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Dive into the research topics where Roselene Matte is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Roselene Matte.


Revista Latino-americana De Enfermagem | 2016

Reducing bed rest time from five to three hours does not increase complications after cardiac catheterization: the THREE CATH Trial

Roselene Matte; Thamires de Souza Hilário; Rejane Reich; Graziella Badin Aliti; Eneida Rejane Rabelo-Silva

Objective: to compare the incidence of vascular complications in patients undergoing transfemoral cardiac catheterization with a 6F introducer sheath followed by 3-hour versus 5-hour rest. Methods: randomized clinical trial. Subjects in the intervention group (IG) ambulated 3 hours after sheath removal, versus 5 hours in the control group (CG). All patients remained in the catheterization laboratory for 5 hours and were assessed hourly, and were contacted 24, 48, and 72 h after hospital discharge. Results: the sample comprised 367 patients in the IG and 363 in the GC. During cath lab stay, hematoma was the most common complication in both groups, occurring in 12 (3%) IG and 13 (4%) CG subjects (P=0.87). Bleeding occurred in 4 (1%) IG and 6 (2%) CG subjects (P=0.51), and vasovagal reaction in 5 (1.4%) IG and 4 (1.1%) CG subjects (P=0.75). At 24-h, 48-h, and 72-h bruising was the most commonly reported complication in both groups. None of the comparisons revealed any significant between-group differences. Conclusion: the results of this trial show that reducing bed rest time to 3 hours after elective cardiac catheterization is safe and does not increase complications as compared with a 5-hour rest. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT-01740856Abstract Objective: to compare the incidence of vascular complications in patients undergoing transfemoral cardiac catheterization with a 6F introducer sheath followed by 3-hour versus 5-hour rest. Methods: randomized clinical trial. Subjects in the intervention group (IG) ambulated 3 hours after sheath removal, versus 5 hours in the control group (CG). All patients remained in the catheterization laboratory for 5 hours and were assessed hourly, and were contacted 24, 48, and 72 h after hospital discharge. Results: the sample comprised 367 patients in the IG and 363 in the GC. During cath lab stay, hematoma was the most common complication in both groups, occurring in 12 (3%) IG and 13 (4%) CG subjects (P=0.87). Bleeding occurred in 4 (1%) IG and 6 (2%) CG subjects (P=0.51), and vasovagal reaction in 5 (1.4%) IG and 4 (1.1%) CG subjects (P=0.75). At 24-h, 48-h, and 72-h bruising was the most commonly reported complication in both groups. None of the comparisons revealed any significant between-group differences. Conclusion: the results of this trial show that reducing bed rest time to 3 hours after elective cardiac catheterization is safe and does not increase complications as compared with a 5-hour rest. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT-01740856


Revista Latino-americana De Enfermagem | 2018

Vascular complications in patients who underwent endovascular cardiac procedures: multicenter cohort study

Angelita Paganin; Mariur Gomes Beghetto; Maria Karolina Echer Ferreira Feijó; Roselene Matte; Jaquelini Messer Sauer; Eneida Rejane Rabelo-Silva

ABSTRACT Objective: to analyze vascular complications among patients who underwent endovascular cardiac procedures in the hemodynamic laboratories of three referral centers. Method: a multicenter cohort study was conducted in three referral facilities. The sample was composed of 2,696 adult patients who had undergone elective or urgent percutaneous cardiac procedures. The outcomes were vascular complications, such as: hematoma at the site of the arterial puncture; major or minor bleeding; surgical correction for retroperitoneal hemorrhage; pseudoaneurysm; and arteriovenous fistula. Results: 237 (8.8%) of the 2,696 patients presented a vascular complication at the site of the arterial puncture. The total number of vascular complications was 264: minor hematoma<10cm (n=135); stable bleeding (n=86); major hematoma ≥10cm (n=32); and unstable bleeding (n=11). There were no retroperitoneal hematoma events, pseudoaneurysm or arterial venous fistula. Most of the major and minor complications occurred in the first six hours after the procedure. Conclusion: the results concerning the current context of interventional cardiology indicate that the complications predominantly occur in the first six hours after the procedure, considering a 48-hour follow-up. The staff should plan and implement preventive measures immediately after the procedures.


