625 results on '"Dagianti A"'
Search Results
2. The Impact of Sports Cardiology on Clinical Practice
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Dagianti, A., Pelliccia, A., editor, Caselli, G., editor, and Bellotti, P., editor
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- 1997
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3. Two-dimensional echocardiography in the early management of acute myocardial infarction
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Agati, Luciano, Penco, Maria, Vizza, Carmine D., Renzi, Marco, Dagianti, Armando, Iliceto, Sabino, editor, Rizzon, Paolo, editor, and Roelandt, Jos R. T. C., editor
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- 1991
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4. Efficacy of Amlodipine in the Treatment of Stable Effort Angina: An Echocardiographic Stress Study
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Vizza, Carmine Dario, Sciomer, Susanna, Giustini, Anna, Dagianti, Alessandra, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
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- 1997
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5. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection and atherosclerotic coronary disease
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Sessa, Rosa, Di Pietro, Marisa, Santino, Iolanda, Piano, Massimo del, Varveri, Antonio, Dagianti, Armando, and Penco, Maria
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Coronary heart disease -- Risk factors ,Atherosclerosis -- Risk factors ,Chlamydia infections -- Health aspects ,Health - Published
- 1999
6. Usefulness of echocardiography in the prognostic evaluation of non–Q-wave myocardial infarction
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Romano, Silvio, Dagianti, Alessandra, Penco, Maria, Varveri, Antonio, Biffani, Elisabetta, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
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- 2000
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7. Assessment of regional left ventricular function during exercise test with pulsed tissue doppler imaging
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Dagianti, Alessandra, Vitarelli, Antonio, Conde, Ysabel, Penco, Maria, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
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- 2000
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8. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection is associated with coronary artery disease but not implicated in inducing plaque instability
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Romano, Silvio, Penco, Maria, Fratini, Simona, Di Pietro, Marisa, Sessa, Rosa, Del Piano, Massimo, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
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- 2004
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9. Identification of coronary artery by-pass grafts: reliability of MRI in clinical practice
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Renzi, PaoloDi, Fedele, Francesco, Di Cesare, Ernesto, Pavone, Paolo, Fabietti, Franco, Sciomer, Susanna, Vizza, Dario C., Dagianti, Armando, and Passariello, Roberto
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- 1992
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10. Influence of reperfusion induced by thrombolytic treatment on natural history of left ventricular regional wall motion abnormality in acute myocardial infarction
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Penco, Maria, Romano, Silvio, Agati, Luciano, Dagianti, Alessandra, Vitarelli, Antonio, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
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Thrombolytic therapy -- Evaluation ,Heart ventricle, Left -- Physiological aspects ,Heart attack -- Drug therapy ,Health - Abstract
Although several studies have investigated ventricular (LV) function after reperfusion interventions, it is still unclear whether benefits result from successful therapy or whether such benefits only reflect the natural history of a subgroup of patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). This study evaluates the unique effect of thrombolytic therapy on the natural history of regional LV wall motion dysfunction. One hundred seventy-six patients with AMI were studied: 82 patients (group A) underwent conventional treatment and 94 (group B) thrombolytic therapy. LV regional improvement, evaluated by changes in echo score between admission and predischarge examination, was present more frequently in group B (28%) than in group A (17%). Furthermore, improve patients in group B had higher admission echo scores (7.5 [+ or -] 3.5 vs 6.3 [+ or -] 3.1), a prevalence of anterior AMI (68 vs 30.1%) and a higher rate of coronary patency (92 vs 58% in patients who had no improvement). In group A patients the rate of coronary patency was similar in those who did (46.1%) and did not have (36.1%) improvement. Observations at 12 to 18 months showed similar data in group A patients and in group B patients without improvement, marginal additional improvement was observed in group B patients who had in-hospital improvement. These observations demonstrate that LV function recovery is more frequent and marked in treated than in untreated patients. Follow-up results suggest a prolonged beneficial effect of thrombolytic treatment on LV function. The highest rate of coronary patency in improved group B patients underline the role of reperfusion natural history of LV dysfunction after AMI. (Am J Cardiol 1993;71:1015-1020)
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- 1993
11. Defective coronary prostaglandin modulation in anginal patients
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Serneri, Gian Gastone Neri, Gensini, Gian Franco, Abbate, Rosanna, Castellani, Sergio, Bonechi, Francesco, Carnovali, Marino, Rostagno, Carlo, Dabizzi, Roberto Piero, Dagianti, Armando, Arata, Luciano, Fedele, Francesco, Iacoboni, Carlo, and Prisco, Domenico
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Coronary heart disease -- Physiological aspects ,Prostaglandins -- Physiological aspects ,Prostacyclin -- Physiological aspects ,Nervous system, Sympathetic -- Physiological aspects ,Angina pectoris -- Physiological aspects ,Vasodilators -- Physiological aspects ,Health - Abstract
Prostaglandins are a complex set of biochemical compounds within the body that perform an equally complex array of functions. Two prostaglandins, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and prostacyclin (also called prostaglandin I2 or PGI2), have been found to dilate blood vessels. In patients with angina pectoris, the chest pain which results from intermittent oxygen deprivation of the heart muscle, little or no PGI2 or PGE2 can be found. Since normal individuals can increase the production of PGE2 and PGI2 in response to sympathetic stimulation, a test was performed on angina patients under similar conditions. For this test, the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system, which modulates the body's response to potentially serious or threatening situations, came in the form of immersing the patient's foot in ice water (appropriately called a cold pressor test). The 23 control subjects all responded to the sympathetic stimulation with increased production of PGI2 and PGE2, and a concomitant decrease in the resistance of the coronary arteries to blood flow. In contrast, little or no increase in prostaglandin production could be detected among the 26 patients with angina. Somewhat paradoxically, among the anginal patients, the resistance of the coronary arteries to blood flow actually increased in response to the cold pressor test. It seems clear that prostaglandins play an important role in the response of the heart's circulation to sympathetic stimulation, whether it is in the form of a bucket of cold water or the stresses of everyday life. And, it is equally clear that an abnormal prostaglandin response is part of the inadequate physiological responses that occur in patients with angina. (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
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- 1990
12. Effectiveness of thrombolysis is associated with a time-dependent increase of malondialdehyde in peripheral blood of patients with acute myocardial infarction
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Giardina, Bruno, Penco, Maria, Lazzarino, Giuseppe, Romano, Silvio, Tavazzi, Barbara, Fedele, Francesco, Di Pierro, Donato, and Dagianti, Armando
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Thrombolytic therapy -- Evaluation ,Heart attack -- Drug therapy ,Adenosine -- Physiological aspects ,Health - Abstract
