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Featured researches published by Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1994

Testes neuropsicológicos de aplicação simples para o diagnóstico de demência

Ricardo Nitrini; Beatriz Helena Lefèvre; Sandra Cristina Mathias; Paulo Caramelli; Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Naim Sauaia; Eduardo Massad; Clovis Kiomitsu Takiguti; Ivaldo Olímpio Da Silva; Claudia S. Porto; Maria Cristina Magila; Milberto Scaff

Thirty patients with dementia defined by DSM-III-R criteria (Alzheimers disease (22), vascular dementia (3), Parkinsons disease, frontal lobe dementia, possible diffuse Lewy body dementia, normal pressure hydrocephalus and uncertain diagnosis), with scores below 24 points in the Mini-Mental Status Examination and more than 4 years of education were submitted to a neuropsychological evaluation. The scores in the neuropsychological tests were compared to those obtained by thirty normal volunteers paired for age, sex and education. Sensivity, specificity and accuracy of the tests in the distinction of demented and normal volunteers were determined. The accuracies were calculated using ROC curves. Blesseds information-memory-concentration test showed greatest accuracy, followed by copy of simple figures, delayed memory of 10 figures (after 5 minutes), recognition of 10 figures and verbal fluency test (animals). A linear discriminant function, composed by 6 tests: visual perception, incidental memory, delayed memory (after 5 minutes), drawing of a clock, verbal fluency (animals) and calculation tests, was able to discriminate all controls from patients and only one patient was wrongly classified as normal control. These tests were chosen because they can be applied in less than 10 minutes and are very easy to interpret. This discriminant function must be applied in another group of patients and controls in order to demonstrate its value. When associated to the MMSE it may be useful to discriminate patients with dementia from normal people in epidemiological studies.Thirty patients with dementia defined by DSM-III-R criteria (Alzheimers disease (22), vascular dementia (3), Parkinsons disease, frontal lobe dementia, possible diffuse Lewy body dementia, normal pressure hydrocephalus and uncertain diagnosis), with scores below 24 points in the Mini-Mental Status Examination and more than 4 years of education were submitted to a neuropsychological evaluation. The scores in the neuropsychological tests were compared to those obtained by thirty normal volunteers paired for age, sex and education. Sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of the tests in the distinction of demented and normal volunteers were determined. The accuracies were calculated using ROC curves. Blesseds information-memory-concentration test showed greatest accuracy, followed by copy of simple figures, delayed memory of 10 figures (after 5 minutes), recognition of 10 figures and verbal fluency test (animals). A linear discriminant function, composed by 6 tests: visual perception, incidental memory, delayed memory (after 5 minutes), drawing of a clock, verbal fluency (animals) and calculation tests, was able to discriminate all controls from patients and only one patient was wrongly classified as normal control. These tests were chosen because they can be applied in less than 10 minutes and are very easy to interpret. This discriminant function must be applied in another group of patients and controls in order to demonstrate its value. When associated to the MMSE it may be useful to discriminate patients with dementia from normal people in epidemiological studies.


Alzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders | 1995

Evaluation of 100 patients with dementia in São Paulo, Brazil : correlation with socioeconomic status and education

Ricardo Nitrini; Sandra Cristina Mathias; Paulo Caramelli; Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Beatriz Helena Lefèvre; Claudia S. Porto; Maria Cristina Magila; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Nelio Garcia de Barros; Sandra F.M. Gualandro; Luiz Alberto Bacheschi; Milberto Scaff

One hundred consecutive outpatients with dementia were prospectively studied to investigate the diagnoses of dementing diseases and to correlate these diagnoses with socioeconomic status and with education. Alzheimer disease was the most common cause of dementia (54%), followed by vascular dementia (20%). Eight patients presented with potentially reversible causes of dementia. These frequencies are similar to those reported by case register studies from Western Europe and the United States. We did not find differences in the frequencies of the dementing diseases according to socioeconomic status or education. Alzheimer disease was the most common cause of dementia in all socioeconomic classes. Potentially reversible dementias, vascular dementias, and other secondary dementias were not more frequent in the lower socioeconomic strata. There was a trend to a higher frequency of vascular dementia among patients with less education, but this was not statistically significant.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2001

