JOSE MARCELO FARFEL

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
24
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Ortopediae Traumatologia, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
LIM/22 - Laboratório de Patolologia Cardiovascular, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 53
  • article 82 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Comprehensive geriatric assessment predicts mortality and adverse outcomes in hospitalized older adults
    (2014) AVELINO-SILVA, Thiago J.; FARFEL, Jose M.; CURIATI, Jose A. E.; AMARAL, Jose R. G.; CAMPORA, Flavia; JACOB-FILHO, Wilson
    Background: Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) provides detailed information on clinical, functional and cognitive aspects of older patients and is especially useful for assessing frail individuals. Although a large proportion of hospitalized older adults demonstrate a high level of complexity, CGA was not developed specifically for this setting. Our aim was to evaluate the application of a CGA model for the clinical characterization and prognostic prediction of hospitalized older adults. Methods: This was a prospective observational study including 746 patients aged 60 years and over who were admitted to a geriatric ward of a university hospital between January 2009 and December 2011, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The proposed CGA was applied to evaluate all patients at admission. The primary outcome was in-hospital death, and the secondary outcomes were delirium, nosocomial infections, functional decline and length of stay. Multivariate binary logistic regression was performed to assess independent factors associated with these outcomes, including socio-demographic, clinical, functional, cognitive, and laboratory variables. Impairment in ten CGA components was particularly investigated: polypharmacy, activities of daily living (ADL) dependency, instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) dependency, depression, dementia, delirium, urinary incontinence, falls, malnutrition, and poor social support. Results: The studied patients were mostly women (67.4%), and the mean age was 80.5 +/- 7.9 years. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed the following independent factors associated with in-hospital death: IADL dependency (OR= 4.02; CI= 1.52-10.58; p= .005); ADL dependency (OR= 2.39; CI= 1.25-4.56; p= .008); malnutrition (OR= 2.80; CI= 1.63-4.83; p< .001); poor social support (OR= 5.42; CI= 2.93-11.36; p< .001); acute kidney injury (OR= 3.05; CI= 1.78-5.27; p< .001); and the presence of pressure ulcers (OR= 2.29; CI= 1.04-5.07; p= .041). ADL dependency was independently associated with both delirium incidence and nosocomial infections (respectively: OR= 3.78; CI= 2.30-6.20; p< .001 and OR= 2.30; CI= 1.49-3.49; p< .001). The number of impaired CGA components was also found to be associated with in-hospital death (p< .001), delirium incidence (p< .001) and nosocomial infections (p= .005). Additionally, IADL dependency, malnutrition and history of falls predicted longer hospitalizations. There were no significant changes in overall functional status during the hospital stay. Conclusions: CGA identified patients at higher risk of in-hospital death and adverse outcomes, of which those with functional dependence, malnutrition and poor social support were foremost.
  • article 15 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Initial findings of striatum tripartite model in OCD brain samples based on transcriptome analysis
    (2019) LISBOA, Bianca C. G.; OLIVEIRA, Katia C.; TAHIRA, Ana Carolina; BARBOSA, Andre Rocha; FELTRIN, Arthur Sant'Anna; GOUVEIA, Gisele; LIMA, Luzia; SANTOS, Ana Cecilia Feio dos; JR, David Correa Martins; PUGA, Renato David; MORETTO, Ariane Cristine; PEREIRA, Carlos Alberto De Braganca; LAFER, Beny; LEITE, Renata Elaine Paraizo; FERRETTI-REBUSTINI, Renata Eloah De Lucena; FARFEL, Jose Marcelo; GRINBERG, Lea Tenenholz; JACOB-FILHO, Wilson; MIGUEL, Euripedes Constantino; HOEXTER, Marcelo Queiroz; BRENTANI, Helena
    Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a psychiatric disorder characterized by obsessions and/or compulsions. Different striatal subregions belonging to the cortico-striato-thalamic circuitry (CSTC) play an important role in the pathophysiology of OCD. The transcriptomes of 3 separate striatal areas (putamen (PT), caudate nucleus (CN) and accumbens nucleus (NAC)) from postmortem brain tissue were compared between 6 OCD and 8 control cases. In addition to network connectivity deregulation, different biological processes are specific to each striatum region according to the tripartite model of the striatum and contribute in various ways to OCD pathophysiology. Specifically, regulation of neurotransmitter levels and presynaptic processes involved in chemical synaptic transmission were shared between NAC and PT. The Gene Ontology terms cellular response to chemical stimulus, response to external stimulus, response to organic substance, regulation of synaptic plasticity, and modulation of synaptic transmission were shared between CN and PT. Most genes harboring common and/or rare variants previously associated with OCD that were differentially expressed or part of a least preserved coexpression module in our study also suggest striatum subregion specificity. At the transcriptional level, our study supports differences in the 3 circuit CSTC model associated with OCD.