By using a highly sensitive, high-performance liquid chromotographic technique, plasma values of malondialdehyde (MDA), adenosine and oxypurines were determined in 10 healthy subjects, 10 patients with noncardiac illness, and 20 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) observed within 6 hours from the onset of symptoms. Patients with AMI received fibrinolytic treatment. Penpheral Mood was obtained before and serially after thrombolysis (1, 2, 3, 6 and 24 hears). Coronery patency was assessed by timing of peak creatine phosphate kinasu and by predischarge angiography. MDA (mean [+ or -] SD) in healthy subjects, noncardiac patients, and immediately before thrombolytic treatment in patients with AMI was 0.051 [+ or -] 0.013, 0.066 [+ or -] 0.020 and 0.397 [+ or -] 0.326 [micro]mol/liter of plasma, respectively. A progressive increase in plasma MDA after thrombolysis was observed only in reperfused patients, whose values at the third, sixth and 24th hours were also significantly greater than those of nonreperfused patients. Time-dependent variations of xanthine and adenosine were also observed in the same group after thrombolysis. The data appear to indicate that a relevant increase in plasma MDA, mostly originating due to phospholipid derangement of postischemic myocytes, occurs only in patients with successful thrombolysis, thus suggesting that if propedy assayed, it may represent reliable biechemical evidence of tissue injuries after myocardial reperfusion in humans. (Am J Cardiol 1993;71:788-793)
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- 1993
13. Usefulness of transesophageal echocardiography in the assessment of aortic dissection
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Penco, Maria, Paparoni, Saro, Dagianti, Alessandra, Fusilli, Chiara, Vitarelli, Antonio, De Remigis, Franco, Mazzola, Alessandro, Di Luzio, Vittorio, Gregorini, Renato, and D’Eusanio, Giuseppe
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- 2000
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14. Value of transesophageal dobutamine stress echocardiography in assessing coronary artery disease
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Vitarelli, Antonio, Dagianti, Alessandra, Conde, Ysabel, Penco, Maria, Pastore, Luciano Raffaele, and Fedele, Francesco
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- 2000
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15. Usefulness of the dipyridamole-Doppler test for diagnosis of coronary artery disease
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Agati, Luciano, Arata, Luciano, Neja, Carlo Peraldo, Manzara, Carla, Iacoboni, Carlo, Vizza, Carmine D., Penco, Maria, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
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Dipyridamole ,Coronary heart disease -- Diagnosis ,Doppler echocardiography ,Health - Abstract
Two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiographic studies and a hemodynamic investigation were performed during dipyridamole testing in 42 subjects (13 control subjects and 29 patients with coronary artery disease [CAD]), to evaluate the ability of dipyridamole Doppler echocardlography in identifying patients with ischemic left ventricular dysfunction. in the control group, after dipyridamole infusion, Doppler-derived parameters increased significantly from baseline (p (Am J Cardiol 1990;65:829-834), One method of assessing the health of the coronary arteries (the arteries that deliver blood to the heart tissue itself) is a noninvasive approach called Doppler echocardiography, an ultrasound technique that provides an image of the beating heart and its blood flow. Since ischemia (decreased blood flow) is a consequence of coronary artery disease, testing should determine if blood flow in these arteries is normal. It is possible that injection of an agent that causes vasodilation (enlargement of the blood vessels), combined with Doppler echocardiography, would constitute a useful diagnostic approach. This method was tested in 42 subjects who underwent diagnostic coronary angiography (injection of a dye into the coronary arteries, followed by X-ray pictures of the dye in the vessels) because they had experienced a chest pain syndrome. Thirteen patients had normal coronary arteries and constituted the control group; the rest had coronary artery disease of at least one coronary artery. All patients received dipyridamole (a vasodilator) intravenously and heart rate, blood pressure, and electrocardiographic variables were monitored continuously. Doppler and two-dimensional echocardiography (an ultrasound technique that allows measurement of other aspects of coronary function) were also performed, as were measurements of hemodynamic variables such as pressure in the chambers of the heart. The results showed that measurements obtained with Doppler echocardiography increased for control subjects after dipyramidole was administered, but certain variables did not change in patients with coronary artery disease. The measures that remained constant were peak flow velocity (velocity of blood flow at the point in the cycle of maximum output), flow velocity integral, and stroke volume (the amount of blood pumped with one contraction). Heart rate and most other measures remained the same in both groups before and after dipyridamole. The changes noted in patients with coronary artery disease appear to be the result of ischemia of the heart muscle. It therefore appears that Doppler echocardiography can be used to distinguish certain patients with heart disease from normal subjects. Limitations of the method are discussed. (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
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- 1990
16. Family psychoeducational interventions for schizophrenia in routine settings: impact on patients' clinical status and social functioning and on relatives' burden and resources
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Vincenzo Delcuratolo, Riccardo Curreli, Luisa Maresca, Rosa Salmeri, Emi Bondi, Laura Pezzenati, Andrea Fiorillo, Graziella Campo, Gennaro Cerullo, Flavia Dagianti, Aniello Esposito, Corrado De Rosa, Rita Di Nunzio, Claudio Malangone, Lucia Matrella, Monica Prezioso, Annarita Sasso, Francesco Bardicchia, Rosario Cantone, Gruppo Di Lavoro, Mauro Raffaeli, Giuseppina Robustelli Test, Grazia Favata, Michele Di Lella, Barbara Scandone, Paola Innocente, Giovanna Cavaliere, Lorenza Magliano, Mario Scordato, Rossella Bellini, Angela Scorsino, Elisabetta Biscussi, Maria Giannini, Matteo Folla, Francesco Degl'Innocent, Luisa Gargiulo, Mario Maj, Silvana Miscali, Lucetta Casale, Floralba Gentile, Stefania Lucania, Magliano, Lorenza, Fiorillo, Andrea, Malangone, C, DE ROSA, C, Favata, G, Sasso, A, Prezioso, M, Pezzenati, L, Gentile, F, Casale, L, Bondi, E, Test, Gr, DI LELLA, M, Biscussi, E, Degl'Innocent, F, Bellini, R, DI NUNZIO, R, Matrella, L, Salmeri, R, Cantone, R, Gargiulo, L, Esposito, A, Delcuratolo, V, Giannini, M, Maresca, L, Cavaliere, G, Scandone, B, Folla, M, Raffaeli, M, Innocente, P, Dagianti, F, Lucania, S, Scorsino, A, Bardicchia, F, Cerullo, G, Curreli, R, Miscali, S, Scordato, M, Campo, G, Maj, Mario, and GRUPPO DI, Lavoro
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MEDLINE ,Severity of Illness Index ,Resource Allocation ,Disability Evaluation ,Social support ,Catchment Area, Health ,Cost of Illness ,Intervention (counseling) ,Severity of illness ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Family ,Social Behavior ,Psychiatry ,Health Education ,Demography ,Social network ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Social Support ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mental Health ,Italy ,Schizophrenia ,Family Therapy ,Female ,Health education ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
SUMMARYObjective — This study explored the effectiveness of a psychoeducational family intervention for schizophrenia on patients' clinical status and disability and relatives' burden and perceived support. Methods — The study has been carried out in 17 mental health centres. In each of them, 2 professionals were trained in a psychoeducational intervention and applied it for six months with families of users with schizophrenia. At baseline and six months later, patients' clinical status and disability, and relatives' burden, social network and professional support were assessed by validated tools. Results — Of the seventy-one recruited families, 48 (68%) completed the intervention. At six months, a significant improvement was found in patients' clinical status and social functioning, as well as in relatives' burden and social and professional support. In particular, the percentage of patients with poor or very poor global social functioning dropped from 50% to 27% at six months. Forty percent of patients and 45% of relatives reported a significant improvement in their social contacts over the intervention period. Conclusions — The results of this study confirm the hypothesis that psychoeducational family interventions may have a significant effect on social outcome and family burden in schizophrenia when provided in routine conditions.Declaration of Interest: none of the authors has had any interest or he/she has received any form of support, including that from drug companies and honoraria for lectures and consultancies, potentially in conflict with this scientific work. None of the authors has received any form of fee for his/her participation in this study. This study was supported by grants received from the “M. Lugli” Foundation (grant n. 2/18/8) and from the National Institute of Health, Italy (grant no. 1AL/F3).
