REGINA MARIA DE CARVALHO PINTO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
15
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
LIM/09 - Laboratório de Pneumologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 3 de 3
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Integrative assessment of cerebral blood regulation in COPD patients
    (2024) CORRE, Daniel I.; DE-LIMA-OLIVEIRA, Marcelo; NOGUEIRA, Ricardo C.; CARVALHO-PINTO, Regina M.; BOR-SENG-SHU, Edson; PANERAI, Ronney B.; CARVALHO, Celso R. F.; SALINET, Angela S. M.
    Cerebrovascular responses were compared between COPD and non-COPD participants. The association between COPD severity and cognitive function was also investigated. Cerebral blood velocity in the middle cerebral artery, blood pressure, and end-tidal CO2 were recorded at rest, followed by a brain activation paradigm, and an inhaled gas mixture (5% CO2) to assess cerebral autoregulation (CA), neurovascular coupling (NVC) and cerebrovascular reactivity to carbon dioxide (CVRCO2), respectively. Pulmonary function, blood gas analysis (COPD) and cognitive function (MoCA test) were also performed. No difference in baseline (systemic and cerebral parameters) and CA was found between 20 severe COPD and 21 non-COPD. Reduced NVC and CVRCO2 test were found in the COPD group. Lower pulmonary function was positively correlated with CA, NVC and CVRCO2 in COPD patients. Cognitive impairment (MoCA<26) was associated with lower NVC responses (COPD and non-COPD) and lower pulmonary function (COPD). Both mechanisms, CVRCO2 and NVC, were lower in COPD patients. Moreover, disease severity and cognitive impaired were associated with worse cerebrovascular regulation.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Tobacco exposure, but not aging, shifts the frequency of peripheral blood B cell subpopulations
    (2024) PINTO, Thalyta Nery Carvalho; SILVA, Cibele Cristine Berto Marques da; PINTO, Regina Maria Carvalho; DUARTE, Alberto Jose da Silva; BENARD, Gil; FERNANDES, Juliana Ruiz
    Several disturbances in T-cell mediated immunity have been described during aging, but immunosenescence of the B-cell compartment is less well elucidated. The peripheral blood B-cell compartment (CD19+) can be split into six main subpopulations according to the cell surface markers IgD, CD27, CD24, and CD38: Transitional, naive, unswitched, switched, double negative and plasmablasts. We thus aimed to verify whether shifts in these subsets occur during healthy and pathological aging. We recruited three groups of aged people (> 60 years old), healthy, COPD patients, and smokers without altered pulmonary function test, and a fourth group of individuals 18-40 years old (youngs). Total B-cells percentage and absolute number were similar among the healthy aged, COPD patients, and youngs, but the smokers showed significantly higher absolute numbers. While all six B-cell subset percentages were comparable among the healthy aged, COPD patients, and youngs, smokers showed significantly higher percentages of switched B-cells and reduced naive B-cells than the other three groups, resulting in an inverted naive:switched ratio. Analysis of the cell subset absolute numbers showed a similar trend. Overall, our results suggest that aging drives milder alterations in the distribution of peripheral blood B-cell subpopulations than in the T-cell compartment. We suggest that it is the T-cell immunosenescence that most contributes to the poor humoral immune responses in the elderly, vaccine responses included. Surprisingly it was the smokers who showed significant alterations when compared with the youngs, healthy aged, and aged COPD patients, probably as a result of the chronic immune stimulation described in active smoking subjects.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Elastic tape reduces dyspnea and improves health status in the short term in nonobese COPD males: A randomized controlled trial
    (2024) SANTOS, Eloise Arruda dos; PINTO, Thiago Fernandes; XAVIER, Rafaella Fagundes; STELMACH, Rafael; CARVALHO-PINTO, Regina Maria; CARVALHO, Celso Ricardo Fernandes de
    Introduction and objectives: The elastic tape (ET) is a novel intervention that acutely improves exercise capacity in laboratory tests; however, its effect on a patient's daily life remains unknown. This randomized controlled trial evaluated the effects of ET on daily life physical activity (DLPA), dyspnea symptoms, health status, and health -related quality of life (HRQoL) in individuals with COPD. Methods: Fifty males with moderate to very severe COPD were randomly assigned to an intervention group (ETG, n = 25), receiving ET on the chest wall and abdomen, or a control group (CG, n = 25). The intervention was for 14 days. DLPA (accelerometry; steps per day, and sedentary time), dyspnea symptoms (transition dyspnea index, TDI; and modified Medical Research Council, mMRC), health status (COPD assessment test, CAT), and health -related quality of life (HRQoL, CRQ) were evaluated at baseline and on Day 21 after the intervention. Results: No change in the DLPA was observed in between-group comparison. CG presented a reduction in step counts after 21days (-707,p <0.05) while ETG. maintained (-114,p > 0.94). However, ET reduced dyspnea symptoms in all TDI domains (functional, task, and effort) and on the mMRC scale after 14 days compared with CG (p < 0.01). Also, the ETG improved CAT score compared to the CG, reaching minimal clinical important difference (MCID) (-4.4 score, p <0.01). The ETG also improved in most CRQ domains reaching MCID after 21 days. Conclusions: ET does not modify DLPA but reduces dyspnea and improves health status and HRQoL in nonobese males with moderate to very severe COPD in the short term. This novel and low-cost intervention improves COPD symptoms.