Marleide da Mota Gomes
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marleide da Mota Gomes.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002
Marleide da Mota Gomes; Regina Golnner Zeitoune; Leandro Lemgruber Kropf; Erica da Silva van Beeck
OBJECTIVE To carry out a prevalence study about epileptic seizures and epilepsy in an urban low-income population. METHOD Prevalence study in a two-phase model: screening and diagnosis confirmation. It was applied a structured questionnaire in 982 people all effectively resident on March 1st 2000 based on a population census previously carried out by the Nurse Faculty. One neurologist interviewed all the suspected cases. RESULTS It was detected 176 suspected cases of epileptic seizures: 156 with non-epileptic events, and 20 with epileptic seizures. The lifetime point prevalence was of 16.3 cases per 1000 inhabitants, and of active epilepsy, 5.1 / 1000. If we consider false negative diagnosis from the screening procedures, the lifetime point-prevalence rates until 20.8/1000. CONCLUSION The prevalence data of epilepsy shows less impressive than in other Latin-American studies and even some Brazilian, but similar to other Brazilian studies. This suggests geographical diversity and/or methodological differences among studies. Anyway, probably the epilepsy prevalence in Rio de Janeiro is not so high as that found in the Latin countries rural areas.
Epilepsy & Behavior | 2011
Andre S. Giorelli; Gisele Schenkel de Moura Leite Neves; Monique Venturi; Igor Monteiro Pontes; Andre Valois; Marleide da Mota Gomes
OBJECTIVE The main objective of the study was to evaluate excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) in patients with epilepsy from a tertiary outpatient clinic in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. METHODS Ninety-nine unselected patients from the epilepsy outpatient clinic were invited and their sleep-wake habits were assessed by means of a clinical interview and four validated instruments: Epworth Sleepiness Scale, Beck Depression Inventory, Beck Anxiety Inventory, and the Basic Nordic Sleep Questionnaire. Sociodemographic information and characteristics of the epilepsy syndrome were collected. RESULTS Complaints about EDS (Epworth Sleepiness Scale score >10) were reported by 47.5% (95% CI: 37.3-57.7) of the patients. In the sample, 52.6% (95% CI: 0.41-0.60) were overweight or obese, and 53.1% (95% CI: 0.43-0.62) had less than 8 years of formal education. Mainly anxiety, but also neck circumference, was correlated with EDS. Our patients did not exhibit quantitative sleep deprivation. No other epilepsy-related variable showed relationship with EDS. The prevalence of EDS in our population was higher than in similar studies performed in other countries. This finding does not seem to be related to epilepsy itself, but rather to other clinical factors, such as neck circumference, and mainly psychiatric factors, such as anxiety. CONCLUSIONS Psychiatric comorbidities such as anxiety are linked to EDS and should be recognized and treated. More studies based on objective sleep quality analysis are needed to help elucidate these relationships in the Brazilian population.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2009
Michele Dominici; Marleide da Mota Gomes
BACKGROUND The relationship between obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and depressive symptoms is ambiguous in the literature. PURPOSE To investigate if there is a correlation between depressive symptoms and the severity of OSA. METHOD A retrospective, cross-sectional study of data from 123 consecutive adults patients with neither mental illness nor psychotropic drugs intake, referred to a sleep laboratory for an evaluation of OSA. For the statistical analysis (uni- and multivariate), we used the following variables: gender and age, as well as scores based on several scales and indexes such as Beck Depressive Inventory (BDI), Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS), Body Mass Index (BMI) and Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI). RESULTS Univariate analysis found a weak but statistically significant negative correlation between BDI and AHI. However, with the multivariate logistic regression analysis model, the inverse relation between AHI and BDI no longer has statistical significance. CONCLUSION There is no causal relationship between OSA and depressive symptoms in the population studied.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1998
Marleide da Mota Gomes; Heber de Souza Maia Filho; Rosângela Aparecida Noé