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- 2006
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17. Benefits and difficulties in implementing family psychoeducational interventions for schizophrenia in mental health services: results from a multicentre Italian study
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Paola Innocente, Angela Scorsino, Corrado De Rosa, Barbara Scandone, Luisa Gargiulo, Mario Maj, Francesco Degl'Innocenti, Lucia Matrella, Rossella Bellini, Rita Di Nunzio, Andrea Fiorillo, Michele Di Lella, Graziella Campo, Anna Malacarne, Carla Sodde, Francesco Bardicchia, Giovanna Cavaliere, Giuseppina Robustelli Test, Laura Pezzenati, Rosa Salmeri, Cinzia Mameli, Luigi D'Ambra, Mauro Raffaeli, Flavia Dagianti, Lorenza Magliano, Grazia Favata, Elisabetta Biscussi, Gruppo Di Lavoro, Aniello Esposito, Monica Prezioso, Mario Scordato, Maria Giannini, Matteo Folla, Stefania Lucania, Floralba Gentile, Riccardo Curreli, Luisa Maresca, Silvana Miscali, Lucetta Casale, Gennaro Cerullo, Vincenzo Delcuratolo, Claudio Malangone, Annarita Sasso, Rosario Cantone, Emi Bondi, Magliano, Lorenza, Fiorillo, Andrea, Malangone, C, DE ROSA, C, Favata, G, Sasso, A, Prezioso, M, Pezzenati, L, Gentile, F, Casale, L, Bondi, E, Test, Gr, DI LELLA, M, Biscussi, E, Degl'Innocenti, F, Bellini, R, DI NUNZIO, R, Matrella, L, Salmeri, R, Cantone, R, Gargiulo, L, Esposito, A, Delcuratolo, V, Giannini, M, Maresca, L, Cavaliere, G, Scandone, B, Folla, M, Raffaeli, M, Innocente, P, Dagianti, F, Lucania, S, Scorsino, A, Bardicchia, F, Cerullo, G, Curreli, R, Miscali, S, Scordato, M, Campo, G, Mameli, C, Sodde, C, D'Ambra, L, Malacarne, A, and Maj, Mario
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Adult ,Male ,Mental Health Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) ,Training course ,Psychological intervention ,Psychoeducational intervention ,Risk Assessment ,Professional-Family Relations ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Health Education ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mental health ,Clinical Practice ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Italy ,Family medicine ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,business - Abstract
SUMMARYAims – This study aims to explore: a) the feasibility of psycho-educational interventions for families of users with schizophrenia in clinical practice by trained staff; b) the benefits and problems encountered by professionals in the use of these interventions. Methods – 46 professionals from 23 Italian Mental Health Sen'ices (MHS) attended at a three-module training course in psycho-educational interventions and four supervisions in the subsequent year. Following the course, participants provided the intervention to families of users with schizophrenia. The difficulties and benefits encountered by trainees to use the intervention were registered on the Family Intervention Schedule.Results – 83% of the participants completed the training course. Following the course, the intervention started in 71 families from 17 MHS. 76% of trainees provided the intervention to 2-5 families, while 13% of them only held informative sessions on schizophrenia. During the supervision period, the organisational difficulties experienced by the professionals were stable, while the benefits increased. Differences in benefits and difficulties were detected in relation to the trainees’ experience and professional roles. Conclusions – It is possible to introduce psycho-educational interventions in MHS after a relatively brief period of training and supervision of the staff. Organisational difficulties need to be addressed to increase the dissemination of these interventions on a large scale.Declaration of Interest: None of the authors has had any interest or he/she has received any form of support, including that from drug companies and honoraria for lectures and consultancies, potentially in conflict with this scientific work. None of the authors has received any form of fee for his/her participation in this study. This study was supported by grants received from the “M. Lugli” Foundation (grant n. 2/18/8) and from the National Institute of Health, Italy (grant no. 1AL/F3).
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- 2005
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18. Stress echocardiography: Comparison of exercise, dipyridamole and dobutamine in detecting and predicting the extent of coronary artery disease
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Francesco Fedele, Alessandra Dagianti, Susanna Sciomer, Salvatore Rosanio, Armando Dagianti, Luciano Agati, and Maria Penco
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ischemia ,Hemodynamics ,Coronary Disease ,Physical exercise ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Coronary artery disease ,Dobutamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Stress Echocardiography ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,business.industry ,Dipyridamole ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Blood pressure ,Echocardiography ,Anesthesia ,Exercise Test ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objectives. This study was designed to compare exercise, dipyridamole and dobutamine echocardiography in the same patients and to evaluate, by measuring physiologic and echocardiographic variables, the mechanisms by which exercise and dobutamine induce ischemia. Background. The diagnostic value of stress echocardiography has been widely reported, but the specific effects of exercise, dipyridamole and dobutamine have not been directly compared. Furthermore, no echocardiographic study has evaluated left ventricular volume changes at ischemic threshold during exercise and dobutamine administration. Methods. One hundred patients with suspected (Group A, n = 60) or known (Group B, n = 40) coronary artery disease underwent all three tests in random order. Results. In Group A, the sensitivities of exercise (mean 76%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 58% to 94%) and of dobutamine echocardiography (72%, 95% CI 53% to 91%) were higher than that of dipyridamole (52%, 95% Cl 31% to 73%; p = 0.01 and p = 0.02, respectively). Specificity did not differ significantly among tests (94% for exercise [95% CI 86% to 100%] and 97% for dipyridamole and dobutamine [95% CI 91% to 100%]). Accuracy was identical for exercise and dobutamine (87%) and higher than that for dipyridamole (78%, p = 0.06). In Group B, the accuracy in predicting coronary disease extent was 71% for exercise, 33% for dipyridamole and 75% for dobutamine. At ischemic threshold, end-systolic volume index and the ratio of systolic blood pressure to end-systolic volume, a variable related to myocardial contractility, were significantly lower and higher, respectively, with dobutamine than during exercise (p Conclusions. In a clinical setting, exercise echocardiography should represent the first diagnostic approach because it has high diagnostic efficacy and provides additional information on exercise capacity; pharmacologic stress, particularly that of dobutamine, provides a pivotal diagnostic tool when exercise is not feasible or its results are nondiagnostic. Our preliminary data on echocardiographic evaluation at ischemic threshold support the view that myocardial contractility is a major factor in inducing ischemia during dobutamine infusion.
