Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida
University of São Paulo
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Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2007
José Antonio Miguel Marcondes; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Cristiano Roberto Grimaldi Barcellos; Michelle P. Rocha; Gustavo Arantes Rosa Maciel; Edmund Chada Baracat
The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of metabolic syndrome in women with polycystic ovary syndrome, as well as its characteristics and predictors. Seventh-three women, with body mass index of 30.4 +/- 7.8 kg/m2 and 25.0 +/- 6.0 years old, subdivided according to body mass index, were studied retrospectively. There was no significant mean age difference among body mass index groups (p = 0.228). Prevalence of metabolic syndrome was 38.4%, with a null prevalence for normal (n = 18), 23.8% for overweight (n = 17), 62.9% for obese (n = 28), and 85.5% for morbidly obese women (n = 7). Women with metabolic syndrome were older than women without metabolic syndrome (27.3 +/- 5.3 vs. 24.2 +/- 4.6 vs. years old; p = 0.031) and presented a higher body mass index (36.3 +/- 7.7 vs. 26.9 +/- 5.4; p < 0.001). There was no difference for degree of hirsutism and menstrual patterns between women with and without metabolic syndrome (p = 0.593 and p = 0.119, respectively). Regarding laboratory parameters, DHEAS was lower (1,646 +/- 1,007 vs. 2,594 +/- 1,563; p = 0.007) and HOMA-IR were higher (9.9 +/- 9.7 vs. 4.6 +/- 4.7; p = 0.004) in women with metabolic syndrome (p = 0.031 and p < 0.001, respectively). The best predictors of metabolic syndrome were waist circumference > 88 cm, HDL-cholesterol < 50 mg/dL and triglycerides >or= 150 mg/dL.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2007
Cristiano Roberto Grimaldi Barcellos; Michelle P. Rocha; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Marcia Nery; José Antonio Miguel Marcondes
Patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) present a higher risk for abnormalities of glucose metabolism (AGM). For to study this in our population, we submitted 85 patients, with body mass index (BMI) of 28.5 +/- 6.6 kg/m(2) and aged 25.5 +/- 5.4 years old, to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), and assessed the impact of BMI on the prevalence of impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and of diabetes mellitus (DM). The states of glucose tolerance were classified considering fasting plasma glucose (FPG) according to the American Diabetes Association (ADA) criterion and plasma glucose at 120 minutes according to the Word Health Organization (WHO) criterion. According to the ADA criteria, 83.5% classified as normal and 16.5% as with AGM, with 15.3% presenting impaired fasting glucose and 1.2% DM, while according to the WHO criteria, 68.2% were classified as normal and 31.8% as with AGM, with 27.0% of them presenting IGT and 4.8% DM. Seventy-three percent of PCOS patients with IGT by WHO criterion had normal FPG by ADA criterion. The prevalence of AGM for both criteria increased with the body mass index. In conclusion, we found a higher prevalence of AGM in PCOS patients than that found in the general population, being the highest in obese patients. Glycemia at 120 minutes on the OGTT identified more patients with AGM than fasting glycemia. We recommended that the assessment of AGM must be done by the OGTT in all patients with PCOS.
Gynecological Endocrinology | 2011
Rocha Mp; Marcondes Ja; Barcellos Cr; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Daniella D.G. Curi; da Fonseca Âm; Vicente Renato Bagnoli; Edmund Chada Baracat
One hundred forty-two women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) with an average body mass index (BMI) of 29.1 kg/m2 and average age of 25.12 years were studied. By BMI, 30.2% were normal, 38.0% were overweight and 31.6% were obese. Thirty-one eumenorrheic women matched for BMI and age, with no evidence of hyperandrogenism, were recruited as controls. The incidence of dyslipidemia in the PCOS group was twice that of the Control group (76.1% versus 32.25%). The most frequent abnormalities were low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C; 57.6%) and high triglyceride (TG) (28.3%). HDL-C was significantly lower in all subgroups of women with PCOS when compared to the subgroups of normal women. No significant differences were seen in the total cholesterol (p = 0.307), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C; p = 0.283) and TGs (p = 0.113) levels among the subgroups. An independent effect on HDL-C was detected for glucose (p = 0.004) and fasting insulin (p = 0.01); on TG for age (p = 0.003) and homeostatic model assessment insulin resistance (p = 0.03) and on total cholesterol and LDL-C for age (p = 0.02 and p = 0.033, respectively). In conclusion, dyslipidemia is common in women with PCOS, mainly due to low HDL-C levels. BMI has a significant impact on this abnormality.
Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 1997
José A. M. Marcondes; Marcia Nery; Berenice B. Mendonca; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Hans Wolfgang Halbe; Filomena Marino Carvalho; Bernardo L. Wajchenberg
A 34-yr-old nulliparous black woman presented with hair loss, facial hirsutism, irregular menses and infertility associated with greatly increased serum total testosterone levels. The adrenal glands and the ovaries were normal on radiological and ultrasonographic investigation. Catheterization of the veins draining from the adrenal glands and the ovaries yielded testosterone levels of 20.3 nmol/L and 20.0 nmo/L in the right and the left adrenal veins, respectively, and 17.9 nmol/L and 27.4 nmol/L in the right and left ovaries venous plexus, respectively. Sequencial dexamethasone and ethynyl estradiol suppression test showed a decrease in cortisol level with no change in total testosterone level on dexamethasone while an increase in testosterone from 10.5 nmol/L to 20.1 nmol/L was observed ten days after ethynil estradiol had been associated to dexamethasone. When a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (gonadorelin 3.5 mg IM) was administered for 2 months, serum gonadotropins levels decreased to less than 2 IU/L, total testosterone to 3.8 nmol/L and estradiol to less than 36 pmol/L. The patient was submitted to a pelvic exploratory laparotomy and a left salpingo-oophorectomy was performed. A solid and circumscribed ovarian tumor of 1.0 cm in diameter was found. The pathological diagnosis was a Leydig cell tumor with surrounding stromal hyperplasia. These findings may suggest that this tumor was gonadotropin-dependent being indirectly stimulated by ethynil estradiol, through a sensitization of the pituitary gonadotropes and increase in gonadotropin levels and suppressed by a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist.
Fertility and Sterility | 2010
Michelle P. Rocha; Raul C. Maranhão; Talita de Mattos Seydell; Cristiano Roberto Grimaldi Barcellos; E.C. Baracat; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Sérgio Paulo Bydlowski; José Antonio Miguel Marcondes
OBJECTIVE To clarify whether the metabolism of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins and lipid transfer to high-density lipoprotein (HDL) are altered in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). DESIGN Case-control study. SETTING Endocrinology clinics. PATIENT(S) Eight normal-weight (NW) and 15 obese (Ob) patients with PCOS were compared with 10 NW and 10 Ob women without PCOS paired for age and body mass index. INTERVENTION(S) Determination of triglyceride-rich lipoprotein metabolism and lipid transfer to HDL. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Participants were injected triglyceride-rich emulsions labeled with (14)C-cholesteryl esters and (3)H-triglycerides and the fractional clearance rate (FCR, in min(-1)) of labels was determined. Lipid transfer from artificial nanoemulsions to HDL was performed by incubating radioactively labeled lipid nanoemulsions with plasma during 1 hour, followed by radioactive counting of HDL-containing supernatant after chemical precipitation. RESULT(S) Lipolysis estimated by triglyceride FCR was equal in PCOS groups (NW = 0.043 +/- 0.032, Ob = 0.033 +/- 0.009) and respective controls (NW = 0.039 +/- 0.015, Ob = 0.044 +/- 0.019). However, the remnant removal as estimated by cholesteryl ester FCR was reduced in both PCOS groups (NW = 0.005 +/- 0.006, Ob = 0.005 +/- 0.005) compared with controls (NW = 0.016 +/- 0.006, Ob = 0.011 +/- 0.072). Lipid transfer rates were not different among groups, but triglyceride transfer rates were positively correlated with homeostasis model assessment estimate of insulin resistance in PCOS. CONCLUSION(S) PCOS patients showed decreased removal of atherogenic remnants even when fasting glucose was <100 mg/dL. This reinforces the usefulness of the measures taken to prevent cardiovascular events in PCOS patients.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2007
