Browsing by Author "Oliveira, FJ"
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- The Coimbra University Hospital experience in liver transplantation in patients with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathyPublication . Perdigoto, R; Furtado, AL; Furtado, E; Oliveira, FJ; Geraldes, B; Mota, O; Ferrão, J; Tomé, L; Viana, JS
- Congenital pancreas malformations: a clinical case reportPublication . Bento, A; Baptista, H; Oliveira, FJOBJECTIVE: This study aimed to review the congenital malformation known as agenesis of the dorsal pancreas (ADP) and other pancreatic birth defects, based on a rare and exemplary clinical case of pancreatic malformations. The intent was to review the latest information published in the national and international literature on pancreatic birth defects, and to investigate the diversity of clinical presentations of ADP and other congenital pancreas abnormalities. The purpose was to identify which situations have therapeutic indication, the most appropriate time to institute treatment, and the currently available medical or surgical treatment of pancreatic congenital malformations. RESULTS: ADP is a very rare malformation that occurs during organogenesis. In the last decades, a large volume of embryological and genetic information has been obtained, helping to understand the causes of pancreatic malformations, which must be studied and understood as a whole. CONCLUSION: Pancreatic malformations are infrequently studied causes of acute and chronic pancreatic in adults. The possibility of pancreatic malformations should always be considered in patients with acute or chronic pancreatitis with no evident cause.
- Coronary surgery in patients with diabetes mellitus: a risk-adjusted study on early outcomePublication . Antunes, PE; Oliveira, FJ; Antunes, MJOBJECTIVES: We aimed at determining the effect of diabetes mellitus (diabetes) on short-term mortality and morbidity in a cohort of patients with ischemic disease undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) at our institution. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A total of 4567 patients undergoing isolated CABG in a 10-year period were studied. Diabetes mellitus was present in 22.6% of the cases but the percentage increased from 19.1% in the beginning to 27% in the end of the study period (p<0.0001 for the decade time-trend). Compared with non-diabetic patients, the group with diabetes was older (61.5+/-8.4 years vs 60.4+/-9.5 years), had a higher body mass index (26.4+/-2.2 vs 26.0+/-2.2), comprised more women (17.5% vs 10.1%), and had a greater incidence of peripheral vascular disease (13.3% vs 8.8%), cerebrovascular disease (8.3% vs 4.3%), renal failure (2.7% vs 1.1%), cardiomegaly (14.0% vs 10.9%), class III-IV angina (43.4% vs 39.0%), triple-vessel disease (80.9% vs 73.7%) and patients with left ventricular dysfunction (all p<0.05). Demographic and peri-procedural data were registered prospectively in a computerized institutional database. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to assess the influence of diabetes as an independent risk factor for in-hospital mortality and morbidity. RESULTS: The overall in-hospital mortality was 0.96% [n=44; diabetics: 1.0%, non-diabetics: 0.9% (p=0.74)]. The mortality of patients with diabetes decreased from 2.7% in the early period to 0.7% in the late period (p=0.03 for the time-trend). Postoperative in-hospital complications were comparable in the two groups in univariate analysis, with only cerebrovascular accident and prolonged length of stay being significantly higher in the diabetic patients (all p<0.05). In multivariate analysis, diabetes was not found to be an independent risk factor for in-hospital mortality (OR=0.61; 95% CI=0.28-1.30; p=0.19), but predicted the occurrence of mediastinitis (OR=1.80; 95% CI=1.01-3.22; p=0.049). CONCLUSIONS: Despite worse demographic and clinical characteristics, diabetic patients could be surgically revascularized with low mortality and morbidity, comparable with control patients. Hence, our data do not support diabetes as a risk factor for significantly adverse early outcome following CABG.
- Cytokine-producing T lymphocytes as a marker of prognosis and rejection episodes in orthotopic liver transplantationPublication . Paiva, A; Pereira, SV; Ballesteros, R; Freitas, A; Perdigoto, R; Mota, O; Ferrão, J; Tomé, L; Furtado, E; Cipriano, MA; Geraldes, B; Oliveira, FJ; Furtado, AL; Regateiro, FJ
- Early gastric cancer: Report of 58 casesPublication . Oliveira, FJ; Ferrão, H; Furtado, E; Batista, H; Conçeição, LBACKGROUND: This retrospective study was carried out to review our surgical experience and to define the clinicopathologic profile of early gastric cancer in a Western country with one of the highest incidences in the world.METHODS: Fifty-eight patients who had gastric surgery for early gastric cancer were included in this study.RESULTS: The incidence of early gastric cancer was 13.9% of the patients with resected gastric cancer (58/416). The mean age of these 58 patients at diagnosis was 56.8 +/- 12.3 years (range, 30-81 years) and the male: female ratio was 2.4 : 1. The most common presenting symptom was epigastric pain (52.4%). All patients were treated by surgical resection. Tumors were typically located in the antrum (72.4%), with a predominance of lesser curvature lesions (89.7%). Macroscopically, the majority of the lesions (63.8%) were excavated (types IIc and III). Thirty tumors were intramucosal and 28 extended into the submucosa. Thirty were of the intestinal type and 28 of the diffuse type. The rate of regional lymph node metastasis was 10.4%. The overall 5-year survival rate was 93.9%.CONCLUSIONS: The excellent response to surgical resection of early gastric cancer reported by Japanese authors is reproducible in Western countries even in the presence of regional lymph node metastasis. For this reason an aggressive surgical approach should be taken for all early gastric cancer.
