KETTE DUALIBI RAMOS VALENTE

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
22
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto de Psiquiatria, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/21 - Laboratório de Neuroimagem em Psiquiatria, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Líder

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Agora exibindo 1 - 9 de 9
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
  • article 22 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Everyday memory impairment in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy caused by hippocampal sclerosis
    (2017) RZEZAK, Patricia; LIMA, Ellen Marise; GARGARO, Ana Carolina; COIMBRA, Erica; VINCENTIIS, Silvia de; VELASCO, Tonicarlo Rodrigues; LEITE, Joao Pereira; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.; VALENTE, Kette D.
    Objective: Patients with temporal lobe epilepsy caused by hippocampal sclerosis (TLE-HS) have episodic memory impairment. Memory has rarely been evaluated using an ecologic measure, even though performance on these tests is more related to patients' memory complaints. We aimed to measure everyday memory of patients with TLE-HS to age-and gender-matched controls. Methods: We evaluated 31 patients with TLE-HS and 34 healthy controls, without epilepsy and psychiatric disorders, using the Rivermead Behavioral Memory Test (RBMT), Visual Reproduction (WMS-III) and Logical Memory (WMS-III). We evaluated the impact of clinical variables such as the age of onset, epilepsy duration, AED use, history of status epilepticus, and seizure frequency on everyday memory. Statistical analyses were performed using MANCOVA with years of education as a confounding factor. Results: Patients showed worse performance than controls on traditional memory tests and in the overall score of RBMT. Patients had more difficulties to recall names, a hidden belonging, to deliver a message, object recognition, to remember a story full of details, a previously presented short route, and in time and space orientation. Clinical epilepsy variables were not associated with RBMT performance. Memory span and working memory were correlated with worse performance on RBMT. Significance: Patients with TLE-HS demonstrated deficits in everyday memory functions. A standard neuropsychological battery, designed to assess episodic memory, would not evaluate these impairments. Impairment in recalling names, routes, stories, messages, and space/time disorientation can adversely impact social adaptation, and we must consider these ecologic measures with greater attention in the neuropsychological evaluation of patients with memory complaints.
  • article 37 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Risk Factors for Diagnostic Delay in Psychogenic Nonepileptic Seizures Among Children and Adolescents
    (2017) VALENTE, Kette D.; ALESSI, Ruda; VINCENTIIS, Silvia; SANTOS, Bernardo dos; RZEZAK, Patricia
    BACKGROUND: This study aims to analyze a series of pediatric patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) to establish the diagnostic gap and possible risk factors for the delayed diagnosis in this age group. METHODS: We evaluated all children with PNES documented by video electroencephalography. None had a previous diagnosis of PNES. In total, we included 53 children (interquartile range: seven to 17 years; mean age 12.81 years [S.D. 3.15]; 60.4% girls) who underwent a protocol consisting of neurological and psychiatric interviews. RESULTS: The average time between seizure onset and referral was 17.76 months (interquartile range: 0.5 to 48 months; S.D. +/- 12.62). Earlier age of onset correlated with a later diagnosis (P < 0.001). The late referral group also presented with a history of psychological abuse (P = 0.018). CONCLUSION: Youth with PNES represent a diagnostic challenge. Identification of children at risk might lead to earlier diagnosis of PNES.
  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The impact of intelligence on memory and executive functions of children with temporal lobe epilepsy: Methodological concerns with clinical relevance
    (2017) RZEZAK, Patricia; GUIMARAES, Catarina A.; GUERREIRO, Marilisa M.; VALENTE, Kette D.
    Purpose: Patients with TLE are prone to have lower IQ scores than healthy controls. Nevertheless, the impact of IQ differences is not usually considered in studies that compared the cognitive functioning of children with and without epilepsy. This study aimed to determine the effect of using IQ as a covariate on memory and attentional/executive functions of children with TLE. Methods: Thirty-eight children and adolescents with TLE and 28 healthy controls paired as to age, gender, and sociodemographic factors were evaluated with a comprehensive neuropsychological battery for memory and executive functions. The authors conducted three analyses to verify the impact of IQ scores on the other cognitive domains. First, we compared performance on cognitive tests without controlling for IQ differences between groups. Second, we performed the same analyses, but we included IQ as a confounding factor. Finally, we evaluated the predictive value of IQ on cognitive functioning. Results: Although patients had IQ score in the normal range, they showed lower IQ scores than controls (p = 0.001). When we did not consider IQ in the analyses, patients had worse performance in verbal and visual memory (short and long-term), semantic memory, sustained, divided and selective attention, mental flexibility and mental tracking for semantic information. By using IQ as a covariate, patients showed worse performance only in verbal memory (long-term), semantic memory, sustained and divided attention and in mental flexibility. IQ was a predictor factor of verbal and visual memory (immediate and delayed), working memory, mental flexibility and mental tracking for semantic information. Conclusion: Intelligence level had a significant impact on memory and executive functioning of children and adolescents with TLE without intellectual disability. This finding opens the discussion of whether IQ scores should be considered when interpreting the results of differences in cognitive performance of patients with epilepsy compared to healthy volunteers.
