LEANDRO TAVARES LUCATO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
18
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto de Radiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
LIM/44 - Laboratório de Ressonância Magnética em Neurorradiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 121
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Prenatal detection and postnatal management of an intranasal glioma
    (2012) OKUMURA, Maria; FRANCISCO, Rossana Pulcineli Vieira; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares; ZERBINI, Maria Claudia Nogueira; ZUGAIB, Marcelo
    Nasal gliomas are rare benign congenital midline tumors composed of heterotopic neuroglial tissue. They have potential for intracranial extension through a bony defect in the skull base. Neuroimaging is essential for identifying nasal lesions and for determining their exact location and any possible intracranial extension. Computed tomography is often the initial imaging study obtained because it provides good visualization of the bony landmarks of the skull base; it is not, however, well suited for soft tissue imaging. Magnetic resonance imaging has better soft tissue resolution and may be the best initial study in patients seen early in life because the anterior skull base consists of an unossified cartilage and may falsely appear as if there is a bony dehiscence on computed tomography. A frontal craniotomy approach is recommended if intracranial extension is identified, followed by a transnasal endoscopic approach for intranasal glioma. A case is presented of a huge fetal facial mass that was shown by ultrasound that protruded through the left nostril at 33 weeks of gestation. Computed tomography of the neonate suggested a transethmoidal encephalocele. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a huge mass occupying the nasopharynx and the nasal cavity and protruding externally to the face but ruled out bony discontinuity in the skull base and, therefore, any intracranial connection. The infant underwent an endoscopic resection of the mass via oral and nasal routes and pathologic examination revealed intranasal glioma.
  • article 20 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Congenital Genetic Inborn Errors of Metabolism Presenting as an Adult or Persisting Into Adulthood: Neuroimaging in the More Common or Recognizable Disorders
    (2014) KRISHNA, Shri H.; MCKINNEY, Alexander M.; LUCATO, Leandro T.
    Numerous congenital-genetic inborn errors of metabolism (CIEMs) have been identified and characterized in detail within recent decades, with promising therapeutic options. Neuroimaging is becoming increasingly utilized in earlier stages of CIEMs, and even in asymptomatic relatives of patients with a CIEM, so as to monitor disease progress and treatment response. This review attempts to summarize in a concise fashion the neuroimaging findings of various CIEMs that may present in adulthood, as well as those that may persist into adulthood, whether because of beneficial therapy or a delay in diagnosis. Notably, some of these disorders have neuroimaging findings that differ from their classic infantile or earlychildhood forms, whereas others are identical to their early pediatric forms. The focus of this review is their appearance on routine magnetic resonance imaging sequences, with some basic attention to the findings of such CIEMs on specialized neuroimaging, based on recent or preliminary research. The general classes of disorders covered in this complex review are: peroxisomal disorders (adrenoleukodystrophy), lysosomal storage disorders (including metachromatic leukodystrophy, Krabbe or globoid cell leukodystrophy, Fabry, Niemann-Pick, GM1, GM2, Gaucher, mucopolysaccharidoses, and Salla diseases), mitochondria! disorders (including mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and strokelike episodes, myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibers, Leigh disease, and Kearns-Sayre syndrome), urea cycle disorders, several organic acidemias (including phenylketonuria, maple syrup urine disease, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl colyase deficiency, glutaric acidurias, methylmalonic academia, proprionic academia, 3-methyl-glucatonic aciduria, and 2-hydroxyglutaric acidurias), cytoskeletal or transporter molecule defects (including Alexander or fibrinoid leukodystrophy, proteolipid protein-1 defect or Pelizaeus Merzbacher, Wilson, and Huntington diseases), and several neurodegenerative disorders of brain iron accumulation. Additionally, an arbitrary ""miscellaneous"" category of 5 recognizable disorders that may present in or persist into adulthood is summarized, which include megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts (megancephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts or van der Knaap disease), polymerase-Ill gene defect (""4H syndrome""), childhood ataxia with central nervous system hypomyelination (""vanishing white matter disease""), striopallidodentate calcinosis (""Fahr disease""), and Cockayne syndrome.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Radiologic and histologic findings in Sjogren's sensory neuronopathy
    (2019) GRATIVVOL, Ronnyson Susano; CAVALCANTE, Wagner Cid Palmeira; VENTURA, Lais Maria Gomes de Brito; CALDAS, Vitor Marques; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares; LOURENCO, Silvia Vanessa; HEISE, Carlos Otto; NITRINI, Ricardo
  • article 30 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Toxic Leukoencephalopathies, Including Drug, Medication, Environmental, and Radiation-Induced Encephalopathic Syndromes
    (2014) RIMKUS, Carolina de Medeiros; ANDRADE, Celi Santos; LEITE, Claudia da Costa; MCKINNEY, Alexander M.; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares
