EDUARDO DE NOVAES COSTA BERGAMASCHI

Índice h a partir de 2011
1
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto Central, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Teaching Video NeuroImages: Susac syndrome's acute onset callosal disconnection
    (2020) MOURAO, Lucas Oliveira; PARMERA, Jacy Bezerra; BERGAMASCHI, Eduardo de Novaes Costa; NUNES, Douglas Mendes; NITRINI, Ricardo; BRUCKI, Sonia M. D.
    A 59-year-old right-handed hypertensive diabetic and previously alcoholic man presented acute confusional state followed by apathy, dysexecutive syndrome, clumsy left hand, and apraxic gait. A year later, his wife noticed impaired hearing. Neurologic examination revealed marked callosal apraxia (nondominant limb ideomotor apraxia, disconnection variant) and left stereoagnosis due to callosal disconnection (video). Left hand agraphia was present without aphasia. MRI showed punched out holes through corpus callosum, sparing the calloso-septal interface (figure 1). Audiometry revealed left neurosensorial loss. Fluorescein retinography demonstrated hyperfluorescence of arterial vessel wall (figure 2), confirming the hypothesis of Susac syndrome.(1)
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Oxford Cognitive Screen – Brazilian Portuguese version (OCS-Br) A pilot study
    (2018) RAMOS, Claudia Cristina Ferreira; AMADO, Daniel Krempel; BORGES, Conrado Regis; BERGAMASCHI, Eduardo; NITRINI, Ricardo; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi
    ABSTRACT Cognitive impairment is very common in stroke patients and underdiagnosed. Symptoms such as language, praxis, visuospatial, visuoconstructive and memory impairment are prominent. The screening cognitive tests available do not address some specific characteristics of stroke patients and have major limitations in relation to the most impaired cognitive domains. Objective: To test the applicability of a Brazilian version of the Oxford Cognitive Screen in a convenience sample of individuals with normal cognition. Methods: Thirty neurologically healthy participants underwent the OCS-Br in this pilot study. Results: The mean score on each task was: naming: 3.4 (SD=0.72) (maximum value of 4); semantics: 3 (SD=0) (maximum 3); orientation: 4 (SD=0) (maximum 4); visual field: 4 (SD=0) (maximum 4); sentence reading: 14.53 (SD: 1) (maximum 15); number writing: 2.86 (0.6) (maximum 3); calculation: 3.8 (SD=0.48) (maximum 4); and accuracy on the broken hearts test: 47.3 (3.3) (maximum 50). The scores obtained were similar to those of the English original sample. Conclusion: We observed similar values on each separate OCS task in comparison to the original test, confirming that the Brazilian Portuguese version is comparable to other studies.