EDUARDO LEITE VIEIRA COSTA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
26
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 - 10 de 61
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Quantitative analysis of pulmonary perfusion with dual-energy CT angiography: comparison of two quantification methods in patients with pulmonary embolism
    (2023) LEE, Hye Ju; WANDERLEY, Mark; RUBIN, Vivian Cardinal da Silva; ALCALA, Glasiele Cristina; COSTA, Eduardo Leite Vieira; PARGA, Jose Rodrigues; AMATO, Marcelo Britto Passos
    The study aimed to evaluate a quantification method of pulmonary perfusion with Dual-Energy CT Angiography (DE-CTA) normalized by lung density in the prediction of outcome in acute pulmonary embolism (PE). In this prospective study with CTA scans acquired with different breathing protocols, two perfusion parameters were calculated: %PBV (relative value of PBV, expressed per unit volume) and PBVm (PBV normalized by lung density, expressed per unit mass). DE-CTA parameters were correlated with simplified pulmonary embolism severity index (sPESI) and with outcome groups, alone and in combinationwith tomographic right-to-left ventricular ratios (RV/LV). PBVm showed significant correlation with sPESI. PBVm presented higher accuracy than %PBV In the prediction of ICU admission or death in patients with PE, with the best performance when combined with RV/LV volumetric ratio.
  • article 111 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Effect of Lowering V-T on Mortality in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Varies with Respiratory System Elastance
    (2021) GOLIGHER, Ewan C.; V, Eduardo L. Costa; YARNELL, Christopher J.; BROCHARD, Laurent J.; STEWART, Thomas E.; TOMLINSON, George; BROWER, Roy G.; SLUTSKY, Arthur S.; AMATO, Marcelo P. B.
    Rationale: If the risk of ventilator-induced lung injury in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is causally determined by driving pressure rather than by V-T, then the effect of ventilation with lower V-T on mortality would be predicted to vary according to respiratory system elastance (Ers). Objectives: To determine whether the mortality benefit of ventilation with lower V-T varies according to Ers. Methods: In a secondary analysis of patients from five randomized trials of lower-versus higher-V-T ventilation strategies in ARDS and acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, the posterior probability of an interaction between the randomized V-T strategy and Ers on 60-day mortality was computed using Bayesian multivariable logistic regression. Measurements and Main Results: Of 1,096 patients available for analysis, 416 (38%) died by Day 60. The posterior probability that the mortality benefit from lower-V-T ventilation strategies varied with Ers was 93% (posterior median interaction odds ratio, 0.80 per cm H2O/[ml/kg]; 90% credible interval, 0.63-1.02). Ers was classified as low (<2 cm H2O/[ml/kg], n=321, 32%), intermediate (2-3 cm H2O/[ml/kg], n=475, 46%), and high (>3 cm H2O/[ml/kg], n=224, 22%). In these groups, the posterior probabilities of an absolute risk reduction in mortality >= 1% were 55%, 82%, and 92%, respectively. The posterior probabilities of an absolute risk reduction >= 5% were 29%, 58%, and 82%, respectively. Conclusions: The mortality benefit of ventilation with lower V-T in ARDS varies according to elastance, suggesting that lungprotective ventilation strategies should primarily target driving pressure rather than V-T.
