Pedro P. Pereira-Junior
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pedro P. Pereira-Junior.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2006
Elen A. Chaves; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Rodrigo S. Fortunato; Masako Oya Masuda; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; Denise P. Carvalho; Marcus F. Oliveira; José Nascimento
The beneficial effects of exercise in reducing the incidence of cardiovascular diseases are well known and the abuse of anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS) has been associated to cardiovascular disorders. Previous studies showed that heart protection to ischemic events would be mediated by increasing the antioxidant enzyme activities. Here, we investigated the impact of exercise and high doses of the AAS nandrolone decanoate (DECA), 10 mgkg(-1) body weight during 8 weeks, in cardiac tolerance to ischemic events as well as on the activity of antioxidant enzymes in rats. After a global ischemic event, hearts of control trained (CT) group recovered about 70% of left ventricular developed pressure, whereas DECA trained (DT), control sedentary (CS) and DECA sedentary (DS) animals recovered only about 20%. Similarly, heart infarct size was significantly lower in the CT group compared to animals of the three other groups. The activities of the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and glutathione reductase (GR) were significantly higher in CT animals than in the other three groups, whereas catalase activity was not affected in any group. Together, these results indicate that chronic treatment with DECA cause an impairment of exercise induction of antioxidant enzyme activities, leading to a reduced cardioprotection upon ischemic events.
Psychophysiology | 2009
Laura Alice Santos de Oliveira; Leticia Oliveira; Mateus Joffily; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Peter J. Lang; Mirtes G. Pereira; Ivan Figueira; Eliane Volchan
For survival, humans are continuously vigilant for signs of danger. Equally important, but less studied, is our ability to detect and respond to safety cues. The trait of positive affect may be a key component determining human variability in safety detection. Here we investigate autonomic and self-report reactivity to pictures of mutilated bodies, after reading a text about the art of mimicking injuries in the movies. Participants that scored high in positive affect trait showed attenuated autonomic reactions to the mutilation pictures. Thus, high positive affect facilitated engagement in safety cues and modulated reflexive reactions of the brains defense system.
Anais Da Academia Brasileira De Ciencias | 2010
Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Moacir Marocolo; Fabrício P. Rodrigues; Emiliano Medei; José Nascimento
Heart rate variability (HRV) analysis consists in a well-established tool for the assessment of cardiac autonomic control, both in humans and in animal models. Conventional methods for HRV analysis in rats rely on conscious state electrocardiogram (ECG) recording based on prior invasive surgical procedures for electrodes/transmitters implants. The aim of the present study was to test a noninvasive and inexpensive method for ECG recording in conscious rats, assessing its feasibility for HRV analysis. A custom-made elastic cotton jacket was developed to fit the rats mean thoracic circumference, with two pieces of platinum electrodes attached on its inner surface, allowing ECG to be recorded noninvasively in conscious, restrained rats (n=6). Time- and frequency-domain HRV analyses were conducted, under basal and autonomic blockade conditions. High-quality ECG signals were obtained, being feasible for HRV analysis. As expected, mean RR interval was significantly decreased in the presence of atropine (p <0.05) and increased in the presence of propranolol (p<0.001). Also, reinforcing the reliability of the method, low- and high-frequency HRV spectral powers were significantly decreased in the presence of propranolol (p <0.05) and atropine (p< 0.001), respectively. In summary, the present work describes a novel, inexpensive and noninvasive method for surface ECG recording in conscious rats.
Physiology & Behavior | 2014
Emerson Lopes Olivares; Anderson Luiz Bezerra da Silveira; Fabricia Fonseca; Cláudio da Silva-Almeida; Rafael S. Côrtes; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; José Nascimento; Luis Carlos Reis
Few data are available on adolescent users because most behavioral studies on anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS) abuse have been performed in adults. Studies evaluating the impact of long-term effects of AAS abuse on the prepubertal phase are even more uncommon. Accordingly, this study was developed to test the hypothesis that changes induced by the use of AAS during the adolescent phase may be noted in the adult phase even when the AAS treatment cycle is discontinued. Therefore, not only behavioral changes but also possible autonomic and electrolyte disorders were evaluated. For this purpose, we used male prepubertal, 26-day-old (P26) Wistar rats that were treated with vehicle (control, n=10) or testosterone propionate (TP; 5 mg/kg intramuscular (IM) injection, AAS, n=10) five times per week for 5 weeks, totaling 25 applications during the treatment. Aggression tests were performed at the end of the cycle (P54-56), whereas open-field tests (OFTs), elevated plus maze (EPM) behavioral tests and measurements of heart rate variability (HRV), fluid intake and pathology were conducted in the adult phase (P87-92). The AAS group showed greater aggressiveness in the pubertal phase and higher levels of horizontal and vertical exploration and anxiety-related behavior in the adult phase than the control group (P<0.05). HRV tests showed an increase in sympathetic autonomic modulation, and hydroelectrolytic assessment showed lower basal intake levels of hypertonic saline than the control group (P<0.05), without statistically significant changes in the basal intake of water. These data together suggest that the use of AAS during the prepubertal phase induces behavioral, autonomic and hydroelectrolytic changes that manifest in the adult phase even when treatment is discontinued in late adolescence in rats.