Revista Latino-americana De Enfermagem | 2016

La reducción del reposo de cinco para tres horas no aumenta las complicaciones después del Clinical Trial Three Cath

Roselene Matte; Thamires de Souza Hilário; Rejane Reich; Graziella Badin Aliti; Eneida Rejane Rabelo-Silva

Objective: to compare the incidence of vascular complications in patients undergoing transfemoral cardiac catheterization with a 6F introducer sheath followed by 3-hour versus 5-hour rest. Methods: randomized clinical trial. Subjects in the intervention group (IG) ambulated 3 hours after sheath removal, versus 5 hours in the control group (CG). All patients remained in the catheterization laboratory for 5 hours and were assessed hourly, and were contacted 24, 48, and 72 h after hospital discharge. Results: the sample comprised 367 patients in the IG and 363 in the GC. During cath lab stay, hematoma was the most common complication in both groups, occurring in 12 (3%) IG and 13 (4%) CG subjects (P=0.87). Bleeding occurred in 4 (1%) IG and 6 (2%) CG subjects (P=0.51), and vasovagal reaction in 5 (1.4%) IG and 4 (1.1%) CG subjects (P=0.75). At 24-h, 48-h, and 72-h bruising was the most commonly reported complication in both groups. None of the comparisons revealed any significant between-group differences. Conclusion: the results of this trial show that reducing bed rest time to 3 hours after elective cardiac catheterization is safe and does not increase complications as compared with a 5-hour rest. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT-01740856Abstract Objective: to compare the incidence of vascular complications in patients undergoing transfemoral cardiac catheterization with a 6F introducer sheath followed by 3-hour versus 5-hour rest. Methods: randomized clinical trial. Subjects in the intervention group (IG) ambulated 3 hours after sheath removal, versus 5 hours in the control group (CG). All patients remained in the catheterization laboratory for 5 hours and were assessed hourly, and were contacted 24, 48, and 72 h after hospital discharge. Results: the sample comprised 367 patients in the IG and 363 in the GC. During cath lab stay, hematoma was the most common complication in both groups, occurring in 12 (3%) IG and 13 (4%) CG subjects (P=0.87). Bleeding occurred in 4 (1%) IG and 6 (2%) CG subjects (P=0.51), and vasovagal reaction in 5 (1.4%) IG and 4 (1.1%) CG subjects (P=0.75). At 24-h, 48-h, and 72-h bruising was the most commonly reported complication in both groups. None of the comparisons revealed any significant between-group differences. Conclusion: the results of this trial show that reducing bed rest time to 3 hours after elective cardiac catheterization is safe and does not increase complications as compared with a 5-hour rest. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT-01740856


Revista Latino-americana De Enfermagem | 2016

Redução do repouso de cinco para três horas não aumenta complicações após cateterismo cardíaco: THREE CATH Clinical Trial

Roselene Matte; Thamires de Souza Hilário; Rejane Reich; Graziella Badin Aliti; Eneida Rejane Rabelo-Silva