Involuntary hand levitation associated with parietal damage: another alien hand syndrome

Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Paulo Caramelli; Francisco Cardoso; Egberto Reis Barbosa; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Ricardo Nitrini

The alien hand syndrome (AHS) usually consists of an autonomous motor activity perceived as an involuntary and purposeful movement, with a feeling of foreignness of the involved limb, commonly associated with a failure to recognise ownership of the limb in the absence of visual clues. It has been described in association to lesions of the frontal lobes and corpus callosum. However, parietal damage can promote an involuntary, but purposeless, hand levitation, which, sometimes, resembles AHS. In the present study, four patients (cortico-basal ganglionic degeneration - n=2; Alzheimers disease - n=1 and parietal stroke - n=1) who developed alien hand motor behaviour and whose CT, MRI and/or SPECT have disclosed a major contralateral parietal damage or dysfunction are described. These results reinforce the idea that parietal lobe lesions may also play a role in some patients with purposeless involuntary limb levitation, which is different from the classic forms of AHS.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2001

Prion disease resembling frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17

Ricardo Nitrini; Luís Sidônio Teixeira da Silva; Sérgio Rosemberg; Paulo Caramelli; Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Paula Iughetti; Maria Rita Passos-Bueno; Mayana Zatz; Stephen Albrecht; Andréa C. LeBlanc

OBJECTIVE To compare the clinical features of a familial prion disease with those of frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17). BACKGROUND Prion diseases are not usually considered in the differential diagnosis of FTDP-17, since familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), the most common inherited prion disease, often manifests as a rapidly progressive dementia. Conversely, FTDP-17 usually has an insidious onset in the fifth decade, with abnormal behavior and parkinsonian features. METHOD We present the clinical features of 12 patients from a family with CJD associated with a point mutation at codon 183 of the prion protein gene. RESULTS The mean age at onset was 44.0 +/- 3.7; the duration of the symptoms until death ranged from two to nine years. Behavioral disturbances were the predominant presenting symptoms. Nine patients were first seen by psychiatrists. Eight patients manifested parkinsonian signs. CONCLUSION These clinical features bear a considerable resemblance to those described in FTDP-17.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1997

Síndrome de Tolosa-Hunt: dificuldades no diagnóstico e padrão de resposta à prednisona

Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Fábio Iuji Yamamoto; Milberto Scaff

The Tolosa-Hunt syndrome (THS) consists of a painful ophthalmoplegia related to granulomatous inflammatory process in the cavernous sinus. According to recent concepts, the diagnosis is established only when other causes of painful ophthalmoplegia are ruled out. A typical pattern of response to corticosteroids associated with a benign evolution may reinforce this possibility. Tumors such as lymphoma and meningioma and orbital pseudotumors can make difficult the differential diagnosis because they also may respond to steroids. Thus it is always necessary to make an extensive ancillary investigation. We performed a clinical, laboratory and radiologic study of five patients with THS. Prednisone was used in all, with dosages ranging from 40 to 80 mg/day. In four patients there was a dramatic analgesic effect in less than 48 hours. Improvement of the ophthalmoplegia was not so fast but occurred in all with a complete remission in 4 to 45 days.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1996

Brain SPECT in dementia a clinical-scintigraphic correlation

Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Sandra Cristina Mathias; Liliam Y. Itaya; Nélio Garcia de Barros; Luis A.P. Portela; José Maria Modenesi Freitas; Paulo Caramelli; Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Luiz Alberto Bacheschi; Fausto Haruki Hironaka; Ricardo Nitrini

