ADALBERTO STUDART NETO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
10
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto Central, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
LIM/45 - Laboratório de Fisiopatologia Neurocirúrgica, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 20
  • conferenceObject
    Amyloid-beta Deposition, Brain Metabolism and Neuropsychological Profile in Elderly with Subjective Cognitive Decline and SuperAgers
    (2020) STUDART-NETO, Adalberto; COUTINHO, Artur; CARNEIRO, Camila de Godoi; MORAES, Natalia Cristina; SPERA, Raphael Ribeiro; YASSUDA, Monica Sanches; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi; LEITE, Claudia; BUCHPIGUEL, Carlos; NITRINI, Ricardo
  • conferenceObject
    Rapidly progressive dementia in a neurologic unit of a tertiary hospital in Brazil
    (2015) STUDART NETO, A.; SOARES NETO, H.; SIMABUKURO, M.; GONCALVES, M.; FORTINI, I. D. A.; CASTRO, L.; NITRINI, R.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Probable 4-Repeat Tauopathy Criteria Predict Brain Amyloid Negativity, Distinct Clinical Features, and FDG-PET/MRI Neurodegeneneration Patterns in Corticobasal Syndrome
    (2024) PARMERA, Jacy Bezerra; CARNEIRO, Camila de Godoi; ALMEIDA, Isabel Junqueira de; OLIVEIRA, Marcos Castello Barbosa de; BARBOSA, Pedro Melo; STUDART-NETO, Adalberto; ONO, Carla Rachel; NITRINI, Ricardo; BUCHPIGUEL, Carlos Alberto; BARBOSA, Egberto Reis; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi; COUTINHO, Artur Martins
    BackgroundCorticobasal syndrome (CBS) is associated with diverse underlying pathologies, including the four-repeat (4R)-tauopathies. The Movement Disorders Society (MDS) criteria for progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) proposed the novel category ""probable 4R-tauopathy"" to address the phenotypic overlap between PSP and corticobasal degeneration (CBD).ObjectivesTo investigate the clinical ability of the MDS-PSP criteria for probable 4R-tauopathy in predicting a negative amyloid-PET in CBS. Additionally, this study aims to explore CBS patients classified as 4R-tauopathy concerning their clinical features and neuroimaging degeneration patterns.MethodsThirty-two patients with probable CBS were prospectively evaluated and split into those who fulfilled or did not fulfill the 4R-tauopathy criteria (CBS-4RT+ vs. CBS-4RT-). All patients underwent positron emission tomographies (PET) with [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose and [11C]Pittsburgh Compound-B (PIB) on a hybrid PET-MRI scanner to perform multimodal quantitative comparisons with a control group.ResultsEleven patients were clinically classified as CBS-4RT+, and only one had a positive PIB-PET. The CBS-4RT+ classification had 92% specificity, 52% sensitivity, and 69% accuracy in predicting a negative PIB-PET. The CBS-4RT+ group presented with dysarthria and perseveration more often than the CBS-4RT- group. Moreover, the CBS-4RT+ group showed a prominent frontal hypometabolism extending to the supplementary motor area and striatum, and brain atrophy at the anterior cingulate and bilateral striata.ConclusionsThe 4R-tauopathy criteria were highly specific in predicting a negative amyloid-PET in CBS. Patients classified as 4R-tauopathy presented distinct clinical aspects, as well as brain metabolism and atrophy patterns previously associated with tauopathies.
  • article 10 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Metabolic and Structural Signatures of Speech and Language Impairment in Corticobasal Syndrome: A Multimodal PET/MRI Study
    (2021) PARMERA, Jacy Bezerra; ALMEIDA, Isabel Junqueira de; OLIVEIRA, Marcos Castello Barbosa de; SILAGI, Marcela Lima; CARNEIRO, Camila de Godoi; STUDART-NETO, Adalberto; ONO, Carla Rachel; BARBOSA, Egberto Reis; NITRINI, Ricardo; BUCHPIGUEL, Carlos Alberto; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi; COUTINHO, Artur Martins
    Introduction: Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is a progressive neurological disorder related to multiple underlying pathologies, including four-repeat tauopathies, such as corticobasal degeneration and progressive supranuclear palsy, and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Speech and language are commonly impaired, encompassing a broad spectrum of deficits. We aimed to investigate CBS speech and language impairment patterns in light of a multimodal imaging approach. Materials and Methods: Thirty-one patients with probable CBS were prospectively evaluated concerning their speech-language, cognitive, and motor profiles. They underwent positron emission tomography with [F-18]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG-PET) and [C-11]Pittsburgh Compound-B (PIB-PET) on a hybrid PET-MRI machine to assess their amyloid status. PIB-PET images were classified based on visual and semi-quantitative analyses. Quantitative group analyses were performed on FDG-PET data, and atrophy patterns on MRI were investigated using voxel-based morphometry (VBM). Thirty healthy participants were recruited as imaging controls. Results: Aphasia was the second most prominent cognitive impairment, presented in 67.7% of the cases, following apraxia (96.8%). We identified a wide linguistic profile, ranging from nonfluent variant-primary progressive aphasia to lexical-semantic deficits, mostly with impaired verbal fluency. PIB-PET was classified as negative (CBS-A- group) in 18/31 (58%) and positive (CBS-A+ group) in 13/31 (42%) patients. The frequency of dysarthria was significantly higher in the CBS-A- group than in the CBS-A+ group (55.6 vs. 7.7%, p = 0.008). CBS patients with dysarthria had a left-sided hypometabolism at frontal regions, with a major cluster at the left inferior frontal gyrus and premotor cortex. They showed brain atrophy mainly at the opercular frontal gyrus and putamen. There was a positive correlation between [F-18]FDG uptake and semantic verbal fluency at the left inferior (p = 0.006, R-2 = 0.2326), middle (0.0054, R-2 = 0.2376), and superior temporal gyri (p = 0.0066, R-2 = 0.2276). Relative to the phonemic verbal fluency, we found a positive correlation at the left frontal opercular gyrus (p = 0.0003, R-2 = 0.3685), the inferior (p = 0.0004, R-2 = 0.3537), and the middle temporal gyri (p = 0.0001, R-2 = 0.3993). Discussion: In the spectrum of language impairment profile, dysarthria might be helpful to distinguish CBS patients not related to AD. Metabolic and structural signatures depicted from this feature provide further insights into the motor speech production network and are also helpful to differentiate CBS variants.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The Brain Metabolic Signature in Superagers Using In Vivo H-1-MRS: A Pilot Study
    (2021) GODOY, L. L. de; STUDART-NETO, A.; WYLEZINSKA-ARRIDGE, M.; TSUNEMI, M. H.; MORAES, N. C.; YASSUDA, M. S.; COUTINHO, A. M.; BUCHPIGUEL, C. A.; NITRINI, R.; BISDAS, S.; LEITE, C. da Costa
    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Youthful memory performance in older adults may reflect an underlying resilience to the conventional pathways of aging. Subjects having this unusual characteristic have been recently termed ?superagers.? This study aimed to explore the significance of imaging biomarkers acquired by H-1-MRS to characterize superagers and to differentiate them from their normal-aging peers. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty-five patients older than 80?years of age were screened using a detailed neuropsychological protocol, and 25 participants, comprising 12 superagers and 13 age-matched controls, were statistically analyzed. We used state-of-the-art 3T H-1-MR spectroscopy to quantify 18 neurochemicals in the posterior cingulate cortex of our subjects. All H-1-MR spectroscopy data were analyzed using LCModel. Results were further processed using 2 approaches to investigate the technique accuracy: 1) comparison of the average concentration of metabolites estimated with Cramer-Rao lower bounds?<20%; and 2) calculation and comparison of the weighted means of metabolites? concentrations. RESULTS: The main finding observed was a higher total N-acetyl aspartate concentration in superagers than in age-matched controls using both approaches (P =?.02 and P =?.03 for the weighted means), reflecting a positive association of total N-acetyl aspartate with higher cognitive performance. CONCLUSIONS: H-1-MR spectroscopy emerges as a promising technique to unravel neurochemical mechanisms related to cognitive aging in vivo and providing a brain metabolic signature in superagers. This may contribute to monitoring future interventional therapies to avoid or postpone the pathologic processes of aging.
