LECIO FIGUEIRA PINTO

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

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Contralateral Interictal and Ictal EEG Epileptiform Activity Accentuate Memory Impairment in Unilateral Mesial Temporal Sclerosis Patients
    (2017) PINTO, Lecio F.; ADDA, Carla C.; SILVA, Liliane C. A.; BANASKIWITZ, Natalie H. C.; PASSARELLI, Valmir; JORGE, Carmen L.; VALERIO, Rosa M.; CASTRO, Luiz H.
    Objective: Memory impairment is a recognized complication of mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS). Epileptiform activity may negatively impact on cognition. We evaluated the impact of contralateral EEG involvement on memory in unilateral MTS (uMTS) patients. Method: Retrospective review of 121 right-handed uMTS patients (69 left) evaluated with prolonged video-EEG and verbal and nonverbal memory tests (Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test and Rey-Osterrieth Complex figure), with additional very delayed trials. Patients were classified according to ictal/interictal EEG findings and MTS side as left or right concordant or discordant. Thirty-nine normal individuals who underwent the same neuropsychological battery served as controls. Results: Demographic, disease, and treatment features did not differ among groups. On the 7-day verbal memory free recall, left discordant performed significantly worse than controls and right concordant, recognized fewer words, and had more recognition errors than all other groups, including left concordant. For nonverbal memory, right discordant performed significantly worse than controls on delayed recall, and attained lower scores than other groups on immediate and 7-day recall, but this difference did not reach statistical significance. Left discordant had higher scores of memory complaints than controls and disclosed a trend toward accentuated memory impairment compared with the other groups over time. Conclusions: Our results suggest that contralateral electrographic involvement in uMTS was associated with more pronounced memory impairment for verbal material in left discordant patients, and to a lesser extent, for nonverbal material in right discordant patients. Left discordant group also had increased memory complaints.
  • article 15 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cyclic seizures in critically ill patients: Clinical correlates, DC recordings and outcomes
    (2017) PINTO, Lecio F.; GILMORE, Emily J.; PETROFF, Ognen A.; SIVARAJU, Adithya; RAMPAL, Nishi; HIRSCH, Lawrence J.; GASPARD, Nicolas
    Objective: To describe EEG and clinical correlates, DC recordings and prognostic significance of cyclic seizures (CS). Methods: We reviewed our prospective continuous EEG database to identify patients with CS, controls with non-cyclic status epilepticus (SE) and controls without seizure matched for age and etiology. EEG was reviewed with DC settings. Results: 39/260 (15%) patients with electrographic seizures presented with CS. These patients were older (62 vs. 54 years; p = 0.04) and more often had acute or progressive brain injury (77% vs. 52%; p = 0.03) than patients with non-cyclic SE and had a lower level of consciousness, were more severely ill, than matched controls. CS almost always had focal onset, often from posterior regions. Patients with CS trended towards worse prognosis. When available (12 patients), DC recordings showed an infraslow cyclic oscillation of EEG baseline synchronized to the seizures in all cases. Conclusions: CS occur mostly in older patients with acute or progressive brain injury, are more likely to be associated with poor outcome than patients with other forms of nonconvulsive SE, and are accompanied by synchronous oscillations of the EEG baseline on DC recordings. Significance: CS are a common form of non-convulsive status epilepticus in critically ill patients and provide further insights into the relationship between infraslow activity and seizures; further study on this relationship may shed light on the mechanisms of seizure initiation and termination.