MARIA ADELAIDE ALBERGARIA PEREIRA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
14
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Instituto Central, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico

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  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Intra-individual Variability of Serum Aldosterone and Implications for Primary Aldosteronism Screening
    (2023) MACIEL, Ana Alice W.; FREITAS, Thais C.; FAGUNDES, Gustavo F. C.; PETENUCI, Janaina; VILELA, Leticia A. P.; BRITO, Luciana P.; GOLDBAUM, Tatiana S.; ZERBINI, Maria Claudia N.; LEDESMA, Felipe L.; TANNO, Fabio Y.; SROUGI, Victor; CHAMBO, Jose L.; PEREIRA, Maria Adelaide A.; COELHO, Fernando M. A.; CAVALCANTE, Aline C. B. S.; CARNEVALE, Francisco C.; PILAN, Bruna; PIO-ABREU, Andrea; V, Joao Silveira; CONSOLIM-COLOMBO, Fernanda M.; BORTOLOTTO, Luiz A.; LATRONICO, Ana Claudia; V, Maria Candida B. Fragoso; DRAGER, Luciano F.; MENDONCA, Berenice B.; ALMEIDA, Madson Q.
    Context Primary aldosteronism (PA) screening relies on an elevated aldosterone to renin ratio with a minimum aldosterone level, which varies from 10 to 15 ng/dL (277-415.5 pmol/L) using immunoassay. Objective To evaluate intra-individual coefficient of variation (CV) of aldosterone and aldosterone to direct renin concentration ratio (A/DRC) and its impact on PA screening. Methods A total of 671 aldosterone and DRC measurements were performed by the same chemiluminescence assays in a large cohort of 216 patients with confirmed PA and at least 2 screenings. Results The median intra-individual CV of aldosterone and A/DRC was 26.8% and 26.7%. Almost 40% of the patients had at least one aldosterone level <15 ng/dL, 19.9% had at least 2 aldosterone levels <15 ng/dL, and 16.2% had mean aldosterone levels <15 ng/dL. A lower cutoff of 10 ng/dL was associated with false negative rates for PA screening of 14.3% for a single aldosterone measurement, 4.6% for 2 aldosterone measurements, and only 2.3% for mean aldosterone levels. Considering the minimum aldosterone, true positive rate of aldosterone thresholds was 85.7% for 10 ng/dL and 61.6% for 15 ng/dL. An A/DRC >2 ng/dL/mu IU/mL had a true positive rate for PA diagnosis of 94.4% and 98.4% when based on 1 or 2 assessments, respectively. CV of aldosterone and A/DRC were not affected by sex, use of interfering antihypertensive medications, PA lateralization, hypokalemia, age, and number of hormone measurements. Conclusion Aldosterone concentrations had a high CV in PA patients, which results in an elevated rate of false negatives in a single screening for PA. Therefore, PA screening should be based on at least 2 screenings with concomitant aldosterone and renin measurements.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Intra-individual Variability of Serum Aldosterone and Implications for Primary Aldosteronism Screening (Nov, dgac679, 2022)
    (2023) MACHEI, A. A. W.; FREITAS, T. C.; FAGUNDES, G. F. C.; PETENUCI, J.; VILELA, L. A. P.; BRITO, L. P.; GOLDBAUM, T. S.; ZERBINI, M. C. N.; LEDESMA, F. L.; YANNO, F. Y.; SROUGI, V; CHAMBO, J. L.; PEREIRA, M. A. A.; COELHO, F. M. A.; CAVALCANTE, A. C. B. S.; CARNEVALE, F. C.; PILAN, B.; PIO-ABREU, A.; V, J. Silveira; CONSOLIM-COLOMBO, F. M.; BORTOLOTTO, L. A.; LATRONICO, A. C.; V, M. C. B. Fragoso; DRAGER, L. F.; MENDONCA, B. B.; ALMEIDA, M. Q.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Efficacy of Oral Furosemide Test for Primary Aldosteronism Diagnosis
    (2023) FREITAS, Thais C.; MACIEL, Ana Alice W.; FAGUNDES, Gustavo F. C.; PETENUCI, Janaina; SANTANA, Lucas S.; GUIMARAES, Augusto G.; FREITAS-CASTRO, Felipe; SROUGI, Victor; TANNO, Fabio Y.; CHAMBO, Jose L.; PEREIRA, Maria Adelaide A.; BRITO, Luciana P.; PIO-ABREU, Andrea; BORTOLOTTO, Luiz A.; LATRONICO, Ana Claudia; V, Maria Candida B. Fragoso; DRAGER, Luciano F.; MENDONCA, Berenice B.; ALMEIDA, Madson Q.
