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Dive into the research topics where Olga Azevedo is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga Azevedo.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2013

Invariant natural killer T cells are phenotypically and functionally altered in Fabry disease.

Catia S. Pereira; Olga Azevedo; M. Luz Maia; Ana F. Dias; Clara Sá-Miranda; M. Fatima Macedo

Fabry disease is a lysosomal storage disease belonging to the group of sphingolipidoses. In Fabry disease there is accumulation of mainly globotriaosylceramide due to deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme α-galactosidase A. The lysosome is an important compartment for the activity of invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells. iNKT cells are lipid-specific T cells that were shown to be important in infection, autoimmunity and tumor surveillance. In several mouse models of lysosomal storage disorders there is a decrease in iNKT cell numbers. Furthermore, alterations on iNKT cell subsets have been recently described in the Fabry disease mouse model. Herein, we analyzed iNKT cells and their subsets in Fabry disease patients. Although there were no differences in the percentage of iNKT cells between Fabry disease patients and control subjects, Fabry disease patients presented a reduction in the iNKT CD4(+) cells accompanied by an increase in the iNKT DN cells. Since iNKT cell subsets produce different quantities of pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines, we analyzed IFN-γ and IL-4 production by iNKT cells of Fabry disease patients and mice. We found a significant reduction in the production of IL-4 by mice splenic iNKT cells and human iNKT cell subsets, but no significant alterations in the production of IFN-γ. Altogether, our results suggest a bias towards a pro-inflammatory phenotype in Fabry disease iNKT cells.


The Cardiology | 2011

Left ventricular noncompaction in a patient with fabry disease: overdiagnosis, morphological manifestation of fabry disease or two unrelated rare conditions in the same patient?

Olga Azevedo; Paulo Gaspar; Clara Sá Miranda; Damião Cunha; Rosa Medeiros; António Lourenço

We report a clinical case of a young female with Fabry disease but without left ventricular hypertrophy, which fulfills the diagnostic criteria of left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC). To our knowledge, this is the first report of LVNC in a patient with Fabry disease. The possibility of an overdiagnosis of LVNC is discussed based on the limitations of the current diagnostic criteria. This case was further investigated by genetic analysis, which came to demonstrate the limited usefulness of genetic testing in the diagnosis of LVNC. Assuming a true trabecular pattern of LVNC, the hypothesis that the same patient has two unrelated and rare conditions, although possible, is unlikely. The genetic and clinical heterogeneity of LVNC is discussed and supports, along with this clinical case, the hypothesis that LVNC is a morphological expression of different diseases rather than a distinct cardiomyopathy. Accordingly, LVNC could be a rare cardiac manifestation of Fabry disease.


The Cardiology | 2010

Cardiomyopathy and Kidney Disease in a Patient with Maternally Inherited Diabetes and Deafness Caused by the 3243A>G Mutation of Mitochondrial DNA

Olga Azevedo; Laura Vilarinho; Filipa Almeida; Francisco Ferreira; Joana Guardado; Mariana Ferreira; António Lourenço; Rosa Medeiros; João Almeida

Cardiomyopathy is a manifestation of mitochondrial cytopathies, but rarely constitutes the dominant feature, especially in adults. We report the case of a 59-year-old male with a personal and maternal history of diabetes and deafness, who presented with cardiomyopathy and kidney disease. We diagnosed the patient as having a mitochondrial cytopathy resulting from the 3243A>G mutation on the tRNALeu(UUR) gene in the mitochondrial DNA. The family history, broad spectrum of clinical manifestations and fluctuant clinical course provided clues to the diagnosis. We discuss the possible mechanisms underlying the phenotypic variability and fluctuant clinical course of mitochondrial disorders and the potential usefulness of coenzyme Q10 and L-carnitine in 3243A>G mutation patients.


