DENISE FREDIANI BARBEIRO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
15
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Clínica Médica, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/51 - Laboratório de Emergências Clínicas, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 11
  • article 17 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cathelicidin-deficient mice exhibit increased survival and upregulation of key inflammatory response genes following cecal ligation and puncture
    (2017) SEVERINO, Patricia; ARIGA, Suely Kubo; BARBEIRO, Hermes Vieira; LIMA, Thais Martins de; SILVA, Elisangela de Paula; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar; NIZET, Victor; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da
    Antimicrobial peptides possess a myriad of molecular properties including bacterial killing and the regulation of many aspects of innate immunity. Cathelicidins are a group of antimicrobial peptides widely investigated by the scientific community. Many studies have focused on the bactericidal and pro-inflammatory roles of cathelicidins. Because the role of endogenous cathelicidin expression remains obscure in deep-seated systemic infections, we induced sepsis in cathelicidin knockout and wild-type (WT) mice by cecal ligation and puncture, performing transcriptome screening by DNA micro-array in conjunction with other immunologic assays. Cathelicidin-deficient mice showed increased survival compared to WT mice in this established experimental model of polymicrobial sepsis, in association with upregulation of certain key inflammatory response genes. Therefore, cathelicidins can exert both pro- and anti-inflammatory activities depending on the disease and cellular context.
  • article 11 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Diazoxide reduces local and remote organ damage in a rat model of intestinal ischemia reperfusion
    (2018) DOURADO, Saulo Fernandes de Mattos; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; KOIKE, Marcia Kiyomi; BARBEIRO, Hermes Vieira; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar
    Background: Intestinal ischemia reperfusion is a common clinical condition that causes functional impairment. Once tight junctions are damaged, barrier function is compromised, and the intestines become a source for entry of bacterial and inflammatory mediators into the circulation, leading to systemic inflammatory response syndrome, multiple organ failure, and death. It is possible that diazoxide could protect the intestines against ischemia reperfusion. The aim of this study is to determine whether diazoxide can provide protection in a rat model of intestinal ischemia reperfusion. Methods: A total of 32 adult male specific pathogen-free Wistar rats were randomized into three groups: a control group, n = 6; a saline group, n = 13; and a diazoxide group, n = 13. The saline and diazoxide groups underwent clamping of the superior mesenteric artery for 1 h, with samples in all the groups being collected 12 h later. Results: Intestinal histology showed greater damage in the intestinal ischemia reperfusion groups. mRNA expression of zonula occludens-1 and occludin (tight junction proteins) and interleukin-6 and cyclooxygenase-2 was the highest in the Saline group. The Diazoxide group showed a reduction in aspartate aminotransferase serum levels compared with the other groups. Conclusions: Increased expression of zonula occludens-1, occludin, and cyclooxygenase-2 suggested a greater regenerative effort because ofmore severe lesions in the saline group. In addition, increased expression of interleukin-6 in the saline group was suggestive of inflammation, indicating that diazoxide had protective effects in the diazoxide group. Reduced aspartate aminotransferase in the diazoxide group suggested liver protection. Diazoxide protects the intestines and liver fromintestinal ischemia reperfusion lesions in rats.
  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Increased intestinal production of alpha-defensins in aged rats with acute pancreatic injury
    (2014) CUNHA, Debora Maria Gomes; KOIKE, Marcia Kiyomi; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; BARBEIRO, Hermes Vieira; HAMASAKI, Mike Yoshio; COELHO NETO, Guilherme Tude; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da
    Acute pancreatitis is a life-threatening situation, frequently associated with uncontrolled local and systemic inflammation, and aging is associated with a worst prognosis. Antimicrobial peptides are ancient molecules that belong to innate immunity, produced by epithelial and immune cells, and are able to trigger a myriad of effector responses. We have hypothesized that antimicrobial peptides could play an important role during serious pancreatic injury. To investigate our hypothesis, alpha-defensin-5, alpha-defensin-7 and CRAMP gene expression levels were measured in the intestinal tissue of old and young rats submitted to chemical pancreatic damage. We found significantly higher levels of alpha-defensin-5 and alpha-defensin-7, but not CRAMP, in the samples from old mice. This increase was not associated with a worse systemic inflammatory response. We conclude that alpha-defensins may have a pivotal role during acute pancreatitis and that the elderly develops a more severe local, but not systemic inflammatory process.