It was evaluated the patient antiepileptic drug (AED) intake adherence in a pilot cross-sectional study carried out at a neurologic out-patient clinic of a university hospital. Ninety-three AED blood concentration (phenobarbital, phenytoin, carbamazepine) were analyzed from 24 patients. The variability of the AED blood level was measured (in the steady state period by means of the variation coefficient) and compared with the self-reported antiepileptic medication non-adherence, AED blood level according to the range (therapeutic or not), and the seizure control. It was not observed any strong correlation between the higher value of variability and the other three parameters of no adherence. The highest correlation was with the blood drug level (therapeutic or not). The evaluation of blood drug measurement alone, except in cases of extreme low adherence and variability of drug intake, is not enough for the recognition of incorrect drug intake, but the clinical markers and the self-reported adherence have to be also considered for this sort of evaluation.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1998
Marleide da Mota Gomes; Heber de Souza Maia Filho
OBJECTIVE To study the most important characteristics of antiepileptic drug (AED) taking behavior in epileptic people. METHODS In a cross-sectional study, 45 consecutively seen patients answered a standardized questionnaire including questions about drug intake behavior. RESULTS Both genders were equally represented (22M x 23F). The mean age was 30.2 years. No specific characteristic were presented in all patients. The self-reported non-use of the drug at any moment one week before (self-reported non-adherence) was 40.0%. Patients took the drug more than once in most cases (75.0%), and the only precipitating factor of seizures more frequently avoided was alcohol intake (66.7%). Forty-four percent said to be afraid of becoming addicted to the medicine, 61.4% reduced or stopped the medicine just to see what would happen, and 47.7% changed the prescription with the same purpose. There is no relationship among socio-demographic, behavior aspects or treatment characteristics, and self-reported non-adherence. CONCLUSIONS Several patients aspects do not seem to be strongly correlated with self-reported adherence. Nevertheless, drug self-regulation is probably related to the drug-intake behavior, and it is important for the physician to understand this parallel influence on treatment for a more realistic approach.
Journal of Epilepsy and Clinical Neurophysiology | 2006
Heber de Souza Maia Filho; Célia Regina Carvalho Machado da Costa; Marleide da Mota Gomes
OBJECTIVE: To review the current literature about neuropsychiatry co-morbidities of children and adolescents with epilepsy and the impact of these problems in the quality of life of these patients. METHODOLOGY: Literature review in journals indexed through MEDLINE, from January 2000 to December 2005. We selected from the abstracts, original studies (epidemiology, diagnoses and therapeutics), meta-analyses, and reviews in Portuguese and English. RESULTS: The rates of mental disorders in the patients studied are higher than in normal children or even in children with other chronic diseases. Once the epilepsy is a heterogeneous syndrome, multiple factors can determine the development of psychopathology. This paper reviews the relationships among epilepsy and mental retardation, pervasive disorder, language and learning disorders and attention deficit disorder, anxiety and mood disorders, psychoses, as well as diagnoses, therapeutic and prognostic aspects. CONCLUSIONS: The modern treatment of children with epilepsy goes beyond the simple control of the epileptic seizures and should include the appropriate diagnosis and treatment of the psychiatric co-morbidities in order to improve their life quality.
Epilepsy Research and Treatment | 2013
Andre S. Giorelli; Pâmela Passos; Thiago Carnaval; Marleide da Mota Gomes
Background. Sleep complaints are common in patients with epilepsy (PWE). Excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) is one of the most reported complaints and its impact is still a matter of debate. Objective. Evaluate the relationship between EDS and epilepsy, with emphasis on prevalence, assessment, and causes. Methods. A systematic review on PubMed database in the last 10 years (2002 to 2012). The search returned 53 articles and 34 were considered relevant. After citation analysis, 3 more articles were included. Results. Most studies were cross-sectional and questionnaire based. 14 papers addressed EDS as the primary endpoint. 14 adult and 3 children studies used subjective and objective analysis as methodology. The number of studies increased throughout the decade, with 21 in the last 5 years. Adult studies represent almost three times the number of children studies. EDS prevalence in PWE varies from 10 to 47.5%. Prevalence was higher in developing countries. Conclusion. EDS seems to be related more frequently to undiagnosed sleep disorders than to epilepsy-related factors, and although it affects the quality of life of PWE, it can be improved by treating comorbid primary sleep disorders.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2005
Heber de Souza Maia Filho; Marleide da Mota Gomes; Lucia Maria da Costa Fontenelle