    Toxic leukoencephalopathies can be secondary to the exposure to a wide variety of exogenous agents, including cranial irradiation, chemotherapy, antiepileptic agents, drugs of abuse, and environmental toxins. There is no typical clinical picture, and patients can present with a wide array of signs and symptoms. Involvement of white matter is a key finding in this scenario, although in some circumstances other high metabolic areas of the central nervous system can also be affected. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging usually discloses bilateral and symmetric white matter areas of hyperintense signal on T2-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images, and signs of restricted diffusion are associated in the acute stage. In most cases, the changes are reversible, especially with prompt recognition of the disease and discontinuation of the noxious agent. Either the MR or clinical features may be similar to several nontoxic entities, such as demyelinating diseases, leukodystrophies, hepatic encephalopathy, vascular disease, hypoxic-ischemic states, and others. A high index of suspicion should be maintained whenever a patient presents recent onset of neurologic deficit, searching the risk of exposure to a neurotoxic agent. Getting to know the most frequent MR appearances and mechanisms of action of causative agents may help to make an early diagnosis and begin therapy, improving outcome. In this review, some of the most important causes of leukoencephalopathies are presented; as well as other 2 related conditions: strokelike migraine attacks after radiation therapy syndrome and reversible splenial lesions.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Teaching NeuroImages: Lacunar stroke and polyarteritis nodosa Consider ADA2 deficiency (DADA2)
    (2019) GONCALVES, Tayrine da Silva; ALVES, Cesar Augusto Pinheiro Ferreira; PAZ, Jose Albino da; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Mobius Sequence in a Girl and Arthrogryposis in her Half-Brother: Distinct Phenotypes Caused By Prenatal Injuries
    (2011) BORLOT, Felippe; PAZ, Jose Albino da; GONZALEZ, Claudette Hajaj; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares; MARQUES-DIAS, Maria Joaquina
    Mobius sequence is a congenital facial and abducens nerve palsy, frequently associated to abnormalities of extremities. Arthrogryposis multiplex congenital is defined as a congenital fixation of multiple joints seldom of neurogenic origin. Both sequences must have a genetic origin, but usually are sporadic cases related to environmental factors such as drugs exposition and maternal trauma. A 5-year-old girl and a 1-year-old boy were born with Mobius sequence and arthrogryposis multiplex congenital, respectively. During pregnancies, the mother had vaginal bleeding at 7 weeks and used crack (free-based cocaine) in the first trimester, respectively. The girl also has equinovarus talipes and autistic behavior. The boy has arthrogryposis with flexion contractures of the feet and knees. A vascular disruption, due to hemorrhage and cocaine exposure, causing a transient ischemic insult to embryos in a critical period of development may be responsible for distinct phenotypes in these cases.
  • article 16 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Characterization of pain syndromes in patients with neuromyelitis optica
    (2020) VALERIO, Fernanda; APOSTOLOS-PEREIRA, Samira L.; SATO, Douglas Kazutoshi; CALLEGARO, Dagoberto; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares; BARBOZA, Victor Rosseto; SILVA, Valquiria A.; GALHARDONI, Ricardo; RODRIGUES, Antonia L. de Lima; TEIXEIRA, Manoel Jacobsen; ANDRADE, Daniel Ciampi de
    Background Pain is common and refractory in spinal cord injury (SCI). Currently, most studies evaluated pain in male-predominant traumatic-SCI. Also, concomitant secondary pain syndromes and its temporal evolution were seldom reported. Methods We aimed to prospectively describe the main and secondary pain and its associated factors in inflammatory-SCI evaluating neuromyelitis optica (NMO) patients. In-remission NMO patients underwent neurological, imaging and autoantibody evaluations. Questionnaires detailing main and secondary pains, functional state, mood, catastrophizing, quality of life (QoL) and ""non-motor symptoms"" were used at two time points. Results Pain was present in 53 (73.6%) of the 72 patients included. At-level neuropathic pain was the most common main pain syndrome, affecting 32 subjects (60.4% of those with pain). Over 70% (n = 38) of this cohort reported two pain syndromes. Those without pain were significantly younger (26.1 +/- 12.7 y.o. in those without pain and 40.1 +/- 12.5, 37.2 +/- 11.4 y.o. in those whose main pain was neuropathic and non-neuropathic, respectively,p = .001), and no differences in the inflammatory status were observed between groups. On follow-up, one-fifth (n = 11) had a different main pain syndrome from the first visit. Pain impacted QoL as much as disability and motor strength. Conclusion Pain is a prevalent and disabling non-motor symptom in NMO-SCI. Most patients experience more than one pain syndrome which can change in time even in the absence of clinical relapse. Age of the inflammatory-SCI was a major determinant of pain. Acknowledging temporal changes and multiplicity of pain syndromes in NMO-SCI may give insights into more precise designs of clinical trials and general management of pain in SCI. Significance In this longitudinal study with NMO-related SCI, pain affected almost three-quarters of patients with NMO. Over 70% have more than one pain syndrome and at-level neuropathic pain is the most common type of pain syndrome. Patients without pain were significantly younger but had the same burden of inflammatory lesions than those with pain. During follow-up, up to one fifth of patients presented with changes in the main pain syndromes, which can occur even in the absence of clinical activity of the inflammatory disease. In this cohort, Pain affected quality of life as much as disability or motor strength.
