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Dive into the research topics where Mário Gomes is active.

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Featured researches published by Mário Gomes.


Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology | 2010

Genotoxic effects in occupational exposure to formaldehyde: A study in anatomy and pathology laboratories and formaldehyde-resins production

Susana Viegas; Carina Ladeira; Carla Nunes; Joana Malta-Vacas; Mário Gomes; Miguel Brito; Paula Mendonça; João Prista

BackgroundAccording to the Report on Carcinogens, formaldehyde ranks 25th in the overall U.S. chemical production, with more than 5 million tons produced each year. Given its economic importance and widespread use, many people are exposed to formaldehyde environmentally and/or occupationally. Presently, the International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies formaldehyde as carcinogenic to humans (Group 1), based on sufficient evidence in humans and in experimental animals. Manyfold in vitro studies clearly indicated that formaldehyde can induce genotoxic effects in proliferating cultured mammalian cells. Furthermore, some in vivo studies have found changes in epithelial cells and in peripheral blood lymphocytes related to formaldehyde exposure.MethodsA study was carried out in Portugal, using 80 workers occupationally exposed to formaldehyde vapours: 30 workers from formaldehyde and formaldehyde-based resins production factory and 50 from 10 pathology and anatomy laboratories. A control group of 85 non-exposed subjects was considered. Exposure assessment was performed by applying simultaneously two techniques of air monitoring: NIOSH Method 2541 and Photo Ionization Detection equipment with simultaneously video recording. Evaluation of genotoxic effects was performed by application of micronucleus test in exfoliated epithelial cells from buccal mucosa and peripheral blood lymphocytes.ResultsTime-weighted average concentrations not exceeded the reference value (0.75 ppm) in the two occupational settings studied. Ceiling concentrations, on the other hand, were higher than reference value (0.3 ppm) in both. The frequency of micronucleus in peripheral blood lymphocytes and in epithelial cells was significantly higher in both exposed groups than in the control group (p < 0.001). Moreover, the frequency of micronucleus in peripheral blood lymphocytes was significantly higher in the laboratories group than in the factory workers (p < 0.05). A moderate positive correlation was found between duration of occupational exposure to formaldehyde (years of exposure) and micronucleus frequency in peripheral blood lymphocytes (r = 0.401; p < 0.001) and in epithelial cells (r = 0.209; p < 0.01).ConclusionsThe population studied is exposed to high peak concentrations of formaldehyde with a long-term exposure. These two aspects, cumulatively, can be the cause of the observed genotoxic endpoint effects. The association of these cytogenetic effects with formaldehyde exposure gives important information to risk assessment process and may also be used to assess health risks for exposed workers.


Tetrahedron-asymmetry | 2002

Asymmetric synthesis of N-aryl aziridines

João Aires-de-Sousa; Sundaresan Prabhakar; Ana M. Lobo; Ana M. Rosa; Mário Gomes; Marta C. Corvo; David J. Williams; Andrew J. P. White

Abstract The reactions of a variety of N-arylhydroxamates as nitrogen transfer reagents to acryloyl derivatives of (−)-8-phenylmenthol, (−)-quinine and (−)-Oppolzers sultam acting as Michael acceptors was studied. Poor to modest diastereoselection was observed in the formation of aziridines. The absolute structure of one of the pure diastereomers secured from Oppolzers auxiliary was established by X-ray crystallography and hence the absolute configuration of the derived methyl-N-phenylaziridine-2-carboxylate could be assigned. Whilst only poor facial selectivity was observed for chiral hydroxamic acid prepared from dehydroabietic acid, moderate to good enantioselection of aziridines could be achieved with the chiral quaternary salts based on cinchona alkaloids, especially with that of cinchonine. A model is presented to explain the origin of enantioselection and a mechanism is proposed for the aziridination reaction.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2014

Assessment of genotoxic effects in nurses handling cytostatic drugs.

Carina Ladeira; Susana Viegas; Mário Pádua; Mário Gomes; Elisabete Carolino; Manuel C. Gomes; Miguel Brito

Several antineoplastic drugs have been classified as carcinogens by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) on the basis of epidemiological findings, animal carcinogenicity data, and outcomes of in vitro genotoxicity studies. 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU), which is easily absorbed through the skin, is the most frequently used antineoplastic agent in Portuguese hospitals and therefore may be used as an indicator of surface contamination. The aims of the present investigation were to (1) examine surface contamination by 5-FU and (2) assess the genotoxic risk using cytokinesis-block micronucleus assay in nurses from two Portuguese hospitals. The study consisted of 2 groups: 27 nurses occupationally exposed to cytostatic agents (cases) and 111 unexposed individuals (controls). Peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) were collected in order to measure micronuclei (MN) in both groups. Hospital B showed a higher numerical level of contamination but not significantly different from Hospital A. However; Hospital A presented the highest value of contamination and also a higher proportion of contaminated samples. The mean frequency of MN was significantly higher in exposed workers compared with controls. No significant differences were found among MN levels between the two hospitals. The analysis of confounding factors showed that age is a significant variable in MN frequency occurrence. Data suggest that there is a potential genotoxic damage related to occupational exposure to cytostatic drugs in oncology nurses.