The Cardiology | 2015

Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy with Left Ventricular Involvement: A Novel Splice Site Mutation in the DSG2 Gene

Marina Fernandes; Olga Azevedo; Vitor H. Pereira; Lucy Calvo; António Lourenço

We report the case of a 37-year-old male patient admitted to the cardiac intensive care unit for acute pulmonary edema. He had a history of excessive alcoholic consumption and had had a viral syndrome in the preceding 10 days. A transthoracic echocardiogram revealed severe biventricular dysfunction, mild dilatation of the left heart chambers, and severe dilatation of the right chambers. Nonsustained ventricular tachycardia with a left bundle branch block morphology was detected during electrocardiographic monitoring. In the follow-up, he underwent a contrast-enhanced transthoracic echocardiogram and a cardiac resonance which were compatible with the diagnosis of arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy with biventricular involvement. Molecular analysis detected the mutation c.1423+2T>G (IVS10 ds +2T>G) in intron 10 of the gene DSG2 (desmoglein-2) in heterozygosity. To our knowledge, this mutation has not been previously described in arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy.


Gene | 2014

Reduced glucosylceramide in the mouse model of Fabry disease: Correction by successful enzyme replacement therapy

Rui Quinta; Daniel Rodrigues; Marisa Assunção; Maria Fatima Macedo; Olga Azevedo; Damião Cunha; Pedro Oliveira; Maria Clara Sá Miranda

Fabry disease is an X-linked lysosomal storage disease (LSD) caused by deficient activity of α-Galactosidase A (α-Gal A). As a result, glycosphingolipids, mainly globotriaosylceramide (Gb3), progressively accumulate in body fluids and tissues. Studies aiming at the identification of secondary lipid alterations in Fabry disease may be potentially useful for the monitorization of the response to enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) and development of future therapies. The focus of this study was to evaluate if α-Gal A deficiency has an effect on two key groups of molecules of sphingolipids metabolism: glucosylceramides (GlucCers) and ceramides (Cers). Studies performed in a mouse model of Fabry disease showed reduced level of GlucCer and normal level of Cer in plasma, liver, spleen, kidney and heart. Moreover, analysis of GlucCer isoforms in Fabry knockout mice showed that GlucCer isoforms are unequally reduced in different tissues of these animals. ERT had a specific effect on the livers GlucCer levels of Fabry knockout mice, increasing hepatic GlucCer to the levels observed in wild type mice. In contrast to Fabry knockout mice, plasma of Fabry patients had normal GlucCer and Cer but an increased GlucCer/Cer ratio. This alteration showed a positive correlation with plasma globotriaosylsphingosine (lyso-Gb3) concentration. In conclusion, this work reveals novel secondary lipid imbalances caused by α-Gal A deficiency.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2018

Biomarkers of Myocardial Fibrosis: Revealing the Natural History of Fibrogenesis in Fabry Disease Cardiomyopathy

Patrício Aguiar; Olga Azevedo; Rui Pinto; Jacira Marino; Carlos Cardoso; Nuno Sousa; Damião Cunha; Derralynn Hughes; José Luís Ducla Soares

Background Cardiomyopathy is a major determinant of overall Fabry disease (FD) prognosis, with the worst outcomes in patients with myocardial fibrosis. Late gadolinium enhancement is currently the gold standard for evaluation of replacement myocardial fibrosis; however, this event is irreversible, thus identification of biomarkers of earlier diffuse fibrosis is paramount. Methods and Results Type I collagen synthesis and degradation biomarkers (PICP [carboxyterminal propeptide of procollagen type I], ICTP [carboxyterminal telopeptide of type I collagen], and MMP1 [matrix metalloproteinase 1] and MMP2) and markers of bone synthesis and degradation were evaluated (to adjust type I collagen metabolism to bone turnover) in FD patients and controls. FD patients were grouped by cardiomyopathy severity, according to echocardiogram: (1) normal, (2) tissue Doppler abnormalities, (3) left ventricular hypertrophy. A significant increase in PICP and a significant decrease in matrix metalloproteinases were observed in FD patients; even the group with normal echocardiogram had a significant increase in PICP. We also found a significant correlation between left ventricular mass and PICP (ρ=0.378, P=0.003) and MMP1 (ρ=−0.484, P<0.001). PICP (adjusted for bone turnover) was the better predictor of left ventricular mass in multivariable regression, and its diagnostic accuracy to predict late gadolinium enhancement was also significant. Conclusions Collagen type I synthesis is increased in FD cardiomyopathy, even in the earlier stages of the disease, and this profibrotic state has good predictive value for and is likely to be critical to the development of overt left ventricular hypertrophy. Moreover, inhibition of enzymes involved in collagen type I cleavage also seems crucial to myocardial collagen deposition.


