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  • Comparing assessment tools as candidates for personalized nutritional evaluation of senior citizens in a nursing home
    Publication . Sousa-Catita, Diogo; Bernardo, Maria Alexandra; Santos, Carla Adriana; Silva, Maria Leonor; Mascarenhas, Paulo; Godinho, Catarina; Fonseca, Jorge
    Nutrition is an important health issue for seniors. In nursing homes, simple, inexpensive, fast, and validated tools to assess nutritional risk/status are indispensable. A multisurvey cross-sectional study with a convenient sample was created, comparing five nutritional screening/assessment tools and the time required for each, in order to identify the most useful instrument for a nursing home setting. Nutrition risk/status was evaluated using the following tools: Subjective Global Assessment (SGA), Mini Nutritional Assessment Short Form (MNA-SF), Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST), Nutritional Risk Screening 2002 (NRS 2002), and calf girth (CG). The time spent completing each tool was recorded. Eighty-three subjects were included. MNA-SF and CG were the screening tools that ranked highest with regards to malnutrition identification. CG failed to identify nutritional risk/malnutrition in seniors with lower limb edema. CG was the fastest tool while SGA was the slowest. This was the first study comparing non-invasive nutritional tools with time expended as a consideration in the implementation. CG is responsive, fast, and reliable in elders without edema. MNA-SF was more efficient at detecting malnutrition cases in the elderly population. Both MNA-SF and CG are considered the most suitable for the nursing home setting.
  • A protocol for the evaluation of nutritional and functional status evolution during a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program for patients after SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia
    Publication . Sousa-Catita, Diogo; Godinho, Catarina; Fonseca, Jorge
    Nutrition status is a major issue of the COVID-19 pandemic. Many factors associated with worse prognosis risk are related to nutrition. Patients received after hospital discharge for pneumonia due to SARS-Cov-2 were submitted to a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program. This study aimed to analyze the nutritional and functional status after SARS-Cov-2 pneumonia and evaluate the impact of a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program.
  • Inflammatory bowel disease, alpha-synuclein aggregates and Parkinson’s disease: the InflamaSPark protocol
    Publication . Grunho, Miguel; Godinho, Catarina; Patita, Marta; Mocanu, Irina; Vieira, Ana Isabel; De Matos, António; Carregosa, Ricardo; Marx, Frederico; Tomé, Morgane; Sousa-Catita, Diogo; Proença, Luís; Outeiro, Tiago; Fonseca, Jorge
    The hallmark of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the accumulation of alpha-synuclein (AS) aggregates. Prior to the central nervous system involvement, PD establishes itself in the gut as a result of the complex interplay between microbiota, the host’s immune/neural systems and increased intestinal permeability. Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) patients present a higher number of AS aggregates in the intestinal wall and an increased risk of developing PD. By studying AS aggregates in gut biopsy specimens of IBD patients and controls, this project aims to further clarify the pathophysiology of PD and to explore the potential of gut a biopsy for AS aggregates as a biomarker for prodromal PD.
  • Gut status in Parkinson’s disease: the GutSPark protocol
    Publication . Grunho, Miguel; Godinho, Catarina; Matos, António Alves de; Barroso, Helena; Carregosa, Ricardo; Marx, Frederico; Tomé, Morgane; Domingos, Josefa; Sousa-catita, Diogo; Botelho, João; Machado, Vanessa; Mendes, José João; Outeiro, Tiago; Fonseca, Jorge
    The neuropathological hallmark of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the accumulation of alpha–synuclein (AS) aggregates. The identification of AS aggregates in gut biopsy specimens from people with PD may provide an opportunity to identify PD at a very early stage, prior to symptom onset. Changes in gut microbiota and inflammatory conditions (such as periodontitis) may be linked with PD onset/evolution. This project aims to explore the concept of microbiota–gut–brain axis in PD, studying gut biopsy specimens for AS aggregates, oral and intestinal microbiota, associated digestive disorders and oral health, of both patients with PD and controls.