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Dive into the research topics where Patricia C. Costa is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia C. Costa.


Journal of Receptors and Signal Transduction | 2008

Autoantibodies Enhance Agonist Action and Binding to Cardiac Muscarinic Receptors in Chronic Chagas' Disease

Ciria C. Hernandez; José Nascimento; Elen A. Chaves; Patricia C. Costa; Masako Oya Masuda; Eleonora Kurtenbach; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; Luis Eduardo Díaz Giménez

Chronic Chagasic patient immunoglobulins (CChP-IgGs) recognize an acidic amino acid cluster at the second extracellular loop (el2) of cardiac M2-muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (M2AChRs). These residues correspond to a common binding site for various allosteric agents. We characterized the nature of the M2AChR/CChP-IgG interaction in functional and radioligand binding experiments applying the same mainstream strategies previously used for the characterization of other allosteric agents. Dose-response curves of acetylcholine effect on heart rate were constructed with data from isolated heart experiments in the presence of CChP or normal blood donor (NBD) sera. In these experiments, CChP sera but not NBD sera increased the efficacy of agonist action by augmenting the onset of bradyarrhythmias and inducing a Hill slope of 2.5. This effect was blocked by gallamine, an M2AChR allosteric antagonist. Correspondingly, CChP-IgGs increased acetylcholine affinity twofold and showed negative cooperativity for [3H]-N-methyl scopolamine ([3H]-NMS) in allosterism binding assays. A peptide corresponding to the M2AChR-el2 blocked this effect. Furthermore, dissociation assays showed that the effect of gallamine on the [3H]-NMS off-rate was reverted by CChP-IgGs. Finally, concentration-effect curves for the allosteric delay of W84 on [3H]-NMS dissociation right shifted from an IC50 of 33 nmol/L to 78 nmol/L, 992 nmol/L, and 1670 nmol/L in the presence of 6.7 × 10− 8, 1.33 × 10− 7, and 2.0 × 10− 7 mol/L of anti-el2 affinity-purified CChP-IgGs. Taken together, these findings confirmed a competitive interplay of these ligands at the common allosteric site and revealed the novel allosteric nature of the interaction of CChP-IgGs at the M2AChRs as a positive cooperativity effect on acetylcholine action.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2010

A safety and feasibility study of cell therapy in dilated cardiomyopathy

Helena F Martino; Paulo Sergio de Oliveira; Fernando César Castro Souza; Patricia C. Costa; E. Assunção e Silva; Rita Villela; Miriam Gaze; Luiz Henrique Weitzel; Amanda Galvão de Oliveira; F.B. Muccillo; S.N.S. Arvelo; Ricardo Sá; T.C.F. Guimarães; Bernardo Rangel Tura; A.C. Campos de Carvalho

The aim of this study was to determine if bone marrow mononuclear cell (BMMC) transplantation is safe for moderate to severe idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC). Clinical trials have shown that this procedure is safe and effective for ischemic patients, but little information is available regarding non-ischemic patients. Twenty-four patients with IDC, optimized therapy, age 46 ± 11.6 years, 17 males, NYHA classes II-IV, and left ventricular ejection fraction <35% were enrolled in the study. Clinical evaluation at baseline and 6 months after stem cell therapy to assess heart function included echocardiogram, magnetic resonance imaging, cardiopulmonary test, Minnesota Quality of Life Questionnaire, and NYHA classification. After cell transplantation 1 patient showed a transient increase in enzyme levels and 2 patients presented arrhythmias that were reversed within 72 h. Four patients died during follow-up, between 6 and 12 weeks after therapy. Clinical evaluation showed improvement in most patients as reflected by statistically significant decreases in Minnesota Quality of Life Questionnaire (63 ± 17.9 baseline vs 28.8 ± 16.75 at 6 months) and in class III-IV NYHA patients (18/24 baseline vs 2/20 at 6 months). Cardiopulmonary exercise tests demonstrated increased peak oxygen consumption (12.2 ± 2.4 at baseline vs 15.8 ± 7.1 mL·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹ at 6 months) and walked distance (377.2 ± 85.4 vs 444.1 ± 77.9 m at 6 months) in the 6-min walk test, which was not accompanied by increased left ventricular ejection fraction. Our findings indicate that BMMC therapy in IDC patients with severe ventricular dysfunction is feasible and that larger, randomized and placebo-controlled trials are warranted.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2007

Pacientes chagásicos crônicos portadores de disfunção do nódulo sinusal: a presença de anticorpos IgG com ação agonista muscarínica independe da disfunção ventricular esquerda?