Objective: to compare the incidence of vascular complications in patients undergoing transfemoral cardiac catheterization with a 6F introducer sheath followed by 3-hour versus 5-hour rest. Methods: randomized clinical trial. Subjects in the intervention group (IG) ambulated 3 hours after sheath removal, versus 5 hours in the control group (CG). All patients remained in the catheterization laboratory for 5 hours and were assessed hourly, and were contacted 24, 48, and 72 h after hospital discharge. Results: the sample comprised 367 patients in the IG and 363 in the GC. During cath lab stay, hematoma was the most common complication in both groups, occurring in 12 (3%) IG and 13 (4%) CG subjects (P=0.87). Bleeding occurred in 4 (1%) IG and 6 (2%) CG subjects (P=0.51), and vasovagal reaction in 5 (1.4%) IG and 4 (1.1%) CG subjects (P=0.75). At 24-h, 48-h, and 72-h bruising was the most commonly reported complication in both groups. None of the comparisons revealed any significant between-group differences. Conclusion: the results of this trial show that reducing bed rest time to 3 hours after elective cardiac catheterization is safe and does not increase complications as compared with a 5-hour rest. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT-01740856Abstract Objective: to compare the incidence of vascular complications in patients undergoing transfemoral cardiac catheterization with a 6F introducer sheath followed by 3-hour versus 5-hour rest. Methods: randomized clinical trial. Subjects in the intervention group (IG) ambulated 3 hours after sheath removal, versus 5 hours in the control group (CG). All patients remained in the catheterization laboratory for 5 hours and were assessed hourly, and were contacted 24, 48, and 72 h after hospital discharge. Results: the sample comprised 367 patients in the IG and 363 in the GC. During cath lab stay, hematoma was the most common complication in both groups, occurring in 12 (3%) IG and 13 (4%) CG subjects (P=0.87). Bleeding occurred in 4 (1%) IG and 6 (2%) CG subjects (P=0.51), and vasovagal reaction in 5 (1.4%) IG and 4 (1.1%) CG subjects (P=0.75). At 24-h, 48-h, and 72-h bruising was the most commonly reported complication in both groups. None of the comparisons revealed any significant between-group differences. Conclusion: the results of this trial show that reducing bed rest time to 3 hours after elective cardiac catheterization is safe and does not increase complications as compared with a 5-hour rest. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT-01740856


Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome | 2017

Elevated serum interleukin-6 is predictive of coronary artery disease in intermediate risk overweight patients referred for coronary angiography

Marco Vugman Wainstein; Márcio Mossmann; Gustavo Neves de Araújo; Sandro Cadaval Gonçalves; Gabriela L. Gravina; Marlei Sangalli; Francine Veadrigo; Roselene Matte; Rejane Reich; Fernanda Guimarães Costa; Michael Andrades; Antônio Marcos Vargas da Silva; Marcello Casaccia Bertoluci


Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome | 2015

HOMA-IR is associated with significant angiographic coronary artery disease in non-diabetic, non-obese individuals: a cross-sectional study

Márcio Mossmann; Marco Vugman Wainstein; Sandro Cadaval Gonçalves; Rodrigo V. Wainstein; Gabriela L. Gravina; Marlei Sangalli; Francine Veadrigo; Roselene Matte; Rejane Reich; Fernanda Guimarães Costa; Marcello Casaccia Bertoluci


Archive | 2016

MitraClip® : relato do primeiro caso de tratamento percutâneo da insuficiência mitral em hospital da região sul

Paola Severo Romero; Rejane Reich; Luana Claudia Jacoby Silveira; Márcia Flores Casco; Simone Marques dos Santos; Juliana Kruger; Roselene Matte; Camille Lacerda Correa; Graziella Badin Aliti; Eneida Rejane Rabelo da Silva


Archive | 2016

VASCOR-Score : estratificação de complicações vasculares baseada nos diagnósticos de enfermagem prioritário

Angelita Paganin; Mariur Gomes Beghetto; Thamires de Souza Hilário; Camille Lacerda Correa; Cátia Souza Portela; Daniela de Souza Bernardes; Roselene Matte; Eneida Rejane Rabelo da Silva; Marian Pizza


Archive | 2015

Derivação e validação de um escore de risco para complicações vasculares em pacientes submetidos a procedimentos cardiológicos invasivos em hemodinâmica

Angelita Paganin; Mariur Gomes Beghetto; Vania Naomi Hirakata; Roselene Matte; Jaqueline Sauer; Thamires de Souza Hilário; Eneida Rejane Rabelo da Silva


Archive | 2015

Associação de resistência à insulina e doença arterial coronariana em pacientes normoglicêmicos

Gabriela L. Gravina; Márcio Mossmann; Francine Veadrigo; Marlei Sangalli; Marcello Casaccia Bertoluci; Marco Vugman Wainstein; Roselene Matte; Rejane Rech

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Rejane Reich

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Graziella Badin Aliti

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Eneida Rejane Rabelo da Silva

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Thamires de Souza Hilário

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Fernanda Guimarães Costa

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Eneida Rejane Rabelo-Silva

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Mariur Gomes Beghetto

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Angelita Paganin

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Francine Veadrigo

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Gabriela L. Gravina

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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