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Dive into the research topics where Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori is active.

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Featured researches published by Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2010

Recurrent neuromyelitis optica in Brazilian patients: clinical, immunological, and neuroimaging characteristics

Tarso Adoni; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; P D da Gama; Samira Apostolos-Pereira; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Fernando Kok; Dagoberto Callegaro

Neuromyelitis optica has not been thoroughly studied in Brazilian patients following the discovery of NMO-IgG and its specific antigen aquaporin-4. In this study we aimed to describe the clinical NMO-IgG immunological status and neuroimaging characteristics of recurrent neuromyelitis optica in a series Brazilian patients. We undertook a retrospective study of 28 patients with recurrent neuromyelitis optica, according to 1999 Wingerchuk’s diagnostic criteria. Data on NMO-IgG status, clinical features, and MRI findings were analyzed. Three men and 25 women were evaluated. Median age at onset of disease was 26 years (range 7—55); median time of follow-up was 7 years (range 2—14). The mean time elapsed between the first and the second attack was 17 months (median 8.5; range 2—88). NMO-IgG was detected in 18 patients (64.3%). Four patients died due to respiratory failure. Most patients presented with cervical (36%) and cervical-thoracic myelitis (46.4%). Holocord lesion was the most common pattern of involvement (50%) on the axial plane. We did not find a statistical association between myelitis extension and NMO-IgG result. Our series of Brazilian patients showed a younger age of onset than previously reported. In our series, in contrast to previous reports, there was no correlation between the extension of myelitis and NMO-IgG positivity.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2014

Existence of a potential neurogenic system in the adult human brain

Adriano Barreto Nogueira; Mari Cleide Sogayar; Alison Colquhoun; Sheila Aparecida Coelho Siqueira; Ariel Barreto Nogueira; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Manoel Jacobsen Teixeira

BackgroundPrevailingly, adult mammalian neurogenesis is thought to occur in discrete, separate locations known as neurogenic niches that are best characterized in the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus and in the subventricular zone (SVZ). The existence of adult human neurogenic niches is controversial.MethodsThe existence of neurogenic niches was investigated with neurogenesis marker immunostaining in histologically normal human brains obtained from autopsies. Twenty-eight adult temporal lobes, specimens from limbic structures and the hypothalamus of one newborn and one adult were examined.ResultsThe neural stem cell marker nestin stained circumventricular organ cells and the immature neuronal marker doublecortin (DCX) stained hypothalamic and limbic structures adjacent to circumventricular organs; both markers stained a continuous structure running from the hypothalamus to the hippocampus. The cell proliferation marker Ki-67 was detected predominately in structures that form the septo-hypothalamic continuum. Nestin-expressing cells were located in the fimbria-fornix at the insertion of the choroid plexus; ependymal cells in this structure expressed the putative neural stem cell marker CD133. From the choroidal fissure in the temporal lobe, a nestin-positive cell layer spread throughout the SVZ and subpial zone. In the subpial zone, a branch of this layer reached the hippocampal sulcus and ended in the SGZ (principally in the newborn) and in the subiculum (principally in the adults). Another branch of the nestin-positive cell layer in the subpial zone returned to the optic chiasm. DCX staining was detected in the periventricular and middle hypothalamus and more densely from the mammillary body to the subiculum through the fimbria-fornix, thus running through the principal neuronal pathway from the hippocampus to the hypothalamus. The column of the fornix forms part of this pathway and appears to coincide with the zone previously identified as the human rostral migratory stream. Partial co-labeling with DCX and the neuronal marker βIII-tubulin was also observed.ConclusionsCollectively, these findings suggest the existence of an adult human neurogenic system that rises from the circumventricular organs and follows, at minimum, the circuitry of the hypothalamus and limbic system.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1999

Magnetic resonance imaging in five patients with a tumefactive demyelinating lesion in the central nervous system

Helga C. A. Silva; Dagoberto Callegaro; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Milberto Scaff; Ana Maria C. Tsanaclis