  • article 15 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Septic shock in older people: a prospective cohort study
    (2013) SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da; ZAMPIERI, Fernando Godinho; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; BARBEIRO, Hermes Vieira; GOULART, Alessandra Carvalho; TORGGLER FILHO, Francisco; VELASCO, Irineu Tadeu; CRUZ NETO, Luiz Monteiro da; SOUZA, Heraldo Possolo de; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar
    Background: Septic shock is the first cause of death in Intensive Care Units. Despite experimental data showing increased inflammatory response of aged animals following infection, the current accepted hypothesis claims that aged patients are immunocompromised, when compared to young individuals. Results: Here, we describe a prospective cohort study designed to analyze the immune profile of this population. Conclusion: Older people are as immunocompetent as the young individual, regarding the cytokines, chemokines and growth factors response to devastating infection.
  • article 12 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Neuropeptides in the brain defense against distant organ damage
    (2016) HAMASAKI, Mike Yoshio; BARBEIRO, Hermes Vieira; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; CUNHA, Debora Maria Gomes; KOIKE, Marcia Kiyomi; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da
    Delirium, or acute confusional state, is a common manifestation in diseases that originate outside the central nervous system, affecting 30-40% of elderly hospitalized patients and up to 80% of the critically ill, even though it remains unclear if severe systemic inflammation is able or not to induce cellular disturbances and immune activation in the brain. Neuropeptides are pleotropic molecules heterogeneously distributed throughout the brain and possess a wide spectrum of functions, including regulation of the inflammatory response, so we hypothesized that they would be the major alarm system in the brain before overt microglia activation. In order to investigate this hypothesis, we induced acute pancreatitis in 8-10 week old rats and collected brain tissue, 12 and 24 h following pancreatic injury, to measure neuropeptide and cytokine tissue levels. We found significantly higher levels of beta-endorphin, orexin and oxytocin in the brain of rats submitted to pancreatic injury, when compared to healthy controls. Interestingly, these differences were not associated with increased local cytokine levels, putting in evidence that neuropeptide release occurred independently of microglia activation and may be a pivotal alarm system to initiate neurologic reactions to distant inflammatory non-infectious aggression.
  • article 21 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Intestinal barrier dysfunction and increased COX-2 gene expression in the gut of elderly rats with acute pancreatitis
    (2016) BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; KOIKE, Marcia Kiyomi; COELHO, Ana Maria Mendonca; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar
    Background/Objectives: The clinical course of acute pancreatitis can vary from mild to severe. In its most severe manifestation, acute pancreatitis is associated with an exacerbated systemic inflammatory response and high mortality rates. The severe form of acute pancreatitis is more frequent in elderly patients than in young patients, but the mechanisms underlying this difference are still under investigation. Methods: Rats were divided into two groups as follows: Group 1, young rats; and Group 2, old rats. Acute pancreatitis group was induced by a retrograde injection of a sodium taurocholate solution into the biliopancreatic duct. Using this model of acute pancreatic injury, we designed a study to investigate possible differences in microbial translocation and characteristics of the intestinal barrier between elderly and young rats. Results: There was a significantly higher number of bacterial colonies in the pancreas of elderly rats compared with young rats following pancreas injury, which was associated with a more severe local intestinal inflammatory response that included elevated gene expression of COX-2 and a decreased gene expression of tight junction proteins. Conclusions: We conclude that intestinal damage during acute pancreatitis is exacerbated in elderly rats compared with young rats and that COX-2 inhibition could be a potential therapeutic target to offer tailored treatment for acute pancreatitis in the elderly.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cytokine and chemokine levels in the heart tissue of aged rats following severe acute pancreatitis
    (2017) AMARAL, Rizia Callou; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; KOIKE, Marcia Kiyomi; MADY, Charles; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da
    Severe acute pancreatitis (AP) is a disease associated with high mortality and characterized by overwhelming systemic inflammation. Older people have a prolonged hospital stay and worst prognosis, when affected by this disease. Our group hypothesized, thus, that the systemic inflammatory response in the elderly would promote more organ damage when compared to the young. We sought to investigate the effect of systemic inflammation on the gene expression of cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors in the hearts of older and younger rats in an animal model of AP. AP was induced in all rats by injection of 0.5 mL of 2.5% taurocholate. There were two healthy age-matched control groups. An array of 79 cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors was measured in samples of cardiac tissue taken from the AP rats after 10 h, and from control rats. Older healthy rats had significantly higher levels of interleukin-10 (IL-10) and CCL1 gene expression than younger ones (P < 0.05), but all other measurements were similar among the study groups. This study indicates the systemic inflammation may show unique features for different organs in the body, but older animals with systemic inflammation are similar to the young regarding the cardiac inflammatory response.