  • article 128 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Quantifying the accretion of hyperphosphorylated tau in the locus coeruleus and dorsal raphe nucleus: the pathological building blocks of early Alzheimer's disease
    (2017) EHRENBERG, A. J.; NGUY, A. K.; THEOFILAS, P.; DUNLOP, S.; SUEMOTO, C. K.; ALHO, A. T. Di Lorenzo; LEITE, R. P.; RODRIGUEZ, R. Diehl; MEJIA, M. B.; RUEB, U.; FARFEL, J. M.; FERRETTI-REBUSTINI, R. E. de Lucena; NASCIMENTO, C. F.; NITRINI, R.; PASQUALLUCCI, C. A.; JACOB-FILHO, W.; MILLER, B.; SEELEY, W. W.; HEINSEN, H.; GRINBERG, L. T.
    AimsHyperphosphorylated tau neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions (ht-NCI) are the best protein correlate of clinical decline in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Qualitative evidence identifies ht-NCI accumulating in the isodendritic core before the entorhinal cortex. Here, we used unbiased stereology to quantify ht-NCI burden in the locus coeruleus (LC) and dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN), aiming to characterize the impact of AD pathology in these nuclei with a focus on early stages.MethodsWe utilized unbiased stereology in a sample of 48 well-characterized subjects enriched for controls and early AD stages. ht-NCI counts were estimated in 60-m-thick sections immunostained for p-tau throughout LC and DRN. Data were integrated with unbiased estimates of LC and DRN neuronal population for a subset of cases.ResultsIn Braak stage 0, 7.9% and 2.6% of neurons in LC and DRN, respectively, harbour ht-NCIs. Although the number of ht-NCI+ neurons significantly increased by about 1.9x between Braak stages 0 to I in LC (P = 0.02), we failed to detect any significant difference between Braak stage I and II. Also, the number of ht-NCI+ neurons remained stable in DRN between all stages 0 and II. Finally, the differential susceptibility to tau inclusions among nuclear subdivisions was more notable in LC than in DRN.ConclusionsLC and DRN neurons exhibited ht-NCI during AD precortical stages. The ht-NCI increases along AD progression on both nuclei, but quantitative changes in LC precede DRN changes.
  • article 76 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Repair of Oxidative DNA Damage, Cell-Cycle Regulation and Neuronal Death May Influence the Clinical Manifestation of Alzheimer's Disease
    (2014) SILVA, Aderbal R. T.; SANTOS, Ana Cecilia Feio; FARFEL, Jose M.; GRINBERG, Lea T.; FERRETTI, Renata E. L.; CAMPOS, Antonio Hugo Jose Froes Marques; CUNHA, Isabela Werneck; BEGNAMI, Maria Dirlei; ROCHA, Rafael M.; CARRARO, Dirce M.; PEREIRA, Carlos Alberto de Braganca; JACOB-FILHO, Wilson; BRENTANI, Helena
    Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by progressive cognitive decline associated with a featured neuropathology (neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles). Several studies have implicated oxidative damage to DNA, DNA repair, and altered cell-cycle regulation in addition to cell death in AD post-mitotic neurons. However, there is a lack of studies that systematically assess those biological processes in patients with AD neuropathology but with no evidence of cognitive impairment. We evaluated markers of oxidative DNA damage (8-OHdG, H2AX), DNA repair (p53, BRCA1, PTEN), and cell-cycle (Cdk1, Cdk4, Cdk5, Cyclin B1, Cyclin D1, p(27Kip1), phospho-Rb and E2F1) through immunohistochemistry and cell death through TUNEL in autopsy hippocampal tissue samples arrayed in a tissue microarray (TMA) composed of three groups: I) ""clinical-pathological AD"" (CP-AD) - subjects with neuropathological AD (Braak >= IV and CERAD = B or C) and clinical dementia (CDR >= 2, IQCODE >= 3.8); II) ""pathological AD"" (P-AD) - subjects with neuropathological AD (Braak >= IV and CERAD = B or C) and without cognitive impairment (CDR 0, IQCODE < 3.2); and III) ""normal aging"" (N) - subjects without neuropathological AD (Braak <= II and CERAD 0 or A) and with normal cognitive function (CDR 0, IQCODE<3.2). Our results show that high levels of oxidative DNA damage are present in all groups. However, significant reductions in DNA repair and cell-cycle inhibition markers and increases in cell-cycle progression and cell death markers in subjects with CP-AD were detected when compared to both P-AD and N groups, whereas there were no significant differences in the studied markers between P-AD individuals and N subjects. This study indicates that, even in the setting of pathological AD, healthy cognition may be associated with a preserved repair to DNA damage, cell-cycle regulation, and cell death in post-mitotic neurons.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Trace element concentration differences in regions of human brain by INAA
    (2013) SAIKI, M.; LEITE, R. E. P.; GENEZINI, F. A.; GRINBERG, L. T.; FERRETTI, R. E. L.; FARFEL, J. M.; SUEMOTO, C.; PASQUALUCCI, C. A.; JACOB-FILHO, W.