- Left ventricular aneurysms: early and long-term results of two types of repairPublication . Antunes, PE; Silva, R; Oliveira, FJ; Antunes, MJOBJECTIVE: Controversy still exists regarding the optimal surgical technique for postinfarction left ventricular (LV) aneurysm repair. We analyze the efficacy of two established techniques, linear vs. patch remodeling, for repair of dyskinetic LV aneurysms. METHODS: Between May 1988 and December 2001, 110 consecutive patients underwent repair of LV aneurysms. These represent 2.0% of a total group of 5429 patients who underwent isolated CABG during the period. Seventy-six (69.1%) patients were submitted to linear repair and 34 (30.9%) to patch remodelling. There were 94 (84.5%) men and 17 women, with a mean age of 59.2+/-9.2 years. Coronary surgery was performed in all patients (mean no. of grafts/patient, 2.7+/-0.8) and 14 (12.7%) had associated coronary endarterectomy. Forty-four (40.0%) patients had angina CCS class III/IV (linear 43.4%, patch 32.4%, NS) and the majority was in NYHA class I/II (88.2% in both groups). Left ventricular dysfunction (EF>40%) was present in 72 (65.5%) patients (linear 61.8%, patch 73.5%, NS). RESULTS: There was no perioperative mortality, and major morbidity was not significantly different between linear repair and patch repair groups. During a mean follow-up of 7.3+/-3.4 years (range 4-182 months) 14 patients (14.3%) had died, 12 (85.7%) of possible cardiac-related cause. Actual global survival rate was 85.7%. Actuarial survival rates at 5, 10 and 15 years were 91.3, 81.4 and 74%, respectively. There was no significant difference in late survival between the patch and the linear groups. At late follow-up the mean angina and NYHA class were, 1.3 (preoperative 2.4, P<0.001) and 1.5 (preoperative 1.7, NS), respectively, with no difference between the groups. There was no significant difference in hospital readmissions for cardiac causes (linear 22.8% and patch 37.0%). CONCLUSIONS: The technique of repair of postinfarction dyskinetic LV aneurysms should be adapted in each patient to the cavity size and shape, and the dimension of the scar. Both techniques achieved good results with respect to perioperative mortality, late functional status and survival
- Local immunosuppression in clinical small bowel transplantation (report of two cases).Publication . Furtado, AL; Perdigoto, R; Oliveira, FJ; Geraldes, E; Furtado, E; Tomé, L; Mota, O; Ferrão, J; Viana, JS; Bento, C; Vieira, H; Neves, S
- Maximum sharing of cadaver liver grafts composite split and domino liver transplantsPublication . Furtado, AL; Oliveira, FJ; Furtado, E; Geraldes, B; Reis, A; Viana, JS; Bento, C; Vieira, H; Neves, S
- Mortality risk prediction in coronary surgery: a locally developed model outperforms external risk modelsPublication . Antunes, PE; Eugénio, L; Oliveira, FJ; Antunes, MJThis study aimed at assessing the performance of three external risk-adjusted models - logistic EuroSCORE, Parsonnet score and Ontario Province Risk (OPR) score - in predicting in-hospital mortality in patients submitted to coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) and to develop a local risk-score model. Data on 4567 patients who underwent isolated CABG (1992-2001) were extracted from our clinical database. Hospital mortality was 0.96% (44 patients). For the three external systems, observed and predicted mortalities were compared, and discrimination and calibration were assessed. A local risk model was developed and validated by means of logistic regression and bootstrap analysis. The EuroSCORE predicted a mortality of 2.34% (P<0.001 vs. observed), the Parsonnet 4.43% (P<0.0001) and the OPR 1.66% (P<0.005). All models overestimated mortality significantly in almost all tertile risk groups. The areas under the ROC curve (AUC) for EuroSCORE, Parsonnet and OPR were 0.754, 0.664 and 0.683, respectively. The local model exhibited good calibration and discrimination AUC, 0.752. In conclusion, the three risk-score systems analyzed do not accurately predict in-hospital mortality in our coronary surgery patients; hence their use for risk prediction may not be appropriate in our population. We developed a risk-prediction model that can be used as an instrument to provide accurate information about the risk of in-hospital mortality in our patient population.
- Peripheral blood lymphocyte phenotype can predict rejection episodes after orthotopic liver transplantationPublication . Perdigoto, R; Paiva, A; Freitas, A; Coimbra, HB; Mota, O; Ferrão, J; Tomé, L; Furtado, E; Cipriano, MA; Oliveira, FJ; Furtado, AL