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- 1995
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19. Value of transesophageal dobutamine stress echocardiography in assessing coronary artery disease
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Maria Penco, Alessandra Dagianti, Luciano Raffaele Pastore, Francesco Fedele, Antonio Vitarelli, and Ysabel Conde
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Thorax ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronary Disease ,Disease ,Doppler imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,Dobutamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Rib cage ,business.industry ,Adrenergic beta-Agonists ,medicine.disease ,Obstructive lung disease ,Echocardiography, Doppler, Color ,Coronary arteries ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Echocardiography ,coronary artery disease ,dobutamine stress echocardiography ,transesophageal echocardiography ,Cardiology ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Echocardiography, Transesophageal ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The introduction of digital echocardiography has significantly enhanced our ability to select the best set of frames for analysis. However, despite the beneficial attributes of transthoracic dobutamine stress echocardiography, poor quality 2-dimensional images continue to be a significant limiting factor in patients with chest deformities, severe chronic obstructive lung disease, marked obesity, and previous chest surgery. Transesophageal echocardiography provides a new window to monitor left ventricular contractility without the interference of bone and air-filled structures of the thoracic cage. The transesophageal dobutamine stress test is a logical but poorly explored modality to image/stress the heart in certain patients with known or suspected myocardial ischemia. Overall sensitivity (< or = 85%) and specificity (< or = 95-100%) of transesophageal dobutamine stress echocardiography appear to be similar to that of previous transthoracic studies, although no direct comparison has been accomplished between transthoracic and transesophageal stress images. False negative transesophageal dobutamine stress echocardiography results have been described in patients with single-vessel disease in whom ischemic regions may not have been visualized throughout the entire study. False positive study results may be present in patients with hypertension and myocardial hypertrophy that may have signs and symptoms of myocardial ischemia in absence of obstructive disease of the epicardial coronary arteries, presumably related to either microvascular disease or impaired vasodilatory reserve. The proportion of patients with coronary artery disease who need a transesophageal examination for reliable assessment of echocardiographic response to stress varies depending on the operators' skills, the interpreters' experience, and the use of videotape or digitizing systems for image analysis. Although clinically useful in its present transthoracic and transesophageal form, a major limitation of dobutamine stress echocardiographic study is the subjective visual interpretation of endocardial motion and wall thickening, which is only semiquantitative. Color kinesis and tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) are 2 novel echocardiographic techniques that color code endocardial motion and myocardial velocity online and have the potential to objectively quantify regional left ventricular function. Quantitative standardization of transthoracic and transesophageal data interpretation, such as establishing endocardial motion by color kinesis or velocity thresholds by TDI for an abnormal segmental response to stress, has the potential to decrease interobserver variability and increase interinstitutional agreement.
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- 2000
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20. Fattibilità ed efficienza degli interventi psicoeducativi familiari per la schizofrenia nei SSM italiani
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MAGLIANO, Lorenza, FIORILLO, Andrea, MARANGONE C, DE ROSA C, FAVATA G, SASSO A, PREZIOSO M, PEZZENATI L, GENTILE F, CASALE L, BONDI E, ROBUSTELLI TEST G, DI LELLA M, BISCUSSI E, DEGLINNOCENTI F, BELLINI R, DI NUNZIO R, MATRELLA L, SALMERI R, CANTONE R, GARGIULO L, ESPOSITO A, DELCURATOLO V, GIANNINI M, MARESCA L, CAVALIERE G, SCANDONE B, FOLLA M, RAFFAELI M, INNOCENTE P, DAGIANTI F, LUCANIA S, SCORSINO A, BARDICCHIA F, CERULLO G, CURRELI R, MISCALI S, SCORDATO M, CAMPO G, MAMELI C, SODDE C, DAMBRA L, MALACARNE A, MAJ, Mario, Magliano, Lorenza, Fiorillo, Andrea, Marangone, C, DE ROSA, C, Favata, G, Sasso, A, Prezioso, M, Pezzenati, L, Gentile, F, Casale, L, Bondi, E, ROBUSTELLI TEST, G, DI LELLA, M, Biscussi, E, Deglinnocenti, F, Bellini, R, DI NUNZIO, R, Matrella, L, Salmeri, R, Cantone, R, Gargiulo, L, Esposito, A, Delcuratolo, V, Giannini, M, Maresca, L, Cavaliere, G, Scandone, B, Folla, M, Raffaeli, M, Innocente, P, Dagianti, F, Lucania, S, Scorsino, A, Bardicchia, F, Cerullo, G, Curreli, R, Miscali, S, Scordato, M, Campo, G, Mameli, C, Sodde, C, Dambra, L, Malacarne, A, and Maj, Mario
- Published
- 2006
21. Clinical application of exercise stress echocardiography: supine bicycle or treadmill?
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Alessandra Dagianti, Luca Sgorbini, Francesco Fedele, Maria Penco, and Alberto Bandiera
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Supine position ,business.industry ,Hemodynamics ,VO2 max ,Coronary Disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Coronary artery disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood pressure ,Echocardiography ,Ventricle ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,Exercise Test ,Supine Position ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Stress Echocardiography ,Humans ,Treadmill ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Although exercise stress echocardiography is currently used to evaluate coronary artery disease (CAD) patients, the best exercise methodology is still undefined. The objectives of the study were: (1) to compare supine bicycle stress echocardiography (SBSE) and treadmill in the evaluation of CAD; and (2) to define, in normal subjects, the different behavior of factors determining MVO 2 with treadmill and SBSE. We selected 10 male patients with CAD (group A), and 10 male control subjects (group B). Each patient underwent SBSE and treadmill testing in random order. We studied heart rate, systolic blood pressure, heart rate × systolic blood pressure, and end-diastolic and end-systolic volume indexes. In group A, we also studied wall motion score index (according to the American Society of Echocardiography) and in group B, systolic blood pressure/end-systolic volume index. The results were as follows: Group A : SBSE resulted in significantly lower work load, heart rate, and significantly higher systolic blood pressure, heart rate × systolic blood pressure, end-diastolic volume index, end-systolic volume index, and wall motion score index. SBSE showed wall motion abnormalities in each patient, whereas treadmill did not detect wall motion abnormalities in 4 patients (3 single-vessel; 1 multivessel); of the other 6 patients, 2 showed a lower wall motion score index and 4 did not show any difference in left ventricle kinetics with the 2 methodologies of exercise. Mean acquisition time for postexercise images was 72 ± 6 seconds. Group B : SBSE resulted in lower work load, heart rate, heart rate × systolic blood pressure, systolic blood pressure/end-systolic volume index, and higher end-diastolic volume index and end-systolic volume index. Systolic blood pressure was similar with SBSE and treadmill testing. In conclusion, our experience suggests SBSE is a highly accurate diagnostic tool for evaluating CAD compared with treadmill testing; the maximum cardiovascular performance can be achieved with lower values of heart rate, suggesting the echo test is more feasible. Treadmill testing could lose important information about the existence, extension, and location of CAD; in contrast, SBSE detects even small, quickly reversible wall motion abnormalities.
