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1.
Rev. bras. cardiol. invasiva ; 23(1): 52-57, abr.-jun.2015. tab, graf, ilus
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-782175

ABSTRACT

O ultrassom intracoronário (USIC) é o método adjunto mais utilizado na Cardiologia Intervencionista, e sua análise depende de normas para a aquisição, mensuração e interpretação das imagens. Ao associar a caracterização tecidual, o artefato causado pelo fio-guia pode hiperestimaro porcentual de núcleo necrótico em determinadas lesões, levando à classificação equivocada defibroateroma. Descrevemos os efeitos quantitativos e na análise tecidual resultantes da subtração do efeitodo artefato do fio-guia nas lesões ateroscleróticas em pacientes com síndrome coronária aguda. Métodos: Foram avaliados 21 pacientes com infarto do miocárdio pós-trombólise com USIC em escala de cinzas e com a tecnologia iMAP®, totalizando 76 lesões.Resultados: O USIC em escala de cinzas mostrou que as lesões tinham extensão média de 21,01 ± 18,03 mm e apresentavam elevada carga de placa (52,07 ± 7,56%). A análise pelo iMAP® demonstrou que, após a subtração do artefato do fio-guia, houve redução de todos os componentes teciduais (necrótico, calcífico, lipídico e fibrótico), porém de maneira mais acentuada do núcleo necrótico (diferença média de 3,59%). Além disso, após a subtração do artefato, 12,4% das lesões que inicialmente apresentavam núcleo necrótico ≥ 10% passaram a não ser mais classificadas como fibroateroma.Conclusões: A análise da placa de ateroma pela tecnologia iMAP® mostrou que o artefato do fio-guia superestimou o componente tecidual do núcleo necrótico. Essa interferência pode mudar errônea e categoricamente as características fenotípicas de lesões mais benignas e estáveis (fibróticas) para lesões potencialmente instáveis, como os fibroateromas, na relação de um em cada dez pacientes...


Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is the most widely used ancillary method in Interventional Cardiology, and its analysis depends on standards for acquisition, measurement and interpretation of the images. By associating tissue characterization, the artifact caused by the guidewire may overestimate the percentage of necrotic core in certain lesions, leading to misclassification of fibroatheroma. In this paper we described quantitative and tissue analysis effects resulting from subtracting the effect of guidewire artifact on atherosclerotic lesions in patients with acute coronary syndrome. Methods: Twenty-one patients with post-thrombolysis myocardial infarction were evaluated with grayscale IVUS and iMAPTM technology, totaling 76 lesions. Results: Grayscale IVUS showed that the lesions had a mean length of 21.01 ± 18.03 mm and revealed highplaque burden (52.07 ± 7.56%). The analysis by iMAPTM demonstrated that, after subtracting the guidewire artifact, there was a reduction of all tissue (necrotic, calcific, lipid and fibrotic) components, but more markedly in necrotic core (mean difference: 3.59%). In addition, after artifact subtraction 12.4% of the lesions that initially exhibited a necrotic core ≥ 10% ceased to be classified as fibroatheroma.Conclusions: An atheroma analysis by iMAPTM technology showed that the guidewire artifact over estimated the tissue component of the necrotic core. This interference may change, in an erroneous and categoric alway, the phenotypic characteristics of more stable and benign (fibrotic) lesions to potentially unstable lesions, for example, fibroatheromas, in a ratio of one out of ten patients...


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Evaluation Studies as Topic/methods , Patients , Drug Therapy , Acute Coronary Syndrome/therapy , Ultrasonography/methods , Coronary Angiography/methods , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Risk Factors , Myocardial Infarction/therapy , Plaque, Atherosclerotic/diagnosis , Plaque, Atherosclerotic/therapy , Thrombolytic Therapy/methods
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 103(2): 201-206, Mar. 2008.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-480635

ABSTRACT

Viruses are the leading cause for hospitalization due to gastroenteritis worldwide. Group A rotaviruses (RV) are the most prevalent and are assorted in glycoproteins (G) and protease sensitive (P) dual genotypes based on polymorphic genes that encode the external VP7 and VP4 capsid proteins, respectively. Noroviruses (NoV) have increasingly answered by sporadic gastroenteritis. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of NoV and RV in 68 hospitalized children, between July 2004 and November 2006, at a pediatric hospital in Vitória city, state of Espírito Santo, Southeastern Brazil. Nucleic acid was extracted from fecal suspension following the guanidine-silica procedure. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were employed for NoV and RV detection, respectively. RV genotyping was accomplished using RT-PCR followed by heminested multiplex PCR with specific primers for the most prevalent types of G and P. Fecal samples were positive for NoV and RV in 39.7 percent (27/68) and 20.5 percent (14/68), respectively and together were responsible for 60 percent (41/68) of the cases. RV genotypes were: 50 percent G9P[8], 28.7 percent G2P[4], 7.1 percent G1P[8], G2P[8] and G?P[8]. Vomit was a prominent manifestation observed in 92 percent and 85 percent of the NoV and RV cases, respectively. The median hospitalization was 5 and 5.5 days for the patients infected with NoV and RV, respectively. The data showed that NoV prevailed over RV and it also corroborated the emergence of RV G9 genotype followed by G2P[4], reinforcing the need for RV genotype surveillance.


Subject(s)
Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Caliciviridae Infections/virology , Gastroenteritis/virology , Norovirus/genetics , Rotavirus Infections/virology , Rotavirus/genetics , Brazil , Caliciviridae Infections/diagnosis , Caliciviridae Infections/epidemiology , DNA, Complementary/analysis , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Feces/virology , Genotype , Gastroenteritis/diagnosis , Gastroenteritis/epidemiology , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Norovirus/isolation & purification , Prevalence , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Rotavirus Infections/diagnosis , Rotavirus Infections/epidemiology , Rotavirus/isolation & purification
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