve the surveillance of SLEV, ROCV, and WNV in Brazil. Therefore, doctors must include flaviviruses (not only dengue) and other arboviruses in their differential diagnosis of acute febrile disease and of meningoencephalitis. In fact, if the doctors do not think on these pathogens, it will perpetuate the mistaken idea that these diseases do not exist here”. In August 2014, a ranch worker from a rural area of Aroeiras do Itaim municipality (Piauí State, Brazil) was admitted to the Natan Portella Institute for Tropical Diseases (Teresina, Piauí State, Brazil) with clinical symptoms of acute encephalitis. Since June 2013, a sentinel surveillance program of viral encephalitis has been instituted by the Municipal Health Department of Teresina. A research protocol established in partnership with the Evandro Chagas Institute (Ananindeua, Pará State, Brazil) enabled the shipment of blood, cerebrospinal fluid and fecal samples in an attempt to isolate and molecularly and serologically detect herpes viruses, enteroviruses and arboviruses. From the start of the program until the admission of this patient, samples from 36 patients had been examined. In the second half of November 2014, the Evandro Chagas Institute released the results of the examinations that undoubtedly confirmed that Piauí had recorded the first human case of WNF in Brazil. At the announcement of the first confirmed case of WNF in Brazil, the Ministry of Health released the following statement: “It is noteworthy that this case was an isolated event; the chain of transmission was not identified, and an in-depth investigation is being performed to clarify the mode of transmission. It does not have epidemiological significance to Brazil nor does it represent a risk to the public health of Piauí or Brazil”. Thereafter, the Brazilian Society of Tropical Medicine expressed concern about the circumstances in which the diagnosis of the first case of WNF in Brazil was conducted: “Even though this was an isolated case, the situation is worrisome. Its absence in Brazil, until this case, was enigmatic. After all, why would a virus disseminated throughout North America and the Caribbean not enter into Brazil where its insect vectors and animal reservoirs are present? Then, suddenly it appears in the State of Piauí? (...) This question is even more troublesome because the virus was identified just after routine surveillance was instituted in a referral hospital. The conclusion is obvious: the virus has already been circulating undetected in Brazil for some time”. The epidemiology news portal from the International Society for Infectious Diseases, ProMED-mail, also expressed moderate concern following the disclosure of the diagnosis: “Vector? Isn’t missing ... There: all the elements of a transmission cycle are present. To deny that the risks of dissemination and, eventually, that outbreaks are a tangible reality would be naive, reckless and, to some degree, irresponsible”. The detection of the first case of WNF in Brazil may have distinct epidemiological meaning expressed by the assumptions that the encephalitis surveillance system was able to detect: (1) the initial phase of an outbreak or an epidemic of WNF in the State of Piauí; (2) a case of an already endemic disease at low levels that so far had an unknown occurrence or was undetected in the region or in the country or (3) a sporadic case that emerged under exceptional circumstances that is so far unexplained. The capacity of Brazilian biomes to provide an ecological niche conducive to the spread of WNV remains enigmatic. To date, there have been no other cases with a confirmed diagnosis of WNF in the country. The team involved in the surveillance of viral encephalitis in Teresina is advocating the hypothesis of a silent endemic (at low levels) of WNF in Piauí and, perhaps, in Brazil. The manifestations of encephalitis caused by various viruses (and even by non-viral agents) have a significant amount of coincident signs and symptoms. The low specificity of clinical, cerebrospinal fluid data, radiological and electroencephalographic “patterns” of WNV encephalitis hinders its recognition. Thus, the reporting of suspected cases, which is an essential step for the national reference laboratories to perform specific diagnostic tests, is fairly limited. The classical assumption of the herpetic nature of viral encephalitis, the lack of specific therapies against most viruses and the lack of diagnostic methods in most Brazilian hospitals are factors that combined lead to the non-recognition of the etiologic agents involved in central nervous system infections. These assertions may indicate that other cases of WNV encephalitis may have occurred without clinical recognition (which is admittedly difficult) of the disease and without performing the tests necessary for an etiological diagnosis. Brazilian clinicians, researchers and epidemiologists have a challenge ahead, given that the clarification of the current status of WNV circulation does have an epidemiological relevance to Teresina municipality, for Piauí State and to Brazil.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2006

Paracoccidioidomicose em hemisfério cerebral e tronco encefálico : Relato de caso

Manoel Baldoino Leal Filho; Guilherme Borges; Raimundo Gerônimo da Silva Jr; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Luciana Maria Ribeiro Pinheiro

We report on a 36 years-old man that had been at the Amazon forest four years before. Six months before the admission he had developed a progressive quadriparesis, gait ataxia, dysphagia, dysarthria, difficulty in breathing and hiccup. The gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted MRI showed a lesion into the right parietoccipital area and another into the medulla, that was the largest. There was any evidence of tuberculosis or AIDS. The patient was submitted to microsurgical approach to the medulla. Pathological examination revealed paracoccidioidomycosis. Treatment with anphotericin B till 2100mg was administered followed by sulfamethoxazole-trimetoprim for three months plus physical therapy. The patient went back to his activities six months after the end of the treatment. Comments are presented about the participation of the immunological system and of the cytokines (interleukines).


