Ricardo T Carvalho
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Ricardo T Carvalho.
computing in cardiology conference | 2002
Marco Antonio Gutierrez; Paulo Eduardo Pilon; Silvia G. Lage; Liliane Kopel; Ricardo T Carvalho; Sergio Shiguemi Furuie
Carotid vessel ultrasound imaging is a reliable noninvasive technique to measure the arterial morphology. Lumen Diameter (LD), intima-media thickness (IMT) of the far wall, and plaque presence can be reliably determined using B-mode ultrasound. In order to measure the carotid IMT as well as any other more complex quantitative indices of vessel morphology, it is necessary to identify lumen-intima and media-adventitia borders in the ultrasound images. In this paper we describe an automatic approach to measure LD and IMT based on an active contour technique improved by a multiresolution analysis. The measurements of LD and IMT were compared to manual tracing of the vessels border in terms of coefficients of variability (CV) and correlation (R). The results have shown that the method is a reliable and reproducible way of assessing the LD and far wall IMT in the carotid artery.
Medical Imaging 2002: Physiology and Function from Multidimensional Images | 2002
Marco Antonio Gutierrez; Paulo Eduardo Pilon; Silvia G. Lage; Liliane Kopel; Ricardo T Carvalho; Sergio Shiguemi Furuie
Carotid vessel ultrasound imaging is a reliable non-invasive technique to measure the arterial morphology. Vessel diameter, intima-media thickness (IMT) of the far wall and plaque presence can be reliably determined using B-mode ultrasound. In this paper we describe a semi-automatic approach to measure artery diameter and IMT based on an active contour technique improved by a multiresolution analysis. The operator selects a region-of-interest (ROI) in a series of carotid images obtained from B-mode ultrasound. This set of images is convolved with the corresponding partial derivatives of the Gaussian filter. The filter response is used to compute a 2D gradient magnitude image in order to refine the vessels boundaries. Using an active contour technique the vessels border is determined automatically. The near wall media-adventitia (NWMA), far wall media-adventitia (FWMA) and far wall lumen-intima (FWLI) borders are obtained by a least-square fitting of the active contours result. The distance between NWMA and FWLI (vessel diameter) and between FWLI and FWMA (far wall intima-media thickness) are obtained for all images and the mean value is computed during systole and diastole. The proposed method is a reliable and reproducible way of assessing the vessel diameter and far wall intima-media thickness of the carotid artery.
Revista Brasileira De Terapia Intensiva | 2008
Antônio Aurélio de Paiva Fagundes Júnior; Ricardo T Carvalho; Rinaldo Focaccia; Juliana Gabriela Fernandez; Helia B Araujo; Tânia Mara Varejão Strabelli; Liliane Kopel; Silvia G. Lage
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Infection with the non-Candida yeast species Trichosporon have been recognized with increasing frequency over the last two decades. Invasive disease due to trichosporonosis has been reported from neutropenic patients with cancer and the mortality is high. Recently, others groups of patients have become susceptible to this rare fungi. We report the emerging of infection with pathogenic Trichosporon asahii in severely ill heart failure patients in a tertiary cardiological intensive care unit (CICU). We describe our data, and report a fatal case of disseminated trichosporonosis in a patient with heart failure. We also review literature pertaining to T. asahii infections. CASE REPORT: An 85 year-old woman with a history of hypertension, heart failure (ejection fraction (EJ): 30%) and pulmonary embolism was admitted to a medical cardiological ICU after cardiac arrest (ventricular fibrillation) resuscitated during a routine consultation. There were no neurological sequelae and the echocardiogram revels no changes, neither the cardiac biomarkers. Ventricular fibrillation was considered secondary to heart failure. The patient had extubation failure and difficult weaning needing long term mechanical ventilation even after tracheostomy. Her hospital course was complicated by acute renal failure and recurrent respiratory, urinary and systemic bacterial infections, which responded to broad-spectrum antibiotics. After a temporary improvement she developed urinary infection and subsequent septic shock. Cultures of urine and blood specimens grew T. asahii. Treatment with liposome amphotericin B (5 mg/kg/day) was started. Despite receiving vancomycin and imipenem, the clinical condition of the patient deteriorates. Blood taken for culture on the seventh day of amphotericin B therapy were negative but urine specimen still grew T. asahii. On the eighteenth day of antifungal therapy, the patient died with multiorgan failure. CONCLUSIONS: The increasing of severely ill patients, and the use of broad spectrum antibiotics, has predisposed the emerging of invasive infections by rare and new opportunistic fungal pathogens. Severe infection related to T. asahii, until recently restricted to neutropenic patients with cancer, has been frequently identified in heart failure patients with advanced age. The mortality is high. These data highlights the importance of considering this group of patients as a risk group for T. asahii infection.