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Proton spectroscopy of the thalamus in a homogeneous sample of patients with easy-to-control juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
    (2017) LEITE, Claudia da Costa; VALENTE, Kette Dualibi Ramos; FIORE, Lia Arno; OTADUY, Maria Concepción García
    Abstract Objective: Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is a subtype of genetically determined generalized epilepsy that does not present abnormalities on conventional magnetic resonance imaging. The aim of this study was to identify metabolic alterations in the thalamus in a clinically homogeneous sample of patients with easy-to-control JME, using short-echo time proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Materials and Methods: We performed single-voxel (2 cm × 2 cm × 2 cm), short-echo time (TE = 35 ms) proton MRS of the thalamus in 21 patients with JME and in 14 healthy age-matched controls. We quantified N-acetylaspartate (NAA), total NAA, creatine (Cr), choline, and myo-inositol (MI), as well as the sum of glutamate and glutamine signals, all scaled to internal water content, and we calculated metabolite ratios using Cr as a reference. Values of p < 0.05 were considered significant. Results: The MI level and the MI/Cr ratio were significantly lower in the thalami of patients diagnosed with JME than in those of the controls. Other metabolites and their ratios did not differ significantly between the two groups. Conclusion: In our sample of 21 JME patients, we identified lower levels of MI in the thalamus. No significant abnormalities were observed in the concentrations or ratios of other metabolites.
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    5-hydroxytryptamine1A receptor density in the hippocampus of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy is associated with disease duration
    (2017) FONSECA, N. C.; JOAQUIM, H. P. G.; TALIB, L. L.; VINCENTIIS, S.; GATTAZ, W. F.; VALENTE, K. D.
    Background and purpose: : To date, no study has evaluated the association between serotonin receptor density and clinical variables in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy caused by hippocampal sclerosis (TLE-HS) using hippocampal tissue. We evaluated 5-hydroxytryptamine1A receptor (5-HT1AR) density in hippocampal tissue from patients with TLE-HS. Methods: We analyzed the hippocampal tissue of 34 patients with pharmacoresistant unilateral TLE-HS. 5-HT1AR density was measured using semiquantitative western blotting. Results: There was an association between higher density of 5-HT1AR and longer duration of epilepsy (Spearman correlation: P = 0.040; generalized linear model: P = 0.026). Conclusions: This study demonstrated that hippocampal 5-HT1AR density is associated with epilepsy duration in patients with TLE-HS. The authors postulate that this may represent a potential regulatory enhancement of endogenous serotonergic neurotransmission in response to prolonged and enduring epileptiform activity in the hippocampal tissue of patients with pharmacoresistant TLE-HS.
  • article 17 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The executive profile of children with Benign Epilepsy of Childhood with Centrotemporal Spikes and Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
    (2017) LIMA, Ellen M.; RZEZAK, Patricia; GUIMARAES, Catarina A.; MONTENEGRO, Maria A.; GUERREIRO, Marilisa M.; VALENTE, Kette D.