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- 1998
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22. Detection of left ventricular systolic and diastolic abnormalities in patients with coronary artery disease by color kinesis
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Armando Dagianti, Antonio Vitarelli, Marco Ferro Luzzi, Susanna Sciomer, and Mauro Schina
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Concordance ,Diastole ,Coronary Disease ,Constriction, Pathologic ,color kinesis ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,cardiac imaging ,myocardia contraction ,Coronary artery disease ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,acoustic quantification ,coronary artery disease ,diastolic function ,echocardiography ,myocardial contraction ,regional ventricular dysfunction ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,In patient ,Systole ,Cardiac imaging ,Aged ,business.industry ,Articles ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Stenosis ,Cardiology ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Kinesis - Abstract
Background: Color kinesis (CK) is a recently developed echocardiographic technique based on acoustic quantification that automatically tracks and displays endocardial motion in real time and has been used in initial studies to improve the evaluation of global and regional wall motion. Hypothesis: For further validation of the use of CK for analysis of segmental ventricular dysfunction, we assessed its sensitivity and specificity for detection of regional systolic and diastolic wall motion abnormalities in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Methods: Two-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography and CK were used to study 15 normal subjects and 63 patients with technically good quality echocardiographic tracings, who underwent coronary arteriography within 1 month of echocardiography. Significant (>70% luminal diameter stenosis) CAD was present in 50 patients (79%). Results: Color kinesis tracked endocardial motion accurately in 93% of left ventricular segments. Wall motion score, systolic segmental endocardial motion (SEM), and the time of systolic SEM (tSEM) and diastolic (tDEM) segmental endocardial motion were calculated. Intra- and interobserver variability were within narrow limits. SEM and tSEM were significantly lower and tDEM was significantly higher in the patient population than in the control group (p< 0.001). Comparison between CK and 2-D echocardiography showed a correlation coefficient of 0.81 between the two techniques. The score was identically graded in 74% of segments, with concordance of 82% in diagnosing segments as abnormal. Interobserver concordance was 86% for CK (r=0.85) and 81% for 2-D echocardiography (r=0.80). The sensitivity and specificity of systolic and diastolic CK parameters for the detection of CAD were 88 and 92% and 77 and 85%, respectively. The positive predictive values were 93 and 96%, respectively, the negative predictive values were 63 and 73%, respectively, and the overall accuracy was 86 and 91%, respectively. Conclusions: Our data suggest that CK is a feasible and sensitive technique for identifying regional systolic as well as diastolic wall motion abnormalities in patients with CAD.
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- 1997
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23. On-line quantitative assessment of left ventricular filling during dobutamine stress echocardiography: a useful addition to conventional wall motion scoring
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Maria Penco, Francesco Fedele, Marco Ferro Luzzi, Armando Dagianti, and Antonio Vitarelli
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dobutamine stress echocardiography ,Cardiac Volume ,Diastole ,Coronary Disease ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Ventricular Function, Left ,Coronary artery disease ,Dobutamine ,Internal medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Quantitative assessment ,Stress Echocardiography ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aged ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Myocardial Contraction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Echocardiography ,Exercise Test ,automatic border detection ,automatic boundary detection ,coronary artery dusease ,diastolic dysfunction ,dobutamine stress echocardiography ,left ventricular diastolic function ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Artery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In order to determine whether the diastolic rate of ventricular volume change obtained on-line with an automatic border detection (ABD) system during dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) would provide an interpretation of the diastolic ventricular response to the drug in quantitative terms in the assessment of coronary artery disease, we studied, with ABD and DSE, 59 patients who underwent coronary arteriography within 2 months of the stress test. Eleven patients had normal coronary findings or non-significant coronary lesions. Significant (or =70% diameter stenosis) coronary artery disease (CAD) was present in 48 patients (81%). Dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) to a maximal dose of 50 microg/kg per min was performed in all patients. ABD images were acquired at rest and at the peak of infusion along with conventional two-dimensional images. The following measurements were evaluated: left ventricular end-diastolic volume (LVEDV), left ventricular end-systolic volume (LVESV), left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), slope of rapid filling segment (RFS), peak filling rate (PFR), rapid filling phase fractional change (RFFC). Patients with non-significant coronary artery lesions exhibited a hyperdynamic response with an LVEF increment of at least 20% from baseline to peak drug infusion. In these patients the effect of dobutamine produced an increase of RFS from 35.5+/-5.6 to 86.5+/-10.5 ml/s, an increase of PFR from 4.4+/-0.6 to 6.8+/-0.6 EDV/s, and an increase of RFFC from 74+/-8 to 92+/-5% (P0.001). Of the 48 patients with coronary artery disease, 27 had20% LVEF increase at peak dobutamine infusion. Four of 22 patients with single vessel disease and 23 of 26 patients with multivessel disease had an abnormal systolic response. After dobutamine infusion single vessel CAD patients showed a decrease of RFS from 33.4+/-5.3 to 26.7+/-5.9 ml/s, a decrease of PFR from 3.8+/-0.7 to 3.0+/-0.7 EDV/s, and a decrease of RFFC from 73+/-6 to 59+/-4% (P0.001). Multivessel CAD patients showed a decrease of RFS from 32.0+/-5.9 to 23.1+/-4.1 ml/s, a decrease of PFR form 3.8+/-0.6 to 2.8+/-0.6 EDV/s, and a decrease of RFFC from 71+/-5 to 54+/-8% (P0.001). The overall sensitivity of detecting CAD was 85% for conventional DSE and 90% for ABD-DSE (P=NS). The sensitivities of detecting patients with single vessel and multivessel CAD with conventional DSE were 68 and 92%, respectively, and with ABD-DSE were 91% (P0.01) and 96% (P=NS), respectively. Our results show that an abnormal diastolic as well as systolic response during on-line quantitative assessment of dobutamine stress echocardiography is a sensitive marker of coronary artery disease and is predictive for the detection of extensive lesions. The described measurements can be utilized to improve the DSE sensitivity in identifying coronary artery disease. On-line quantitation of diastolic indexes with ABD can represent another step toward obtaining uniform results after stress echocardiography.