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Neuroimaging in cerebral small vessel disease: Update and new concepts
    (2017) SHIBUYA, Mika; LEITE, Claudia da Costa; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares
    ABSTRACT. In recent years, small vessel disease (SVD) has been recognized for its major impact on cognitive impairment in elderly people, where it is often difficult to separate its effects from those of neurodegenerative diseases individually. SVD is a systemic disease, probably related to diffuse endothelial dysfunction, which affects the perforating arterioles, capillaries and venules in the brain. Although often asymptomatic, it is responsible for almost half of all dementia cases and a significant proportion of stroke cases. Imaging features found on magnetic resonance include recent small subcortical infarctions, lacunes of presumed vascular origin, white matter hyperintensity of presumed vascular origin, prominent perivascular spaces and cerebral microbleeds. The recognition of these imaging findings as a spectrum of the same disease caused by endothelial dysfunction of small cerebral vessels can allow an overall analysis of the disease and thus the development of more effective preventive and therapeutic strategies.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging in the osseous phase of Nasu-Hakola disease
    (2014) BRENNER, Christiana; SPECK-MARTINS, Carlos Eduardo; BRUM, Jaime Moritz; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares; LEITE, Claudia da Costa
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Advances in diffuse glial tumors diagnosis
    (2023) GODOY, Luis Filipe de Souza; PAES, Vitor Ribeiro; AYRES, Aline Sgnolf; BANDEIRA, Gabriela Alencar; MORENO, Raquel Andrade; HIRATA, Fabiana de Campos Cordeiro; SILVA, Frederico Adolfo Benevides; NASCIMENTO, Felipe; CAMPOS NETO, Guilherme de Carvalho; GENTIL, Andre Felix; LUCATO, Leandro Tavares; AMARO JUNIOR, Edson; YOUNG, Robert J.; MALHEIROS, Suzana Maria Fleury
    In recent decades, there have been significant advances in the diagnosis of diffuse gliomas, driven by the integration of novel technologies. These advancements have deepened our understanding of tumor oncogenesis, enabling a more refined stratification of the biological behavior of these neoplasms. This progress culminated in the fifth edition of the WHO classification of central nervous system (CNS) tumors in 2021. This comprehensive review article aims to elucidate these advances within a multidisciplinary framework, contextualized within the backdrop of the new classification. This article will explore morphologic pathology and molecular/genetics techniques (immunohistochemistry, genetic sequencing, and methylation profiling), which are pivotal in diagnosis, besides the correlation of structural neuroimaging radiophenotypes to pathology and genetics. It briefly reviews the usefulness of tractography and functional neuroimaging in surgical planning. Additionally, the article addresses the value of other functional imaging techniques such as perfusion MRI, spectroscopy, and nuclear medicine in distinguishing tumor progression from treatment-related changes. Furthermore, it discusses the advantages of evolving diagnostic techniques in classifying these tumors, as well as their limitations in terms of availability and utilization. Moreover, the expanding domains of data processing, artificial intelligence, radiomics, and radiogenomics hold great promise and may soon exert a substantial influence on glioma diagnosis. These innovative technologies have the potential to revolutionize our approach to these tumors. Ultimately, this review underscores the fundamental importance of multidisciplinary collaboration in employing recent diagnostic advancements, thereby hoping to translate them into improved quality of life and extended survival for glioma patients.