CLAUDIA DA COSTA LEITE

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
27
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Radiologia, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
LIM/44 - Laboratório de Ressonância Magnética em Neurorradiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Líder

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 9 de 9
  • article 27 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Dorsal Anterior Cingulate Lactate and Glutathione Levels in Euthymic Bipolar I Disorder: H-1-MRS Study
    (2016) SOEIRO-DE-SOUZA, Marcio Gerhardt; PASTORELLO, Bruno F.; LEITE, Claudia da Costa; HENNING, Anke; MORENO, Ricardo A.; OTADUY, Maria Concepcion Garcia
    Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction are 2 closely integrated processes implicated in the physiopathology of bipolar disorder. Advanced proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy techniques enable the measurement of levels of lactate, the main marker of mitochondrial dysfunction, and glutathione, the predominant brain antioxidant. The objective of this study was to measure brain lactate and glutathione levels in bipolar disorder and healthy controls. Eighty-eight individuals (50 bipolar disorder and 38 healthy controls) underwent 3T proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (2x2x4.5cm(3)) using a 2-D JPRESS sequence. Lactate and glutathione were quantified using the ProFit software program. Bipolar disorder patients had higher dorsal anterior cingulate cortex lactate levels compared with controls. Glutathione levels did not differ between euthymic bipolar disorder and controls. There was a positive correlation between lactate and glutathione levels specific to bipolar disorder. No influence of medications on metabolites was observed. This is the most extensive magnetic resonance spectroscopy study of lactate and glutathione in bipolar disorder to date, and results indicated that euthymic bipolar disorder patients had higher levels of lactate, which might be an indication of altered mitochondrial function. Moreover, lactate levels correlated with glutathione levels, indicating a compensatory mechanism regardless of bipolar disorder diagnosis.
  • article 94 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Patterns of regional gray matter loss at different stages of schizophrenia: A multisite, cross-sectional VBM study in first-episode and chronic illness
    (2016) TORRES, Ulysses S.; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; SCHAUFELBERGER, Maristela S.; CRIPPA, Jose A. S.; LOUZA, Mario R.; SALLET, Paulo C.; KANEGUSUKU, Caroline Y. O.; ELKIS, Helio; GATTAZ, Wagner F.; BASSITT, Debora P.; ZUARDI, AntonioW.; HALLAK, Jaime Eduardo C.; LEITE, Claudia C.; CASTRO, Claudio C.; SANTOS, Antonio Carlos; MURRAY, Robin M.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.
    Background: Structural brain abnormalities in schizophrenia have been repeatedly demonstrated in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies, but it remains unclear whether these are static or progressive in nature. While longitudinalMRI studies have been traditionally used to assess the issue of progression of brain abnormalities in schizophrenia, information from cross-sectional neuroimaging studies directly comparing first-episode and chronic schizophrenia patients to healthy controls may also be useful to further clarify this issue. With the recent interest in multisite mega-analyses combining structural MRI data from multiple centers aiming at increased statistical power, the present multisite voxel-basedmorphometry (VBM) studywas carried out to examine patterns of brain structural changes according to the different stages of illness and to ascertainwhich (if any) of such structural abnormalities would be specifically correlated to potential clinical moderators, including cumulative exposure to antipsychotics, age of onset, illness duration and overall illness severity. Methods: Wegathered a large sample of schizophrenia patients (161, being 99 chronic and 62 first-episode) and controls (151) fromfour previousmorphometricMRI studies (1.5 T) carried out in the same geographical region of Brazil. Image processing and analyses were conducted using Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM8) software with the diffeomorphic anatomical registration through exponentiated Lie algebra (DARTEL) algorithm. Group effects on regional gray matter (GM) volumes were investigated through whole-brain voxel-wise comparisons using General LinearModel Analysis of Co-variance (ANCOVA), always including total GMvolume, scan protocol, age and gender as nuisance variables. Finally, correlation analyseswere performed between the aforementioned clinical moderators and regional and global brain volumes. Results: First-episode schizophrenia subjects displayed subtle volumetric deficits relative to controls in a circumscribed brain regional network identified only in small volume-corrected (SVC) analyses (p < 0.05, FWE-corrected), including the insula, temporolimbic structures and striatum. Chronic schizophrenia patients, on the other hand, demonstrated an extensive pattern of regional GM volume decreases relative to controls, involving bilateral superior, inferior and orbital frontal cortices, right middle frontal cortex, bilateral anterior cingulate cortices, bilateral insulae and right superior and middle temporal cortices (p < 0.05, FWE-corrected over the whole brain). GM volumes in several of those brain regionswere directly correlated with age of disease onset on SVC analyses for conjoined (first-episode and chronic) schizophrenia groups. There were also widespread foci of significant negative correlation between duration of illness and relative GM volumes, but such findings remained significant only for the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex after accounting for the influence of age of disease onset. Finally, significant negative correlations were detected between life-time cumulative exposure to antipsychotics and total GM and white matter volumes in schizophrenia patients, but no significant relationship was found between indices of antipsychotic usage and relative GM volume in any specific brain region. Conclusion: The above data indicate that brain changes associated with the diagnosis of schizophrenia are more widespread in chronic schizophrenia compared to first-episode patients. Our findings also suggest that relative GM volume deficits may be greater in (presumably more severe) cases with earlier age of onset, as well as varying as a function of illness duration in specific frontal brain regions. Finally, our results highlight the potentially complex effects of the continued use of antipsychotic drugs on structural brain abnormalities in schizophrenia, as we found that cumulative doses of antipsychotics affected brain volumes globally rather than selectively on frontal-temporal regions. (C) 2016 The Authors.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Extratemporal abnormalities in phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy of patients with mesial temporal sclerosis
    (2016) PARK, Eun Joo; OTADUY, Maria Concepcion Garcia; LYRA, Katarina Paz de; ANDRADE, Celi Santos; CASTRO, Luiz Henrique Martins; PASSARELLI, Valmir; VALERIO, Rosa Maria Figueiredo; JORGE, Carmen Lisa; TSUNEMI, Miriam Harumi; LEITE, Claudia da Costa
    Objective: We evaluated extratemporal metabolic changes with phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (P-31-MRS) in patients with unilateral mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS). Method: P-31-MRS of 33 patients with unilateral MTS was compared with 31 controls. The voxels were selected in the anterior, posterior insula-basal ganglia (AIBG, PIBG) and frontal lobes (FL). Relative values of phosphodiesters-PDE, phosphomonoesters-PME, inorganic phosphate - Pi, phosphocreatine-PCr, total adenosine triphosphate [ATP(t=) gamma- + a- + b-ATP] and the ratios PCr/ATP(t), PCr/gamma-ATP, PCr/Pi and PME/PDE were obtained. Results: We found energetic abnormalities in the MTS patients compared to the controls with Pi reduction bilaterally in the AIBG and ipsilaterally in the PIBG and the contralateral FL; there was also decreased PCr/gamma-ATP in the ipsilateral AIBG and PIBG. Increased ATP(T) in the contralateral AIBG and increased gamma-ATP in the ipsilateral PIBG were detected. Conclusion: Widespread energy dysfunction was detected in patients with unilateral MTS.
  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A Selective Association between Central and Peripheral Lithium Levels in Remitters in Bipolar Depression: A 3T-Li-7 Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Study
    (2016) MACHADO-VIEIRA, R.; OTADUY, M. C.; ZANETTI, M. V.; SOUSA, R. T. De; DIAS, V. V.; LEITE, C. C.; FORLENZA, O. V.; BUSATTO, G. F.; SOARES, J. C.; GATTAZ, W. F.
    ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to evaluate brain lithium levels using Li-7 magnetic resonance spectroscopy after 6 weeks of lithium therapy in bipolar depression to test the hypothesis that brain and plasma lithium are correlated. It was also tested whether responders and remitters have different pharmacokinetics, blood and brain lithium levels (ratio) compared with those presenting suboptimal antidepressant improvement. MethodTwenty-three patients with bipolar disorder (I and II) during depressive episodes were included and followed up for 6 weeks at the University of Sao Paulo using flexible dose of lithium (450-900 mg/day). Sixteen patients were drug-naive. At endpoint, patients underwent a Li-7-MRS scan and brain lithium concentrations were calculated. ResultsA significant association between central and peripheral lithium levels was found only in remitters (r = 0.7, P = 0.004) but not in non-remitters (r = -0.12, P = 0.76). Also, brain lithium (but not plasma) was inversely correlated with age (r = -0.46, P = 0.025). Plasma lithium did not correlate with any clinical outcome, lithium dosage or adverse effects. ConclusionThese findings suggest that non-remitters may not transport lithium properly to the brain, which may underlie treatment resistance to lithium in BD. Future studies with Li-7-MRS integrated with the evaluation of blood-brain barrier transport mechanisms and longitudinal clinical outcomes in BD and aging are warranted.
  • bookPart
    Diagnóstico por Imagem em Nerurologia
    (2016) LEITE, Claudia da Costa; NAGAE, Lídia Mayumi; MARTIN, Maria da Graça Morais; CALDAS, José Guilherme Pereira; JúNIOR, Edson Amaro; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) in colorectal liver metastasis: the radiologist's perspective
    (2016) ZATTAR-RAMOS, L. C.; BEZERRA, R. O.; SIQUEIRA, L. T.; MARQUES, D. T.; MENEZES, M. R.; HERMAN, P.; MACHADO, M. A. C.; CERRI, G. G.; LEITE, C. C.
    This retrospective study included 9 patients with CRLM who underwent the ALPPS procedure. Abdominal imaging studies were reviewed, with an emphasis on a rational radiological approach. The number of liver metastases, the FLR volume (pre- and postportal vein ligation), anatomical variations, potential pitfalls related to disease progression, and postoperative complications were evaluated. The types of hepatic resection included 4 classical ALPPS cases, 3 right ALPPS variations, and 2 left ALPPS variations. The mean FLR volume calculated in the initial evaluation was 453 mL (213-790 mL). Following the first surgery, the mean FLR volume increased to 634 mL (410-957 mL), which indicated a mean volume increase of 181.1 mL (95% CI 149.7-212.5 mL; p < 0.001) and a mean absolute volume increase of 48% (19%-88%). The ALPPS procedure is an emerging form of two-stage hepatectomy. In this context, radiologists should provide crucial preoperative and perioperative information that may change surgical planning and contribute to an improvement in the oncologic outcome.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Dural amyloidoma An unusual presentation of CNS amyloidosis
    (2016) SHIBAO, Simone; DALPRA, Fabio A. R.; ANDRADE, Celi S.; LEITE, Claudia C.
    A 46-year-old previously healthy woman presented with recurring left frontal and occipital headache. A brain MRI demonstrated diffuse dural thickening (figure 1, top). CSF analysis showed no abnormalities. A meningeal biopsy had pathology typical of an amyloid tumor (figure 2). Further investigations did not reveal evidence of plasma-cell tumor, multiple myeloma, systemic amyloidosis, underlying inflammatory disorder, or malignancy. Follow-up brain MRIs revealed regression of the pachymeningeal disease after treatment with corticosteroids and radiotherapy (figure 1, bottom).
  • conferenceObject
    Correlations between [18F]FDG-PET and Naa/mI spectroscopy data of the posterior cingulate cortex in amnestic mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease.
    (2016) COUTINHO, Artur; PORTO, Fabio; ZAMPIERI, Poliana; OTADUY, Maria; NUNES, Rafael; PERROCO, Tibor; BOTTINO, Cassio; ONO, Carla; LEITE, Claudia; BUCHPIGUEL, Carlos
  • conferenceObject
    Cognitive decline in multiple sclerosis is associated with structural network disruption - a single-subject network approach
    (2016) RIMKUS, C. M.; SCHOONHEIM, M. M.; STEENWIJK, M. D.; WATTJES, M.; KILLESTEIN, J.; LEITE, C. C.; BARKHOF, F.; TIJMS, B. M.