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- 1997
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24. Contents, Vol. 88, 1997
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George Opio, Tetsushi Wakiyama, Marianne Hartford, Tetsuro Sugiura, A. Sgreccia, Chia-Lun Chao, Björn W. Karlson, Massimo Accorinti, Kei Miyoshi, Ulf Näslund, Andreas Mügge, Avi Pinchas, A. Heusch, Maria Penco, Toshio lzuoka, Yoshio Ishida, Yoriko Shimotsu, Aram Smolinsky, Willem J Remme, Francesco Ciciarello, M. Bourgeois, Raffaele Casale, Roderick K King, Saul Schaefer, K. Bachmann, Milovan Bojić, Diederik C.A van Hoogenhuyze, K. Reynen, Staffan Westberg, Dirk Hausmann, Mario Luzi, NM Magid, Tadayuki Hiroki, Louis Bartels, Antonio Mammarella, Maria Haglid, Leon Lurje, Shy Livschitz, Sergio Morelli, Eliezer Klainman, C. Perrone, Avanindra Jain, Ryuichiro Miyawaki, Giovanni Antonini, Yoshio Urabe, Steen M. Jensen, Hirotoshi Morii, Fragola Pv, Martin van der Ent, Aleksandar N. Neskovic, Babeth Rabinowitz, Ezra A. Amsterdam, J. Quagebeur, Yung-Zu Tseng, Kwan-Lih Hsu, Jer-Min Lin, Johan Herlitz, Ming-Fong Chen, Elieser Kaplinsky, Paolo Pasqualetti, Juey-Jen Hwang, Yasunori Nakayama, Guido Valesini, Kei Tsumura, Yoshiaki Hirose, Nili Zafrir, Toshiji Iwasaka, Poon-Ung Chieng, Francesco Fedele, Gershon Fink, Dick A.C.M Kruijssen, H. Singer, Kenneth Caidahl, Kohei Hayashida, O.N. Krogmann, Shimon Spitzer, Toru Satoh, Paola Pivetti-Pezzi, Ela Dhanak, Pierre Chouraqui, Yasuo Takayama, Petar Otšević, Paolo Voci, Michelle B. Sholar, Kazuo Moroe, Sadahiko Uchimoto, David Horoszowsky, Ivo Amende, A. Paulus, Mitsuo Inada, Marco Ferro Luzzi, Armando Dagianti, Leonardo Calò, Antonio Vitarelli, Jane Yang, Tri Thuong Nguyen, Takayuki Furuki, Tsunehiko Nishimura, Yi-Lwun Ho, Matthias Sturm, Erwin Blessing, Aleksandar D. Popovic, Göran Johansson, Shuji Kitashiro, Yuan-Teh Lee, Por-Jau Huang, Hanno Krauss, Chau-Chung Wu, Sören Häggmark, Luigi Ferrante, Jeffrey S. Borer, Roberta Priori, Teruhiro Tamura, Kent B. Lewandrowski, Per Albertsson, and Arthur J. Siegel
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Traditional medicine ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 1997
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25. Ruolo eziopatogenetico dell’infezione da Chlamydia Pneumoniae nella cardiopatia ischemica giovanile
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Romano, S, Fratini, S, Dagianti, Al, Sessa, R, DI PIETRO, M, DEL PIANO, M, Fedele, F, Penco, Maria, and Dagianti, A.
- Published
- 2003
26. Study of the systolic function of the left ventricle by strain/strain rate in patients with heart disease ischemic and non,renal transplant candidates for the risk assessment of preoperative independent predictor of cardiac death post-transplant
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Montalto, GIOACCHINO MARIA, D'Ambrosi, A, Gatto, M. C., Dagianti, A, Berloco, B. P., and in corso di stampa, Fedele F.
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speckle tracking ,renal transplant ,strain/strain rate - Published
- 2013
27. Valore incrementale della valutazione della performance sistolica ventricolare mediante strain/strain rate nel predire l'outcome di pazienti cardiopatici ischemici sottoposti ad interventi di chirurgia vascolare
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Dagianti, Alessandra, Regnae, Laurito, A, Malaj, A, Gossetti, B, and Fedele, Francesco
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Strain/Strain rate ,Speckle tracking - Published
- 2013
28. Reizung der Rezeptoren der Muskelarteriolen durch brüske Ausdehnung der Gefäßwände (“Widderstoß”) und ihr vermutlicher Entstehungsmechanismus
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Condorelli, L., Strano, A., Filocamo, G., Dagianti, A., Chiavaro, A., and Patanè, F.
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- 1963
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29. Die für chemische Reize empfindlichen Rezeptoren der peripheren Muskelgefäße und deren Wirkung auf die Atmung
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Condorelli, L., Strano, A., Filocamo, G., Dagianti, A., Condorelli, S., and Bartolo, M.
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- 1960
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30. Sitz und zuleitende Bahnen der peripheren Gefäß-Sensibilität
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Condorelli, L., Strano, A., Filocamo, G., Dagianti, A., Condorelli, S., Bartolo, M., Chiavaro, A., and Patanè, F.
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- 1961
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31. Weitere Untersuchungen über die Arteriolarsensibilität der gestreiften Muskeln sowie über die Reizungsmodalitäten ihrer chemischen Rezeptoren
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Condorelli, Luigi, Strano, A., Pennetti, V., Dagianti, A., Chiavaro, A., and Guerrizio, L.
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- 1966
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32. Untersuchungen über die periphere Gefäß-Sensibilität: Über den spezifischen Sitz der peripheren, mit KCN reizbaren Gefäßrezeptoren in den Muskelarteriolen
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Condorelli, L., Strano, A., Filocamo, G., Dagianti, A., Condorelli, S., Bartolo, M., Lioy, F., and Visalli, M.
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- 1961
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33. Identification of viable myocardium in patients with chronic coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction: Role of magnetic resonance imaging
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M. Ferro-Luzzi, Luciano Agati, Teresa Montesano, Francesco Fedele, Paolo Renzi, Armando Dagianti, Antonio Vitarelli, Francesco Scopinaro, Franco Serri, Maria Penco, and Ernesto Di Cesare
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Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gadolinium ,Myocardial Infarction ,Contrast Media ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Coronary Disease ,Anterior Descending Coronary Artery ,Scintigraphy ,Ventricular Function, Left ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Coronary artery disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Tissue Survival ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Pentetic acid ,Fatty Acids ,Heart ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Pentetic Acid ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Ventricle ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Abstract
Nineteen patients (16 men and 3 women, mean age 51 years) with previous anterior myocardial infarction and severe stenosis (> or = 90%) of the left anterior descending coronary artery were studied by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) without and with contrast media to verify the capability of MRI in identifying viable myocardium in areas of severe systolic dysfunction. In corresponding left ventricular segments, a comparison was made between regional signal intensities (SI) determined on MRI images before and 4, 8, 12, and 30 minutes after administration of paramagnetic contrast media (gadolinium diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, 0.4 mmol/kg intravenously) and metabolic parameters determined by iodine 123 phenylpentadecanoic acid (IPPA) scintigraphy. The SI and the time of maximum postcontrast enhancement were analyzed by dividing the left ventricle into 11 segments. Each segment was classified as normal (group 1, n = 116), hibernating (group 2, n = 50), or necrotic (group 3, n = 43) on the basis of the IPPA washout rate (> 30%, 10% to 30%, and < 10%, respectively). Regional SI demonstrated significant differences in absolute values at 12 minutes (group 3: 1.62 +/- 0.58 vs group 1: 1.32 +/- 0.52, p < 0.01, and vs group 2: 1.34 +/- 0.48, p < 0.05) and at 30 minutes (group 3: 1.71 +/- 0.47 vs group 1: 1.21 +/- 0.55, p < 0.01, and vs group 2: 1.49 +/- 0.57, p < 0.05) and in temporal distribution. These results suggest that MRI has a potential role in differentiating viable from necrotic myocardium in patients with chronic severe systolic dysfunction.
