Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira.
Hypertension | 2003
José Jayme Galvão de Lima; Emil Sabbaga; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Flávio Jota de Paula; Luis Estevan Ianhez; Eduardo M. Krieger; José Antonio Franchini Ramires
Abstract—Guidelines for the detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) and assess of risk in renal transplant candidates are based on the results of noninvasive testing, according to data originated in the nonuremic population. We evaluated prospectively the accuracy of 2 noninvasive tests and risk stratification in detecting CAD (≥70% obstruction) and assessing cardiac risk by using coronary angiography (CA). One hundred twenty-six renal transplant candidates who were classified as at moderate (≥50 years) or high (diabetes, extracardiac atherosclerosis, or clinical coronary artery disease) coronary risk underwent myocardial scintigraphy (SPECT), dobutamine stress echocardiography, and CA and were followed for 6 to 48 months. The prevalence of CAD was 42%. The sensitivities and negative predictive values for the 2 noninvasive tests and risk stratification were <75%. After 6 to 48 months, there were 18 cardiac events, 9 fatal. Risk stratification (P =0.007) and CA (P =0.0002) predicted the crude probability of surviving free of cardiac events. The probability of event-free survival at 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 months were 98%, 98%, 94%, 94%, and 94% in patients with <70% stenosis on CA and 97%, 87%, 61%, 56%, and 54% in patients with ≥70% stenosis. Multivariate analysis showed that the sole predictor of cardiac events was critical coronary lesions (P =0.003). Coronary angiography may still be necessary for detecting CAD and determining cardiac risk in renal transplant candidates. The data suggest that current algorithms based on noninvasive testing in this population should be revised.
American Journal of Hypertension | 1999
José Jayme Galvão de Lima; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Heno Ferreira Lopes; C Gruppi; Caio C. J. Medeiros; Luis Estevan Ianhez; Eduardo M. Krieger
Complex arrhythmia is frequent in hemodialysis patients but it is not clear if this is a consequence of dialysis or uremia or is secondary to the hemodynamic and cardiovascular alterations often associated with chronic renal failure. The incidence of complex ventricular arrhythmia (frequent multiform premature beats, couplets, and runs) in 31 subjects who had their uremic status recently corrected by renal transplant (Group 1) and in 23 predialysis (Group 2) and 73 hemodialysis (Group 3) chronic renal failure patients were studied with 24-h Holter monitoring. Patients were not receiving antiarrhythmic drugs or digitalis and significant coronary artery disease was excluded by clinical and noninvasive methods. Complex arrhythmia was two times more frequent in dialysis patients but the difference did not reach statistical significance (Group 1: 16%; Group 2: 17%; Group 3: 34%; chi2 4.9, P = .086). The stepwise model of logistic regression analysis identified systolic blood pressure (odds ratio 1.015, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.001-1.027, P = .03) and left ventricular systolic dysfunction (odds ratio 7.04, 95% CI 1.3-36.7, P = .02) as the only factors that independently influenced the probability of complex arrhythmia. Age, gender, race, diabetes, smoking status, body mass index, diastolic blood pressure, serum creatinine, hematocrit, left ventricular mass index, and use of diuretics, beta-blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, sympatolytics, and calcium channel blockers did not influence the occurrence of complex arrhythmia. The data indicate that blood pressure and myocardial dysfunction are more important determinants of complex arrhythmia than dialysis or uremia in chronic renal disease patients.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2005
Luís Henrique Wolff Gowdak; Flávio Jota de Paula; Dante Marcelo Artigas Giorgi; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Eduardo M. Krieger; José Jayme Galvão de Lima
OBJECTIVE To determine the prevalence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and traditional risk factors in patients with chronic renal failure undergoing evaluation for inclusion on the renal transplantation list. METHODS One hundred ninety-five patients with dialytic chronic renal failure underwent clinical evaluation and complementary tests and were compared with a group of 334 hypertensive patients paired for age. The Framingham equations were used for calculating the absolute risk (AR). The relative risk (RR) was calculated based on the absolute risk of the low-risk Framingham cohort. RESULTS Thirty-seven percent of the patients had some sort of cardiovascular disease on the initial evaluation, peripheral vascular disease (23%) being the most prevalent. Patients with cardiovascular disease were excluded. Regarding traditional risk factors, a significant difference was observed in systolic blood pressure and total cholesterol (greater in the hypertensive group), and in the prevalence of men, diabetes, and smoking, which were greater in the chronic renal failure group. The latter had a greater degree of left ventricular hypertrophy, lower diastolic blood pressure, and a lower prevalence of familial history of cardiovascular disease and obesity. The relative risk for cardiovascular disease in patients with chronic renal failure was greater compared with that in the Framingham control population, but it did not differ from that observed in the group of hypertensive individuals. CONCLUSION The prevalence of cardiovascular disease and traditional risk factors is high among candidates for renal transplantation; the Framingham equations do not adequately quantify the real cardiovascular risk, and other risk factors specific for that population should contribute for their greater cardiovascular risk.