  • conferenceObject
    Increased TNF alpha Levels in the Intestinal Tissue, but Not in the Brain, Following Severe Acute Pancreatitis
    (2015) HAMASAKI, Mike Yoshio; BARBEIRO, Hermes Vieira; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; CUNHA, Debora Maria Gomes; KOIKE, Marcia Kiyomi; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da
  • article 30 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cathelicidin LL-37 bloodstream surveillance is down regulated during septic shock
    (2013) BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; BARBEIRO, Hermes Vieira; ZAMPIERI, Fernando Godinho; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar; TORGGLER FILHO, Francisco; CUNHA, Debora Maria Gomes; GOULART, Alessandra Carvalho; VELASCO, Irineu Tadeu; CRUZ NETO, Luiz Monteiro da; SOUZA, Heraldo Possolo de; SILVA, Fabiano Pinheiro da
    Host defense peptides are ancient weapons of the innate immunity. The human cathelicidin LL-37 protects the epithelial barrier against infection and is constitutively secreted in the bloodstream by immune cells. Current knowledge claims that LL-37 is up regulated upon infection. LL-37 can protect against bacterial infections and possesses many immunomodulatory properties. Here, we show that the human host defense peptide LL-37 is down regulated during septic shock. Furthermore, we show that these effects are not related to vitamin D serum levels, a potent inducer of LL-37 gene expression, pointing out the complex regulation of cathelicidins during septic shock.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Does fasting protect liver from ischemia and reperfusion injury?
    (2023) KOIKE, Marcia Kiyomi; BARBEIRO, Denise Frediani; SOUZA, Heraldo Possolo de; MACHADO, Marcel Cerqueira Cesar
    Purpose: To evaluate local and systemic effects of 24-hour fasting in liver ischemia and reperfusion injury. Methods: Twenty-one adult male Wistar rats (330-390 g) were submitted to 60 minutes of hepatic ischemia followed by 24 hours of reperfusion. Before the day of the experiment, the animals fasted, but free access to water was allowed. Two groups were constituted: Control: nonfasted, that is, feeding ad libitum before surgical procedure; Fasting: rats underwent previous fasting of 24 hours. Hepatic ischemia was performed using vascular clamp in hepatic pedicle. At 24 hours after liver reperfusion, blood and tissue samples were collected. To analysis, liver lobes submitted to ischemia was identified as ischemic liver and paracaval non-ischemic lobes as non-ischemic activities, and both ratio), cytokines (interleukins-6, -10, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha), hepatic ischemia and reperfusion injury (histology). Results: Malondialdehyde measured in non-ischemic and ischemic liver samples, hepatocellular function and cytokines were comparable between groups. Histological findings were distinct in three regions evaluated. Microvesicular steatosis was comparable between 24-hour fasting and non-fasted control groups in periportal region of hepatic lobe. In contrast, steatosis was more pronounced in zones 2 and 3 of ischemic liver samples of fasting compared to control groups. Conclusion: These data indicates that fasting does not protect, but it can be also detrimental to liver submitted to ischemia/reperfusion damage. At that time, using long fasting before liver surgery in the real world may be contraindicated.