Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Protásio Lemos da Luz is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Protásio Lemos da Luz.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1997

Coronary Angioplasty Results in Leukocyte and Platelet Activation With Adhesion Molecule Expression: Evidence of Inflammatory Responses in Coronary Angioplasty

Carlos V. Serrano; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Margareth L. Venturinelli; Siguemituso Ariê; Elbio D Amico; Jay L. Zweier; Fúlvio Pileggi; Protásio Lemos da Luz

OBJECTIVES This study sought to characterize leukocyte and platelet activation and adhesion molecule expression after coronary angioplasty. BACKGROUND Coronary angioplasty can be regarded as a clinical model of postischemic inflammation because this intervention leads to the release of inflammatory mediators as a result of plaque rupture and endothelial injury. METHODS In 13 patients with stable angina (mean [ +/- SEM] age 56.0 +/- 2.4 years, range 44 to 79), blood samples were drawn from the aorta and coronary sinus immediately before and immediately and 15 min after coronary angioplasty. Subsequently, leukocyte and platelet functions were determined. Eleven control patients (57.5 +/- 2.3 years, range 52 to 78) underwent coronary arteriography. RESULTS Coronary arteriography and angioplasty showed no difference in number of leukocytes between the coronary sinus and the aorta. However, 15 min after coronary angioplasty, there was an increase in neutrophil CD18 and CD11b, monocyte CD14 and platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa expression and a decrease in neutrophil L-selectin expression (189 +/- 25%, 163 +/- 27%, 158 +/- 35%, 141 +/- 22% and 31 +/- 10%, respectively, p < 0.01). In the control subjects, no change in adhesion molecule expression occurred. Superoxide production and aggregation in ex vivo-stimulated neutrophils collected from the coronary sinus 15 min after coronary angioplasty was significantly decreased compared with that after coronary arteriography (54 +/- 12% vs. 106 +/- 30% and 58 +/- 11% vs. 102 +/- 29%, respectively, p < 0.01). The reduced responses to phorbol ester stimulation may be explained by previous in vivo activation of neutrophils during coronary angioplasty. CONCLUSIONS Coronary angioplasty increases neutrophil, monocyte and platelet adhesion molecule expression and induces a significant decrease in ex vivo-stimulated neutrophil superoxide generation and aggregation. These findings suggest that coronary angioplasty triggers cellular activation with an inflammatory response that could contribute to restenosis.


Cardiovascular Research | 2000

Oxidative stress as a signaling mechanism of the vascular response to injury: the redox hypothesis of restenosis.

Luciano C. P. Azevedo; Marcelo A. Pedro; Liliete C. Souza; Heraldo Possolo de Souza; Mariano Janiszewski; Protásio Lemos da Luz; Francisco R.M. Laurindo

The prominent role of redox processes in tissue injury and in vascular cell signaling suggest their involvement in the repair reaction to vessel injury, which is a key determinant of restenosis post-angioplasty. Experimental studies showed a protective effect of superoxide dismutase or antioxidants on vasospasm, neointimal thickening or remodeling after balloon injury. It was also shown that oxidized thiols induce chelatable metal-dependent amplification of the vascular repair reaction. Ongoing or completed clinical trials show a promising effect of the antioxidant probucol against restenosis. However, few studies addressed the molecular physiological mechanisms underlying the redox hypothesis of restenosis. We recently showed evidence for marked oxidative stress early after balloon injury, with superoxide production mediated primarily by non-endothelial NAD(P)H oxidase-type flavoenzyme(s). This effect was closely related to the degree of injury. There is evidence supporting a role for such early redox processes in apoptotic cell loss and NF-kappa B activation. We present new data on the time course of oxidative stress after balloon injury of intact rabbit iliac arteries. Our data show that despite substantial neointimal growth and lumen narrowing, superoxide production and glutathione levels are unaltered at day 14 and 28 after balloon injury. At day 7 after injury, the peak neointimal proliferation in this model, there was significant decrease of vascular superoxide dismutase activity, without clear evidence of spontaneous superoxide production. Thus, oxidative stress after injury is likely to be an early transient event, which parallels the inflammatory and proliferative phases of the vascular response. We propose that such early redox processes act as dose-dependent signal transducers of gene programs that affect the final repair.