Cristiano Roberto Grimaldi Barcellos; Michelle P. Rocha; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Décio Mion Júnior; Silvia G. Lage; José Antonio Miguel Marcondes
As there is controversy about the prevalence of hypertension in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and, up to the present moment, no studies have evaluated the impact of body mass index (BMI) on blood pressure levels (BP) in these patients, we studied retrospectively sixty-nine patients with PCOS, with BMI of 29.0 +/- 6.7 kg/m(2) and aged 25.6 +/-5.6 yr, subdivided into three groups according to BMI (normal, overweight and obese) and evaluated regarding BP (mercury sphygmomanometer), basal hormonal profile, fasting glucose, and insulin sensitivity (HOMA-IR). Mean systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) were normal (118.1 +/- 17.0 and 74.7+/- 11.5 mmHg, respectively), with a hypertension prevalence of 20.3%. Of these patients, 78.6% were obese and 21.4% were overweight. When the groups were compared according to BMI, a significant increase in SBP and DBP was observed (higher in overweight and obese patients for SBP and higher in obese for DBP), as well as a significant progressive increase in glucose, insulin, homeostatic model assessment, and a significant progressive decline in LH levels. When the patients were subdivided as normotensive or hypertensive, a significant difference was observed only for BMI (28.2 +/- 6.1 and 34.7 +/- 8.6 kg/m(2), respectively; p = 0.007). In conclusion, we observed a significant and progressive impact of BMI on blood pressure levels in our patients with polycystic ovary syndrome.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2008
José Antonio Miguel Marcondes; Daniela D. G. Curi; Cezar Noboru Matsuzaki; Cristiano Roberto Grimaldi Barcellos; Michelle P. Rocha; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Edmund Chada Baracat
Adrenal incidentaloma is not infrequent and can be found in hirsute women. We report a case of a 54-year-old woman with amenorrhea and hirsutism of abrupt onset and mild signs of virilization that had an adrenal incidentaloma coexisting with ovarian hyperthecosis. Basal total and free testosterone were 191 ng/dL and 179 pmol/L. Pelvic ultrasonography disclosed a right ovary with 10.3 cc and a left ovary with 9.8 cc without nodules or cysts, and computerized tomography of the abdomen disclosed a normal right adrenal gland. On the left adrenal gland a solid nodule with 0.8 cm was seen. After GnRHa administration, total testosterone was 23 ng/dL and free testosterone was 17 pmol/L. In view of a suppression of testosterone by GnRHa, the patient was submitted to a hystero-oophorectomy by laparoscopy. Symmetrically enlarged ovaries were seen. No tumor was apparent. Histology showed hyperthecosis, with foci of luteinized stromal cells. Only atretic follicles were detected. No hilar cell hyperplasia was seen. In conclusion, the presence of an adrenal mass in a hirsute woman can lead to a wrong diagnosis. In this case the suppression GnRHa test was fundamental to determine the origin of hyperandrogenemia.