Maria Beatriz Corrêa de Mello Altschüller; Roberto Coury Pedrosa; Basílio de Bragança Pereira; Wilson Braz Corrêa Filho; Aline Silva de Medeiros; Patricia C. Costa; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho

Studies have shown that muscarinic agonist IgG antibodies from Chagas disease patients alter the electrical activity of cardiac cells in vitro. Others have considered their presence, along with sinus node dysfunction, to be consequences of progressive cardiac lesions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between these antibodies and sinus node and left ventricular dysfunction in 65 chronic Chagas disease patients. These patients were divided into group I, composed of 31 patients with sinus node dysfunction, and group II, composed of the patients without this syndrome. Data analysis using the log linear model showed interdependence between sinus node dysfunction and the antibodies (p = 0.0021) and between nodal and ventricular dysfunction (p = 0.0005). However, no relationship was found between the antibodies and ventricular function. Age and sex did not influence any other variables. The chronic Chagas disease patients with sinus node dysfunction had higher prevalence of muscarinic agonist antibodies, independent of the presence of myocardial dysfunction.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2006

Cell therapy in dilated cardiomyopathy

Helena F Martino; Paulo Sergio de Oliveira; Edmilson Assunção; Rita Villela; Miriam Gaze; Patricia C. Costa; Fernando César Castro Souza; Luiz Henrique Weitzel; Ana Paula R. Velloso; Amarino Carvalho de Oliveira Junior; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho

A forty-one-year-old male with systolic heart failure, FC-III NYHA, clinical stage C due to dilated cardiomyopathy was submitted to an autologous transplant of the mononuclear fraction of bone marrow via coronary artery system through heart catheterism. Two months after the procedure, there was a decrease in plasma BNP and cardiac area reduction at the thorax X-ray and nuclear magnetic resonance. The echocardiogram showed decrease of the secondary regurgitation and mitral ring dilatation. There was a better performance at the ergospirometry, with increase of the maximum oxygen consumption and consequent reduction in drug therapy. The absence of adverse events characterized by clinical/hemodynamic instability, enzymatic alteration or electrocardiogram demonstrate the safety and feasibility of this procedure carried out and described with pioneering spirit in dilated cardiomyopathy.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2010

Cardiac gene expression and systemic cytokine profile are complementary in a murine model of post-ischemic heart failure

Stephan Lachtermacher; B.L.B. Esporcatte; Fabrício Montalvão; Patricia C. Costa; D.C. Rodrigues; Luciano Belém; Arnaldo Rabischoffisky; H.C.C. Faria Neto; Rita Vasconcellos; Sanda Iacobas; Dumitru A. Iacobas; Hf Dohmann; David C. Spray; R.C.S. Goldenberg; A.C. Campos-de-Carvalho

