Rita Proença
University of Lisbon
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rita Proença.
Graefes Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2016
João Paulo Cunha; N. Moura-Coelho; Rita Proença; Arnaldo Dias-Santos; Joana Tavares Ferreira; Carlota Louro; A. Castanheira-Dinis
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a prevalent, long-term progressive degenerative disorder with great social impact. It is currently thought that, in addition to neurodegeneration, vascular changes also play a role in the pathophysiology of the disease. Visual symptoms are frequent and are an early clinical manifestation; a number of psychophysiologic changes occur in visual function, including visual field defects, abnormal contrast sensitivity, abnormalities in color vision, depth perception deficits, and motion detection abnormalities. These visual changes were initially believed to be solely due to neurodegeneration in the posterior visual pathway. However, evidence from pathology studies in both animal models of AD and humans has demonstrated that neurodegeneration also takes place in the anterior visual pathway, with involvement of the retinal ganglion cells’ (RGCs) dendrites, somata, and axons in the optic nerve. These studies additionally showed that patients with AD have changes in retinal and choroidal microvasculature. Pathology findings have been corroborated in in-vivo assessment of the retina and optic nerve head (ONH), as well as the retinal and choroidal vasculature. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) in particular has shown great utility in the assessment of these changes, and it may become a useful tool for early detection and monitoring disease progression in AD. The authors make a review of the current understanding of retinal and choroidal pathological changes in patients with AD, with particular focus on in-vivo evidence of retinal and choroidal neurodegenerative and microvascular changes using OCT technology.
Graefes Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2017
João Paulo Cunha; Rita Proença; Arnaldo Dias-Santos; Rita Almeida; Helena Águas; Marta Alves; Ana Luísa Papoila; Carlota Louro; António Castanheira-Dinis
BackgroundPeripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRNFL) and internal macular layer thinning have been demonstrated in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) with optical coherence tomography (OCT) studies. The purpose of this study is to compare the pRNFL thickness and overall retinal thickness (RT) in AD patients with non-AD patients, using spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and determine the sectors most characteristically affected in AD.MethodsA cross-sectional study was performed to determine the pRNFL and overall macular RT thicknesses in AD and non-AD patients, attending a tertiary hospital center. For pRNFL, the global and six peripapillary quadrants were calculated, and for overall RT values, the nine Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) areas were used. A multiple regression analysis was applied to assess the effects of disease, age, gender, spherical equivalent, visual acuity, intraocular pressure, axial length and blood pressure on pRNFL and overall macular RT. ResultsA total of 202 subjects, including 50 eyes of 50 patients with mild AD (mean age 73.10; SD = 5.36 years) and 152 eyes of 152 patients without AD (mean age 71.03; SD = 4.62 years). After Bonferroni correction, the pRNFL was significantly thinner for the AD group globally and in the temporal superior quadrant (10.76 μm and 20.09 μm mean decrease, respectively). The RT thickness was also decreased in superior sectors S3 and S6 (mean thinning of 9.92 μm and 11.65 μm, respectively). Spearman’s correlation coefficient showed a direct association between pRNFL in the temporal superior quadrant and RT in superior S6 and S3 sectors (rS = 0.41; p < 0.001 and rS = 0.28; p < 0.001, respectively).ConclusionsPatients with AD showed a significant thickness reduction in global and temporal superior quadrants in pRNFL and in superior pericentral and peripheral sectors of RT. These findings may reflect a peripapillary and retinal changes characteristic of AD, suggesting the importance of SD-OCT as a potential adjuvant in early diagnosis of AD. Further studies are needed to understand which retinal layers and macular sectors are more useful as potential ocular biomarker over time in AD.
Alzheimer's & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring | 2017
João Paulo Cunha; Rita Proença; Arnaldo Dias-Santos; Diana Melancia; Rita Almeida; Helena Águas; B. Santos; Marta Alves; Joana Ferreira; Ana Luísa Papoila; Carlota Louro; António Castanheira-Dinis
The purpose of this study was to measure and to compare macular choroidal thickness (CT) between patients with mild Alzheimers disease (AD), patients without AD, and elderly patients.
