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Dive into the research topics where Pedro Rosa Neto is active.

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Featured researches published by Pedro Rosa Neto.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1997

Frequency of the different mutations causing spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA1, SCA2, MJD/SCA3 and DRPLA) in a large group of Brazilian patients

Iscia Lopes-Cendesi; Helio Ghizoni Teive; Maria Elisa Calcagnotto; Jaderson Costa da Costa; Francisco Cardoso; Erika Viana; Jaime A. Maciel Jr; João Radvany; Walter O. Arruda; Paulo Cesar Trevisol-Bittencourt; Pedro Rosa Neto; Isabel Silveira; Carlos Eduardo Steiner; Walter Pinto-Junior; André S. Santos; Ylmar Corrêa Neto; Lineu Cesar Werneck; Abelardo Q. C. Araújo; Gerson Carakushansky; Luiz Renato Mello; Laura Bannach Jardim; Guy A. Rouleau

Spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1), spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) and Machado-Joseph disease or spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (MJD/SCA3) are three distinctive forms of autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) caused by expansions of an unstable CAG repeat localized in the coding region of the causative genes. Another related disease, dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) is also caused by an unstable triplet repeat and can present as SCA in late onset patients. We investigated the frequency of the SCA1, SCA2, MJD/SCA3 and DRPLA mutations in 328 Brazilian patients with SCA, belonging to 90 unrelated families with various patterns of inheritance and originating in different geographic regions of Brazil. We found mutations in 35 families (39%), 32 of them with a clear autosomal dominant inheritance. The frequency of the SCA1 mutation was 3% of all patients; and 6% in the dominantly inherited SCAs. We identified the SCA2 mutation in 6% of all families and in 9% of the families with autosomal dominant inheritance. The MJD/SCA3 mutation was detected in 30% of all patients; and in the 44% of the dominantly inherited cases. We found no DRPLA mutation. In addition, we observed variability in the frequency of the different mutations according to geographic origin of the patients, which is probably related to the distinct colonization of different parts of Brazil. These results suggest that SCA may be occasionally caused by the SCA1 and SCA2 mutations in the Brazilian population, and that the MJD/SCA3 mutation is the most common cause of dominantly inherited SCA in Brazil.


Alzheimer's Research & Therapy | 2013

Early-onset dementias: diagnostic and etiological considerations

Mario Masellis; Kayla Sherborn; Pedro Rosa Neto; Dessa Sadovnick; Ging-Yuek Robin Hsiung; Sandra E. Black; Sadhana Prasad; Meghan Williams; Serge Gauthier

This paper summarizes the body of literature about early-onset dementia (EOD) that led to recommendations from the Fourth Canadian Consensus Conference on the Diagnosis and Treatment of Dementia. A broader differential diagnosis is required for EOD compared with late-onset dementia. Delays in diagnosis are common, and the social impact of EOD requires special care teams. The etiologies underlying EOD syndromes should take into account family history and comorbid diseases, such as cerebrovascular risk factors, that may influence the clinical presentation and age at onset. For example, although many EODs are more likely to have Mendelian genetic and/or metabolic causes, the presence of comorbidities may drive the individual at risk for late-onset dementia to manifest the symptoms at an earlier age, which contributes further to the observed heterogeneity and may confound diagnostic investigation. A personalized medicine approach to diagnosis should therefore be considered depending on the age at onset, clinical presentation, and comorbidities. Genetic counseling and testing as well as specialized biochemical screening are often required, especially in those under the age of 40 and in those with a family history of autosomal dominant or recessive disease. Novel treatments in the drug development pipeline for EOD, such as genetic forms of Alzheimers disease, should target the specific pathogenic cascade implicated by the mutation or biochemical defect.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 2011

Brain Regional α-[11C]Methyl-L-Tryptophan Trapping in Medication-Free Patients With Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Alexandre Berney; Marco Leyton; Paul Gravel; Igor Sibon; Debbie Sookman; Pedro Rosa Neto; Mirko Diksic; Akio Nakai; Gilbert Pinard; Christo Todorov; Hidehiko Okazawa; Pierre Blier; Thomas E. Nordahl; Chawki Benkelfat