  • article 15 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Brazilian recommendations of mechanical ventilation 2013. Part 1
    (2014) CAVALCANTI, Alexandre Biasi; ISOLA, Alexandre Marini; GAMA, Ana Maria Casati; DUARTE, Antonio Carlos Magalhaes; VIANNA, Arthur; SERPA NETO, Ary; FARIAS, Augusto Manoel de Carvalho; BRAVIM, Bruno de Arruda; PINHEIRO, Bruno do Valle; MAZZA, Bruno Franco; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro de; TOUFEN JUNIOR, Carlos; BARBAS, Carmen Silvia Valente; DAVID, Cid Marcos Nascimento; TANIGUCHI, Corine; MAZZA, Debora Dutra da Silveira; DRAGOSAVAC, Desanka; TOLEDO, Diogo Oliveira; COSTA, Eduardo Leite; CASER, Eliana Bemardete; SILVA, Eliezer; AMORIM, Fabio Ferreira; SADDY, Felipe; GALAS, Filomena Regina Barbosa Gomes; SILVA, Gisele Sampaio; MATOS, Gustavo Faissol Janot de; EMMERICH, Joao Claudio; VALIATTI, Jorge Luis dos Sanots; TELES, Jose Mario Vleira; VICTORINO, Josue Almeida; FERREIRA, Juliana Carvalho; PRODOMO, Luciana Passuello do Vale; HAJAR, Ludhmila Abrahao; MARTINS, Luiz Claudio; MALBOUISSON, Luiz Marcelo Sa; VARGAS, Mara Ambrosina de Oliveira; HOLANDA, Marcelo Alcantara; AMATO, Marcelo Brito Passos; PARK, Marcelo; JACOMELLI, Marcia; REIS, Marco Antonio Soares; TAVARES, Marcos; DAMASCENO, Marta Cristina Paulette; DAMASCENO, Moyzes Pinto Coelho Duarte; ASSUNCAO, Murillo Santucci Cesar; YOUSSEF, Nazah Cherif Mohamad; MESSEDER, Octavio; TEIXEIRA, Paulo Jose Zimmermann; CARUSO, Pedro; DUARTE, Pericles Almeida Delfino; EID, Raquel Caserta; RODRIGUES, Ricardo Goulart; JESUS, Rodrigo Francisco de; KAIRALLA, Ronald Adib; JUSTINO, Sandra; NEMER, Sergio Nogueira; ROMERO, Simone Barbosa; AMADO, Veronica Moreira
    Perspectives on invasive and noninvasive ventilatory support for critically ill patients are evolving, as much evidence indicates that ventilation may have positive effects on patient survival and the quality of the care provided in intensive care units in Brazil. For those reasons, the Brazilian Association of Intensive Care Medicine (Associacao de Medicina Intensiva Brasileira - AMIB) and the Brazilian Thoracic Society (Sociedade Brasileira de Pneumologia e Tisiologia - SBPT), represented by the Mechanical Ventilation Committee and the Commission of Intensive Therapy, respectively, decided to review the literature and draft recommendations for mechanical ventilation with the goal of creating a document for bedside guidance as to the best practices on mechanical ventilation available to their members. The document was based on the available evidence regarding 29 subtopics selected as the most relevant for the subject of interest. The project was developed in several stages, during which the selected topics were distributed among experts recommended by both societies with recent publications on the subject of interest and/or significant teaching and research activity in the field of mechanical ventilation in Brazil. The experts were divided into pairs that were charged with performing a thorough review of the international literature on each topic. All the experts met at the Forum on Mechanical Ventilation, which was held at the headquarters of AMIB in Sao Paulo on August 3 and 4, 2013, to collaboratively draft the final text corresponding to each sub-topic, which was presented to, appraised, discussed and approved in a plenary session that included all 58 participants and aimed to create the final document.
  • conferenceObject
    Peep Titration In Severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: Different Physiological Consequences When Guided By Electrical Impedance Tomography Versus Esophageal Pressure
    (2017) ROLDAN, R.; LIMA, C.; YOSHIDA, T.; SANTIAGO, R. R. D. S.; GOMES, S.; TUCCI, M. R.; BERALDO, M. A.; COSTA, E. L. V.; TORSANI, V.; NAKAMURA, M. A. M.; CARVALHO, C. R. R.; AMATO, M. B. P.