Canadian Journal of Cardiology | 2010
Emiliano Medei; Ana Paula Lima-Leopoldo; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; André Soares Leopoldo; Dijon Henrique Salomé de Campos; Juliana Montani Raimundo; Roberto T. Sudo; Gisele Zapata-Sudo; Thiago Bruder-Nascimento; Sandra Cordellini; José Nascimento; Antonio Carlos Cicogna
BACKGROUND Dyslipidemia results from consumption of a diet rich in saturated fatty acids and is usually associated with cardiovascular disease. A diet rich in unsaturated fatty acids is usually associated with improved cardiovascular condition. OBJECTIVE To investigate whether a high-fat diet rich in unsaturated fatty acids (U-HFD) - in which fatty acid represents approximately 45% of the total calories - impairs the cardiovascular system. METHODS Male, 30-day-old Wistar rats were fed a standard (control) diet or a U-HFD containing 83% unsaturated fatty acid for 19 weeks. The in vivo electrocardiogram, the spectral analysis of heart rate variability, and the vascular reactivity responses to phenylephrine, acetylcholine, noradrenaline and prazosin in aortic ring preparations were analyzed to assess the cardiovascular parameters. RESULTS After 19 weeks, the U-HFD rats had increased total body fat, baseline glucose levels and feed efficiency compared with control rats. However, the final body weight, systolic blood pressure, area under the curve for glucose, calorie intake and heart weight⁄final body weight ratio were similar between the groups. In addition, both groups demonstrated no alteration in the electrocardiogram or cardiac sympathetic parameters. There was no difference in the responses to acetylcholine or the maximal contractile response of the thoracic aorta to phenylephrine between groups, but the concentration necessary to produce 50% of maximal response showed a decrease in the sensitivity to phenylephrine in U-HFD rats. The cumulative concentration- effect curve for noradrenaline in the presence of prazosin was shifted similarly in both groups. CONCLUSIONS The present work shows that U-HFD did not impair the cardiovascular parameters analyzed.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2015
Márcia Cavalcanti de Campos Queiroz; Roberto Coury Pedrosa; Amanda Cardoso Berensztejn; Basílio de Bragança Pereira; Emilia Matos do Nascimento; Martha Maria Turano Duarte; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Márcia Waddington Cruz
Background Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) is a rare disease diagnosed in Brazil and worldwide. The frequency of cardiovascular involvement in Brazilian FAP patients is unknown. Objective Detect the frequency of cardiovascular involvement and correlate the cardiovascular findings with the modified polyneuropathy disability (PND) score. Methods In a national reference center, 51 patients were evaluated with clinical examination, electrocardiography (ECG), echocardiography (ECHO), and 24-hour Holter. Patients were classified according to the modified PND score and divided into groups: PND 0, PND I, PND II, and PND > II (which included PND IIIa, IIIb, and IV). We chose the classification tree as the statistical method to analyze the association between findings in cardiac tests with the neurological classification (PND). Results ECG abnormalities were present in almost 2/3 of the FAP patients, whereas ECHO abnormalities occurred in around 1/3 of them. All patients with abnormal ECHO also had abnormal ECG, but the opposite did not apply. The classification tree identified ECG and ECHO as relevant variables (p < 0.001 and p = 0.08, respectively). The probability of a patient to be allocated to the PND 0 group when having a normal ECG was over 80%. When both ECG and ECHO were abnormal, this probability was null. Conclusions Brazilian patients with FAP have frequent ECG abnormalities. ECG is an appropriate test to discriminate asymptomatic carriers of the mutation from those who develop the disease, whereas ECHO contributes to this discrimination.
European Journal of Applied Physiology | 2006
Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Elen A. Chaves; Ricardo Henrique Costa-e-Sousa; Masako Oya Masuda; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; José Nascimento
Motricidade | 2011
Celso José da Silva-Junior; Alexandre Palma; Paulo R. R. Costa; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Rafael de Castro Lima Barroso; Ricardo Costa Abrantes-Junior; Marcio Assis Marques Barbosa
Parasitology | 2014
Anissa Daliry; Isabela Resende Pereira; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Isalira Peroba Ramos; Glaucia Vilar-Pereira; Raquel Rangel Silvares; Joseli Lannes-Vieira; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho
Archive | 2007
Elen A. Chaves; Pedro P. Pereira-Junior; Rodrigo S. Fortunato; José Nascimento; Marcus F. Oliveira