Teresa Pinho e Melo
University of Lisbon
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Featured researches published by Teresa Pinho e Melo.
Stroke | 2003
Jordi Matías-Guiu; José M. Ferro; José Alvarez-Sabín; Ferran Torres; M. Dolores Jiménez; Aida Lago; Teresa Pinho e Melo
Background and Purpose— The efficacy of the antiplatelet agent triflusal for prevention of vascular events after stroke has been reported in a pilot study. However, there is a need to confirm those results in a larger study. Methods— We performed a randomized, double-blind, multicenter study to test the efficacy of triflusal (600 mg/d) versus aspirin (325 mg/d) for prevention of vascular events in patients with stroke or transient ischemic attack (Triflusal versus Aspirin in Cerebral Infarction Prevention [TACIP]). We assessed a combined end point (incidence of nonfatal ischemic stroke, nonfatal acute myocardial infarction, or vascular death) as well as the incidence of these events separately and the incidence of major hemorrhage. Results— Of 2113 patients, 1058 received triflusal and 1055 aspirin. The mean follow-up period was 30.1 months. The incidence of combined end point (13.1% for triflusal, 12.4% for aspirin) as well the survival analysis (hazard ratio [HR] for triflusal versus aspirin, 1.09; 95% CI, 0.85 to 1.38) showed no differences between groups. The incidence of nonfatal stroke (HR, 1.09; 95% CI, 0.82 to 1.44), nonfatal acute myocardial infarction (HR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.46 to 1.98,) and vascular death (HR, 1.22; 95% CI, 0.75 to 1.96) was also similar. A significantly higher incidence of major hemorrhages in the aspirin group was recorded (HR, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.28 to 0.82). The overall incidence of hemorrhage was significantly lower in the triflusal group (16.7% versus 25.2%) (odds ratio, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.67 to 0.86;P <0.001). Conclusions— This study failed to show significantly superior efficacy of triflusal over aspirin in the long-term prevention of vascular events after stroke, but triflusal was associated with a significantly lower rate of hemorrhagic complications.
Stroke | 1998
José M. Ferro; A. N. Pinto; I. Falcão; G. Rodrigues; Joaquim J. Ferreira; F. Falcão; Elsa Azevedo; P. Canhão; Teresa Pinho e Melo; M.J. Rosas; V. Oliveira; A. V. Salgado
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The first medical contact of an acute stroke victim is often a nonneurologist. Validation of stroke diagnosis made by these medical doctors is poorly known. The present study seeks to validate the stroke diagnoses made by general practitioners (GPs) and hospital emergency service physicians (ESPs). METHODS Validation through direct interview and examination by a neurologist was performed for diagnoses of stroke made by GPs in patients under their care and doctors working at the emergency departments of 3 hospitals. RESULTS Validation of the GP diagnosis was confirmed in 44 cases (85%); 3 patients (6%) had transient ischemic attacks and 5 (9%) suffered from noncerebrovascular disorders. Validation of the ESP diagnosis was confirmed in 169 patients (91%); 16 (9%) had a noncerebrovascular diagnosis. Overall, the most frequent conditions misdiagnosed as stroke were neurological in nature (cerebral tumor, 3; subdural hematoma, 1; seizure, 1; benign paroxysmal postural vertigo, 1; peripheral facial palsy, 2; psychiatric condition, 6; and other medical disorders, 7). CONCLUSIONS In the majority of cases, nonneurologists (either GPs or ESPs) can make a correct diagnosis of acute stroke. Treatment of acute stroke with drugs that do not cause serious side effects can be started before evaluation by a neurologist and CT scan.