After myocardial infarction (MI), activation of the immune system and inflammatory mechanisms, among others, can lead to ventricular remodeling and heart failure (HF). The interaction between these systemic alterations and corresponding changes in the heart has not been extensively examined in the setting of chronic ischemia. The main purpose of this study was to investigate alterations in cardiac gene and systemic cytokine profile in mice with post-ischemic HF. Plasma was tested for IgM and IgG anti-heart reactive repertoire and inflammatory cytokines. Heart samples were assayed for gene expression by analyzing hybridization to AECOM 32k mouse microarrays. Ischemic HF significantly increased the levels of total serum IgM (by 5.2-fold) and total IgG (by 3.6-fold) associated with a relatively high content of anti-heart specificity. A comparable increase was observed in the levels of circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1beta (3.8X) and TNF-alpha (6.0X). IFN-gamma was also increased by 3.1-fold in the MI group. However, IL-4 and IL-10 were not significantly different between the MI and sham-operated groups. Chemokines such as MCP-1 and IL-8 were 1.4- and 13-fold increased, respectively, in the plasma of infarcted mice. We identified 2079 well annotated unigenes that were significantly regulated by post-ischemic HF. Complement activation and immune response were among the most up-regulated processes. Interestingly, 21 of the 101 quantified unigenes involved in the inflammatory response were significantly up-regulated and none were down-regulated. These data indicate that post-ischemic heart remodeling is accompanied by immune-mediated mechanisms that act both systemically and locally.


Congress of the International Ergonomics Association | 2018

eSports: Opportunities for Future Ergonomic Studies

Viktoriya Lipovaya; Patricia C. Costa; Pedro Grillo; Aleksandr A. Volosiuk; Aleksandra Sopina

Professional electronic sports (eSports) is an emerging professional and academic field. It presents a unique combination of an electronic/online world and traditional sports. Its activity is computer-mediated, but has all characteristics of traditional sports: training routine, tournaments agenda, high pressure from eSports fans base, relations with sponsors, and others. This unique position has raised concerns of the professionals regarding the quality of standards, professionalization and formalization of this activity field. The aim of this article is to fill the gap in ergonomics studies on eSports, in particular, to generalize the knowledge about this new professional area, and also to reflect on the prospects of future ergonomic studies in this field. How is this professional world and professional area developing? What problems and new demands arise from this? We used an exploratory and qualitative methodology in three main phases: (1) Exploratory interviews with eSports professionals in order to understand and define existing problems in this new area; (2) Academic literature review on the topic; (3) An ergonomic intervention at one of the first Brazilian eSports enterprises, located in Rio de Janeiro. Ergonomic Work Analysis was employed to help an eSports team’s owner to investigate the problems of his eSports team formation. As a result, we reveal the main problems of the Brazilian eSports market, present preliminary ergonomic intervention results and highlight paths for future research.


The FASEB Journal | 1998

Functionally active cardiac antibodies in chronic Chagas' disease are specifically blocked by Trypanosoma cruzi antigens

Masako Oya Masuda; Mariano J. Levin; Selma Farias de Oliveira; Patricia C. Costa; Pablo López Bergami; Norma A. S. Almeida; Roberto Coury Pedrosa; Inés Ferrari; Johan Hoebeke; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho


International Journal of Cardiology | 2007

Human antibodies with muscarinic activity modulate ventricular repolarization: basis for electrical disturbance.

Emiliano Medei; Roberto Coury Pedrosa; Paulo Roberto Benchimol Barbosa; Patricia C. Costa; Ciria C. Hernandez; Elen A. Chaves; Vivian Linhares; Masako Oya Masuda; José Nascimento; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho


The FASEB Journal | 1999

Presence of antibodies against the third intracellular loop of the m2 muscarinic receptor in the sera of chronic chagasic patients

Fernanda Coutinho Retondaro; Patricia C. Costa; Roberto Coury Pedrosa; Eleonora Kurtenbach


Stem Cell Reviews and Reports | 2012

Functional and Transcriptomic Recovery of Infarcted Mouse Myocardium Treated with Bone Marrow Mononuclear Cells

Stephan Lachtermacher; B.L.B. Esporcatte; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Nazareth N. Rocha; Fabrício Montalvão; Patricia C. Costa; Luciano Belém; Arnaldo Rabischoffisky; Hugo C. Castro Faria Neto; Rita Vasconcellos; Dumitru A. Iacobas; Sanda Iacobas; David C. Spray; Neil M. Thomas; Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho

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Roberto Coury Pedrosa

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Masako Oya Masuda

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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B.L.B. Esporcatte

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Elen A. Chaves

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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José Nascimento

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Stephan Lachtermacher

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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David C. Spray

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Dumitru A. Iacobas

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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