MIGUEL LIA TEDDE

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
9
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto Central, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
LIM/61 - Laboratório de Pesquisa em Cirurgia Torácica, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 4 de 4
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Correspondence on Should the Ravitch Procedure to Correct Pectus Excavatum Be Avoided in Young Children?
    (2022) TEDDE, M. L.; BEER, S. A. de; PARK, H. J.
    To the editor: In addition to the excellent outcome they obtained, the case reported by Rim and Park [1] shows the boldness and inventiveness of the authors: boldness for performing the fourth surgical procedure (previously, the patient had undergone the Ravitch procedure, correction with 2 metal bars, and removal of the bars) for the repair of recurrent pectus excavatum (PE), and inventiveness for proposing a 3-dimensional-printed artificial thoracic wall, which as far as we know is an unprecedented treatment, to correct this serious defect © 2022. The Korean Society for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A prospective controlled randomized multicenter study to evaluate the severity of compensatory sweating after one-stage bilateral thoracic sympathectomy versus unilateral thoracic sympathectomy in the dominant side
    (2020) HAMILTON, Niura Noro; TEDDE, Miguel Lia; WOLOSKER, Nelson; AGUIAR, Wolfgang William Schmidt; FERREIRA, Hylas Paiva da Costa; OLIVEIRA, Humberto Alves de; LIMA, Alexandre Marcelo Rodrigues; WESTPHAL, Fernando Luiz; OLIVEIRA, Marina Varela Braga de; RIUTO, Fabio de Oliveira; PEREIRA, Sergio Tadeu Lima F.; REZENDE, Guilherme Cancado; VALERO, Caroline Elizabeth Brero; PEGO-FERNANDES, Paulo M.
    Objective: To evaluate the contribution that unilateral thoracic sympathectomy in dominant side or two-stage bilateral thoracic sympathectomy can have as strategies to reduce the incidence of compensatory sweating after sympathectomy for palmar hyperhidrosis. Methods: This is a prospective, controlled, randomized multicenter trial of 200 participants with palmar hyperhidrosis, which will be randomized into two arms: (a) one-stage bilateral thoracic sympathectomy (control arm); or (b) unilateral thoracic sympathectomy in dominant side (intervention arm). At six months the participants submitted to unilateral procedure can make the contralateral surgery if they wanted it, creating a third group called two-stage bilateral sympathectomy. Participants will be evaluated for the degree of sweating by the Hyperhidrosis Disease Severity Scale (HDSS) and of quality of life questionnaires. Results: 96 participants out of the 200 proposed have been included so far, with 48 participants randomized to each arm. From the sample 61 (63.5%) are female, with a mean age of 24 (20-32) years. There were exclusive palmar hiperhydrosis in 14 cases (14.5%), palmar and plantar hyperhidrosis in 36 (37.5%) cases, palmar and axillar hyperhidrosis in 12 (12,5%) cases and palmar-axillary-plantar hyperhidrosis in 34 (35,4%) cases. The age at the beginning of the disease was childhood (78%), with mean of time of disease 15 (11-22) years. Conclusions: If one or both hypothesis: (a) unilateral sympathectomy in dominant hand is a satisfactory treatment; b) two-stage bilateral sympathectomy causes less compensatory sweating than in one stage are confirmed there is a chance that surgical therapy for palmar hyperhidrosis can be changed for better.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Management of deep pectus excavatum (DPE)
    (2016) CAMPOS, Jose Ribas Milanez de; TEDDE, Miguel Lia
    The correction of deep pectus excavatum, with the Nuss procedure, frequently require a series of maneuvers that is inherently dangerous. Herein we describe 10 technical modifications to prevent potential complications. These modified techniques have certain advantages and according to the authors, with these maneuvers the risk of pericardial sac, cardiac injury, bar displacement and complications during the removal of the bar could be markedly reduced.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Pulmonary inhalation-perfusion scintigraphy in the evaluation of bronchoscopic treatment of bronchopleural fistula
    (2018) ONO, Carla Rachel; TEDDE, Miguel Lia; SCORDAMAGLIO, Paulo Rogerio; BUCHPIGUEL, Carlos Alberto
    Abstract Objective: To evaluate the use of pulmonary inhalation-perfusion scintigraphy as an alternative method of investigation and follow-up in patients with bronchopleural fistula (BPF). Materials and Methods: Nine patients with BPFs were treated through the off-label use of a transcatheter atrial septal defect occluder, placed endoscopically, and were followed with pulmonary inhalation-perfusion scintigraphy, involving inhalation, via a nebulizer, of 900-1300 MBq (25-35 mCi) of technetium-99m-labeled diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid and single-photon emission computed tomography with a dual-head gamma camera. Results: In two cases, there was a residual air leak that was not identified by bronchoscopy or the methylene blue test but was detected only by pulmonary inhalation-perfusion scintigraphy. Those results correlated with the evolution of the patients, both of whom showed late signs of air leak, which confirmed the scintigraphy findings. In the patients with complete resolution of symptoms and fistula closure seen on bronchoscopy, the scintigraphy was completely negative. In cases of failure to close the BPF, the scintigraphy confirmed the persistence of the air leak. In two patients, scintigraphy was the only method to show residual BPF, the fistula no longer being seen on bronchoscopy. Conclusion: We found pulmonary inhalation-perfusion scintigraphy to be a useful tool for identifying a residual BPF, as well as being an alternative method of investigating BPFs and of monitoring the affected patients.