CONTEXT The hypothesis of a serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine [5-HT]) dysfunction in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) stems largely from the clinical efficacy of 5-HT reuptake inhibitors. Serotonergic abnormalities in the unmedicated symptomatic state, however, remain to be fully characterized. OBJECTIVE To investigate brain regional 5-HT synthesis, as indexed by positron emission tomography and the α-[(11)C]methyl-L-tryptophan trapping constant (K*), in treatment-free adults meeting criteria for OCD. DESIGN Between-group comparison. SETTING Department of Psychiatry and Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, and Department of Psychology, McGill University Health Centre, Quebec, Canada. PARTICIPANTS Twenty-one medication-free patients with OCD (15 men with a mean [SD] age of 33.2 [9.3] years and 6 women with a mean [SD] age of 35.8 [7.1] years) and 21 healthy controls matched for age and sex (15 men with a mean [SD] age of 32.9 [10.1] years and 6 women with a mean [SD] age of 36.5.5 [8.6] years). Main Outcome Measure The α-[(11)C]methyl-L-tryptophan brain trapping constant K*, which was analyzed with Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM8) and with proportional normalization (extent threshold of 100 voxels with a peak threshold of P ≤ .005). RESULTS Compared with healthy controls, the patients with OCD exhibited significantly greater α-[(11)C]methyl-L-tryptophan trapping in the right hippocampus and left temporal gyrus (Brodmann area 20). In the larger subsample of all men, these same differences were also evident, as well as higher K* values in the caudate nucleus. Individual differences in symptom severity correlated positively with K* values sampled from the caudate and temporal lobe of the patients with OCD, respectively. There were no regions where the patients exhibited abnormally low K* values. Volumetric analyses found no morphometric alterations that would account for the group differences. CONCLUSION The results support previous reports of greater striatal and temporal lobe activity in patients with OCD than in healthy controls and suggest that these disturbances include a serotonergic component. Previously reported glucose metabolic disturbances in OCD involving the orbitofrontal and cingulate cortices, in comparison, might reflect postsynaptic changes in the serotonergic system.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2014

A Rat Model of Photothrombotic Capsular Infarct with a Marked Motor Deficit: A Behavioral, Histologic, and microPET Study

Hyung-Sun Kim; Donghyeon Kim; Ra Gyung Kim; Jin-Myung Kim; Euiheon Chung; Pedro Rosa Neto; Min-Cheol Lee; Hyoung-Ihl Kim

We present a new method for inducing a circumscribed subcortical capsular infarct (SCI), which imposes a persistent motor impairment in rats. Photothrombotic destruction of the internal capsule (IC) was conducted in Sprague Dawley rats (male; n=38). The motor performance of all animals was assessed using forelimb placing, forelimb use asymmetry, and the single pellet reaching test. On the basis of the degree of motor recovery, rats were subdivided into either the poor recovery group (PRG) or the moderate recovery group (MRG). Imaging assessment of the impact of SCI on brain metabolism was performed using 2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluoro-D-glucose ([18F]-FDG) microPET (positron emission tomography). Photothrombotic lesioning using low light energy selectively disrupted circumscribed capsular fibers. The MRG showed recovery of motor performance after 1 week, but the PRG showed a persistent motor impairment for >3 weeks. Damage to the posterior limb of the IC (PLIC) is more effective for producing a severe motor deficit. Analysis of PET data revealed decreased regional glucose metabolism in the ipsilesional motor and bilateral sensory cortex and increased metabolism in the contralesional motor cortex and bilateral hippocampus during the early recovery period after SCI. Behavioral, histologic, and functional imaging findings support the usefulness of this novel SCI rat model for investigating motor recovery.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2014

NEURODEGENERATION AND CORTICAL ATROPHY IN [18F]FLORBETAPIR ACCUMULATORS AND NON-ACCUMULATORS

Sara Mohades; Sulantha Mathotaarachchi; Maxime Parent; Monica Shin; Seqian Wang; Andrea Lessa Benedet; Antoine Leuzy; Thomas Beaudry; Eduardo Rigon Zimmer; Laksanun Cheewakriengkrai; Daliah Farajat; Vladmir Fonov; Simon Fristed Eskildsen; Serge Gauthier; Pedro Rosa Neto

BBSI n 18 22 26 23 49 104 LS Mean (SE) 13.17 (2.06) 13.46 (1.91) 15.72 (1.80) 16.03 (1.89) 15.77 (1.25) 14.5 (8.5) VBSI n 20 22 29 24 53 104 LS Mean (SE) 4.46 (0.59) 4.25 (0.57) 5.31 (0.54) 4.36 (0.55) 4.85 (0.35) 4.43 (3.17) LHBSI n 21 22 29 24 53 104 LS Mean (SE) 0.136 (0.020) 0.119 (0.020) 0.186 (0.018) 0.191 (0.019) 0.188 (0.013) 0.340 (0.190) RHBSI n 21 22 29 24 53 LS Mean (SE) 0.135 (0.020) 0.110 (0.020) 0.176 (0.018) 0.171 (0.019) 0.173 (0.013)


Epilepsia | 2013

Bilateral perisylvian ulegyria: An under-recognized, surgically remediable epileptic syndrome

