VERA DEMARCHI AIELLO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
11
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 63
  • article 93 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Classification of Ventricular Septal Defects for the Eleventh Iteration of the International Classification of Diseases-Striving for Consensus: A Report From the International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease
    (2018) LOPEZ, Leo; HOUYEL, Lucile; COLAN, Steven D.; ANDERSON, Robert H.; BELAND, Marie J.; AIELLO, Vera D.; BAILLIARD, Frederique; COHEN, Meryl S.; JACOBS, Jeffrey P.; KUROSAWA, Hiromi; SANDERS, Stephen P.; III, Henry L. Walters; WEINBERG, Paul M.; BORIS, Jeffrey R.; COOK, Andrew C.; CRUCEAN, Adrian; EVERETT, Allen D.; GAYNOR, J. William; GIROUD, Jorge; GULESERIAN, Kristine J.; HUGHES, Marina L.; JURASZEK, Amy L.; KROGMANN, Otto N.; MARUSZEWSKI, Bohdan J.; LOUIS, James D. St; SESLAR, Stephen P.; SPICER, Diane E.; SRIVASTAVA, Shubhika; STELLIN, Giovanni; I, Christo Tchervenkov; WANG, Lianyi; FRANKLIN, Rodney C. G.
    The definition and classification of ventricular septal defects have been fraught with controversy. The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and annually for the past 9 years in an effort to unify by consensus the divergent approaches to describe ventricular septal defects. These efforts have culminated in acceptance of the classification system by the World Health Organization into the 11th Iteration of the International Classification of Diseases. The scheme to categorize a ventricular septal defect uses both its location and the structures along its borders, thereby bridging the two most popular and disparate classification approaches and providing a common language for describing each phenotype. Although the first-order terms are based on the geographic categories of central perimembranous, inlet, trabecular muscular, and outlet defects, inlet and Congenital Heart Disease is a group of international specialists in pediatric cardiology, cardiac surgery, cardiac morphology, and cardiac pathology that has met outlet defects are further characterized by descriptors that incorporate the borders of the defect, namely the perimembranous, muscular, and juxta-arterial types. The Society recognizes that it is equally valid to classify these defects by geography or borders, so the emphasis in this system is on the second-order terms that incorporate both geography and borders to describe each phenotype. The unified terminology should help the medical community describe with better precision all types of ventricular septal defects. (C) 2018 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Case 4/2019-26-Year-Old Man with Congenital Chagas Disease and Heart Transplantation
    (2019) PINESI, Henrique Trombini; STRABELLI, Tania Mara Varejao; AIELLO, Vera Demarchi
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Parameters associated with outcome in pediatric patients with congenital heart disease and pulmonary hypertension subjected to combined vasodilator and surgical treatments
    (2019) THOMAZ, Ana Maria; KAJITA, Luiz J.; AIELLO, Vera D.; ZORZANELLI, Leina; GALAS, Filomena Regina B. G.; MACHADO, Cleide G.; BARBERO-MARCIAL, Miguel; JATENE, Marcelo B.; RABINOVITCH, Marlene; LOPES, Antonio Augusto
    Management of pediatric pulmonary hypertension associated with congenital heart disease (PHT-CHD) is challenging. Some patients have persistently elevated pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) after cardiac surgery, an undesired condition that is difficult to predict. We investigated the value of clinical, hemodynamic, and histopathological data in predicting the outcome in a prospective cohort. Patients with PHT-CHD received sildenafil orally pre- and postoperatively for six months and then were subjected to a catheter study. Thirty-three patients were enrolled (age range = 4.6-37.0 months). Pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) was 4.9 (range = 3.9-7.2) Wood units x m(2) (median with IQR). Twenty-two patients had a >= 20% decrease in PVR and pulmonary-to-systemic vascular resistance ratio (PVR/SVR) in response to inhaled nitric oxide (NO). The response was directly related to the degree of medial hypertrophy of pulmonary arterioles (P < 0.05) (morphometric analysis, intraoperative lung biopsy). Subsequently, five of the non-responders had a >= 30% increase in pulmonary blood flow in response to sildenafil (3.0 [2.0-4.0] mg/kg/day). Six months after surgery, PAP and PVR were significantly lower (P < 0.001 vs. baseline), even in seven patients with Heath-Edwards grade III/IV pulmonary vascular lesions (P = 0.018), but still abnormal in 12 individuals (>25 mmHg and >3.0 U x m(2), respectively). A preoperative PVR/SVR of >= 24% during NO inhalation and a wall thickness of arteries accompanying respiratory bronchioli of >= 4.7 (Z score) were identified, respectively, as risk and protection factors for abnormal postoperative hemodynamics (hazard ratio [95% CI] = 1.09 [1.01-1.18], P = 0.036; and 0.69 [0.49-0.98], P = 0.040, respectively). Thus, in PHT-CHD patients receiving oral sildenafil pre- and post-surgical repair of cardiac lesions, mid-term postoperative outcome is predictable to some extent.
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Atrioventricular Block Pathology in Cardiomyopathy by Desmin Deposition
    (2012) BENVENUTI, Luiz Alberto; AIELLO, Vera Dermarchi; FALCAO, Breno Alencar Araripe; LAGE, Silvia Gelas
    Generally, restrictive cardiomyopathy due to desmin deposition is characterized by restriction to ventricular diastolic filling and different degrees of atrioventricular block (AVB). In this report, we describe the pathological changes of the cardiac conduction system related to AVB. The sinus node, the compact node, and the penetrating bundle (bundle of His) had no abnormalities, however, there was extensive fibrosis of the terminal portions of the branching bundle and the beginning of the left and right bundles at the top of the ventricular septum. The pathogenesis of this fibrous replacement is probably the same that leads to extensive fibrosis of the working ventricular myocardium, and remains to be elucidated.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Superior caval vein syndrome and cardiac inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour in an infant
    (2023) SOARES, Bernardo Mussi; SOARES, Andressa Mussi; AIELLO, Vera Demarchi
    The inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour, although very rare, must be considered in the differential diagnosis of intracardiac masses in children as it has systemic implications. We present a case of an infant whose diagnosis was suspected on clinical basis and echocardiogram, but the anatomopathological analysis with immunohistochemical study was essential for the conclusion of the histological type and orientation of the clinical follow-up.
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Ultrahigh resolution spectral-domain optical coherence tomography using the 1000-1600 nm spectral band
    (2022) BERNSTEIN, L. I. A. N. E.; RAMIER, A. N. T. O. I. N. E.; WU, J. I. A. M. I. N.; AIELLO, V. E. R. A. D.; BELAND, M. A. R. I. E. J.; LIN, C. H. A. R. L. E. S. P.; YUN, SEOK-HYUN
    Ultrahigh resolution optical coherence tomography (UHR-OCT) can image micro-scopic features that are not visible with the standard OCT resolution of 5-15 mu m. In previous studies, high-speed UHR-OCT has been accomplished within the visible (VIS) and near-infrared (NIR-I) spectral ranges, specifically within 550-950 nm. Here, we present a spectral domain UHR-OCT system operating in a short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) range from 1000 to 1600 nm using a supercontinuum light source and an InGaAs-based spectrometer. We obtained an axial resolution of 2.6 mu m in air, the highest ever recorded in the SWIR window to our knowledge, with deeper penetration into tissues than VIS or NIR-I light. We demonstrate imaging of conduction fibers of the left bundle branch in freshly excised porcine hearts. These results suggest a potential for deep-penetration, ultrahigh resolution OCT in intraoperative applications. (c) 2022 Optica Publishing Group under the terms of the Optica Open Access Publishing Agreement
  • article 10 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Early changes in myocyte contractility and cardiac function in streptozotocin-induced type 1 diabetes in rats
    (2020) MARCHINI, Gustavo S.; CESTARI, Ismar N.; SALEMI, Vera M. C.; IRIGOYEN, Maria Claudia; ARNOLD, Alexandre; KAKOI, Adelia; ROCON, Camila; AIELLO, Vera D.; CESTARI, Idagene A.
    Diabetes can elicit direct deleterious effects on the myocardium, independent of coronary artery disease or hypertension. These cardiac disturbances are termed diabetic cardiomyopathy showing increased risk of heart failure with or without reduced ejection fraction. Presently, there is no specific treatment for this type of cardiomyopathy and in the case of type I diabetes, it may start in early childhood independent of glycemic control. We hypothesized that alterations in isolated myocyte contractility and cardiac function are present in the early stages of experimental diabetes in rats before overt changes in myocardium structure occur. Diabetes was induced by single-dose injection of streptozotocin (STZ) in rats with data collected from control and diabetic animals 3 weeks after injection. Left ventricle myocyte contractility was measured by single-cell length variation under electrical stimulation. Cardiac function and morphology were studied by high-resolution echocardiography with pulsed-wave tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) measurements and three-lead surface electrocardiogram. Triglycerides, cholesterol and liver enzyme levels were measured from plasma samples obtained from both groups. Myocardial collagen content and perivascular fibrosis of atria and ventricle were studied by histological analysis after picrosirius red staining. Diabetes resulted in altered contractility of isolated cardiac myocytes with increased contraction and relaxation time intervals. Echocardiography showed left atrium dilation, increased end-diastolic LV and posterior wall thickness, with reduced longitudinal systolic peak velocity (S') of the septum mitral annulus at the apical four-chamber view obtained by TDI. Triglycerides, aspartate aminotransferase and alkaline phosphatase were elevated in diabetic animals. Intertitial collagen content was higher in atria of both groups and did not differ among control and diabetic animals. Perivascular intramyocardial arterioles collagen did not differ between groups. These results suggest that alterations in cardiac function are present in the early phase in this model of diabetes type 1 and occur before overt changes in myocardium structure appear as evaluated by intersticial collagen deposition and perivascular fibrosis of intramyocardial arterioles.
  • article 25 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Percutaneous Transatrial Access to the Pericardial Space for Epicardial Mapping and Ablation
    (2011) SCANAVACCA, Mauricio I.; VENANCIO, Ana Claudia; PISANI, Cristiano F.; LARA, Sissy; HACHUL, Denise; DARRIEUX, Francisco; HARDY, Carina; PAOLA, Edna; AIELLO, Vera D.; MAHAPATRA, Srijoy; SOSA, Eduardo
    Background-Puncture of the atrial appendage may provide access to the pericardial space. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of epicardial mapping and ablation through an endocardial transatrial access in a swine model. Methods and Results-An 8-F Mullins sheath was used to perforate the right (n=16) or left (n=1) atrial appendage in 17 pigs (median weight, 27.5 kg; first and third quartiles [Q1, Q3], 25.2, 30.0 kg). A 7-F ablation catheter was introduced into the pericardial space to perform epicardial mapping and deliver radiofrequency pulses on the atria. The pericardial space was entered in all 17 animals. In 15 (88%) animals, there was no hemodynamic instability (mean blood pressure monitoring, initial median, 80 mm Hg; Q1, Q3, 70, 86 mm Hg; final median, 88 mm Hg; Q1, Q3, 80, 96 mm Hg; P=0.426). In these 15, a mild hemorrhagic pericardial effusion was identified and aspirated (median, 20 mL; Q1, Q3, 15, 30 mL) during the procedure, and postmortem gross analysis revealed that the atrial perforation was closed in these animals. In 2 (12%) of the 17 animals, there was major pericardial bleeding with hemodynamic collapse. On gross examination, it was found that pericardial space was accessed through right ventricular perforation in 1 animal and the tricuspid annulus in the other. After the initial study, we used an occlusion device in 3 other animals to attempt to seal the puncture (2 at the right atrial appendage and 1 at the right ventricle). These 3 animals had no significant pericardial bleeding. Conclusions-Transatrial endovascular right atrial appendage puncture may provide a potential alternative route for pericardial access. Further studies are needed to evaluate its safety with longer and more-complex procedures before being applied in clinical settings. (Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol. 2011;4:331-336.)