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- 1994
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34. Dipyridamole myocardial contrast echocardiography in patients with single-vessel coronary artery disease: Perfusion, anatomic, and functional correlates
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Francesco Fedele, Paolo Voci, Armando Dagianti, C. Iacoboni, Luciano Agati, R. Luongo, and Federico Bilotta
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Video Recording ,Ischemia ,Contrast Media ,Blood Pressure ,Coronary Disease ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary artery disease ,Electrocardiography ,Heart Rate ,Coronary Circulation ,Internal medicine ,Heart Septum ,medicine ,Humans ,Ventricular Function ,Aged ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Dipyridamole ,Blood flow ,Middle Aged ,Image Enhancement ,medicine.disease ,Intensity (physics) ,Stenosis ,Echocardiography ,Cardiology ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,Densitometry ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine whether myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE) may be used to study regional myocardial blood flow distribution during dipyriamole-induced hyperemia. MCE was performed before and after dipyridamole infusion in 11 patients with a proximal, significant left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery stenosis. The relation between contrast-derived parameters and the degree of coronary narrowing and the occurrence of transient regional wall motion abnormalities was also investigated. In the territory supplied by left circumflex coronary artery, mean peak contrast intensity increased after dipyridamole from 50 ± 18 to 76 ± 27 IU (p < 0.001). In contrast, a significant reduction in mean peak intensity was observed after dipyridamole in the LAD territory (from 41 ± 27 to 13 ± 13 IU, p < 0.01). Similar results were obtained with the use of the area under the time-intensity curve. An increase in peak intensity ≥10 IU after dipyridamole administration separated normal regions from those supplied by a significant coronary artery lesion with a sensitivity of 91% and a specificity of 91%. Perfusion abnormalities were always detected by contrast echocardiography when septal motion abnormalities developed and, in five patients they were detected in the absence of clinical, electrocardiographic, and echocardiographic signs of ischemia. A weak correlation was found between both peak intensity and area under the curve and percent coronary diameter stenosis and cross-sectional area. In conclusion, dipyridamole MCE can be used during routine coronary angiography to assess myocardial blood flow distribution in patients with coronary artery disease. The intracoronary injection of contrast agents during dipyridamolestress echocardiography, may provide additional information on the functional significance of coronary lesions, thus helping in prognostic stratification and therapeutic decision making.
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- 1994
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35. IPO-V2: A prospective, multicenter, randomized, comparative clinical investigation of the effects of sulodexide in preventing cardiovascular accidents in the first year after acute myocardial infarction
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Sergio Dalla Volta, Giorgio Mattioli, Schivazappa L, Angelo Bignamini, Massimo Chiariello, Bruno Brusoni, Elisa Trotta, Anna Vittoria Mattioli, Maria Penco, Mario Condorelli, Vittorio Pengo, and Armando Dagianti
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Heart Diseases ,medicine.drug_class ,Myocardial Infarction ,Infarction ,Low molecular weight heparin ,heparin ,anticoagulant agent ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Recurrence ,law ,Cause of Death ,Internal medicine ,Antithrombotic ,Humans ,Medicine ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Prospective Studies ,Myocardial infarction ,Aged ,Glycosaminoglycans ,Hypolipidemic Agents ,fibrinolytic agent ,business.industry ,Thrombosis ,Middle Aged ,Left ventricular thrombus ,medicine.disease ,Sulodexide ,Surgery ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,business ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Objectives . This study was conducted to assess the efficacy of sulodexide, a glycosaminoglycan compound with antithrombotic properties, in preventing death and thromboembotic events after acute myocardial infarction. Background . Antithrombotic therapy has been found to play an important role in the prevention of cardiovascular events and death after acute myocardial infarction. Glycosaminoglycan-containing compounds, including sulodexide, show profibrinolytic and antithrombotic properties that render them suitable for use in patients after infarction. Methods . A total of 3,986 patients who had recovered from acute myocardial infarction were randomized to receive either the standard therapy routinely administered at each study center, excluding antiplatelet and anticoagulant drugs (control group, 1,970 patients), or the standard therapy plus sulodexide (treated group, 2,016 patients). Between 7 and 10 days after the episode of acute myocardial infarction, sulodexide was administered as a single daily 600-lipoprotein-lipase-releasing unit (LRU) intramuscular injection for the 1st month, followed by oral capsules of 500 LRU twice daily. Patients were evaluated for ≥12 months. Results . At the end of the study, 140 (7.1%) were recorded in the control group and 97 (4.8%) in the sulodexide group (32% risk reduction, p = 0.0022, chi-square test). A total of 90 patients (4.6%) in the control group had a further infarction, compared with 66 (33%) in the sulodexide group (28% risk reduction, p = 0.035). Furthermore, a reduction in left ventricular thrombus formation (evaluated by echocardiography) was observed in the sulodeside group (n = 12; 0.6%), compared with values in the control group (n = 25; 1.3%) (53% risk reduction, p = 0.027). Sulodexide was well tolerated and devoid of significant adverse events. All significant results were confirmed by “actual treatment” analyses. Conclusions . The study provides evidence that long-term therapy with sulodexide started early after an episode of acute myocardial infarction is associated with reductions in total mortality, rate of reinfarction and mural thrombus formation.
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- 1994
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36. Usefulness of echocardiography in the prognostic evaluation of non-Q-wave myocardial infarction
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Armando Dagianti, Alessandra Dagianti, Antonio Varveri, Elisabetta Biffani, Maria Penco, Francesco Fedele, and Silvio Romano
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Myocardial Infarction ,Angina ,Heart Conduction System ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,ST segment ,Myocardial infarction ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,ST depression ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Echocardiography ,Heart failure ,Coronary care unit ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Patients with non-Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI) are a heterogeneous population with a wide range of coronary disease severity and extent of myocardial necrosis, showing, therefore, different electrocardiographic findings and different outcomes. To evaluate the role of echocardiography in the management of non-Q-wave MI patients, 192 consecutive patients without previous MI were studied (78 with ST segment elevation, 56 with ST depression and 58 without ST modifications). All patients underwent 2-dimensional echocardiography (16-segment model) within 24 hours of admission to the coronary care unit. Wall-motion abnormalities, wall-motion score index, ejection fraction, and end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes were evaluated. In 35 patients, death, reinfarction, recurrent angina, or severe heart failure occurred during the in-hospital phase, whereas the remaining 157 patients had a good outcome. Patients with a poor prognosis were older (68 +/- 6 vs 59 +/- 5 years, p0.01), had a worse left-ventricular function (wall-motion score index 1.4 +/- 0.4 vs 1.25 +/- 0.3, p0.05; end-systolic volume 54 +/- 25 vs 38 +/- 12 mL/m2, p0.01; ejection fraction 50 +/- 10 vs 58 +/- 8%, p0.01), and presented more frequently with ST segment depression (49 vs 25%, p0.01). The positive and negative predictive values for early clinical events were, respectively: ST segment depression 0.30 and 0.87; wall-motion abnormalities in3 segments 0.28 and 0.86; wall-motion score index1.33 = 0.28 and 0.87; end-diastolic volume46 mL/m2 = 0.49 and 0.91; ST segment depression and wall-motion abnormalities in3 segments 0.60 and 0.88. These results underline the usefulness of echocardiography in the early risk stratification of non-Q-wave MI patients, together with electrocardiographic data. Patients with ST segment depression and more extensive wall-motion abnormalities are at higher risk and their management needs a more aggressive approach.