  • article 23 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Understanding brain resilience in superagers: a systematic review
    (2021) GODOY, Laiz Laura de; ALVES, Cesar Augusto Pinheiro Ferreira; SAAVEDRA, Juan Sebastian Martin; STUDART-NETO, Adalberto; NITRINI, Ricardo; LEITE, Claudia da Costa; BISDAS, Sotirios
    Purpose Superagers are older adults presenting excellent memory performance that may reflect resilience to the conventional pathways of aging. Our contribution aims to shape the evidence body of the known distinctive biomarkers of superagers and their connections with the Brain and Cognitive Reserve and Brain Maintenance concepts. Methods We performed a systematic literature search in PubMed and ScienceDirect with no limit on publication date for studies that evaluated potential biomarkers in superagers classified by validated neuropsychological tests. Methodological quality was assessed using the QUADAS-2 tool. Results Twenty-one studies were included, the majority in neuroimaging, followed by histological, genetic, cognition, and a single one on blood plasma analysis. Superagers exhibited specific regions of cortical preservation, rather than global cortical maintenance, standing out the anterior cingulate and hippocampus regions. Both superagers and controls showed similar levels of amyloid deposition. Moreover, the functional oscillation patterns in superagers resembled those described in young adults. Most of the quality assessment for the included studies showed medium risks of bias. Conclusion This systematic review supports selective cortical preservation in superagers, comprehending regions of the default mode, and salience networks, overlapped by stronger functional connectivity. In this context, the anterior cingulate cortex is highlighted as an imaging and histologic signature of these subjects. Besides, the biomarkers included pointed out that the Brain and Cognitive Reserve and Brain Maintenance concepts are independent and complementary in the superagers' setting.
  • conferenceObject
    Language impairment in Corticobasal Syndrome: from clinical phenotype to biomarkers
    (2021) PARMERA, J.; OLIVEIRA, M.; COUTINHO, A.; ALMEIDA, I. de; CARNEIRO, C.; NETO, A.; NITRINI, R.; BUCHPIGUEL, C.; BARBOSA, E.; BRUCKI, S.
  • conferenceObject
    FDG-PET degeneration patterns predict amyloid deposition in Corticobasal Syndrome
    (2020) PARMERA, J.; COUTINHO, A.; NETO, A.; ONO, C.; ARANHA, M.; BUCHPIGUEL, C.; NITRINI, R.; BARBOSA, E.; BRUCKI, S.
  • article 22 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    FDG-PET Patterns Predict Amyloid Deposition and Clinical Profile in Corticobasal Syndrome
    (2021) PARMERA, Jacy Bezerra; COUTINHO, Artur Martins; ARANHA, Mateus Rozalem; STUDART-NETO, Adalberto; CARNEIRO, Camila de Godoi; ALMEIDA, Isabel Junqueira de; SOLLA, Davi J. Fontoura; ONO, Carla Rachel; BARBOSA, Egberto Reis; NITRINI, Ricardo; BUCHPIGUEL, Carlos Alberto; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi
    Background Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is an atypical parkinsonian syndrome related to multiple underlying pathologies. Objective To investigate if individual brain [F-18]fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) patterns could distinguish CBS due to Alzheimer's disease (AD) from other pathologies based on [C-11]Pittsburgh Compound-B (PIB)-PET. Methods Forty-five patients with probable CBS were prospectively evaluated regarding cognitive and movement disorders profile. They underwent FDG-PET and were distributed into groups: likely related to AD (CBS FDG-AD) or likely non-AD (CBS FDG-nonAD) pathology. Thirty patients underwent PIB-PET on a hybrid PET-magnetic resonance imaging equipment to assess their amyloid status. FDG and PIB-PET images were classified individually based on visual and semi-quantitative analysis, blinded to each other. Quantitative group analyses were also performed. Results CBS FDG-AD group demonstrated worse cognitive performances, mostly concerning attention, memory, visuospatial domains, and displayed more myoclonus and hallucinations. The non-AD metabolic group presented more often limb dystonia, ocular motor dysfunction, motor perseveration, and dysarthria. All patients classified as CBS FDG-AD tested positive at PIB-PET compared to 3 of 20 in the non-AD group. The individual FDG-PET classification demonstrated 76.92% of sensitivity, 100% of specificity and positive predictive value and 88.5% of balanced accuracy to detect positive PIB-PET scans. Individuals with positive and negative PIB-PET showed hypometabolism in posterior temporoparietal areas and in thalamus and brainstem, respectively, mainly contralateral to most affected side, disclosing possible metabolic signatures of CBS variants. Conclusion FDG-PET was useful to predict AD and non-AD CBS variants depicting their specific degeneration patterns, different clinical features, and brain amyloid deposition. (c) 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
  • conferenceObject
    Assessment of Diagnostic Value and Risks of Brain Biopsy in Neurologic Disease
    (2016) GUEDES, Bruno; SILVA, Andre; SOLLA, Davi; CASTRO, Luiz; SOARES-NETO, Herval; NETO, Adalberto Studart; TINONE, Gisela; GONCALVES, Marcia; FORTINI, Ida; NITRINI, Ricardo