Five patients with a tumefactive lesion were clinically followed from 1992 to 1993. Four patients were female; age ranged from 32 to 57 years, the duration of symptoms varied from 3 days to 3 years. Neurological examination disclosed dementia in two patients, aphasia in three, hemiparesis in four, hemihypoaesthesia in three, optical neuritis in two, tetraparesis with sensitive level and neurogenic bladder in one. MRI disclosed lesions with a hypersignal on images assessed at T2 and hyposignal at T1, and gadolinium heterogeneous enhancement; these lesions were located in the: a) temporooccipital region bilaterally and brain stem, b) frontoparietal white matter, c) basal ganglia, bilateral white matter and brain stem, d) left parietal region, e) cervical spinal cord, with enlargement of this region. Cerebral biopsy was performed in three patients; acute and subacute demyelinating disease was diagnosed by histological examination. Two patients had an evolutive diagnosis; exclusion of other pathologies and clinical and radiological improvement after corticotherapy, pointed to an inflammatory disease.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2008

Seroprevalence of NMO-IgG antibody in Brazilian patients with neuromyelitis optica

Tarso Adoni; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Fernando Kok; Dagoberto Callegaro

OBJECTIVE To determine the seroprevalence of neuromyelitis optica antibody (NMO)-IgG in Brazilian patients with clinical diagnosis of relapsing neuromyelitis optica, also known as Devics disease. METHOD We determined NMO-IgG titers in 28 patients (25 of them females) that fulfilled the 1999 NMO diagnostic criteria proposed by Wingerchuk et al. RESULTS NMO-IgG was detected in 18 NMO patients (64.3%). CONCLUSION Our results showed that seroprevalence of NMO-IgG in Brazilian NMO patients was similar to the observed in other studies.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Thymectomy by partial sternotomy for the treatment of myasthenia gravis

Paulo Manuel Pêgo-Fernandes; José Ribas Milanez de Campos; Fabio Biscegli Jatene; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Francisco Vargas Suso; Sérgio Almeida de Oliveira

BACKGROUND Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disease characterized by weakness and fatigue of voluntary muscles. Surgical treatment of choice for myasthenia gravis has been thymectomy. However, thymectomy indications and surgical approach are still controversial. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of partial median sternotomy approach to the thymus. METHODS From 1973 to 1999, 478 patients with myasthenia gravis underwent thymectomy through a partial median sternotomy. RESULTS Sixty-one patients (12.7%) had complete remission of symptoms, 299 (62.5%) had a significant improvement, and 83 (17.4%), a mild improvement; whereas 35 patients (7.4%) had no improvement of clinical symptoms. CONCLUSIONS Partial median sternotomy has shown to be a useful surgical approach to the thymus, as demonstrated by the good functional and aesthetic results, associated with low morbidity and no mortality.


Neuroepidemiology | 2002

Human T Cell Lymphotropic Virus Type 1-Associated Myelopathy in São Paulo, Brazil

Antonio C.P. Milagres; Maria Lúcia S.G. Jorge; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Aluisio Cotrim Segurado

We report epidemiologic and clinical features of human T cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1)-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis in a Brazilian cohort of 86 patients from a university hospital. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) abnormalities and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings were correlated with neurologic signs and symptoms. The patients’ mean age at disease onset was 43.2 years and the female to male ratio 1.5:1. Risk factors for retroviral exposure included blood transfusions, sexual transmission and intravenous drug use. Neurologic manifestations consisted mostly of spastic paraparesis, of gradual and asymmetric onset, with increased deep-tendon reflexes. Disability was associated with disease duration. CSF findings included mild mononuclear pleocytosis and elevated protein levels. MRI showed hemispheric areas of high signal intensity in 32.7% and spinal cord atrophy in 5.6% of cases, particularly in patients with longer duration of disease. A high frequency of past blood transfusion (32.6%) suggests that blood-borne infection was an important means of HTLV infection before implementation of screening of blood donors in Brazil.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2014

Serial and prolonged EEG monitoring in anti-N-Methyl-d-Aspartate receptor encephalitis

Francisco Pereira da Silva-Júnior; Luiz Henrique Martins Castro; Joaquina Queiroz Andrade; Carla Guimarães Bastos; Camila Hobi Moreira; Rosa M. F. Valério; Carmen L. Jorge; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Ricardo Nitrini; Eliana Garzon