The aim of this study was to compare the accuracy of computed tomography (CT) and single photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) in the diagnosis of dementia. Fifty-two patients with clinical diagnosis of dementia and 11 controls were studied. The scans were interpreted by one experienced neuroradiologist and one nuclear radiologist, both blinded to the clinical data. In the diagnosis of dementia, CT and SPECT showed equal sensitivity (82.7%) and statistically similar specificity (63.8 and 81.8%, respectively). The specificity of SPECT in diagnosing Alzheimers disease (100%) was statistically superior to CT (69%). However, both methods showed similar sensitivity in detecting Alzheimers disease. In conclusion, SPECT and CT showed similar accuracy in the diagnosis of dementia. The quite high specificity of SPECT in Alzheimers disease may be useful for confirming that diagnosis, particularly for patients with presenile onset of the disease.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1994

Coreoatetose paroxística cinesiogênica: relato de um caso tratado com carbamazepina

Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Egberto Reis Barbosa; Mônica Santoro Haddad; Luiz Roberto Comerlatti; João Carlos Papaterra Limongi; M Scaff

Paroxysmal choreoathetosis (PC) is a rare entity, and professionals who study movement disorders do not find it easily. Paroxysmal occurrence of dystonic, choreic, athetosic movements is the typical feature of this syndrome. The onset is always subtle and the attacks can last from few seconds to hours. Sporadic cases and more common familial cases have been reported. The therapeutic approach with anticonvulsant drugs like carbamazepine is not always successful. However, there is a good response to this drug in the kinesigenic form of PC. The case of a 21 years old male patient is reported here. The onset occurred during puberty, at 14 years old. Neurologic examination was normal between attacks. Subtle and brief choreic, athetosic and dystonic limb and legs movements precipitated by sudden quick and unexpected passive movements, as by startle, were observed during the attacks. There was no familial history. Routine laboratorial investigation, EEG, CT scan and MRI did not show significant changes. Carbamazepine in low dosages (100 mg/day) brought a complete control of the attacks.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1994

Functional significance of MRI defined mesial temporal sclerosis in temporal lobe epilepsy

Elza M.T. Yacubian; Arthur Cukiert; Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Carmen L. Jorge; Lia Arno Fiore; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel

The functional significance of MRI-defined mesial temporal sclerosis in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is not completely established. In order to study the possible relationship between signals of mesial temporal sclerosis on MRI and interictal SPECT findings we selected 18 patients with complex partial seizures, unilateral temporal EEG focus and normal CT. The EEG focus was defined by the presence of interictal sharp waves and slow background on several scalp EEG obtained during many years of follow up in all patients and by ictal recordings with sphenoidal electrodes in 12 patients. Group I comprised patients (n = 11) in whom MRI showed mesial temporal sclerosis; group II patients (n = 7) had normal MRIs. All patients were submitted to interictal 99m-Tc HMPAO injections with concomitant EEG monitoring. Lateralized hypoperfusion ipsilateral to the EEG was found in 13 patients (72%). In all Group II and in 6 Group I patients a temporal hypoperfusion was found. This SPECT study showed a higher positivity rate in patients with normal MRI than previously reported. On the other hand, in all these group II patients a neocortical origin of epileptic focus was suspected on clinical or electroencephalographic basis. Positive SPECT findings may be at least as prevalent in neocortical as in mesiolimbic epilepsy.


Arq. bras. neurocir | 1996

Complicaçöes neurológicas associadas ao abuso de cocaína

Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho; Sergio Nicastri; Arthr Guerra de Andrade; Ricardo Nitrini


Arq. bras. neurocir | 1995

Tratamento das distonias cervicais com toxina botulínica: análise de 19 casos

Egberto Reis Barbosa; Helga C. A. Silva; Miriam Salvadori Bittar; Mônica Santoro Haddad; Paulo Eduardo Mestrinelli Carrilho

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Paulo Caramelli

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Milberto Scaff

University of São Paulo

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