Revista Brasileira De Terapia Intensiva | 2007
Silvia G Lage; Ricardo T Carvalho; Liliane Kopel; Jaime F Bastos; Marcelo A Ribeiro; Antonio Ap Fagundes Junior; Helia B Araujo; Célia C Strunz
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Use of low molecular weight heparins (LMWH), either prophylactic or therapeutic, is of most importance in several syndromes and diseases in daily clinical practice. Our objective in this clinical trial was to evaluate safety and efficacy of test sodium enoxaparin (ENOX-T) compared to the reference drug (ENOX-R). METHODS: We conducted a prospective, randomized, comparative, unicentric and open-labeled trial including patients with either prophylactic or therapeutic anti-thrombotic indications. A total of 100 patients were enrolled in two branches: prophylactic (n=50) and therapeutic (n=50) and two groups for each branch (group 1: ENOX-R and group 2: ENOX-T). We analyzed clinical and laboratory data in each segment. Anti-factor Xa was measured in three different moments: baseline (1st evaluation); 1st or 2nd day (2nd evaluation) and 5th to 7th day (3rd evaluation). Doppler-sonography of inferior limbs was performed on all patients in prophylactic group on 2nd or 3rd evaluation. RESULTS: The data showed that both branches (prophylactic and therapeutic) were homogenous in regard of sex, age, body mass index (BMI), serum creatinine and APACHE II severity score at admission. Anti-factor Xa results, in both prophylactic and therapeutic branches, showed expected efficacy to both drugs, without any clinical or statistical difference between them. Adverse events incurred in both groups in a similar way, without any clinical or statistical difference between them. In prophylactic branch, Doppler-sonography of inferior limbs added useful information on drugs efficacy. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that test sodium enoxaparin (ENOX-T) was effective and safe in our patients cohort and equivalent to reference drug (ENOX-R).
Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2001
Liliane Kopel; Flávio Tarasoutchi; Caio C. J. Medeiros; Ricardo T Carvalho; Max Grinberg; Silvia G. Lage
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate elastic properties of conduit arteries in asymptomatic patients who have severe chronic aortic regurgitation. METHODS: Twelve healthy volunteers aged 30±1 years (control group) and 14 asymptomatic patients with severe aortic regurgitation aged 29±2 years and left ventricular ejection fraction of 0.61±0.02 (radioisotope ventriculography) were studied. High-resolution ultrasonography was performed to measure the systolic and diastolic diameters of the common carotid artery. Simultaneous measurement of blood pressure enabled the calculation of arterial compliance and distensibility. RESULTS: No differences were observed between patients with aortic regurgitation and the control group concerning age, sex, body surface, and mean blood pressure. Pulse pressure was significantly higher in the aortic regurgitation group compared with that in the control group (78±3 versus 48±1mmHg, P<0.01). Arterial compliance and distensibility were significantly greater in the aortic regurgitation group compared with that in the control group (11.0±0.8 versus 8.1±0.7 10-10 N-1 m4, P=0.01 e and 39.3±2.6 versus 31.1±2.0 10-6 N-1 m2, P=0.02, respectively). CONCLUSION: Patients with chronic aortic regurgitation have increased arterial distensibility. Greater vascular compliance, to lessen the impact of systolic volume ejected into conduit arteries, represents a compensatory mechanism in left ventricular and arterial system coupling.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2006
Ricardo T Carvalho; Marcelo Luis Campos Vieira; Ângela Romano; Liliane Kopel; Silvia G Lage
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the use of resistive exercise in the study of endothelial dysfunction in heart failure (HF) comparatively to reactive hyperemia (RH). METHODS Eighteen patients with heart failure and 15 normal volunteers were submitted to intermittent handgrip exercise in a pneumatic bag, at an intensity that corresponds to 75% of the previously assessed maximum load. Patients underwent high-resolution vascular ultrasonography for brachial artery diameter and flow evaluation as well as cardiac output determination at rest, RH and after exercise. The systolic flow index in the brachial artery and cardiac index were calculated. RESULTS Systolic flow index increase in the brachial artery was observed after RH and physical exercise, with the latter presenting the highest increase. There was an increase in the cardiac index after the study conditions in comparison to resting conditions. CONCLUSION Resistive exercise, performed at the assessed load, increases blood flow more intensively than RH, constituting a physiological option for the evaluation of endothelial function in HF.
