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Publications

Publications by Lio Gonçalves

2011

High doses of olive leaf extract induce liver changes in mice

Authors
Arantes-Rodrigues, R; Henriques, A; Pires, M; Colaço, B; Calado, A; Rema, P; Colaço, A; Fernandes, T; De la Cruz, P; Lopes, C; Fidalgo-Gonçalves, L; Vilela, S; Pedrosa, T; Peixoto, F; Oliveira, P;

Publication
Food and Chemical Toxicology

Abstract

2011

High doses of olive leaf extract induce liver changes in mice

Authors
Arantes Rodrigues, R; Henriques, A; Pires, MJ; Colaco, B; Calado, AM; Rema, P; Colaco, A; Fernandes, T; De la Cruz, PLF; Lopes, C; Fidalgo Goncalves, L; Vilela, S; Pedrosa, T; Peixoto, F; Oliveira, PA;

Publication
FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY

Abstract
Virtually ever since it was first commercialized in 1995, there have been several studies focusing on the use of olive leaf extract (OLE) as a natural therapy and its medical properties. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of three different concentrations of OLE on the function of mice livers over the course of 14 weeks. Female ICR mice were divided into four groups, depending on OLE concentration used: 0%, 0.25%, 0.5%, and 0.75%. Alanine aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, total bilirubin and albumin serum concentrations were all measured. Histopathological changes of the liver were observed after haematoxylin and eosin, reticulin, and Masson's trichrome staining was carried out while liver mitochondrial bioenergetics were also evaluated. Alanine aminotransferase and alkaline phosphatase serum enzyme activities increased significantly in the groups in which 0.5% and 0.75% OLE concentrations were used. Histologically, all the groups exposed to OLE exhibited hyperplasia of the bile ducts, cholestasis, hepatocyte necrosis and inflammatory infiltrated. Hepatic fibrosis was observed in the groups featuring 0.5% and 0.75% OLE concentrations. The mitochondrial membrane potential, respiratory control ratio and ADP/O of samples from animals fed the higher OLE concentration was significantly decreased when compared to the control group.

2011

Forecasting Portugal's Wind Power Production by a Fuzzy-PCA Approach

Authors
Goncalves, L; Salgado, P;

Publication
NUMERICAL ANALYSIS AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS ICNAAM 2011: INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NUMERICAL ANALYSIS AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS, VOLS A-C

Abstract
The increased integration of wind power into the electric grid, as nowadays occurs in Portugal, poses new challenges due to its intermittency and volatility. Wind power prediction plays a key role in tackling these challenges. The contribution of this paper is to propose a new approach, combining fuzzy clustering and PCA, that uses historical data and wind speed data to get estimates of power curves that are very accurate.

2023

Femoral Neck Thickness Index as an Indicator of Proximal Femur Bone Modeling

Authors
Franco-Goncalo, P; Pereira, AI; Loureiro, C; Alves-Pimenta, S; Filipe, V; Goncalves, L; Colaco, B; Leite, P; McEvoy, F; Ginja, M;

Publication
VETERINARY SCIENCES

Abstract
Simple Summary Canine hip dysplasia development results in femoral neck modeling and an increase in thickness. The main objective of this work was to describe a femoral neck thickness index to quantify femoral neck width and to study its association with the degree of canine hip dysplasia using the Federation Cynologique Internationale scoring scheme. A total of 53 dogs (106 hips) were randomly selected for this study. Two examiners performed femoral neck thickness index estimation to study intra- and inter-examiner reliability and agreement. Statistical analysis tests showed excellent agreement and reliability between the measurements of the two examiners and the examiners' sessions. All joints were scored in five categories by an experienced examiner according to the Federation Cynologique Internationale criteria, and the results from examiner 1 were compared between these categories. The comparison of mean femoral neck thickness index between hip dysplasia categories using the analysis of variance test showed significant differences between groups. These results show that femoral neck thickness index is a parameter capable of evaluating proximal femur bone modeling and that it has the potential to enrich conventional canine hip dysplasia scoring criteria if incorporated into a computer-aided diagnosis software. The alteration in the shape of the femoral neck is an important radiographic sign for scoring canine hip dysplasia (CHD). Previous studies have reported that the femoral neck thickness (FNT) is greater in dogs with hip joint dysplasia, becoming progressively thicker with disease severity. The main objective of this work was to describe a femoral neck thickness index (FNTi) to quantify FNT and to study its association with the degree of CHD using the Federation Cynologique Internationale (FCI) scheme. A total of 53 dogs (106 hips) were randomly selected for this study. Two examiners performed FNTi estimation to study intra- and inter-examiner reliability and agreement. The paired t-test, the Bland-Altman plots, and the intraclass correlation coefficient showed excellent agreement and reliability between the measurements of the two examiners and the examiners' sessions. All joints were scored in five categories by an experienced examiner according to FCI criteria. The results from examiner 1 were compared between FCI categories. Hips that were assigned an FCI grade of A (n = 19), B (n = 23), C (n = 24), D (n = 24), and E (n = 16) had a mean & PLUSMN; standard deviation FNTi of 0.809 & PLUSMN; 0.024, 0.835 & PLUSMN; 0.044, 0.868 & PLUSMN; 0.022, 0.903 & PLUSMN; 0.033, and 0.923 & PLUSMN; 0.068, respectively (ANOVA, p < 0.05). Therefore, these results show that FNTi is a parameter capable of evaluating proximal femur bone modeling and that it has the potential to enrich conventional CHD scoring criteria if incorporated into a computer-aided diagnosis capable of detecting CHD.