    Rationale: Benign Epilepsy of Childhood with Centrotemporal Spikes (BECTS) and temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) represent two distinct models of focal epilepsy of childhood. In both, there is evidence of executive dysfunction. The purpose of the present study was to identify particular deficits in the executive function that would distinguish children with BECTS from children with TLE. Methods: We prospectively evaluated 19 consecutive children and adolescents with TLE with hippocampal sclerosis (HS) (57.9% male; mean 11.74 years [SD 2.05]; mean IQ 95.21 [SD 15.09]), 19with BECTS (36.8% male; mean 10.95 years [SD 2.33]; mean IQ 107.40 [SD 16.01]), and 21 age and gender-matched controls (33.3% male; mean 11.86 years [SD 2.25]; mean IQ 108.67 [15.05]). All participants underwent a neuropsychological assessment with a comprehensive battery for executive and attentional functions. We used ANOVA and chi-square to evaluate differences on demographic aspects among groups (BECTS, TLE-HS, and control groups). Group comparisons on continuous variables were complemented by MANOVA and Bonferroni posthoc comparisons. Results: Patients with BECTS had worse performance than controls in: Matching Familiar Figures Test, time (p = 0.001); Matching Familiar Figures Test, time x errors index (p < 0.001); Verbal Fluency for foods (p = 0.038); Trail Making Test, part B time (p = 0.030); Trail Making Test, part B number of errors (p = 0.030); and WCST, number of categories achieved (p = 0.043). Patients with BECTS had worse performance than patients with TLE-HS on Matching Familiar Figures Test, time (p = 0.004), and Matching Familiar Figures Test, time x errors index (p < 0.001). Patients with TLE-HS had worse performance than controls on the following tests: Verbal Fluency for foods (p = 0.004); Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, the number of categories achieved (p < 0.001); and Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, the number of perseverative errors (p = 0.028). Patients with TLE-HS had worse performance than patients with BECTS on Digit Backward (p = 0.002); and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, the number of perseverative errors (p < 0.001). Conclusions: Patients with TLE and BECTS present distinct cognitive profiles. Patients with TLE-HS had worse performance in mental flexibility, concept formation, and working memory compared to BECTS. Patients with BECTS had worse inhibitory control compared to children with TLE-HS. Both TLE-HS and BECTS had a higher number of errors on an inhibitory control test. However, patients with BECTS had a slower mental processing even when compared to patients with TLE-HS. Rehabilitation programs for children with epilepsy must include children with benign epilepsies and must take into account the epileptic syndrome and its particular neurocognitive phenotype.
  • article 19 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Semiology of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures: An international cross-cultural study
    (2017) ASADI-POOYA, Ali A.; VALENTE, Kette; ALESSI, Ruda; TINKER, Jennifer
    Purpose: We compared the semiology of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) between patients from the USA and Brazil. This international cross-cultural comparative study may expand understanding of PNES across the borders. Methods: We retrospectively investigated all patients with PNES admitted to one epilepsy center in the USA and one in Brazil. We classified their seizures into four classes: generalized motor, akinetic, focal motor, and subjective symptoms. All patients were interviewed by an epileptologist in both countries and were administered psychological assessment measures, including questions about PNES risk factors. For the statistical analyses, we compared patients from the two nations. Results: Eighty-nine patients (49 from the USA and 40 from Brazil) were studied. Patients from the two countries were not significantly different with regard to sex and age, but patients from Brazil had earlier age at onset (26 years vs. 34 years; P = 0.004) and a significantly greater delay in diagnosis (9.9 years vs. 5.6 years; P = 0.001). Some characteristics of PNES were different between the two groups; patients from the USA had generally more seizure types and more often reported subjective seizures (55% in the USA vs. 10% in Brazil; P = 0.0001). Clinical and historical characteristics of the patients were not significantly different. Conclusion: Delay in diagnosis of PNES may represent a major factor in resource-limited countries. Large multicenter cross-cultural studies may reveal subtle but significant cross-cultural differences with respect to the semiological, clinical, and historical aspects of PNES; however, patients with PNES share more similarities than differences.
  • article 11 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The approach to patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures in epilepsy surgery centers regarding diagnosis, treatment, and education
    (2017) VALENTE, Kette D.; PAOLA, Luciano De; PALMINI, Andre; FAVERET, Eduardo; ARAUJO-FILHO, Gerardo Maria de; LINDEN, Helio van der; BIANCHIN, Marino M.; WALZ, Roger; ALESSI, Ruda; VELASCO, Tonicarlo; TEIXEIRA, Wagner A.; LAFRANCE JR., W. Curt
    Previous studies, using surveys, provided an understanding about how health-care providers address patients with PNES. To date, there is limited information on the management of patients with PNES by tertiary referral centers for epilepsy. In this study, we surveyed 11 Brazilian epilepsy center directors about diagnosis, treatment, education and research on PNES. Respondents reported that patients with PNES represented 10-20% of all adult patients recorded by video-EEG (VEEG). All respondents recognized VEEG as the method to confirm the diagnosis, and 81.8% used this approach for confirmation. Most centers had a standard protocol for diagnosis. None of the centers had a particular protocol to treat PNES, but 90.9% had a uniform treatment approach including therapy and educational measures. Psychotherapy was not easily obtained in nine centers (81.8%). Seven (63.3%) centers reported ongoing research projects with PNES. Five centers referred to an educational PNES program discussing diagnosis, but only one reported an educational program for treatment. This study showed a commitment to PNES diagnosis; however, some gaps remain regarding treatment and training, namely implementing a psychotherapy approach for patients and providing educational curricula for clinicians.