LETICIA LESSA MANSUR

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
13
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
LIM/34 - Laboratório de Ciências da Reabilitação, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 12
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Performance of a sample of patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and healthy elderly on a lexical decision test (LDT) as a measure of pre-morbid intelligence
    (2015) SERRAO, Valéria Trunkl; BRUCKI, Sônia Maria Dozzi; CAMPANHOLO, Kenia Repiso; MANSUR, Letícia Lessa; NITRINI, Ricardo; MIOTTO, Eliane Correa
    Objective: The objective of this study was to describe the performance of healthy elderly patients with aging-related pathologies (MCI) and patients with AD on a lexical decision test. Methods: The study included 38 healthy elderly subjects, 61 MCI and 26 AD patients from the Neurology Department of the Hospital das Clinicas, Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology Group. The neuropsychological instruments included the episodic memory test (RAVLT), subtests from the WAIS-III (Matrix Reasoning and Vocabulary) to determine estimated IQ, the Boston naming test (BNT) and Lexical Decision Test (LDT).Results:All groups differed on the MMSE, as expected according to their pathologies, memory tests, naming and estimated IQ. For the vocabulary and the LDT - measures of crystalized intelligence no differences were found. Conclusion: The LDT demonstrated that lexical decision can be used as a measure of pre-morbid IQ among the individuals assessed in a Brazilian sample.
  • article 66 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Nonpharmacological interventions for cognitive impairments following primary progressive aphasia: A systematic review of the literature
    (2013) CARTHERY-GOULART, Maria Teresa; SILVEIRA, Amanda da Costa da; MACHADO, Thais Helena; MANSUR, Leticia Lessa; PARENTE, Maria Alice de Mattos Pimenta; SENAHA, Mirna Lie Hosogi; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi; NITRINI, Ricardo
    ABSTRACT This study provided a systematic review on nonpharmacological interventions applied to patients diagnosed with Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA) and its variants: Semantic (SPPA), Nonfluent (NFPPA) and Logopenic (LPPA) to establish evidence-based recommendations for the clinical practice of cognitive rehabilitation for these patients. Methods: A PubMed and LILACS literature search with no time restriction was conducted with the keywords PPA (and its variants) AND rehabilitation OR training OR intervention OR therapy OR treatment OR effectiveness. To develop its evidence-based recommendations, a research committee identified questions to be addressed and determined the level of evidence for each study according to published criteria (Cicerone et al., 2000). Overall evidence for treatments was summarized and recommendations were derived. Results: Our search retrieved articles published from 1995 to 2013: 21 for SPPA, 8 for NFPPA, 3 for LPPA and 8 for PPA with no specification. Thirty-five studies were rated as Class III, consisting of studies with results obtained from one or more single-cases and that used appropriate single-subject methods with adequate quantification and analysis of results. The level of evidence of three functional interventions could not be established. One study was rated as Class II and consisted of a nonrandomized case-control investigation. Conclusion: Positive results were reported in all reviewed studies. However, in order to be recommended, some investigation regarding the intervention efficacy was required. Results of the present review allows for recommendation of some nonpharmacological interventions for cognitive deficits following PPA as Practice Options. Suggestions for further studies on PPA interventions and future research are discussed.