Lucas Porcello Schilling; Renata R. Kieling; Tharick Ali Pascoal; Hyoung-Ihl Kim; Min-Cheol Lee; Yun Hee Kim; Eliseu Paglioli; Pedro Rosa Neto; Jaderson Costa da Costa; André Palmini

Interest in the association of epilepsy and pseudobulbar palsy was rekindled since the identification through magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria (PMG). Seizures are often intractable, but resective epilepsy surgery has not been recommended. However, a similar clinical picture can be encountered in patients with bilateral perisylvian destructive lesions, which fit the description of ulegyria (ULG). We report a series of patients with epilepsy and pseudobulbar palsy due to bilateral perisylvian ULG (BP‐ULG), show that hippocampal sclerosis (HS) is often associated and highlight the fact that in this entity, unlike in malformative bilateral perisylvian PMG, seizures may be surgically treated.


Proceeding Series of the Brazilian Society of Computational and Applied Mathematics | 2015

Método dos K-Vizinhos mais Próximos aplicado ao dignóstico de Alzheimer

Yuri Elias Rodrigues; Evandro Manica; Eduardo Rigon Zimmer; Pedro Rosa Neto; Tharick Ali Pascoal

Neste trabalho implementamos o metodo dos K-Vizinhos mais Proximos (kVP), um classificador de padroes que classifica um padrao desconhecido a partir das distâncias relativas a um conjunto de treino, juntamente com a tecnica SMOTE (Synthetic Minority Over-sampling Technique), que trata o inconveniente de dados desbalanceados para realizarmos a selecao de caracteristicas do problema de aprendizagem supervisionada em dados de Alzheimer. Em nosso experimento utilizamos algoritmos indutivos para selecionar subconjuntos de variaveis mais efetivas na caracterizacao dos estagios da doenca e validamos sua precisao com o metodo de 10-fold cross validation. Abordagem, caracteristicas a serem analisadas.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2015

Clinical utility of amyloid imaging in the differential diagnosis of atypical/unclear dementias and its impact on caregivers

Mohamed Reda Bensaïdane; Rémi W. Bouchard; Marie-Pierre Fortin; Michèle Houde; Pedro Rosa Neto; Stéphane Poulin; Louis Verret; Jean-Paul Soucy; Jean-Mathieu Beauregard; Robert Laforce

Recent studies have supported a role for amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) imaging in distinguishing Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology from other pathological protein accumulations leading to dementia. We investigated the clinical utility of amyloid PET in the differential diagnosis of atypical dementia cases and its impact on caregivers. Using the amyloid tracer 18F-NAV4694, we prospectively scanned 28 patients (mean age 59.3 y, s.d. 5.8; mean MMSE 21.4, s.d. 6.0) with an atypical dementia syndrome. Following a comprehensive diagnostic workup (i.e., history taking, neurological examination, blood tests, neuropsychological evaluation, MRI, and FDG-PET), no certain diagnosis could be arrived at. Amyloid PET was then conducted and classified as positive or negative. Attending physicians were asked to evaluate whether this result led to a change in diagnosis or altered management. They also reported their degree of confidence in the diagnosis. Caregivers were met after disclosure of amyloid PET results and completed a questionnaire/interview to assess the impact of the scan. Our cohort was evenly divided between positive (14/28) and negative (14/28) 18F-NAV4694 cases. Amyloid PET resulted in a diagnostic change in 9/28 cases (32.1%: 17.8% changed from AD to non-AD, 14.3% from non-AD to AD). There was a 44% increase in diagnostic confidence. Altered management occurred in 71.4% (20/28) of cases. Knowledge of amyloid status improved caregivers’ outcomes in all domains (anxiety, depression, disease perception, future anticipation, and quality of life). This study suggests a useful additive role for amyloid PET in atypical cases with an unclear diagnosis beyond the extensive workup of a tertiary memory clinic. Amyloid PET increased diagnostic confidence and led to clinically significant alterations in management. The information gained from that test was well received by caregivers and encouraged spending quality time with their loved ones.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2015

Longitudinal changes in resting-state brain activity in a capsular infarct model

Donghyeon Kim; Ra Gyung Kim; Hyung-Sun Kim; Jin-Myung Kim; Sung Chan Jun; Boreom Lee; Hang Joon Jo; Pedro Rosa Neto; Min-Cheol Lee; Hyoung-Ihl Kim


Pediatric Neurology | 1992

Narcolepsy and moebius syndrome: A casual association?

Jaderson Costa da Costa; Pedro Rosa Neto; Luis Fernando Garcias da Silva; Flavio Aesse; João Arthur Ehlers

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Jean-Paul Soucy

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Jaderson Costa da Costa

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Hyoung-Ihl Kim

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

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Min-Cheol Lee

Chonnam National University

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