Clinics | 2008

High ratio of triglycerides to hdl-cholesterol predicts extensive coronary disease

Protásio Lemos da Luz; Desiderio Favarato; Jose Rocha Faria-Neto Junior; Pedro A. Lemos; Antonio Carlos Palandri Chagas

An abnormal ratio of triglycerides to HDL-cholesterol (TG/HDL-c) indicates an atherogenic lipid profile and a risk for the development of coronary disease. OBJECTIVE To investigate the association between lipid levels, specifically TG/HDL-c, and the extent of coronary disease. METHODS High-risk patients (n = 374) submitted for coronary angiography had their lipid variables measured and coronary disease extent scored by the Friesinger index. RESULTS The subjects consisted of 220 males and 154 females, age 57.2 ± 11.1 years, with total cholesterol of 210± 50.3 mg/dL, triglycerides of 173.8 ± 169.8 mg/dL, HDL-cholesterol (HDL-c) of 40.1 ± 12.8 mg/dL, LDL-cholesterol (LDL-c) of 137.3 ± 46.2 mg/dL, TG/HDL-c of 5.1 ± 5.3, and a Friesinger index of 6.6 ± 4.7. The relationship between the extent of coronary disease (dichotomized by a Friesenger index of 5 and lipid levels (normal vs. abnormal) was statistically significant for the following: triglycerides, odds ratio of 2.02 (1.31–3.1; p = 0.0018); HDL-c, odds ratio of 2.21 (1.42–3.43; p = 0.0005); and TG/HDL-c, odds ratio of 2.01(1.30–3.09; p = 0.0018). However, the relationship was not significant between extent of coronary disease and total cholesterol [1.25 (0.82–1.91; p = 0.33)] or LDL-c [1.47 (0.96–2.25; p = 0.0842)]. The chi-square for linear trends for Friesinger > 4 and lipid quartiles was statistically significant for triglycerides (p = 0.0017), HDL-c (p = 0.0001), and TG/HDL-c (p = 0.0018), but not for total cholesterol (p = 0.393) or LDL-c (p = 0.0568). The multivariate analysis by logistic regression OR gave 1.3 ± 0.79 (p = .0001) for TG/HDL-c, 0.779 ± 0.074 (p = .0001) for HDL-c, and 1.234 ± 0.097 (p = 0.03) for LDL. Analysis of receiver operating characteristic curves showed that only TG/HDL-c and HDL-c were useful for detecting extensive coronary disease, with the former more strongly associated with disease. CONCLUSIONS Although some lipid variables were associated with the extent of coronary disease, the ratio of triglycerides to HDL-cholesterol showed the strongest association with extent.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2000

Vascular oxidant stress early after balloon injury: evidence for increased NAD(P)H oxidoreductase activity.

Heraldo Possolo de Souza; Liliete C. Souza; Veruska M Anastacio; Alexandre C. Pereira; Maria de Lourdes Junqueira; José Eduardo Krieger; Protásio Lemos da Luz; Ohara Augusto; Francisco R.M. Laurindo

Available evidence for oxidative stress after angioplasty is indirect or ambiguous. We sought to characterize the pattern, time course, and possible sources of free radical generation early after arterial balloon injury. Ex vivo injury performed in arterial rings in buffer with lucigenin yielded a massive oxygen-dependent peak of luminescence that decayed exponentially and was proportional to the degree of injury. Signals for injured vs. control arteries were 207. 1 +/- 17.9 (n = 13) vs 4.1 +/- 0.7 (n = 22) cpm x 10(3)/mg/min (p <. 001). Data obtained with 0.25 mmol/l lucigenin were validated with 0. 005-0.05 mmol/l lucigenin or the novel superoxide-sensitive probe coelenterazine (5 micromol/l). Gentle removal of endothelium prior to injury scarcely affected the amount of luminescence. Lucigenin signals were amplified 5- to 20-fold by exogenous NAD(P)H, and were >85% inhibited by diphenyliodonium (DPI, a flavoenzyme inhibitor). Antagonists of several other potential free radical sources, including xanthine oxidase, nitric oxide synthase, and mitochondrial electron transport, were without effect. Overdistension of intact rabbit iliac arteries in vivo (n = 7) induced 72% fall in intracellular reduced glutathione and 68% increase in oxidized glutathione, so that GSH/GSSG ratio changed from 7.93 +/- 2.14 to 0. 81 +/- 0.16 (p <.005). There was also 28.7% loss of the glutathione pool. Further studies were performed with electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Rabbit aortas submitted to ex vivo overdistension in the presence of the spin trap DEPMPO (5-diethoxy-phosphoryl-5-methyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide, 100 mmol/l, n = 5) showed formation of radical adduct spectra, abolished by DPI or superoxide dismutase. Computer simulation indicated a mixture of hydroxyl and carbon-centered radical adducts, likely due to decay of superoxide adduct. Electrical mobility shift assays for NF-kappaB activation were performed in nuclear protein extracts from intact or previously injured rabbit aortas. Balloon injury induced early NF-kappaB activation, which was decreased by DPI. In conclusion, our data show unambiguously that arterial injury induces an immediate profound vascular oxidative stress. Such redox imbalance is likely accounted for by activation of vessel wall NAD(P)H oxidoreductase(s), generating radical species potentially involved in tissue repair.