  • article 16 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Comparison of language impairment in late-onset depression and Alzheimer's disease
    (2011) NOVARETTI, Tania M. da Silva; FREITAS, Maria I. D'Avila; MANSUR, Leticia L.; NITRINI, Ricardo; RADANOVIC, Marcia
    Objectives: Depression and dementia are highly prevalent in the elderly. Language impairment is an inherent component of Alzheimer's disease (AD), which can also be encountered in depressed patients. The aim of this study wasto compare the profiles of language abilities in late-onset depression and mild AD groups. Methods: We studied 25 patients with late-onset depression (mean age 73.6 +/- 6.6 years; schooling 9.1 +/- 5.7 years) and 30 patients with mild AD (77.6 +/- 5.4 years; 7.5 +/- 7.1 years) using the Arizona Battery for Communication Disorders of Dementia (ABCD), compared to a group of 30 controls (73.8 +/- 5.8 years; 9.1 +/- 5.4 years). Cut-off scores to discriminate between Controls x Depression and Depression x AD were determined. Results: Depressed patients' scores were similar to AD in confrontation naming, concept definition, following commands, repetition and reading comprehension (sentence). Episodic memory and mental status subtests were useful in differentiating depressed patients from AD, a result that was reproduced when using analysis of covariance to control for the effect of age in the same subtests (p = 0.01 and 0.04, respectively). Conclusion: Language impairment resembling AD was found in the aforementioned language subtests of the ABCD in elderly depressed patients; the mental status and episodic memory subtests were useful to discriminate between AD and depression. The ABCD has proven to be a suitable tool for language evaluation in this population and should aid in the differentiation of AD and pseudodementia (as that of depression).
  • article 44 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Prevalence of Cognitive Impairment Without Dementia and Dementia in Tremembe, Brazil
    (2016) CESAR, Karolina G.; BRUCKI, Sonia M. D.; TAKADA, Leonel T.; NASCIMENTO, Luiz F. C.; GOMES, Camila M. S.; ALMEIDA, Milena C. S.; OLIVEIRA, Maira O.; PORTO, Fabio H. G.; SENAHA, Mirna L. H.; BAHIA, Valeria S.; SILVA, Thais B. L.; IANOF, Jessica N.; SPINDOLA, Livia; SCHMIDT, Magali T.; JORGE, Mario S.; VALE, Patricia H. F.; CECCHINI, Mario A.; CASSIMIRO, Luciana; SOARES, Roger T.; GONCALVES, Marcia R.; MARTINS, Ana C. S.; DARE, Patricia; SMID, Jerusa; PORTO, Claudia S.; CARTHERY-GOULART, Maria T.; YASSUDA, Monica S.; MANSUR, Leticia L.; NITRINI, Ricardo
    Background:The prevalence of cognitive impairment is insufficiently determined in developing countries. The aim of this study was to ascertain the prevalence of cognitive impairment without dementia and dementia in community-dwelling elderly in Brazil.Methods:This was a single-phase cross-sectional survey of the elderly (aged 60 years and above) living in the municipality of Tremembe, Brazil. Twenty percent of the households with elderly persons were randomly selected from urban and rural areas, to obtain a homogenous representation of all socioeconomic and cultural levels.Results:We assessed 630 individuals [mean age, 71.3 y (7.99); mean years of education, 4.9 (+/- 4.54)] and found prevalence rates of 17.5% (95% confidence interval, 14.6-20.6) for dementia and 19.5% (95% confidence interval, 16.6-22.8) for cognitive impairment without dementia. These prevalence rates were influenced by age (P<0.001) and by educational level (P<0.001). There was no significant sex difference among diagnostic groups (P=0.166). The prevalence of dementia was higher in relatively younger individuals (below 70 y) when compared with other studies. Besides, dementia was associated with low socioeconomic status, stroke, previous psychiatric disorder, alcoholism, and epilepsy.Conclusions:The prevalence of dementia in this study was higher than in other studies, particularly among younger elderly.
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cognitive predictors of limited health literacy in adults with heterogeneous socioeconomic backgrounds
    (2015) APOLINARIO, Daniel; MANSUR, Leticia L.; CARTHERY-GOULART, Maria T.; BRUCKI, Sonia M. D.; NITRINI, Ricardo
    The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between health literacy and specific cognitive abilities in hospital users. A neuropsychological battery was administered and the Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults was used to classify individuals as having adequate or limited functional health literacy. Of the 322 participants, 102 (31.7%) presented limited health literacy. Even after adjusting for demographics, years of education, and quality of education, health literacy was strongly associated with measures of cognitive performance, but the strength of association was variable across different cognitive abilities.