    Studies have shown that there is a potential relationship between the levels of trace elements in cerebral tissues and neurological disorders. However, there are few publications available on the elemental composition of these tissues as well as for different regions of the brain. The aim of this study was to investigate trace element differences in various regions of the human brain from an elderly population of normal individuals. Brain samples from 31 individuals of both genders, aged 51-95 years were provided by the Brain Bank of the Brazilian Aging Study Group of the So Paulo University, Medical School. The tissues from the regions of the hippocampus, cerebellum and frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital cortex were dissected using a titanium knife, ground, freeze-dried and then analyzed by instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA). Samples and element standards were irradiated with a neutron flux at the IEA-R1 nuclear research reactor for Br, Fe, K, Na, Rb, Se and Zn determinations. One-way ANOVA test (p < 0.05) was used to compare the results which showed significant differences for several elements among the brain regions. Most of our brain analysis results agreed with the literature data. The results were also submitted for brain region classification by cluster analysis.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    LEARNING TO READ IN OLDER AGE IMPROVES COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE: FINDINGS FROM A PROSPECTIVE OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
    (2014) SILVA, Eduardo Marques da; APOLINARIO, Daniel; MAGALDI, Regina Miksian; BENNETT, David A.; NITRINI, Ricardo; JACOB FILHO, Wilson; FARFEL, Jose Marcelo
  • article 168 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Sex differences in Alzheimer's disease and common neuropathologies of aging
    (2018) OVEISGHARAN, Shahram; ARVANITAKIS, Zoe; YU, Lei; FARFEL, Jose; SCHNEIDER, Julie A.; BENNETT, David A.
    Alzheimer's dementia is significantly more common in women than in men. However, few pathological studies have addressed sex difference in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other brain pathologies. We leveraged postmortem data from 1453 persons who participated in one of two longitudinal community-based studies of older adults, the Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Project. Postmortem examination identified AD pathologies, neocortical Lewy bodies, DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43), hippocampal sclerosis, gross and micro infarcts, atherosclerosis, arteriolosclerosis, and cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Linear and logistic regressions examined the association of sex with each of the pathologic measures. Two-thirds of subjects were women (n=971; 67%), with a mean age at death of 89.8 (SD=6.6) years in women and 87.3 (SD=6.6) in men. Adjusted for age and education, women had higher levels on a global measure of AD pathology (estimate=0.102, SE=0.022, p<0.001), and tau tangle density in particular (estimate=0.334, SE=0.074, p<0.001), and there was a borderline difference between women and men in amyloid- load (estimate=0.124, SE=0.065, p=0.056). In addition, compared to men, women were more likely to have more severe arteriolosclerosis (OR=1.28, 95% CI:1.04-1.58, p=0.018), and less likely to have gross infarcts (OR=0.78, 95% CI:0.61-0.98, p=0.037), although the association with gross infarct was attenuated after controlling for vascular risk factors. These data help elucidate the neuropathologic footprint of sex difference in AD and other common brain pathologies of aging.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Is Olfactory Epithelium Biopsy Useful for Confirming Alzheimer's Disease?