Gynecological Endocrinology | 2013
Cristiano Roberto Grimaldi Barcellos; Silvia G Lage; Michelle P. Rocha; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Edmund Chade Baracat; Angela Romano; Vinicius Nahime Brito; José Antonio Miguel Marcondes
Abstract The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and obesity on vascular parameters related to early atherosclerosis (VP-EA) [brachial flow-mediated dilation (FMD), carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) and carotid arterial compliance (CAC)] in women with minor cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs). Twenty-five young women with PCOS and 23 eumenorrheic women matched for body mass index (BMI) were studied. The women were subdivided according to BMI and PCOS status, and comparisons were done between PCOS and Control group, regardless of BMI, and between Obese and Lean group, regardless of the presence of PCOS. Insulin resistance was higher in PCOS-group than in control-group and in obese-group than in lean-group. The median of all VP-EA evaluated were similar between PCOS-group and Control-group [FMD: 6.6 versus 8.4% (p = NS); CIMT: 48.0 versus 47.0 mm.10-2 (p = NS); CAC: 6.2 versus 5.6N-1.m4.10-10 (p = NS)] and between obese-group and lean-group [FMD: 7.8 versus 6.6% (p = NS); CIMT: 48.0 versus 47.0 mm.10-2 (p = NS); CAC: 5.7 versus 6.3N-1.m4.10-10 (p = NS)]. These results suggest that PCOS and obesity do not affect VP-EA in women with minor CVRFs.
Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2011
André M. Faria; Ricardo Vessoni Perez; José Antonio Miguel Marcondes; Daniel Soares Freire; Roberto Blasbalg; José Soares; Kleber Simões; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Maria Adelaide Albergaria Pereira
Background. A 33-year-old woman presented to an endocrinology clinic with a 5-year history of secondary amenorrhea. 2 years before presentation, she had noticed progressively worsening signs of virilization.Investigations. Measurement of levels of serum free and total testosterone, androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate and gonadotropins; transvaginal ultrasonography, abdominal and pelvic MRI and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET imaging.Diagnosis. Virilization secondary to an ovarian Leydig cell tumor.Management. The patient underwent a left salpingo-oophorectomy that confirmed the diagnosis of a unilateral Leydig cell tumor. Complete normalization of androgens and gonadotropin levels was achieved after surgery.
Gene | 2014
Mariani Carla Prudente Batista; Eliane de Fatima Duarte; Michele Delarmelina dos Reis Borba; Emilie Zingler; João Mangussi-Gomes; Beatriz Taynara Araújo dos Santos; Olivia Laquis de Moraes; Sylvia Asaka Yamashita Hayashida; Edmund Chada Baracat; Francisco de Assis Rocha Neves; Gustavo Arantes Rosa Maciel; Tania Aparecida Sartori Sanchez Bachega; Gustavo Barcelos Barra; Adriana Lofrano-Porto
INTRODUCTION Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) is a complex endocrine disorder, of multifactorial etiology, which affects 6-10% of women of reproductive age. It is considered the leading cause of anovulatory infertility, menstrual disorders and hyperandrogenism in this population. The genetic basis of PCOS is still largely unknown despite significant family clustering; determining its mode of inheritance is particularly difficult given the heterogenic presentation of the disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS 130 Brazilian women, aged 14-42 years, who met the 2003 Rotterdam criteria for PCOS diagnosis, were included, and 96 healthy women constituted the control group. Presence of hirsutism was classified using the modified Ferriman-Gallwey score (F-G score) as absent (≤7), mild (8-14), and severe (≥15). Blood levels of luteinizing hormone (LH), total testosterone (TT), dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) and androstenedione were determined. The coding region of the luteinizing hormone beta-subunit (LHB) gene was amplified and sequenced. Differences in allelic and genotypic frequency distribution of each polymorphism across controls and cases were estimated by the Mantel-Haenszel chi-square or Fishers exact test (p<0.05), and the probability of an association between the detection of a polymorphism and presence of a diagnosis of PCOS, by logistic regression. RESULT(S) Sequencing detected 8 polymorphisms in the LHB gene coding region. Two polymorphisms in linkage disequilibrium were significantly more prevalent in the presence of hyperandrogenemia: rs1800447/rs34349826 (Trp28Arg/Ile35Thr) (p=0.02). CONCLUSION(S) In this series, a modulatory effect of LHB polymorphisms on hyperandrogenemia phenotype of PCOS was observed; however, this finding needs to be replicated in other populations.