Case Reports | 2018
Rita Proença; Júlia Fernandes; Miguel N. Burnier; Rui Proença
The authors report a case of an orbital metastasis from an occult breast carcinoma. A 66-year-old woman presented with a growing left orbital tumour. Orbital CT scan was consistent with lymphoma. However, ocular pathology revealed small neoplastic cells showing an ‘indian file pattern’ suggestive of metastatic carcinoma and immunohistochemistry was positive for CK7, CK CAM5.2 and oestrogen receptor. A systemic evaluation was then performed with mammogram, breast ultrasound and MRI considered normal. An exhaustive systemic evaluation revealed multiple bone lesions, a right axillary lymph node lesion, which presented the same pattern on pathology and immunohistochemistry, with no evidence of a primary tumour. A diagnosis of a metastatic lobular carcinoma of the breast (T0, N1, M1) was made and the patient was started on chemotherapy and adjuvant hormonal therapy.
Autoimmunity Reviews | 2018
Arnaldo Dias-Santos; Rita Proença; Joana Tavares Ferreira; Sofia Pinheiro; João Paulo da Silva Cunha; Rui Proença; Maria Francisca Moraes-Fontes
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune connective tissue disorder that can involve any organ system. Central nervous system involvement can be a severe life threatening complication, ultimately resulting in severe neurodegenerative changes. Magnetic resonance imaging suggests that neurodegeneration, which may have deleterious effects on brain function, may occur early in SLE and experimental models suggest that neuroprotection may be feasible and beneficial. The retina is an extension of the brain. Recent ophthalmic imaging technologies are capable of identifying early changes in retinal and choroidal morphology and circulation that may reflect CNS degeneration. However, their utility in monitoring CNS involvement in SLE has been poorly studied as these have only been performed in small cohorts, in a cross-sectional design, non-quantitatively and without correlation to disease activity. The authors aim to review the current understanding of neurodegeneration associated with SLE, with particular focus on the visual pathway. We describe the neuropathology of the visual system in SLE and the evidence for retinal and choroidal neurodegenerative and microvascular changes using optical coherence tomography technology. We aim to describe the potential role of optical imaging modalities in NPSLE diagnosis and their likely impact on the study of neuronal function.
Special Session on Biomedical Optical Imaging and Nanomedicine | 2017
Rita Proença; Joana Ferreira; João Paulo Cunha
Anterior segment imaging optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) can be a useful aid in glaucoma surgery. Recent studies have shown its importance in both the preoperative morphologic evaluation of glaucoma patients as well as postoperative evaluation of filtering bleb functionality. Our purpose is to evaluate posttrabeculectomy filtering and non-filtering bleb characteristics in both time-domain OCT (TD-OCT, VisanteTM, Carl Zeiss) and spectral-domain OCT (SD-OCT, Heidelberg Spectralis ® anterior segment module), assess the usefulness of AS-OCT in evaluating postoperative filtering bleb function and compare both methods results. AS-OCT as a useful exam in determining functioning and non-functioning bleb characteristics. SD-OCT with an anterior segment module had a better performance in examining fine bleb features and performed better than in previous studies in examining deeper structures.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2017
Joana Tavares Ferreira; Rita Proença; Marta Alves; Arnaldo Dias-Santos; B. Santos; João Paulo Cunha; Ana Luísa Papoila; Luís Abegão Pinto
Retina-the Journal of Retinal and Vitreous Diseases | 2017
Joana Tavares Ferreira; André Vicente; Rita Proença; B. Santos; João Paulo da Silva Cunha; Marta Alves; Ana Luísa Papoila; Luís Abegão Pinto
Revista Sociedade Portuguesa de Oftalmologia | 2017
Rita Proença; João Paulo Cunha
Revista Sociedade Portuguesa de Oftalmologia | 2017
Sara Crisóstomo; Joana Cardigos; L. Costa; Rita Proença; Nuno Coelho; Rita Anjos; Mariana Cardoso; Teresa Gomes