  • article 22 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Detecting limited health literacy in Brazil: development of a multidimensional screening tool
    (2014) APOLINARIO, Daniel; MANSUR, Leticia Lessa; CARTHERY-GOULART, Maria Teresa; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi; NITRINI, Ricardo
    Screening questions have been proposed as practical tools for detecting limited functional health literacy, but have achieved only moderate accuracy in previous studies. We hypothesized that a combination of screening questions and demographic characteristics could better predict a patients functional health literacy. Three hundred and twenty-two hospital users from So Paulo, Brazil, were interviewed for demographic information and answered questions about literacy habits and perceived difficulties. The Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults was used to classify individuals as having adequate or limited functional health literacy. Of the 322 participants, 102 (31.7) presented limited functional health literacy. The final logistic model included six predictors. The three demographic variables were educational attainment, mothers educational attainment and major lifetime occupation (manual or non-manual). The three questions concerned frequency of use of computers, difficulty with writing that have precluded the individual from getting a better job and difficulty reading the subtitles while watching a foreign movie. A simple score was derived to constitute a practical tool we named the Multidimensional Screener of Functional Health Literacy (MSFHL). The sensitivity of the MSFHL in detecting limited functional health literacy was 81.4 and the specificity was 87.7, with an area under receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve of 0.93 (95 CI 0.890.95). The MSFHL was better than educational attainment in accurately classifying functional health literacy status (p 0.0018). We have developed a screening tool based on three demographic characteristics and three simple questions which provides an accurate prediction of a patients functional health literacy level.
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Linguistic abilities in major vascular cognitive impairment: a comparative study with Alzheimer's disease
    (2018) FREITAS, Maria Isabel D'Avila; PORTO, Claudia S.; OLIVEIRA, Maira O.; BRUCKI, Sonia M. D.; MANSUR, Leticia L.; NITRINI, Ricardo; RADANOVIC, Marcia
    We assessed the linguistic abilities of multi-infarct (cortical) dementia and subcortical ischemic vascular dementia (VaD) patients and compared the linguistic performance of VaD and Alzheimer's Disease (AD) patients. A total of 23 VaD patients, 20 mild AD patients, and 31 controls participated in the study. All were evaluated using the Arizona Battery for Communication Disorders of Dementia (ABCD). Neuropsychological testing was performed to ascertain that VaD and AD patients had comparable cognitive performance. Both dementia groups performed more poorly than controls in the ABCD measures, except for the comparative question subtest. Comparison between VaD and AD patients showed statistically significant differences only in the confrontation naming subtest (p < 0.05), where paraphasias and visual errors were the most prevalent. AD patients showed a trend towards more circumlocution errors than VaD patients (p = 0.0483). When compared to controls, linguistic abilities of VaD patients were impaired in all measures of linguistic expression and linguistic comprehension, except for the comparative question subtest. Linguistic differences between VaD and AD patients were observed only in the confrontation naming subtest.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Performance of the Visual Analogue Scale of Happiness and of the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia in the Tremembé Epidemiological Study, Brazil
    (2014) CÉSAR, Karolina G.; BRUCKI, Sonia M.D.; TAKADA, Leonel T.; NASCIMENTO, Luiz Fernando C.; GOMES, Camila M.S.; ALMEIDA, Milena C.S.; OLIVEIRA, Maira O.; PORTO, Fábio H.G.; SENAHA, Mirna L.H.; BAHIA, Valéria S.; SILVA, Thaís Bento L.; IANOF, Jéssica N.; SPÍNDOLA, Lívia; SCHMIDT, Magali T.; JORGE, Mário S.; VALE, Patrícia H.F.; CECCHINI, Mário A.; CASSIMIRO, Luciana; SOARES, Roger T.; GONÇALVES, Márcia R.; SMID, Jerusa; PORTO, Claudia S.; CARTHERY-GOULART, Maria Teresa; YASSUDA, Mônica S.; MANSUR, Letícia L.; NITRINI, Ricardo