  • article 12 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Brazilian recommendations of mechanical ventilation 2013. Part 2
    (2014) CAVALCANTI, Alexandre Biasi; ISOLA, Alexandre Marini; GAMA, Ana Maria Casati; DUARTE, Antonio Carlos Magalhaes; VIANNA, Arthur; SERPA NETO, Ary; FARIAS, Augusto Manoel de Carvalho; BRAVIM, Bruno de Arruda; PINHEIRO, Bruno do Valle; MAZZA, Bruno Franco; CARVALHO, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro de; TOUFEN JUNIOR, Carlos; BARBAS, Carmen Silvia Valente; DAVID, Cid Marcos Nascimento; TANIGUCHI, Corine; MAZZA, Debora Dutra da Silveira; DRAGOSAVAC, Desanka; TOLEDO, Diogo Oliveira; COSTA, Eduardo Leite; CASER, Eliana Bernardete; SILVA, Eliezer; AMORIM, Fabio Ferreira; SADDY, Felipe; GALAS, Filomena Regina Barbosa Gomes; SILVA, Gisele Sampaio; MATOS, Gustavo Faissol Janot de; EMMERICH, Joao Claudio; VALIATTI, Jorge Luis dos Sanots; TELES, Jose Mario Meira; VICTORINO, Josue Almeida; FERREIRA, Juliana Carvalho; PRODOMO, Luciana Passuello do Vale; HAJJAR, Ludhmila Abrahao; MARTINS, Luiz Claudio; MALBOUISSON, Luiz Marcelo Sa; VARGAS, Mara Ambrosina de Oliveira; HOLANDA, Marcelo Alcantara; AMATO, Marcelo Brito Passos; PARK, Marcelo; JACOMELLI, Marcia; REIS, Marco Antonio Soares; TAVARES, Marcos; DAMASCENO, Marta Cristina Paulette; DAMASCENO, Moyzes Pinto Coelho Duarte; ASSUNCAO, Murillo Santucci Cesar; YOUSSEF, Nazah Cherif Mohamad; MESSEDER, Octavio; TEIXEIRA, Paulo Jose Zimmermann; CARUSO, Pedro; DUARTE, Pericles Almeida Delfino; EID, Raquel Caserta; RODRIGUES, Ricardo Goulart; JESUS, Rodrigo Francisco de; KAIRALLA, Ronaldo Adib; JUSTINO, Sandra; NEMER, Sergio Nogueira; ROMERO, Simone Barbosa; AMADO, Veronica Moreira
    Perspectives on invasive and noninvasive ventilatory support for critically ill patients are evolving, as much evidence indicates that ventilation may have positive effects on patient survival and the quality of the care provided in intensive care units in Brazil. For those reasons, the Brazilian Association of Intensive Care Medicine (Associacao de Medicina Intensiva Brasileira - AMIB) and the Brazilian Thoracic Society (Sociedade Brasileira de Pneumologia e Tisiologia - SBPT), represented by the Mechanical Ventilation Committee and the Commission of Intensive Therapy, respectively, decided to review the literature and draft recommendations for mechanical ventilation with the goal of creating a document for bedside guidance as to the best practices on mechanical ventilation available to their members. The document was based on the available evidence regarding 29 subtopics selected as the most relevant for the subject of interest. The project was developed in several stages, during which the selected topics were distributed among experts recommended by both societies with recent publications on the subject of interest and/or significant teaching and research activity in the field of mechanical ventilation in Brazil. The experts were divided into pairs that were charged with performing a thorough review of the international literature on each topic. All the experts met at the Forum on Mechanical Ventilation, which was held at the headquarters of AMIB in Sao Paulo on August 3 and 4, 2013, to collaboratively draft the final text corresponding to each sub-topic, which was presented to, appraised, discussed and approved in a plenary session that included all 58 participants and aimed to create the final document.