    (2019) GODOY, Maria Dantas Costa Lima; FORNAZIERI, Marco Aurelio; DOTY, Richard L.; PINNA, Fabio de Rezende; FARFEL, Jose Marcelo; SANTOS, Glaucia Bento dos; MOLINA, Mariana; FERRETTI-REBUSTINI, Renata E. L.; LEITE, Renata E. P.; SUEMOTO, Claudia K.; GRINBERG, Lea T.; PASCRALUCCI, Carlos A. G.; VOEGELS, Richard Louis; NITRINI, Ricardo; JACOB FILHO, Wilson
    Objectives: The clinical symptoms of Alzheimer's disease (AD) are preceded by a long asymptomatic period associated with ""silent"" deposition of aberrant paired helical filament (PHF)-tau and amyloid-beta proteins in brain tissue. Similar depositions have been reported within the olfactory epithelium (OE), a tissue that can be biopsied in vivo. The degree to which such biopsies are useful in identifying AD is controversial. This postmortem study had 3 main goals: first, to quantify the relative densities of AD-related proteins in 3 regions of the olfactory neuroepithelium, namely, the nasal septum, middle turbinate, and superior turbinate; second, to establish whether such densities are correlated among these epithelial regions as well as with semi-quantitative ratings of general brain cortex pathology; and third, to evaluate correlations between the protein densities and measures of antemortem cognitive function. Methods: Postmortem blocks of olfactory mucosa were obtained from 12 AD cadavers and 24 controls and subjected to amyloid-beta and PHF-tau immunohistochemistry. Results: We observed marked heterogeneity in the presence of the biomarkers of tau and amyloid-beta among the targeted olfactory epithelial regions. No significant difference was observed between the cadavers with AD and the controls regarding the concentration of these proteins in any of these epithelial regions. Only one correlation significant was evident, namely, that between the tau protein densities of the middle and the upper turbinate (r = .58, P = .002). Conclusion: AD-related biomarker heterogeneity, which has not been previously demonstrated, makes comparisons across studies difficult and throws into question the usefulness of OE amyloid-beta and PHF-tau biopsies in detecting AD.
  • article 39 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Atherosclerosis and Dementia A Cross-Sectional Study With Pathological Analysis of the Carotid Arteries
    (2011) SUEMOTO, Claudia K.; NITRINI, Ricardo; GRINBERG, Lea T.; FERRETTI, Renata E. L.; FARFEL, Jose M.; LEITE, Renata E. P.; MENEZES, Paulo R.; FREGNI, Felipe; JACOB-FILHO, Wilson; PASQUALUCCI, Carlos A.
    Background and Purpose-Previous ultrasound-based studies have shown an association between carotid artery atherosclerosis and dementia. Our aim was to investigate this association using postmortem examination. Methods-Postmortem morphometric measurements of carotid stenosis and intima-media thickness were performed in individuals with dementia (n = 112) and control subjects (n = 577). Multivariate logistic regression models were applied. Results-High-grade left internal carotid stenosis (>= 70%) was associated with increased odds for dementia (OR, 2.30; 95% CI, 1.14-4.74; P = 0.02). Intima-media thickness was not associated with dementia. Conclusions-The likelihood of dementia is increased with high-grade left internal carotid artery atherosclerosis after adjusting for demographic and cardiovascular risk factors. (Stroke. 2011; 42: 3614-3615.)
  • article 11 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Applicability of the Spoken Knowledge in Low Literacy Patients with Diabetes in Brazilian elderly
    (2016) SOUZA, Jonas Gordilho; APOLINARIO, Daniel; FARFEL, José Marcelo; JALUUL, Omar; MAGALDI, Regina Miksian; BUSSE, Alexandre Leopold; CAMPORA, Flávia; JACOB-FILHO, Wilson
    ABSTRACT Objective To translate, adapt and evaluate the properties of a Brazilian Portuguese version of the Spoken Knowledge in Low Literacy Patients with Diabetes, which is a questionnaire that evaluate diabetes knowledge. Methods A cross-sectional study with type 2 diabetes patients aged ≥60 years, seen at a public healthcare organization in the city of Sao Paulo (SP). After the development of the Portuguese version, we evaluated the psychometrics properties and the association with sociodemographic and clinical variables. The regression models were adjusted for sociodemographic data, functional health literacy, duration of disease, use of insulin, and glycemic control. Results We evaluated 129 type 2 diabetic patients, with mean age of 75.9 (±6.2) years, mean scholling of 5.2 (±4.4) years, mean glycosylated hemoglobin of 7.2% (±1.4), and mean score on Spoken Knowledge in Low Literacy Patients with Diabetes of 42.1% (±25.8). In the regression model, the variables independently associated to Spoken Knowledge in Low Literacy Patients with Diabetes were schooling (B=0.193; p=0.003), use of insulin (B=1.326; p=0.004), duration of diabetes (B=0.053; p=0.022) and health literacy (B=0.108; p=0.021). The determination coefficient was 0.273. The Cronbach a was 0.75, demonstrating appropriate internal consistency. Conclusion This translated version of the Spoken Knowledge in Low Literacy Patients with Diabetes showed to be adequate to evaluate diabetes knowledge in elderly patients with low schooling levels. It presented normal distribution, adequate internal consistency, with no ceiling or floor effect. The tool is easy to be used, can be quickly applied and does not depend on reading skills.