    Context: Confirmatory tests represent a fundamental step in primary aldosteronism (PA) diagnosis, but they are laborious and often require a hospital environment due to the risks involved.Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of oral furosemide as a new confirmatory test for PA diagnosis.Methods: We prospectively evaluated the diagnostic performance of 80 mg of oral furosemide in 64 patients with PA and 22 with primary hypertension (controls). Direct renin concentration (DRC) was measured before, and 2 hours and 3 hours after the oral furosemide. In addition, the oral furosemide test was compared with 2 other confirmatory tests: the furosemide upright test (FUT) and saline infusion test (SIT) or captopril challenge test (CCT) in all patients with PA.Results: The cut-off of 7.6 mu U/mL for DRC at 2 hours after oral furosemide had a sensitivity of 92%, specificity of 82%, and accuracy of 90% for PA diagnosis. In 5 out of 6 controls with low-renin hypertension, which might represent a PA spectrum, renin remained suppressed. Excluding these 6 controls with low-renin hypertension, the DRC cut-off of 10 mu U/mL at 2 hours after oral furosemide had a sensitivity of 95.3%, specificity of 93.7% and accuracy of 95% for PA diagnosis. DRC after 3 hours of oral furosemide did not improve diagnostic performance. Using the cut-off of 10 mu U/mL, the oral furosemide test and the FUT were concordant in 62 out of 64 (97%) patients with PA. Only 4 out of 64 cases with PA (6.4%) ended the oral furosemide test with potassium <3.5 mEq/L. Hypotension was not evidenced in any patient with PA during the test.Conclusion: The oral furosemide test was safe, well-tolerated and represents an effective strategy for PA investigation.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Case report: Insulinomatosis: description of four sporadic cases and review of the literature
    (2024) JR, Delmar Muniz Lourenco; CORREA-GIANNELLA, Maria Lucia; SIQUEIRA, Sheila Aparecida Coelho; NERY, Marcia; RIBEIRO, Flavio Galvao; QUEDAS, Elizangela Pereira de Souza; ROCHA, Manoel de Souza; NASCIMENTO, Ramon Marcelino do; PEREIRA, Maria Adelaide Albergaria
    The best-known etiologies of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia are insulinoma, non-insulinoma pancreatogenous hypoglycemic syndrome, autoimmune processes, and factitious hypoglycemia. In 2009, a disease not associated with classic genetic syndromes and characterized by the presence of multiple pancreatic lesions was described and named insulinomatosis. We present the clinical and pathologic features of four patients with the diagnosis of insulinomatosis, aggregated new clinical data, reviewed extensively the literature, and illustrated the nature and evolution of this recently recognized disease. One of our patients had isolated (without fasting hypoglycemia) postprandial hypoglycemia, an occurrence not previously reported in the literature. Furthermore, we reported the second case presenting malignant disease. All of them had persistent/recurrent hypoglycemia after the first surgery even with pathology confirming the presence of a positive insulin neuroendocrine tumor. In the literature review, 27 sporadic insulinomatosis cases were compiled. All of them had episodes of fasting hypoglycemia except one of our patients. Only two patients had malignant disease, and one of them was from our series. The suspicion of insulinomatosis can be raised before surgery in patients without genetic syndromes, with multiple tumors in the topographic investigation and in those who had persistent or recurrent hypoglycemia after surgical removal of one or more tumors. The definitive diagnosis is established by histology and immunohistochemistry and requires examination of the ""macroscopically normal pancreas."" Our case series reinforces the marked predominance in women, the high frequency of recurrent hypoglycemia, and consequently, a definitive poor response to the usual surgical treatment.