  • article 16 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Regional Lung Derecruitment and Inflammation during 16 Hours of Mechanical Ventilation in Supine Healthy Sheep
    (2013) TUCCI, Mauro R.; COSTA, Eduardo L. V.; WELLMAN, Tyler J.; MUSCH, Guido; WINKLER, Tilo; HARRIS, R. Scott; VENEGAS, Jose G.; AMATO, Marcelo B. P.; MELO, Marcos F. Vidal
    Background: Lung derecruitment is common during general anesthesia. Mechanical ventilation with physiological tidal volumes could magnify derecruitment, and produce lung dysfunction and inflammation. The authors used positron emission tomography to study the process of derecruitment in normal lungs ventilated for 16 h and the corresponding changes in regional lung perfusion and inflammation. Methods: Six anesthetized supine sheep were ventilated with V-T = 8 ml/kg and positive end-expiratory pressure = 0. Transmission scans were performed at 2-h intervals to assess regional aeration. Emission scans were acquired at baseline and after 16 h for the following tracers: (1) F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose to evaluate lung inflammation and (2) (NN)-N-13 to calculate regional perfusion and shunt fraction. Results: Gas fraction decreased from baseline to 16 h in dorsal (0.31 +/- 0.13 to 0.14 +/- 0.12, P < 0.01), but not in ventral regions (0.61 +/- 0.03 to 0.63 +/- 0.07, P = nonsignificant), with time constants of 1.5-44.6 h. Although the vertical distribution of relative perfusion did not change from baseline to 16 h, shunt increased in dorsal regions (0.34 +/- 0.23 to 0.63 +/- 0.35, P < 0.01). The average pulmonary net F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose uptake rate in six regions of interest along the ventral-dorsal direction increased from 3.4 +/- 1.4 at baseline to 4.1 +/- 1.510(-3)/min after 16 h (P < 0.01), and the corresponding average regions of interest F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose phosphorylation rate increased from 2.0 +/- 0.2 to 2.5 +/- 0.210(-2)/min (P < 0.01). Conclusions: When normal lungs are mechanically ventilated without positive end-expiratory pressure, loss of aeration occurs continuously for several hours and is preferentially localized to dorsal regions. Progressive lung derecruitment was associated with increased regional shunt, implying an insufficient hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. The increased pulmonary net uptake and phosphorylation rates of F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose suggest an incipient inflammation in these initially normal lungs.
  • conferenceObject
    Higher Positive End-Expiratory Pressures Affect The Distribution Of Lung Inflammation During Spontaneous Breathing In An Experimental Model Of Severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
    (2017) MORAIS, C. C. A.; PLENS, G.; TUCCI, M. R.; YOSHIDA, T.; BORGES, J. B.; RAMOS, O. P.; PEREIRA, S. M.; LIMA, C. A. S.; GOMES, S.; MELO, M. Vidal; AMATO, M. B. P.; COSTA, E. L. V.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Effect of Cardiogenic Oscillations on Trigger Delay During Pressure Support Ventilation
    (2018) PLENS, Glauco M.; MORAIS, Caio C. A.; NAKAMURA, Maria A.; SOUZA, Patricia N.; AMATO, Marcelo B. P.; TUCCI, Mauro R.; V, Eduardo L. Costa
    BACKGROUND: Sensitive flow or pressure triggers are usually applied to improve ventilator response time. Conversely, too sensitive triggers can incur risk of auto-triggering, a type of asynchrony in which a breath is triggered without inspiratory muscle activity. A frequent cause of auto-triggering is cardiogenic oscillations, characterized by cyclical variations in pressure and flow waveforms caused by cardiac contractions. Our goal was to test trigger performance and capacity to abolish auto-triggering in 5 different ICU ventilators using different simulated levels of cardiogenic oscillations. METHODS: A mechanical breathing simulator was used to test 5 different ICU ventilators' trigger response time and capacity to minimize auto-triggering in conditions with 0, 0.25, 0.5, and 1 cm H2O cardiogenic oscillation. Each ventilator was evaluated until an ideal trigger was found (the most sensitive that abolished auto-triggering). When the least sensitive flow trigger was unable to avoid auto-triggering, a pressure trigger was used. We compared time delay, airway pressure drop until triggering, and work of breathing before each trigger, all at the ideal trigger level fur each cardiogenic oscillation amplitude. We also assessed the proportion of auto-triggered breaths in the whole range of trigger levels tested. RESULTS: Larger cardiogenic oscillations were associated with more frequent auto-triggering. To avoid auto-triggering, less sensitive triggers were required ( +2.51 L/min per 1 cm H2O increase in cardiogenic oscillation; 95% CI 2.26-2.76, P < .001). Time delay increased with larger cardiogenic oscillations, because less sensitive trigger levels were required to abolish auto-triggering (4.79-ms increase per 1 L/min increment on flow trigger). CONCLUSIONS: More sensitive triggers led to faster ventilator response, but also to more frequent auto-triggering. To avoid auto-triggering, less sensitive triggers were required, with consequent slower trigger response. To compare trigger performance in a scenario that more closely represents clinical practice, evaluation of the tradeoff between time delay and frequency of auto-triggering should be considered.