2016

Ultrasonography as the Gold Standard for In Vivo Volumetric Determination of Chemically-induced Mammary Tumors

Authors
Faustino Rocha, AI; Gama, A; Oliveira, PA; Alvarado, A; Fidalgo Gonçalves, L; Ferreira, R; Ginja, M;

Publication
In vivo (Athens, Greece)

Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIM: In this study, we evaluated the dimensions and volume of rat mammary tumors and the association of these variables with tumor invasiveness.MATERIALS AND METHODS: Tumors were measured by caliper and ultrasonography. Volume was determined by water displacement and by application of four formulas using tumor length (L), width (W) and depth (D) or tumor weight.RESULTS: Results confirmed the data obtained in our previous work, where we verified that mammary tumors grow as oblate spheroids.CONCLUSION: The determination of mammary tumor volume by applying the formula V=(4/3)×p×(L/2)×(L/2)×(D/2) is the best way to evaluate tumor volume in vivo. Beyond volume evaluation by water displacement, the determination on the basis of tumor weight is the most accurate way to evaluate tumor volume after animal sacrifice or tumor excision. According to our results, it is not possible to predict if a tumor is invasive or non-invasive by its dimensions, volume or weight. Future work in chemically-induced mammary cancer should use ultrasonography and water displacement or tumor weight to determine tumor volume in vivo and after animal sacrifice or tumor excision, respectively. Copyright

2023

Femoral parallelism: evaluation and impact of variation on canine hip dysplasia assessment

Authors
Franco-Goncalo, P; Alves-Pimenta, S; Goncalves, L; Colaco, B; Leite, P; Ribeiro, A; Ferreira, M; McEvoy, F; Ginja, M;

Publication
FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE

Abstract
Adequate radiographic positioning on the X-ray table is paramount for canine hip dysplasia (HD) screening. The aims of this study were to evaluate femoral parallelism on normal ventrodorsal hip extended (VDHE) view and the effect of femoral angulation (FA) on Norberg Angle (NA) and Hip Congruency Index (HCI). The femoral parallelism was evaluated comparing the alignment of the long femoral axis with the long body axis in normal VDHE views and the effect of FA on NA and HCI on repeated VDHE views with different levels of FA. The femoral long axis in normal VDHE views showed a ranged of FA from -4.85 degrees to 5.85 degrees, mean +/- standard deviation (SD) of -0.06 +/- 2.41 degrees, 95% CI [-4.88, 4.76 degrees]. In the paired views, the mean +/- SD femur adduction of 3.69 +/- 1.96 degrees led to a statistically significant decrease NA, and HCI, and femur abduction of 2.89 +/- 2.12 led to a statistically significant increase in NA and HCI (p < 0.05). The FA differences were also significantly correlated with both NA differences (r = 0.83) and HCI differences (r = 0.44) (p < 0.001). This work describes a methodology that allows evaluation of femoral parallelism in VDHE views and the results suggest that femur abduction yielded more desirable NA and HCI values and adduction impaired NA and HCI values. The positive linear association of FA with NA and HCI allows the use of regression equations to create corrections, to reduce the influence of poor femoral parallelism in the HD scoring.

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