Circulation | 1975

Pulmonary edema during volume infusion.

Leon Stein; Jean-Jacques Beraud; M Morissette; Protásio Lemos da Luz; Max Harry Weil; Herbert Shubin

The relationship between left ventricular filling pressure and plasma colloid osmotic pressure to pulmonary edema was examined in a group of 37 patients, the majority of whom were hypovolemic. Sixteen patients developed pulmonary edema during fluid infusion. In the 21 patients who did not develop pulmonary edema, the left ventricular filling pressure was slightly elevated but the colloid osmotic pressure was not reduced. The majority of these patients were treated with colloid solutions (group I). In five of the 16 patients who developed pulmonary edema, the left ventricular filling pressure was elevated and there was no reduction in the plasma colloid osmotic pressure. These patients received only colloids (group II). In the other 11 patients who developed pulmonary edema, the left ventricular filling pressure was normal but the plasma colloid osmotic pressure was reduced to 16 ± 2 torr (group III). The colloid osmotic pressure in this group was significantly less than in the other two groups (P < 0.01). Most of these patients received large volumes of crystalloid solutions. After administration of furosemide, clearing of pulmonary edema in this group was associated with normalization of the plasma colloid osmotic pressure. Infusion of large volumes of crystalloids in hypovolemic patients can be hazardous, for reduction of the plasma colloid osmotic pressure may predispose to the development of pulmonary edema even when the left ventricular filling pressure remains normal.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003

Ten-year clinical laboratory follow-up after application of a symptom-based therapeutic strategy to patients with severe chronic aortic regurgitation of predominant rheumatic etiology.

Flávio Tarasoutchi; Max Grinberg; Guilherme Sobreira Spina; Roney Orismar Sampaio; L.uís F. Cardoso; Eduardo Giusti Rossi; Pablo Maria Alberto Pomerantzeff; Francisco R.M. Laurindo; Protásio Lemos da Luz; José Antonio Franchini Ramires

OBJECTIVES This study was designed to assess the feasibility and the long-term results of a symptom-based strategy of aortic valve replacement in a Brazilian population with predominant rheumatic etiology. BACKGROUND Optimal criteria for valve replacement in aortic regurgitation (AR) are still not entirely clear. The appearance of symptoms is an indication for surgery, but may be associated with myocardial damage. Although cardiac imaging data have provided a safer guide for such decisions, the use of symptom-based surgical indication has not been validated and might conceivably be better in populations with predominant rheumatic etiology and younger age. METHODS Echocardiography and rest-exercise radionuclide ventriculography were performed in 75 patients with severe AR, age 28 +/- 9 years, over a period of 10 +/- 0.69 years. Thirty-seven patients developed symptoms and underwent aortic valve replacement surgery within six months. Thirty-eight patients remained asymptomatic and were managed medically. RESULTS Survival was 100% in asymptomatic patients and 82% in symptomatic. Surgical treatment caused marked ventricular remodeling, with ventricular diameter involution and an improvement of rest-exercise ejection fraction percent variation. Multivariate analysis showed that the probability of developing symptoms within 10 years was 58% for a patient with a left ventricular end-diastolic diameter > or =70 mm and 76% for a patient with left ventricular end-systolic (LVESD) > or =50 mm. Logistic regression identified LVESD and age as the most predictive and specific, but not sensitive, indicators of symptom development. CONCLUSIONS Application of a standardized therapeutic strategy to patients with severe AR and predominant rheumatic etiology resulted in 90.6% survival after 10 years of follow-up.


Circulation | 2001

Influence of Hypoxia on Nitric Oxide Synthase Activity and Gene Expression in Children With Congenital Heart Disease A Novel Pathophysiological Adaptive Mechanism

Carlos Regenga Ferreiro; Antonio Carlos Palandri Chagas; Maria Helena C. Carvalho; Ana Paula Dantas; Marcelo Biscegli Jatene; Luiz Carlos Bento de Souza; Protásio Lemos da Luz

BackgroundChronic hypoxia has been shown to modulate nitric oxide (NO) responses in different cell models, but the relationship between hypoxia and NO synthase (NOS) regulation in humans was not studied. We studied the relationship between endothelial and inducible NOS (eNOS and iNOS) activities and expression and chronic hypoxia in children with cyanotic and acyanotic congenital heart defects. Methods and ResultsRight atrial tissue was excised from 18 patients during cardiac surgery. eNOS and iNOS activities were measured by conversion of l-[H3]arginine to l-[H3]citrulline. Gene expression of eNOS and iNOS was quantified by competitive reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction. The eNOS activity and expression were significantly reduced in cyanotic hearts compared with acyanotic hearts: 0.38±0.14 versus 1.06±0.11 pmol · mg−1 · min−1 (P <0.0001) and 0.54±0.08 versus 0.80±0.10 relative optical density (ROD) of cDNA (P <0.0001), respectively. In contrast, iNOS activity and expression were significantly higher in cyanotic than in acyanotic children: 7.04±1.20 versus 4.17±1.10 pmol · mg−1 · min−1 (P <0.0001) and 2.55±0.11 versus 1.91±0.18 ROD of cDNA (P <0.0001), respectively. ConclusionsHypoxia downregulates eNOS activity and gene expression in cardiac tissue from patients with cyanotic congenital heart defects. By contrast, iNOS activity and expression are increased in cyanotic children and may represent an alternative mechanism to counteract the effects of hypoxia in the cardiovascular system. Therefore, a novel adaptive mechanism during hypoxia is suggested.