  • article 1716 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Driving Pressure and Survival in the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
    (2015) AMATO, Marcelo B. P.; MEADE, Maureen O.; SLUTSKY, Arthur S.; BROCHARD, Laurent; COSTA, Eduardo L. V.; SCHOENFELD, David A.; STEWART, Thomas E.; BRIEL, Matthias; TALMOR, Daniel; MERCAT, Alain; RICHARD, Jean-Christophe M.; CARVALHO, Carlos R. R.; BROWER, Roy G.
    BACKGROUND Mechanical-ventilation strategies that use lower end-inspiratory (plateau) airway pressures, lower tidal volumes (V-T), and higher positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEPs) can improve survival in patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), but the relative importance of each of these components is uncertain. Because respiratory-system compliance (C-RS) is strongly related to the volume of aerated remaining functional lung during disease (termed functional lung size), we hypothesized that driving pressure (Delta P=V-T/C-RS), in which V-T is intrinsically normalized to functional lung size (instead of predicted lung size in healthy persons), would be an index more strongly associated with survival than V-T or PEEP in patients who are not actively breathing. METHODS Using a statistical tool known as multilevel mediation analysis to analyze individual data from 3562 patients with ARDS enrolled in nine previously reported randomized trials, we examined Delta P as an independent variable associated with survival. In the mediation analysis, we estimated the isolated effects of changes in Delta P resulting from randomized ventilator settings while minimizing confounding due to the baseline severity of lung disease. RESULTS Among ventilation variables, Delta P was most strongly associated with survival. A 1-SD increment in Delta P (approximately 7 cm of water) was associated with increased mortality (relative risk, 1.41; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.31 to 1.51; P<0.001), even in patients receiving ""protective"" plateau pressures and V-T (relative risk, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.17 to 1.58; P<0.001). Individual changes in V-T or PEEP after randomization were not independently associated with survival; they were associated only if they were among the changes that led to reductions in Delta P (mediation effects of Delta P, P=0.004 and P=0.001, respectively). CONCLUSIONS We found that Delta P was the ventilation variable that best stratified risk. Decreases in Delta P owing to changes in ventilator settings were strongly associated with increased survival. (Funded by Fundacao de Amparo e Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo and others.)
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Assessment of regional lung ventilation by electrical impedance tomography in a patient with unilateral bronchial stenosis and a history of tuberculosis
    (2013) MARINHO, Liegina Silveira; SOUSA, Nathalia Parente de; BARROS, Carlos Augusto Barbosa da Silveira; MATIAS, Marcelo Silveira; MONTEIRO, Luana Torres; BERALDO, Marcelo do Amaral; COSTA, Eduardo Leite Vieira; AMATO, Marcelo Britto Passos; HOLANDA, Marcelo Alcantara
    Bronchial stenosis can impair regional lung ventilation by causing abnormal, asymmetric airflow limitation. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is an imaging technique that allows the assessment of regional lung ventilation and therefore complements the functional assessment of the lungs. We report the case of a patient with left unilateral bronchial stenosis and a history of tuberculosis, in whom regional lung ventilation was assessed by EIT. The EIT results were compared with those obtained by ventilation/perfusion radionuclide imaging. The patient was using nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) for the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. Therefore, we studied the effects of postural changes and of the use of nasal CPAP. The EIT revealed heterogeneous distribution of regional lung ventilation, the ventilation being higher in the right lung, and this distribution was influenced by postural changes and CPAP use. The EIT assessment of regional lung ventilation produced results similar to those obtained with the radionuclide imaging technique and had the advantage of providing a dynamic evaluation without radiation exposure.