European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2018

Inner ear involvement in fabry disease: Clinical and audiometric evaluation of a large cohort of patients followed in a reference centre

Jorge Rodrigues; Olga Azevedo; Nuno Sousa; Damião Cunha; Alexandre Mexedo; Rui Fonseca

BACKGROUND Fabry disease (FD) is a lysosomal storage disorder (LSD) that involves the cochleovestibular system. Tinnitus and progressive sensorineural hearing loss are frequent complains. A stabilization of hearing function has been reported with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). This study aims to characterize the inner ear involvement, identify factors associated to hearing loss and evaluate the effect of ERT on the hearing function of FD patients. METHODS We reviewed the clinical records of patients with confirmed diagnosis of FD followed in a Reference Centre on LSD in the North of Portugal. RESULTS We included a total of 122 patients with a mean age of 47.1 ± 17.6 years and 48.3% males. Hearing loss was reported by 26.2% of the patients and 23.0% mentioned tinnitus. Pure tone audiometry revealed sensorineural hearing loss in 36.9% of the cases. FD patients presented worse age-adjusted hearing thresholds in all analysed frequencies compared to the normal population (p = .001). Patients with hearing loss presented a significantly higher value of microalbuminuria (p = .001) and a higher frequency of acroparesthesias (p = .032). Patients presented a comparable hearing level one year after starting ERT (p = .384). CONCLUSIONS In FD, hearing loss is common and age-matched hearing thresholds by frequency are worse than in the general population. Hearing loss was associated to the presence of acroparesthesias and higher values of microalbuminuria. Hearing loss stabilized in patients under ERT. A careful cochleo-vestibular evaluation should be part of the clinical assessment of FD.


International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging | 2014

Aortic root to left atrium fistula: a rare complication of infective endocarditis in a native aortic valve.

Vitor Pereira; João Português; Lucy Calvo; Inocência Machado; Olga Azevedo; António Lourenço

The image shows a pseudoaneurysm of the mitral-aortic intervalvular fibrosa and a fistula between the non-coronary sinus and the left atrium.


Sensors | 2018

High-Resolution Seismocardiogram Acquisition and Analysis System

Fábio Leitão; Eurico Esteves Moreira; Filipe Manuel Serra Alves; Mário Lourenço; Olga Azevedo; J. Gaspar; Luís A. Rocha

Several devices and measurement approaches have recently been developed to perform ballistocardiogram (BCG) and seismocardiogram (SCG) measurements. The development of a wireless acquisition system (hardware and software), incorporating a novel high-resolution micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS) accelerometer for SCG and BCG signals acquisition and data treatment is presented in this paper. A small accelerometer, with a sensitivity of up to 0.164 µs/µg and a noise density below 6.5 µg/Hz is presented and used in a wireless acquisition system for BCG and SCG measurement applications. The wireless acquisition system also incorporates electrocardiogram (ECG) signals acquisition, and the developed software enables the real-time acquisition and visualization of SCG and ECG signals (sensor positioned on chest). It then calculates metrics related to cardiac performance as well as the correlation of data from previously performed sessions with echocardiogram (ECHO) parameters. A preliminarily clinical study of over 22 subjects (including healthy subjects and cardiovascular patients) was performed to test the capability of the developed system. Data correlation between this measurement system and echocardiogram exams is also performed. The high resolution of the MEMS accelerometer used provides a better signal for SCG wave recognition, enabling a more consistent study of the diagnostic capability of this technique in clinical analysis.


Journal of Cardiology & Current Research | 2018

Left atrial myxoma: always so benign?

Margarida Oliveira; Olga Azevedo; Bebiana Faria; Pedro Von Hafe; Mário Lourenço; António Lourenço

Primary tumours of the heart are rare, with an incidence ranging between 0.0017% and 0.19% in autopsy series. Atrial myxomas are the most common primary heart tumours.1,2 They are found in all 4 cardiac chambers but in 75% of cases they arise in the left atrium3‒6 most of them involving the interatrial septum. The imaging modality of choice remains the echocardiogram but there are other imaging methods that allow mass visualization and better characterization as computed tomogra phy and magnetic resonance imaging.

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Jacira Marino

Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust

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Paulo Gaspar

Instituto de Biologia Molecular e Celular

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