Vaccine | 2008

Dynamics and control of measles in Portugal: Accessing the impact of anticipating the age for the first dose of MMR from 15 to 12 months of age

Ana Cristina Paulo; Manuel C. Gomes; Mário Gomes

The all-time low incidence of measles in Portugal in the recent years, raises questions regarding whether the disease has been eliminated, the role of recent control measures, and the epidemiological consequences of the rise in the proportion of newborns to vaccinated mothers, as opposed to those born to mothers who acquired immunity by natural infection. We estimate the vaccination coverage against measles in Portugal on a cohort-by-cohort basis, and incorporate this information into an age-structured seasonally-driven mathematical model aimed at reproducing measles dynamics in the past decades. The model reproduces documented trends in disease notifications and the serological profile of the Portuguese population, as estimated by a recent National Serological Survey. We provide evidence that the effective reproduction number (R(e)) of measles has been driven below 1 in Portugal, and that sustained measles elimination is crucially dependent upon the maintenance of a high (>95%) coverage with the MMR I vaccine in the future. If the vaccination coverage decreases to levels around 90% the anticipation of the first dose of the MMR I from 15 to 12 months of age, will ensure that R(e) remains below 1.


Chemical Communications | 2002

Studies in 3-oxy-assisted 3-aza Cope rearrangements

Mário Gomes; Lalit Sharma; Sundaresan Prabhakar; Ana M. Lobo; Paulo M.C. Glória

On thermolysis appropriately substituted N-silyloxy-N-allyl enamines undergo smooth 3,3-sigmatropic rearrangments to the corresponding N-silyloxy imino ethers.


Current Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Exposure and genotoxicity assessment methodologies: the case of formaldehyde occupational exposure

Susana Viegas; Carina Ladeira; Mário Gomes; Carla Nunes; Miguel Brito; João Prista

Formaldehyde (FA) ranks 25 th in the overall U.S. chemical production, with more than 5 million tons produced each year. Given its economic importance and widespread use, many people are exposed to FA occupationally. Recently, based on the correlation with nasopharyngeal cancer in humans, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) confirmed the classification of FA as a Group I substance. Considering the epidemiological evidence of a potential asso- ciation with leukemia, the IARC has concluded that FA can cause this lymphoproliferative disorder. Our group has devel- oped a method to assess the exposure and genotoxicity effects of FA in two different occupational settings, namely FA- based resins production and pathology and anatomy laboratories. For exposure assessment we applied simultaneously two different techniques of air monitoring: NIOSH Method 2541 and Photo Ionization Detection Equipment with simultane- ously video recording. Genotoxicity effects were measured by cytokinesis-blocked micronucleus assay in peripheral blood lymphocytes and by micronucleus test in exfoliated oral cavity epithelial cells, both considered target cells. The two exposure assessment techniques show that in the two occupational settings peak exposures are still occurring. There was a statistical significant increase in the micronucleus mean of epithelial cells and peripheral lymphocytes of ex- posed individuals compared with controls. In conclusion, the exposure and genotoxicity effects assessment methodologies developed by us allowed to determine that these two occupational settings promote exposure to high peak FA concentrations and an increase in the micronucleus mean of exposed workers. Moreover, the developed techniques showed promising results and could be used to confirm and extend the results obtained by the analytical techniques currently available.


Archive | 2012

Genotoxic Effects of Exposure to Formaldehyde in Two Different Occupational Settings

Susana Viegas; Carina Ladeira; Mário Gomes; Carla Nunes; Miguel Brito; João Prista

Aleksandr Butlerov synthesized the chemical in 1859, but it was August Wilhelm von Hofmann who identified it as the product formed from passing methanol and air over a heated platinum spiral in 1867. This method is still the basis for the industrial production of formaldehyde today, in which methanol is oxidized using a metal catalyst. By the early 20th century, with the explosion of knowledge in chemistry and physics, coupled with demands for more innovative synthetic products, the scene was set for the birth of a new material– plastics (Zhang et al., 2009).


WIT Transactions on Biomedicine and Health | 2009

Exposure assessment: the influence of environmental monitoring methodology

Susana Viegas; João Prista; Mário Gomes

Exposure assessment is an important step of risk assessment process and has evolved more quickly than perhaps any aspect of the four-step risk paradigm (hazard identification, exposure assessment, dose-response analysis, and risk characterization). Nevertheless, some epidemiological studies have associated adverse health effects to a chemical exposure with an inadequate or absent exposure quantification. In addition to the metric used, the truly representation of exposure by measurements depends on: the strategy of sampling, random collection of measurements, and similarity between the measured and unmeasured exposure groups. Two environmental monitoring methodologies for formaldehyde occupational exposure were used to assess the influence of metric selection in exposure assessment and, consequently, in risk assessment process. In one of the methodologies, environmental samples were obtained by personal air sampling, and formaldehyde levels were measured by GC analysis and time-weighted average (TWA8) estimated according to the NIOSH 2541 method. The second methodology aimed to measure ceiling values of formaldehyde using Photo Ionisation Detection equipment with simultaneously video recording. The NIOSH method data showed that exposure can be considered low, while results Environmental Health Risk V 353


Tetrahedron Letters | 2003

SbCl5—wet acetonitrile: a new system for chemoselective O-desilylation

Paulo M.C. Glória; Sundaresan Prabhakar; Ana M. Lobo; Mário Gomes


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2005

Automatic assignment of absolute configuration from 1D NMR data.

Qingyou Zhang; Gonçalo V.S.M. Carrera; Mário Gomes; João Aires-de-Sousa

Collaboration


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Susana Viegas

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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Carina Ladeira

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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Miguel Brito

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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João Prista

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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Ana M. Lobo

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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Carla Nunes

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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Paula Mendonça

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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