Experimental and Molecular Pathology | 1999

The Effect of Red Wine on Experimental Atherosclerosis: Lipid-Independent Protection ~

Protásio Lemos da Luz; Carlos V. Serrano; Ana Paula Marte Chacra; Hugo P. Monteiro; Vanda Mitie Yoshida; Mozart Furtado; Silvia Moreira Ayub Ferreira; Paulo Sampaio Gutierrez; Fúlvio Pileggi

To assess the effect of red wine on atherosclerosis, New Zealand rabbits were given 1% cholesterol diet for 12 weeks and compared to animals that received the diet plus either red wine or nonalcoholic wine products (NAWP). Diet induced marked increases in total and LDL cholesterol; yet no significant changes in HDL and triglyceride concentrations occurred. In the control group, plaque area was 69 +/- 9% of the aortic surface, while in the wine and NAWP groups it was only 38 +/- 9 and 47 +/- 12%, respectively (P < 0.0001). The average intima/media thickness ratio was 0.60 +/- 0.2 in control animals, 0.14 +/- 0.09 in the wine group, and 0.39 +/- 0.19 in the NAWP group (P < 0.0001). No significant differences were noted in LDL oxidizability among treatments. Thus, both red wine and NAWP can prevent plaque formation in hypercholesterolemic rabbits despite significant increases in LDL. We speculate that anti-platelet effect, blockade of expression of endothelial cell adhesion molecules, and/or NO stimulation by red wine flavonoids are possible explanations.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1984

A Technique of Anastomosis of the Right Internal Mammary Artery to the Circumflex Artery and Its Branches

Luiz Boro Puig; Luiz França Neto; Miguel Rati; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Protásio Lemos da Luz; Fúlvio Pileggi; Adib D Jatene

A new technique for direct revascularization of the left circumflex artery and its ventricular branches through anastomosis with the right internal mammary artery (RIMA) was applied in 56 patients. Postoperative angiographic studies in 17 patients showed that positioned behind the aorta, the RIMA can reach the circumflex artery with no tension, allowing adequate distal filling.


Atherosclerosis | 2001

Effect of simvastatin on monocyte adhesion molecule expression in patients with hypercholesterolemia

Carlos V. Serrano; Vanda Mitie Yoshida; Margareth L. Venturinelli; E.A. D'Amico; Hugo P. Monteiro; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Protásio Lemos da Luz

Increased monocyte adherence to the vessel wall is one of the earliest events in atherosclerosis. The mechanism by which hypercholesterolemia causes alterations in endothelial adhesiveness for monocytes is unclear. This study sought to determine if monocyte adhesion molecule expression is affected by low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol levels. Patients with hypercholesterolemia and stable coronary artery disease were compared with those without major cardiovascular risk (control). Patients with hypercholesterolemia were treated with simvastatin 20--40 mg/day for 8--10 weeks. Blood samples were examined with flow cytometry assays at baseline and after cholesterol-lowering therapy. Monocyte CD11b and CD14 adhesion molecule expression, measured as fluorescence intensity, were significantly (P<0.0001) higher in hypercholesterolemic patients before the study (176.9+/-9.8 and 138.0+/-4.8, respectively) when compared with that in control subjects (97.2+/-8.1 and 84.0+/-6.4, respectively). Both decreased markedly with treatment: to 118.8+/-6.9 and 103.1+/-3.9, respectively. Monocyte L-selectin expression was significantly lower in patients with hypercholesterolemia before treatment (43.0+/-3.0) when compared with control subjects (79.9+/-2.7), and it increased markedly with treatment (54.2+/-2.5). LDL levels correlated directly with both CD11b and CD14 expression and correlated inversely with L-selectin expression. These data show that hypercholesterolemia affects monocyte adhesion molecule expression which, in turn, decreases with statin-induced plasmatic cholesterol reduction. Such perturbations in monocyte function likely represent a proinflammatory response to hypercholesterolemia and may have a role in the early progression of atherogenesis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Protásio Lemos da Luz's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adib D Jatene

University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge