CARLOS ROBERTO RIBEIRO DE CARVALHO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
29
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Cardio-Pneumologia, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/09 - Laboratório de Pneumologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Líder

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 111
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Plano de análise estatística para o Alveolar Recruitment for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Trial (ART). Ensaio controlado randomizado
    (2017) DAMIANI, Lucas Petri; BERWANGER, Otavio; PAISANI, Denise; LARANJEIRA, Ligia Nasi; SUZUMURA, Erica Aranha; AMATO, Marcelo Britto Passos; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro; CAVALCANTI, Alexandre Biasi
    ABSTRACT Background: The Alveolar Recruitment for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Trial (ART) is an international multicenter randomized pragmatic controlled trial with allocation concealment involving 120 intensive care units in Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Malaysia, Spain, and Uruguay. The primary objective of ART is to determine whether maximum stepwise alveolar recruitment associated with PEEP titration, adjusted according to the static compliance of the respiratory system (ART strategy), is able to increase 28-day survival in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome compared to conventional treatment (ARDSNet strategy). Objective: To describe the data management process and statistical analysis plan. Methods: The statistical analysis plan was designed by the trial executive committee and reviewed and approved by the trial steering committee. We provide an overview of the trial design with a special focus on describing the primary (28-day survival) and secondary outcomes. We describe our data management process, data monitoring committee, interim analyses, and sample size calculation. We describe our planned statistical analyses for primary and secondary outcomes as well as pre-specified subgroup analyses. We also provide details for presenting results, including mock tables for baseline characteristics, adherence to the protocol and effect on clinical outcomes. Conclusion: According to best trial practice, we report our statistical analysis plan and data management plan prior to locking the database and beginning analyses. We anticipate that this document will prevent analysis bias and enhance the utility of the reported results. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01374022.
  • article 29 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Lung ultrasound in the evaluation of pleural effusion
    (2014) PRINA, Elena; TORRES, Antoni; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Short-term effects of stored homologous red blood cell transfusion on cardiorespiratory function and inflammation: an experimental study in a hypovolemia model
    (2018) BIAGINI, S.; DALE, C. S.; REAL, J. M.; MOREIRA, E. S.; CARVALHO, C. R. R.; SCHETTINO, G. P. P.; WENDEL, S.; AZEVEDO, L. C. P.
    The pathophysiological mechanisms associated with the effects of red blood cell (RBC) transfusion on cardiopulmonary function and inflammation are unclear. We developed an experimental model of homologous 14-days stored RBC transfusion in hypovolemic swine to evaluate the short-term effects of transfusion on cardiopulmonary system and inflammation. Sixteen healthy male anesthetized swine (68 +/- 3.3 kg) were submitted to controlled hemorrhage (25% of blood volume). Two units of non-filtered RBC from each animal were stored under blood bank conditions for 14 days. After 30 min of hypovolemia, the control group (n=8) received an infusion of lactated Ringer's solution (three times the removed volume). The transfusion group (n=8) received two units of homologous 14-days stored RBC and lactated Ringer's solution in a volume that was three times the difference between blood removed and blood transfusion infused. Both groups were followed up for 6 h after resuscitation with collection of hemodynamic and respiratory data. Cytokines and RNA expression were measured in plasma and lung tissue. Stored RBC transfusion significantly increased mixed oxygen venous saturation and arterial oxygen content. Transfusion was not associated with alterations on pulmonary function. Pulmonary concentrations of cytokines were not different between groups. Gene expression for lung cytokines demonstrated a 2-fold increase in mRNA level for inducible nitric oxide synthase and a 0.5-fold decrease in mRNA content for IL-21 in the transfused group. Thus, stored homologous RBC transfusion in a hypovolemia model improved cardiovascular parameters but did not induce significant effects on microcirculation, pulmonary inflammation and respiratory function up to 6 h after transfusion.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Avaliação dos artigos de pneumologia publicados em periódicos brasileiros além do Jornal Brasileiro de Pneumologia
    (2011) BALDI, Bruno Guedes; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro
    In Brazil, research on pulmonology has become increasingly more visible in recent years. In addition to the Brazilian Journal of Pulmonology, other journals have contributed to that by publishing relevant articles in this area. The objective of this article was to briefly report the most relevant studies on pulmonology that were published in other important Brazilian journals between 2009 and 2010. Altogether, there were 56 articles related to the various subareas that compose the field of respiratory diseases.
  • article 37 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Doxycycline use in patients with lymphangioleiomyomatosis: safety and efficacy in metalloproteinase blockade
    (2011) PIMENTA, Suzana Pinheiro; BALDI, Bruno Guedes; ACENCIO, Milena Marques Pagliarelli; KAIRALLA, Ronaldo Adib; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro
    Objective: Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is characterized by lung cysts, whose development is associated with matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) hyperactivity, principally that of MMP-2 and MMP-9. Our objective was to compare LAM patients and controls in terms of the levels of these MMPs, as well as to determine the safety and efficacy of treatment with doxycycline, a potent MMP inhibitor. Methods: Prospective clinical study involving female LAM patients who received doxycycline (100 mg/day) for six months. Urine and blood samples were collected for the quantification of MMP-2 and MMP-9 before and after the treatment period. Samples from 10 healthy women were also collected. Results: Of the 41 LAM patients who started the treatment, 34 completed the protocol. Serum and urinary MMP-9 levels were significantly lower in the controls than in the LAM patients (p < 0.0001). Comparing pre- and post-treatment values, we found that the median level of MMP-9 in serum decreased from 919 ng/mL to 871 ng/mL (p = 0.05), whereas that of MMP-9 in urine decreased from 11,558 pg/mL to 7,315 pg/mL (p = 0.10). After treatment, the median level of MMP-2 in serum was significantly lower (p = 0.04) and urinary MMP-2 levels were undetectable. Nausea, diarrhea, and epigastric pain were the most prevalent adverse affects and were often self-limiting. There was only one case in which the patient discontinued the treatment because of side effects. Conclusions: We have demonstrated, for the first time, a decrease in serum and urine levels of MMPs in LAM patients treated with doxycycline, which proved to be a safe medication, with mild and well-tolerated side effects.
  • article 15 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Brazilian recommendations of mechanical ventilation 2013. Part 1
    (2014) CAVALCANTI, Alexandre Biasi; ISOLA, Alexandre Marini; GAMA, Ana Maria Casati; DUARTE, Antonio Carlos Magalhaes; VIANNA, Arthur; SERPA NETO, Ary; FARIAS, Augusto Manoel de Carvalho; BRAVIM, Bruno de Arruda; PINHEIRO, Bruno do Valle; MAZZA, Bruno Franco; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro de; TOUFEN JUNIOR, Carlos; BARBAS, Carmen Silvia Valente; DAVID, Cid Marcos Nascimento; TANIGUCHI, Corine; MAZZA, Debora Dutra da Silveira; DRAGOSAVAC, Desanka; TOLEDO, Diogo Oliveira; COSTA, Eduardo Leite; CASER, Eliana Bemardete; SILVA, Eliezer; AMORIM, Fabio Ferreira; SADDY, Felipe; GALAS, Filomena Regina Barbosa Gomes; SILVA, Gisele Sampaio; MATOS, Gustavo Faissol Janot de; EMMERICH, Joao Claudio; VALIATTI, Jorge Luis dos Sanots; TELES, Jose Mario Vleira; VICTORINO, Josue Almeida; FERREIRA, Juliana Carvalho; PRODOMO, Luciana Passuello do Vale; HAJAR, Ludhmila Abrahao; MARTINS, Luiz Claudio; MALBOUISSON, Luiz Marcelo Sa; VARGAS, Mara Ambrosina de Oliveira; HOLANDA, Marcelo Alcantara; AMATO, Marcelo Brito Passos; PARK, Marcelo; JACOMELLI, Marcia; REIS, Marco Antonio Soares; TAVARES, Marcos; DAMASCENO, Marta Cristina Paulette; DAMASCENO, Moyzes Pinto Coelho Duarte; ASSUNCAO, Murillo Santucci Cesar; YOUSSEF, Nazah Cherif Mohamad; MESSEDER, Octavio; TEIXEIRA, Paulo Jose Zimmermann; CARUSO, Pedro; DUARTE, Pericles Almeida Delfino; EID, Raquel Caserta; RODRIGUES, Ricardo Goulart; JESUS, Rodrigo Francisco de; KAIRALLA, Ronald Adib; JUSTINO, Sandra; NEMER, Sergio Nogueira; ROMERO, Simone Barbosa; AMADO, Veronica Moreira
    Perspectives on invasive and noninvasive ventilatory support for critically ill patients are evolving, as much evidence indicates that ventilation may have positive effects on patient survival and the quality of the care provided in intensive care units in Brazil. For those reasons, the Brazilian Association of Intensive Care Medicine (Associacao de Medicina Intensiva Brasileira - AMIB) and the Brazilian Thoracic Society (Sociedade Brasileira de Pneumologia e Tisiologia - SBPT), represented by the Mechanical Ventilation Committee and the Commission of Intensive Therapy, respectively, decided to review the literature and draft recommendations for mechanical ventilation with the goal of creating a document for bedside guidance as to the best practices on mechanical ventilation available to their members. The document was based on the available evidence regarding 29 subtopics selected as the most relevant for the subject of interest. The project was developed in several stages, during which the selected topics were distributed among experts recommended by both societies with recent publications on the subject of interest and/or significant teaching and research activity in the field of mechanical ventilation in Brazil. The experts were divided into pairs that were charged with performing a thorough review of the international literature on each topic. All the experts met at the Forum on Mechanical Ventilation, which was held at the headquarters of AMIB in Sao Paulo on August 3 and 4, 2013, to collaboratively draft the final text corresponding to each sub-topic, which was presented to, appraised, discussed and approved in a plenary session that included all 58 participants and aimed to create the final document.
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    New steps for the international consolidation of the Brazilian Journal of Pulmonology
    (2014) CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro; BALDI, Bruno Guedes; JARDIM, Carlos Viana Poyares; CARUSO, Pedro; SOUZA, Rogerio
  • article 12 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Brazilian recommendations of mechanical ventilation 2013. Part 2
    (2014) CAVALCANTI, Alexandre Biasi; ISOLA, Alexandre Marini; GAMA, Ana Maria Casati; DUARTE, Antonio Carlos Magalhaes; VIANNA, Arthur; SERPA NETO, Ary; FARIAS, Augusto Manoel de Carvalho; BRAVIM, Bruno de Arruda; PINHEIRO, Bruno do Valle; MAZZA, Bruno Franco; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro de; TOUFEN JUNIOR, Carlos; BARBAS, Carmen Silvia Valente; DAVID, Cid Marcos Nascimento; TANIGUCHI, Corine; MAZZA, Debora Dutra da Silveira; DRAGOSAVAC, Desanka; TOLEDO, Diogo Oliveira; COSTA, Eduardo Leite; CASER, Eliana Bernardete; SILVA, Eliezer; AMORIM, Fabio Ferreira; SADDY, Felipe; GALAS, Filomena Regina Barbosa Gomes; SILVA, Gisele Sampaio; MATOS, Gustavo Faissol Janot de; EMMERICH, Joao Claudio; VALIATTI, Jorge Luis dos Sanots; TELES, Jose Mario Meira; VICTORINO, Josue Almeida; FERREIRA, Juliana Carvalho; PRODOMO, Luciana Passuello do Vale; HAJJAR, Ludhmila Abrahao; MARTINS, Luiz Claudio; MALBOUISSON, Luiz Marcelo Sa; VARGAS, Mara Ambrosina de Oliveira; HOLANDA, Marcelo Alcantara; AMATO, Marcelo Brito Passos; PARK, Marcelo; JACOMELLI, Marcia; REIS, Marco Antonio Soares; TAVARES, Marcos; DAMASCENO, Marta Cristina Paulette; DAMASCENO, Moyzes Pinto Coelho Duarte; ASSUNCAO, Murillo Santucci Cesar; YOUSSEF, Nazah Cherif Mohamad; MESSEDER, Octavio; TEIXEIRA, Paulo Jose Zimmermann; CARUSO, Pedro; DUARTE, Pericles Almeida Delfino; EID, Raquel Caserta; RODRIGUES, Ricardo Goulart; JESUS, Rodrigo Francisco de; KAIRALLA, Ronaldo Adib; JUSTINO, Sandra; NEMER, Sergio Nogueira; ROMERO, Simone Barbosa; AMADO, Veronica Moreira
    Perspectives on invasive and noninvasive ventilatory support for critically ill patients are evolving, as much evidence indicates that ventilation may have positive effects on patient survival and the quality of the care provided in intensive care units in Brazil. For those reasons, the Brazilian Association of Intensive Care Medicine (Associacao de Medicina Intensiva Brasileira - AMIB) and the Brazilian Thoracic Society (Sociedade Brasileira de Pneumologia e Tisiologia - SBPT), represented by the Mechanical Ventilation Committee and the Commission of Intensive Therapy, respectively, decided to review the literature and draft recommendations for mechanical ventilation with the goal of creating a document for bedside guidance as to the best practices on mechanical ventilation available to their members. The document was based on the available evidence regarding 29 subtopics selected as the most relevant for the subject of interest. The project was developed in several stages, during which the selected topics were distributed among experts recommended by both societies with recent publications on the subject of interest and/or significant teaching and research activity in the field of mechanical ventilation in Brazil. The experts were divided into pairs that were charged with performing a thorough review of the international literature on each topic. All the experts met at the Forum on Mechanical Ventilation, which was held at the headquarters of AMIB in Sao Paulo on August 3 and 4, 2013, to collaboratively draft the final text corresponding to each sub-topic, which was presented to, appraised, discussed and approved in a plenary session that included all 58 participants and aimed to create the final document.
  • article 20 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Driving pressure and long-term outcomes in moderate/severe acute respiratory distress syndrome
    (2018) TOUFEN JUNIOR, Carlos; SANTIAGO, Roberta R. De Santis; HIROTA, Adriana S.; CARVALHO, Alysson Roncally S.; GOMES, Susimeire; AMATO, Marcelo Brito Passos; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro
    BackgroundAcute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patients may present impaired in lung function and structure after hospital discharge that may be related to mechanical ventilation strategy. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between functional and structural lung impairment, N-terminal-peptide type III procollagen (NT-PCP-III) and driving pressure during protective mechanical ventilation. It was a secondary analysis of data from randomized controlled trial that included patients with moderate/severe ARDS with at least one follow-up visit performed. We obtained serial measurements of plasma NT-PCP-III levels. Whole-lung computed tomography analysis and pulmonary function test were performed at 1 and 6months of follow-up. A health-related quality of life survey after 6months was also performed.ResultsThirty-three patients were enrolled, and 21 patients survived after 6months. In extubation day an association between driving pressure and NT-PCP-III was observed. At 1 and 6months forced vital capacity (FVC) was negatively correlated to driving pressure (p<0.01). At 6months driving pressure was associated with lower FVC independently on tidal volume, plateau pressure and baseline static respiratory compliance after adjustments (r(2)=0.51, p=0.02). There was a significant correlation between driving pressure and lung densities and nonaerated/poorly aerated lung volume after 6months. Driving pressure was also related to general health domain of SF-36 at 6months.ConclusionEven in patients ventilated with protective tidal volume, higher driving pressure is associated with worse long-term pulmonary function and structure.
  • article 14 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Colagenose pulmão dominante em pacientes com doença pulmonar intersticial: prevalência, estabilidade funcional e manifestações extratorácicas comuns
    (2015) PEREIRA, Daniel Antunes Silva; DIAS, Olivia Meira; ALMEIDA, Guilherme Eler de; ARAUJO, Mariana Sponholz; KAWANO-DOURADO, Leticia Barbosa; BALDI, Bruno Guedes; KAIRALLA, Ronaldo Adib; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro
    Objective: To describe the characteristics of a cohort of patients with lung-dominant connective tissue disease (LD-CTD). Methods: This was a retrospective study of patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD), positive antinuclear antibody (ANA) results (>= 1/320), with or without specific autoantibodies, and at least one clinical feature suggestive of connective tissue disease (CO). Results: Of the 1,998 patients screened, 52 initially met the criteria for a diagnosis of LD-CTD: 37% were male; the mean age at diagnosis was 56 years; and the median follow-up period was 48 months. During follow-up, 8 patients met the criteria for a definitive diagnosis of a CTD. The remaining 44 patients comprised the LD-CTD group, in which the most prevalent extrathoracic features were arthralgia, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and Raynaud's phenomenon. The most prevalent autoantibodies in this group were ANA (89%) and anti-SSA (anti-Ro, 27%). The mean baseline and final FVC was 69.5% and 74.0% of the predicted values, respectively (p > 0.05). Nonspecific interstitial pneumonia and usual interstitial pneumonia patterns were found in 45% and 9% of HRCT scans, respectively; 36% of the scans were unclassifiable. A similar prevalence was noted in histological samples. Diffuse esophageal dilatation was identified in 52% of HRCT scans. Nailfold capillaroscopy was performed in 22 patients; 17 showed a scleroderma pattern. Conclusions: In our LD-CTD group, there was predominance of females and the patients showed mild spirometric abnormalities at diagnosis, with differing underlying ILD patterns that were mostly unclassifiable on HRCT and by histology. We found functional stability on follow-up. Esophageal dilatation on HRCT and scleroderma pattern on nailfold capillaroscopy were frequent findings and might come to serve as diagnostic criteria.