  • article 49 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Report from The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease: cardiovascular catheterisation for congenital and paediatric cardiac disease (Part 2-Nomenclature of complications associated with interventional cardiology)
    (2011) BERGERSEN, Lisa; GIROUD, Jorge Manuel; JACOBS, Jeffrey Phillip; FRANKLIN, Rodney Cyril George; BELAND, Marie Josee; KROGMANN, Otto Nils; AIELLO, Vera Demarchi; COLAN, Steven D.; ELLIOTT, Martin J.; GAYNOR, J. William; KUROSAWA, Hiromi; MARUSZEWSKI, Bohdan; STELLIN, Giovanni; TCHERVENKOV, Christo I.; III, Henry Lane Walters; WEINBERG, Paul; EVERETT, Allen Dale
    Interventional cardiology for paediatric and congenital cardiac disease is a relatively young and rapidly evolving field. As the profession begins to establish multi-institutional databases, a universal system of nomenclature is necessary for the field of interventional cardiology for paediatric and congenital cardiac disease. The purpose of this paper is to present the results of the efforts of The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease to establish a system of nomenclature for cardiovascular catheterisation for congenital and paediatric cardiac disease, focusing both on procedural nomenclature and the nomenclature of complications associated with interventional cardiology. This system of nomenclature for cardiovascular catheterisation for congenital and paediatric cardiac disease is a component of The International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code. This manuscript is the second part of the two-part series. Part 1 covered the procedural nomenclature associated with interventional cardiology as treatment for paediatric and congenital cardiac disease. Part 2 will cover the nomenclature of complications associated with interventional cardiology as treatment for paediatric and congenital cardiac disease.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Rosuvastatin prevents myocardial necrosis in an experimental model of acute myocardial infarction
    (2011) DOURADO, P. M. M.; TSUTSUI, J. M.; LANDIM, M. B. P.; CASELLA FILHO, A.; GALVAO, T. F. G.; AIELLO, V. D.; MATHIAS JR., W.; LUZ, P. L. da; CHAGAS, A. C. P.
    Dyslipidemia is related to the progression of atherosclerosis and is an important risk factor for acute coronary syndromes. Our objective was to determine the effect of rosuvastatin on myocardial necrosis in an experimental model of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Male Wistar rats (8-10 weeks old, 250-350 g) were subjected to definitive occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery to cause AMI. Animals were divided into 6 groups of 8 to 11 rats per group: G1, normocholesterolemic diet; G2, normocholesterolemic diet and rosuvastatin (1 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) 30 days after AMI; G3, normocholesterolemic diet and rosuvastatin (1 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) 30 days before and after AMI; G4, hypercholesterolemic diet; G5, hypercholesterolemic diet and rosuvastatin (1 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) 30 days after AMI; G6, hypercholesterolemic diet and rosuvastatin (1 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) 30 days before and after AMI. Left ventricular function was determined by echocardiography and percent infarct area by histology. Fractional shortening of the left ventricle was normal at baseline and decreased significantly after AMI (P < 0.05 in all groups), being lower in G4 and G5 than in the other groups. No significant difference in fractional shortening was observed between G6 and the groups on the normocholesterolemic diet. Percent infarct area was significantly higher in G4 than in G3. No significant differences were observed in infarct area among the other groups. We conclude that a hypercholesterolemic diet resulted in reduced cardiac function after AMI, which was reversed with rosuvastatin when started 30 days before AMI. A normocholesterolemic diet associated with rosuvastatin before and after AMI prevented myocardial necrosis when compared with the hypercholesterolemic condition.