    Depression is a major growing public health problem. Many population studies have found a significant relationship between depression and the presence of cognitive disorders. OBJECTIVE: To establish the correlation between the Visual Analogue Scale of Happiness and the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia in the population aged 60 years or over in the city of Tremembé, state of São Paulo, Brazil. METHODS: An epidemiological survey involving home visits was carried out in the city of Tremembé. The sample was randomly selected by drawing 20% of the population aged 60 years or older from each of the city's census sectors. In this single-phase study, the assessment included clinical history, physical and neurological examination, cognitive evaluation, and application of both the Cornell Scale and the Analogue Scale of Happiness for psychiatric symptoms. The presence of depressive symptoms was defined as scores greater than or equal to 8 points on the Cornell Scale. RESULTS: A total of 623 subjects were evaluated and of these 251 (40.3%) had clinically significant depressive symptoms on the Cornell Scale, with a significant association with female gender (p<0.001) and with lower education (p=0.012). One hundred and thirty-six participants (21.8%) chose the unhappiness faces, with a significant association with age (p<0.001), female gender (p=0.020) and low socioeconomic status (p=0.012). Although there was a statistically significant association on the correlation test, the correlation was not high (rho=0.47). CONCLUSION: The prevalence of depressive symptoms was high in this sample and the Visual Analogue Scale of Happiness and Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia should not be used as similar alternatives for evaluating the presence of depressive symptoms, at least in populations with low educational level.
  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Semantic memory: Nouns and action verbs in cognitively unimpaired individuals and frontotemporal lobar degeneration
    (2013) MANSUR, Leticia Lessa; CARTHERY-GOULART, Maria Teresa; BAHIA, Valéria Santoro; BAK, Thomas H.; NITRINI, Ricardo
    ABSTRACT Among the instruments to evaluate semantic memory, the Pyramids and Palm Trees (PPT) and the Kissing and Dancing (KDT) tests are widely used but none have a performance referential for cognitively normal and impaired Brazilian populations. Objective: [A] To study these two tests in a sample of young healthy Brazilian individuals living in São Paulo; [B] To apply the results to the evaluation of two cases diagnosed with frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Methods: We evaluated 50 normal participants (41 females and 9 males) aged between 20-63 years, with schooling level of 14-20 years. In addition, two individuals diagnosed with frontotemporal lobar degeneration were examined, one with behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia and the other with semantic dementia. Results: On the two tests, no effects of age, gender and schooling on the performance of normal individuals were observed. According to the performance of the sample of controls, scores below 46 points on the PPT and below 47 on the KDT are suggestive of deficits in semantic memory. The analyses of both cases indicated double dissociation in establishing associations between nouns and action verbs. Although the two patients had low scores on both tests, the patient with behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia performed better on the PPT compared to the KDT, while the patient with semantic dementia showed the reverse, performing better on the KDT. Conclusion: The PPT and KDT are suitable tests for use in the Brazilian population, with minimal need for adjustments. They are applicable tools both for cognitive assessment and research in semantic memory. In the present study, we obtained representative values of performance for cognitively unimpaired individuals and demonstrated the utility of these instruments for cognitive assessment of patients with FTLD.
  • conferenceObject
    Prevalence of cognitive impairment in tremembe, Brazil
    (2015) CESAR, K. G.; BRUCKI, S. M. D.; TAKADA, L. T.; OLIVEIRA, M. O.; PORTO, F. H. G.; SENAHA, M. L. H.; BAHIA, V. S.; SILVA, T. B. L.; CECCHINI, M. A.; CASSIMIRO, L.; SMID, J.; PORTO, C. S.; CARTHERY-GOULART, M. T.; YASSUDA, M. S.; MANSUR, L. L.; NITRINI, R.