PURPOSE To construct a multidimensional questionnaire that analyses the epileptic child quality of life from the parental point of view. METHOD The pilot questionnaire was composed of 157 questions distributed in several dimensions. Fifty-one epileptic childrens parents answered the questionnaire. The instrument was tested in its diverse properties: frequency of endorsement, homogeneity (Cronbach alpha), criterion and face validity, and later it was reduced. RESULTS Endorsement frequency excluded 65 questions that did not attain a minimum of 5% response per item. Cronbach alpha was as follows: physical (0.93), psychological (0.91), social (0.91), familiar (0.70), cognitive (0.92), medical (0.30) and economical (0.37). Patient groups, in relation to seizure control, significantly differed only in physical domain and total score, although there was a trend to differences in other domains. The final questionnaire (QVCE50) has 50 items, with good homogeneity in the physical, psychological and cognitive domains. CONCLUSION QVCE-50 is a promissing Brazilian HRQL questionnaire for children with epilepsy. It needs to be applied in a larger population to confirm its psychometric properties.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002
Marleide da Mota Gomes; Irene Lucca; Sonia Alonso Monteiro Bezerra; Juan Clinton Llerena; Denise Madeira Moreira
We present the clinical, electroencephalographic, neuroimaging (brain magnetic resonance image - MRI and spectroscopy by MRI) and cytogenetic findings of a young male patient with a rare cytogenetic anomaly characterised by a de novo 46,XY,r(20)(p13q13.3) karyotype. He presents with mental retardation, emotional liability, and strabismus, without any other significant dysmorphies. There are brain anomalies characterised by corpus callosum, uvula, nodule and cerebellum pyramid hypoplasias, besides arachnoid cysts in the occipital region. He had seizures refractory to pharmacotherapy and long period of confusional status with or without a motor component. The authors recognised that the EEG pattern was not fixed but changed over time, specially for bursts of slow waves with great amplitude accompanied or not by sharp components, and bursts of theta waves sharply contoured. Previously, epilepsy solely has been assigned to region 20q13. However, the important structural cerebral alterations present in our case has not been reported associated to such chromosomal abnormality and may indicate possible new chromosomal sites where such atypical neurological characteristics could be mapped.
Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2007
Heber de Souza Maia Filho; David L. Streiner; Marleide da Mota Gomes
PURPOSE To analyze the validity and reliability of an epilepsy specific health related quality of life (HRQL) instrument (QVCE-50), constructed for Brazilians. The QVCE-50 comprises the following domains: physical (9 items), psychological (18 items), social/familial (7 items), and cognitive/educational (16 items). Items were scored on a four point scale. Domains were equally weighted using percent scores. The questionnaire ends with a quality of life scale scored 0-10 and a space for free observations. METHODS A total of 77 children with epilepsy were consecutively seen in a neuropaediatric ambulatory unit. Parents or caregivers responded to the QVCE-50 and a Portuguese version of ICIS (Impact of Childhood Illness Scale). QVCE-50 was analyzed for internal consistency, reliability, content and concurrent validity. Clinical and socio-demographic variables were also analyzed. RESULTS Socio-demographic and clinical variables that differed in at least one domain were age, sex, time since diagnosis, epilepsy family history, and antiepileptic drug used. Internal consistency, analyzed by Cronbachs alpha, showed good results for total and domain scores: physical (0.68), psychological (0.86), socio-familiar (0.70) and cognitive-educational (0.91). Total scores on the QVCE-50 and ICIS are inversely correlated (Pearsons r=-0.74, p<0.0001). The Intraclass Correlation Coefficients for test-retest reliability were acceptable: physical (0.51), psychological (0.62), socio-familiar (0.66), cognitive-educational (0.85) and total (0.77), p<0.0001. CONCLUSIONS QVCE-50 has good psychometric properties. It is a useful tool for analyzing HRQL in children with epilepsy for Portuguese speakers, especially Brazilians. Other properties should be further tested, such as responsiveness to drug and surgical treatment, capacity of distinguishing among seizure control categories and etiology (with a larger sample) and impact of psychiatric and cognitive co-morbidities.
Collaboration
Dive into the Marleide da Mota Gomes's collaboration.
Gisele Schenkel de Moura Leite Neves
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
View shared research outputsCélia Regina Carvalho Machado da Costa
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
View shared research outputs