Cerebrovascular Diseases | 1994
José M. Ferro; Teresa Pinho e Melo; V. Oliveira; Manuela Crespo; Patrícia Canhão; Amélia N. Pinto
The main factors influencing admission delay of stroke patients were investigated in 309 consecutive cases admitted to the emergency room of a University hospital. All these patients were examined and
Neurology | 1992
Teresa Pinho e Melo; Julien Bogousslavsky; Guy van Melle; Franco Regli
We studied the correlations between the pattern of weakness, stroke type, topography, and etiology in 255 patients whose first stroke was manifested by isolated hemiparesis. They represented 14% of consecutively admitted stroke patients. The weakness distributions were as follows: face, upper limb, and lower limb (FUL) (50%); face and upper limb (FU) (29%); upper limb (U) (10%); and upper and lower limb (UL) (9%). Twenty-nine percent of the patients had dysarthria, which was of no localizing value. Less than one half of the patients had a deep infarct, and one third had a potential embolic source from the heart or large arteries. Logistic regression analysis showed that history of hypertension and type of weakness distribution were the main factors accounting for lesion localization: patients with FUL distribution and hypertension had a 90% probability of deep infarct; patients either with FUL distribution but no hypertension or with UL distribution and hypertension each had 70% probability of deep infarct. Pure motor monoparesis was almost never caused by a deep infarct. We suggest that the assumption of a lacunar etiology to a pure motor stroke should be applied only to patients with FUL involvement.
Neurology | 1996
Teresa Pinho e Melo; Amélia N. Pinto; José M. Ferro
Objectives: We sought to describe the frequency and location of headache in intracerebral hematoma (ICH) and to analyze its clinical and CT predictors by means of multivariate analysis. Background: Headache is more common in intracerebral hemorrhage than in ischemic stroke, and its frequency varies with hematoma location, but the pathophysiologic mechanisms of headache associated with ICH are not fully known. Methods: We examined a cohort of 289 patients with ICH during a 14-month period in a university hospital. Clinical, including the presence and location of headache, and CT features were collected by two neurologists. Results: One hundred and sixty-five (57%) patients with ICH had a headache at the onset of their stroke. Headache was more common in cerebellar and lobar hemorrhages than in deep ones (thalamic, caudate, capsuloputaminal, brainstem). Headache was also more common in women, patients younger than 70 years, those who vomited, and those with meningeal signs, a Glasgow Coma Scale score <10, a hematoma volume >10 ml or CT evidence of intraventricular or subarachnoid bleeding, moderate to severe hydrocephalus, or transtentorial herniation or midline shift. In multiple logistic regression analysis, only meningeal signs (odds ratio [OR] = 2.3), cerebellar or lobar location (OR = 2.1), transtentorial herniation (OR = 1.8), and female gender (OR = 1.6) were significant predictors of headache at the onset of ICH. Conclusions: Hematoma location, meningeal signs, and gender are more predictive of headache than hematoma volume, suggesting that headache is more often related to the activation of an anatomically distributed system in susceptible individuals and to subarachnoid bleeding than to intracranial hypertension. NEUROLOGY 1996;47: 494-500
Cerebrovascular Diseases | 1998
Amélia N. Pinto; Teresa Pinho e Melo; Maria Eduarda Lourenço; Maria José Leandro; Ana Brázio; Leonor Carvalho; António Soares Franco; José M. Ferro
The predictive value of the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project ischemic stroke classification for acute stroke complications, therapeutic interventions and disability at discharge was investigated in 297 consecutive first-ever acute stroke patients. More than one medical complication (odds ratio, OR = 2.2), fever (OR = 2.5) and dependency (Rankin grade >2) at discharge (OR = 2.3) were more frequent in intracerebral hemorrhage patients. Fever and urinary tract infections were the most common complications among ischemic stroke patients. Both were more frequent in total anterior circulation infarct (TACI) patients (OR = 11.5 and OR = 3.7). Neurological deterioration was observed in about 10% of TACI and posterior circulation infarct (POCI) patients. Dependency at discharge was more frequent in TACI patients (OR = 10.3). Logistic regression analysis identified ischemic stroke subgroups (OR = 8.4) and medical complications (OR = 3.8) as predictors of poor outcome (Rankin score ≥4). A clinical classification is useful to predict possible medical and neurological complications in the acute phase, death and dependency at discharge.