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2012

Transverse myelitis with Brown-Sèquard syndrome after H1N1 immunization

Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Carlos Henrique N. Costa; Chrystiany Placido de Brito Vieira; Maria do Amparo S. Cavalcanti; Sebastião P. Ferreira-Filho

1Neurologist of Nathan Portella Tropical Diseases Institute, Federal University of Piauí, Teresina PI, Brazil; 2Nathan Portella Tropical Diseases Institute, Federal University of Piauí, Teresina PI, Brazil; 3Faculdade NOVAFAPI, Teresina PI, Brazil. Correspondence: Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Rua São Pedro 2.133; 64001-380 Teresina PI Brasil; E-mail: [email protected] Conflict of interest: There is no conflict of interest to declare. Received 10 January 2012; Received in final form 09 March 2012; Accepted 16 March 2012. Durrant DH, True JM. Spinal cord syndromes and guide to neurological 1. levels. In: Durrant DH, True JM (Eds). Myelopathy, radiculopathy and peripheral entrapment syndromes. Washington, DC: CRC Press, 2002:139-157.


SciELO | 2006

Paracoccidioidomicose em hemisfério cerebral e tronco encefálico: relato de caso

Manoel Baldoino Leal Filho; Guilherme Borges; Raimundo Gerônimo da Silva Jr; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Luciana Maria Ribeiro Pinheiro

We report on a 36 years-old man that had been at the Amazon forest four years before. Six months before the admission he had developed a progressive quadriparesis, gait ataxia, dysphagia, dysarthria, difficulty in breathing and hiccup. The gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted MRI showed a lesion into the right parietoccipital area and another into the medulla, that was the largest. There was any evidence of tuberculosis or AIDS. The patient was submitted to microsurgical approach to the medulla. Pathological examination revealed paracoccidioidomycosis. Treatment with anphotericin B till 2100mg was administered followed by sulfamethoxazole-trimetoprim for three months plus physical therapy. The patient went back to his activities six months after the end of the treatment. Comments are presented about the participation of the immunological system and of the cytokines (interleukines).


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2003

Granuloma eosinofílico de coluna cervical: relato de caso

Manoel Baldoino Leal Filho; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Karoline da Silva Dantas; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Ricardo Keyson Paiva de Morais

Eosinophilic granuloma (EG) is a benign condition of histocytes proliferation localized or multifocal. It is presents in the cervical spine in 1.5%-20% of the cases of EG. We report the case of a seven-year-old girl that presented with a one month history of cervical pain, persistent wryneck and vicious posture of the neck. A computerized tomography was performed and confirmed the presence of spreading lesion, ostheodestructive to the level of the left laminae of C2, with invasion of the spine and the muscular tissue. A laminectomy was underwent for removal of the lesion. The patient had a good post-operative recovery with improvement of the symptoms. Chemotherapy with prednisone, vinblastine and ethoposide was administred. After six months, this protocol was repeated associaded to methotrexate.The patient improved and had no new symptoms in a follow-up of 36 months.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002

Forma tumoral de neurocisticercose: relato de caso

Manoel Baldoino Leal Filho; José Adail Fonseca De Castro; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Aline de Almeida Xavier; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Ricardo Keyson Paiva de Morais; Karoline da Silva Dantas

The authors report a case of neurocysticercosis by giant cyst (3.9 x 3.4 cm), where there were clinical manifestations of increased intracranial pressure and characteristics of image in computed tomography of cranium of expansive process with mass effect in central nervous system (CNS). They comment the possibility of the tumoral form of this disease having clinical and radiological presentation similar to other expansive processes of CNS and stress the surgical procedure as a form of treatment and diagnostic confirmation.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2003

Corpo estranho no cone orbitário: relato de caso

Manoel Baldoino Leal Filho; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Ricardo Keyson Paiva de Morais; Karoline da Silva Dantas


PubMed | 2006

[paracoccidioidomycosis In Cerebral Hemisphere And Brainstem: Case Report].

Manoel Baldoino Leal Filho; Guilherme Borges; Raimundo Gerônimo da Silva Jr; Aline de Almeida Xavier Aguiar; Bruno Ribeiro de Almeida; Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Luciana Maria Ribeiro Pinheiro

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Guilherme Borges

State University of Campinas

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