Journal of Critical Care | 2017
João Gabriel Rosa Ramos; Mario Diego Teles Correa; Ricardo T Carvalho; Daryl Jones; Daniel Neves Forte
Purpose: To evaluate clinical characteristics of patients with palliative care (PC) and urgent intensive care unit (ICU) referrals in the same hospital admission. Methods: All urgent ICU referrals at an academic, tertiary hospital, and the co‐occurrence and timing of PC assessment were retrieved from a prospectively collected database. Results: From May 2014 to May 2015, 2476 patients were analyzed and 179 (7%) had co‐occurrence of PC assessment and urgent ICU referral in the same hospital admission. Hospital mortality was higher (odds ratio, 8.3; 95% confidence interval, 5.4‐12.7) and ICU admission was lower (odds ratio, 0.54; 95% confidence interval, 0.40‐0.74) in patients with PC assessment, compared with patients without concurrent PC and ICU referrals. Variables associated with PC assessment were older age, diagnosis of cancer, depressed level of consciousness, nonsurgical admission, lower performance status, physicians subjective prognosis of poor outcome, and length of hospitalization before ICU referral. Conclusion: In this cohort of patients with urgent ICU referral, clinical characteristics at the moment of ICU referral were associated with co‐occurrence of PC assessment in the same hospital admission. These characteristics might guide the development of instruments to enhance early referral of high‐risk patients to PC services.
Critical Care | 2007
Ricardo T Carvalho; Aap Fagundes; Rinaldo Focaccia Siciliano; Liliane Kopel; J Bastos; Tv Strabelli; Silvia G. Lage
In the last years, the fungal infection incidence is increasing progressively in severely ill patients in the ICU. Trichosporon asahii (TA) (formerly Trichosporon beigelii) reported risk factors for infection less usually include acquired immuno-deficiency caused by drugs, AIDS and critical illness in patients with chronic comorbidities. There is no description of these infections in heart failure patients in the ICU.
Critical Care | 2006
Sergio Timerman; Silvia G. Lage; M Gonzalez; Liliane Kopel; J Bastos; C Vianna; Ricardo T Carvalho; Marcelo A Ribeiro; J Ramires
New techniques have been used in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) since the introduction of closed cardiac massage in 1960. Despite this progress, there has been no significant improvement in survival rates after inhospital cardiac arrest over the past 40 years. In a general hospital, survival rates at discharge, not considering specifically ICU patients, is around 15–20%. Few data are available considering survival in cardiologic care units.
Critical Care | 2005
Ricardo T Carvalho; Ma Ribeiro; J Bastos; Helia B Araujo; A Fagudnes; Liliane Kopel; Silvia G. Lage
New techniques have been used in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) since the introduction of closed cardiac massage in 1960. Despite this progress, there was no significant improvement in survival rates after inhospital cardiac arrest over the past 40 years. In a general hospital, survival rates at discharge, not considering specifically ICU patients, is around 15–20%. Few data are available considering survival in cardiologic critical care units.