Renal Failure | 2002
Antonio Mario Q. Marcondes; José Jayme Galvão de Lima; Dante Marcelo Artigas Giorgi; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; José L. Andrade; Luis Estevan Ianhez; Eduardo M. Krieger
Background: Left ventricular hypertrophy is common in renal transplant patients but the factors influencing its development remain to be determined. The present investigation was conducted to study the effect of blood pressure load on the left ventricular mass of recently transplanted patients using 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM). Methods: We studied 30 renal transplant (RT) patients (36.1 ± 13.7 years old, 11 males, 26 Whites, 4 diabetics, 15 under antihypertensive medication, 21 recipients of cadaver donors, and all treated with steroids, cyclosporin and azathioprine and with adequate (serum creatinine< 1.8 mg/100 ml) renal function). The median duration of dialysis treatment before transplant was 37 months, and the studies were performed during the first 40 days post-transplantation. Blood pressure was measured after a 15-min rest (casual blood pressure) and during a 24-h period with a SpaceLabs™ apparatus. Echocardiograms were obtained from all patients. Results: Mean left ventricular mass index (LVMI) was 153 ± 44 g/m2; casual systolic and diastolic BP (mmHg) was 152 ± 25 and 92 ± 13, whereas systolic and diastolic 24-h BP was 133 ± 12 and 85 ± 8, respectively. The systolic sleeping BP/awake systolic BP (SSBP/ASBP) ratio was 0.94 ± 0.07, and 73% of the patients did not show a significant (>10%) fall of systolic blood pressure during sleep. Multivariate analysis showed that awake systolic blood pressure was the only variable that independently influenced LVMI after adjusting for confounding factors (regression coefficient = 0.49, p = 0.01). Casual systolic and diastolic BP, sleeping systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 24-h heart rate, age, race, gender, smoking, body mass index, duration of dialysis, diabetes, antihypertensive and immunosuppressive drugs and levels of hematocrit, creatinine and serum lipids did not correlate with LVMI. Conclusion: The data indicate that left ventricular hypertrophy during the early post-transplant period is mainly influenced by awake blood pressure load. They also suggest that ABPM may be more useful in the diagnosis and management of post-transplant hypertension than casual BP. The findings emphasize the importance of rigid blood pressure control in renal transplant recipients.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2006
Ricardo T Carvalho; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Ângela Romano; Liliane Kopel; Silvia G Lage
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the use of resistive exercise in the study of endothelial dysfunction in heart failure (HF) comparatively to reactive hyperemia (RH). METHODS Eighteen patients with heart failure and 15 normal volunteers were submitted to intermittent handgrip exercise in a pneumatic bag, at an intensity that corresponds to 75% of the previously assessed maximum load. Patients underwent high-resolution vascular ultrasonography for brachial artery diameter and flow evaluation as well as cardiac output determination at rest, RH and after exercise. The systolic flow index in the brachial artery and cardiac index were calculated. RESULTS Systolic flow index increase in the brachial artery was observed after RH and physical exercise, with the latter presenting the highest increase. There was an increase in the cardiac index after the study conditions in comparison to resting conditions. CONCLUSION Resistive exercise, performed at the assessed load, increases blood flow more intensively than RH, constituting a physiological option for the evaluation of endothelial function in HF.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 1997
David Pamplona; Marcello S. Barduco; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Luciano M. A Forlenza; Luiz Antonio Machado César
A case of a young patient, heavy drinker, who suffered an acute myocardial infarction (AMI), and whose cinecoronariography, early post unsuccessful intravenous thrombolysis, showed the presence of thrombi in multiple arteries is reported. A second cinecoronariography performed on the 7th day post AMI revealed normal coronary arteries. There were no plasmatic lipid or coagulation abnormalities, nor other risk factors for coronary artery disease. We speculate about the role of the heavy alcohol ingestion in this particular case.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2002
José Jayme Galvão de Lima; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Luis Fernando Viviani; Caio Cesar Jorge Medeiros; Luis Estevan Ianhez; Liliane Kopel; José L. Andrade; Eduardo M. Krieger; Silvia G Lage
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2001
José Jayme Galvão de Lima; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Henry Abensur; Eduardo M. Krieger
Rev. bras. cardiol. (Impr.) | 2014
Josiane Motta e Motta; Marco Antônio Perim; Flávio Tarasoutchi; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Heno Ferreira Lopes
International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences | 2013
Josiane Motta e Motta; Marco Antônio Perim; Flávio Tarasoutchi; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Heno Ferreira Lopes