Journal of Neurology | 1999
Patrícia Canhão; Filipa Falcão; Teresa Pinho e Melo; Helena Ferro; José M. Ferro
Abstract No data have been published on the role of vascular risk factors for perimesencephalic nonaneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (PMSAH). In a case-control study we compared the prevalence of vascular risk factors in 40 consecutive patients who suffered a perimesencephalic subarachnoid hemorrhage with that in two controls groups: (a) 120 subjects registered with a general practitioner (GP; matched at a 3 : 1 ratio for age and sex) and (b) 81 proxies of patients of a hospital outpatient clinic. A conditional multivariate logistic regression model was performed taking into account the matched design. Hypertension was more frequent among PMSAH patients than among the two control group subjects for men and women. Among women, smoking was more common in PMSAH than in the GP control group. The conditional multivariate logistic regression model confirmed that hypertension was an independent risk factor for PMSAH (P = 0.036) Hypertension is a preventable risk factor of PMSAH.
Cephalalgia | 2008
A Verdelho; José M. Ferro; Teresa Pinho e Melo; Patrícia Canhão; Filipa Falcão
We aimed to describe and classify headaches associated with acute stroke, by interviewing patients consecutively admitted to a stroke unit using a validated headache questionnaire and the International Classification of Headache Disorders of the International Headache Society (IHS). One hundred and twenty-four patients (61% ischaemic and 39% haemorrhagic stroke) reported headache. Headaches started mostly on the day of stroke, were more often continuous, pressure-type, bilateral and located in the anterior region, were increased by movement and by cough and lasted for a mean of 3.8 days. Tension-type was the most frequent type of headache. Eleven per cent of headaches could not be classified using the criteria of the IHS. Previous primary headache was documented in 71 patients. The presence of nausea/vomiting due to acute stroke can confound headache classification using the IHS criteria. In up to half of the patients, headache seems to be a reactivation of previous primary headache.
Cerebrovascular Diseases | 1991
José M. Ferro; José Lopes; Teresa Pinho e Melo; Vânia Darlene Rampazzo Bachega de Oliveira; Manuela Crespo; Jorge Campos; A. Trindade; J.L. Antunes
To analyze the factors that could influence early diagnosis and referral of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), demographic, clinical and neuroradiological data of 112 cases of SAH admitted from January 19
Stroke | 2013
Tatiana V. Kharitonova; Teresa Pinho e Melo; Grethe Andersen; José Antonio Egido; José Castillo; Nils Wahlgren
Background and Purpose— Recanalization status after intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) in patients with ischemic stroke is a reference point to proceed with a rescue reperfusion intervention, although early neurological improvement (NI) may preclude endovascular procedures. We aimed to evaluate the importance of restoration of blood flow at the arterial occlusion site in subgroups of patients with stroke stratified by early NI after IVT. Methods— The following patients were recruited from the Safe Implementation of Treatment in Stroke-International Stroke Thrombolysis Register: (1) with baseline vessel occlusion documented by computed tomographic (CT) or magnetic resonance (MR) angiography and follow-up angioimaging between 22 and 36 hours after IVT available; and (2) with dense cerebral artery sign on admission CT scan and results of follow-up CT reported. Recanalization at 24 hours was defined as absence of vessel occlusion or as resolution of dense cerebral artery sign on follow-up 22- to 36-hour imaging. NI was assessed at 2 hours and 24 hours after IVT and was defined as improvement by 20% from baseline National Institute of Health Stroke scale score. Primary outcome measure was independence, defined as modified Rankin scale score 0 to 2 after 3 months. Results— Of 28136 cases registered between December 2003 and November 2009, 5324 cases (19%) met the inclusion criteria. Patients with both NI at 2 hours post-treatment and vessel recanalization had the best chances to achieve independence at 3 months (adjusted odds ratio, 15.8; 95% confidence interval, 12.5–20.0), followed by those who had NI despite persistent occlusion (adjusted odds ratio, 4.7; 95% confidence interval, 3.6–6.1); and those without NI despite recanalization (adjusted odds ratio, 2.7; 95% confidence interval, 2.2–3.3). Conclusions— Recanalization of an occluded artery in acute stroke is associated with favorable functional outcome both in patients with and without NI after IVT. In future evaluations of mechanical thrombectomy and other additional strategies, recanalization should be considered in patients with persisting occlusion after IVT even after significant NI.