OBJECTIVE To describe serial electroencephalographic (EEG) findings of three patients with anti-NMDAR encephalitis. METHODS Three women (age 15-34years) with confirmed anti-NMDAR encephalitis underwent serial EEG recordings. Continuous EEG for 72h was performed in one case and 3-day video-EEG monitoring was obtained in two cases. RESULTS Generalized rhythmic delta activity (GRDA) was found in all patients. GRDA persisted for hours, but was not continuous on a 24-h EEG recording, disclosed no frequency, voltage or field evolution, and was not seen on the first EEG of two patients. Extreme delta brush was noted in two patients who presented more severe disease. One patient presented seizures, which were electrographically and clinically different from the GRDA pattern and from dyskinetic movements. CONCLUSIONS Serial or continuous EEG may be necessary to detect GRDA in anti-NMDAR patients. To avoid unnecessary treatment, this pattern should not be interpreted as indicative of ictal activity, unless there is evidence of its ictal nature. SIGNIFICANCE Our findings may contribute to the diagnosis of anti-NMDAR encephalitis in cases with characteristic clinical picture.


Auris Nasus Larynx | 1994

Atrophy of the tongue with persistent articulation disorder in myasthenia gravis: report of 10 patients.

José Lamartine de Assis; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Milberto Scaff

Ten patients with atrophy of the tongue, from a group of 752 with generalized acquired myasthenia gravis (MG), were studied. Tongue atrophy developed late in the majority of patients and was accompanied by tongue paresis (70% of the cases) and eventually associated to atrophy of other muscles of the palate, especially the uvula. All the patients exhibited severe forms of MG with bulbar involvement, mainly persistent dysphonia and dysphagia, almost always refractory to treatment. There is no correlation among atrophy of the tongue, sex, and thymus pathology. There is correlation between severeness of symptoms and early, persistent and treatment refractory dysphonia and dysphagia.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2009

Study of oligoclonal bands restricted to the cerebrospinal fluid in multiple sclerosis patients in the city of São Paulo

Paulo Diniz da Gama; Luís dos Ramos Machado; José Antonio Livramento; Hélio Rodrigues Gomes; Tarso Adoni; Angelina Maria Martins Lino; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Rogério de Rizo Morales; Marco Aurélio Lana-Peixoto; Dagoberto Callegaro

The frequency of oligoclonal bands (OCB) restricted to the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) varies widely in different populations. The objective of this study was to determine the frequency of these OCB in a group of MS patients in the city of São Paulo. Techniques used to detect OCB consisted of isoelectric focusing followed by immunoblotting. Oligoclonal bands were found in 49 (54.4%) out of 90 patients with clinically definite MS; in (31.2%) of the 16 patients with clinically isolated syndrome; in 7 (17.9%) of 39 patients with inflammatory disorders of the central nervous system (IDCNS), and in none of the individuals with no neurological condition (control group). The specificity of the method was 100% when compared to the control group and 82.1% when compared to the IDCNS group. These results suggest that the frequency of CSF OCB is much lower in Brazilian MS patients from São Paulo city than that reported in MS series from Caucasian populations.


European Journal of Neurology | 2008

Beyond neuropathy in hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type V : cognitive evaluation

D.C. de Andrade; Sophie Baudic; Nadine Attal; Cleonisio L. Rodrigues; Paulo Caramelli; A. M. M. Lino; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori; Massako Okada; Milberto Scaff; Didier Bouhassira; Manoel Jacobsen Teixeira

Background and purpose:  Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN) type V is a very rare disorder. It is characterized by the absence of thermal and mechanical pain perception caused by decreased number of small diameter neurons in peripheral nerves. Recent genetic studies have pointed out the aetiological role of nerve growth factor beta, which is also involved in the development of the autonomic nervous system and cholinergic pathways in the brain. HSAN type V is usually reported not to cause mental retardation or cognitive decline. However, a structured assessment of the cognitive profile of these patients has never been made.

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Milberto Scaff

University of São Paulo

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