- Published
- 2000
37. Modifications of whole blood filterability during myocardial infarction
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Penco, M, Romano, S, Dagianti A., Jr, Tozzi, MARIA GIULIANA, and Dagianti, A.
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coronary artery disease ,rythrocyte deformability ,thrombolytic therapy - Published
- 2000
38. Assessment of regional left ventricular function during exercise test with pulsed tissue Doppler imaging
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Ysabel Conde, Armando Dagianti, Antonio Vitarelli, Francesco Fedele, Maria Penco, and Alessandra Dagianti
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,coronary artery disease ,regional left ventricular function ,exercise test ,pulsed tissue Doppler imaging ,Myocardial Infarction ,Doppler imaging ,Ventricular Function, Left ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Stress Echocardiography ,Humans ,Sinus rhythm ,cardiovascular diseases ,Myocardial infarction ,Echocardiography, Doppler, Pulsed ,Mitral regurgitation ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Left bundle branch block ,Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic ,medicine.disease ,Right coronary artery ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Mitral Valve ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Blood Flow Velocity - Abstract
To investigate whether mitral annular velocity, measured by tissue Doppler imaging (TDI), is able to get a feasible quantitative evaluation of global and regional left-ventricular function during exercise test, 29 patients with previous uncomplicated myocardial infarction were studied by exercise echocardiography. All patients underwent coronary arteriography within 10 days of stress echocardiography. All of them were in sinus rhythm and had no right or left bundle branch block or significant mitral regurgitation as observed by left ventriculography. A total of 12 patients had anteroseptal and/or posteroseptal wall asynergies and left anterior descending involvement; 9 patients had lateral and/or posteroinferior asynergies and left circumflex coronary artery involvement; 8 patients had inferior and posteroseptal wall asynergies and right coronary artery involvement. Twelve subjects of same age and sex with normal cardiovascular findings were selected as a control group. TDI sample volumes were set on the mitral annuli corresponding to anteroseptal, posterior, posteroseptal, lateral, anterior, and inferior wall in 4-chamber, 2-chamber, and long-axis views. There was a significant correlation between the left-ventricular ejection fraction (0.41 +/- 0.8) and the means of the systolic (S) values (6.1 +/- 0.9 cm/sec, r = 0.83, p0.01). The mean S at the sites corresponding to the infarct regions (5.5 +/- 0.4 cm/sec) was significantly lower than the control group (11 +/- 0.8 cm/sec, p0.001). After stress, in patients with multivessel disease, S values corresponding to remote regions were significantly lower (p0.01) compared with control subjects. Thus, the parameters obtained from mitral annular velocities with pulsed TDI in patients with previous myocardial infarction reflect left ventricular asynergy corresponding to the infarct regions and reversible regional dysfunction after exercise.
- Published
- 2000
39. Modifications of whole blood filterability during acute myocardial infarction
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Maria PENCO, Romano, S., Dagianti Jr, A., Tozzi-Ciancarelli, M. G., and Dagianti, A.
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Male ,Polycarboxylate Cement ,Myocardium ,Myocardial Infarction ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Fibrinogen ,Hyperlipidemias ,Membranes, Artificial ,Middle Aged ,Blood Viscosity ,Diabetes Complications ,Necrosis ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Erythrocyte Deformability ,Acute Disease ,Hypertension ,Humans ,Female ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,acute myocardial infarction ,coronary artery disease ,erythrocyte deformability ,thrombolytic therapy ,whole blood filterability ,Filtration ,Aged - Abstract
Experimental evidences underline that hemorheological alterations observed in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) are strictly involved in the decreased perfusion of the damaged area and in the extension of the necrotic regions. We have analyzed whole blood filterability as an index of erythrocyte deformability in 60 AMI patients compared with 30 patients with non-acute coronary artery disease and 52 healthy subjects. Nucleopore polycarbonate membranes with a pore diameter of 5 microm and a filtering pressure of -20 cm H2O were used. The results are expressed as the volume of whole blood filtered in 1 minute (index of filterability, IF). In normal subjects IF was 1.16 +/- 0.24. Among AMI patients IF was 0.70 +/- 0.30 at admission, 0.68 +/- 017 at day 10 and 0.78 +/- 0.14 at day 20. These values were significantly lower than those obtained in normal subjects and in patients with non-acute coronary artery disease. In addition, AMI patients treated with thrombolytic therapy showed, at admission, a significantly higher IF value than that obtained in patients who did not receive thrombolytic treatment (0.85 +/- 0.34 vs 0.60 +/- 0.22; p0.01). These results demonstrate an evident reduction of whole blood filterability in AMI patients that may be considered as an index of erythrocyte deformability. Thrombolytic therapy seems to have a positive effect on blood filterability and may produce beneficial effects through its therapeutical action other than the lysis of the coronary thrombus.
- Published
- 2000
40. Silent ischemia in unstable angina is related to an altered cardiac norepinephrine handling
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L Arata, A Dagianti, Mirella Coppo, Gian Franco Gensini, G.G. Neri Serneri, P Dabizzi, S Lazzerini, M Bini, Carlo Rostagno, and Maria Boddi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Ischemia ,Tritium ,Norepinephrine (medication) ,Angina ,Norepinephrine ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Angina, Unstable ,Coronary sinus ,Unstable angina ,business.industry ,Cold pressor test ,Heart ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cold Temperature ,Anesthesia ,Electrocardiography, Ambulatory ,Catecholamine ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND Inferential evidence suggests that silent ischemia might be related to sympathetic activity. Study of [3H]norepinephrine kinetics is a suitable tool to assess the regional sympathetic activity. This method was applied to investigate whether silent myocardial ischemia in unstable angina is related to and depends on cardiac sympathetic overactivity. METHODS AND RESULTS Patients with active unstable angina were compared with patients with inactive unstable angina, stable effort angina, and controls. Silent myocardial ischemia was evaluated by three 24-hour Holter monitoring periods on alternate days, and [3H]norepinephrine kinetics was assessed under rest conditions and following the cold pressor test. Simultaneously, catecholamine concentrations were measured in the aortic, coronary sinus, and peripheral venous blood. Different than the other groups (p = 0.0013), in patients with active unstable angina, the majority of silent ischemic episodes occurred without increase in heart rate. These patients had a positive coronary sinus-aorta norepinephrine gradient, both at rest and following the cold pressor test. [3H]Norepinephrine kinetics demonstrated an increased selective cardiac spillover, both at rest and, even more, after the cold pressor test. Reduced cardiac [3H]norepinephrine extraction also was found. A significant relation was found between the number of ischemic episodes or the overall duration of silent ischemia and norepinephrine spillover, both at rest and following cold application. CONCLUSIONS During the acute phase of unstable angina (but not in the quiescent phase or in stable effort angina), a disorder in cardiac norepinephrine handling occurs. This results in a reflex cardiac sympathetic overactivity that plays a major role in the occurrence of silent myocardial ischemia.
- Published
- 1993
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41. [Chlamydia pneumoniae infection and cardiac ischemic syndromes]
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Varveri, A., Sgorbini, L., Romano, Silvio, Aurigemma, G., Dagianti, Alessandra, Sessa, Rosa, DI PIETRO, Marisa, Del Piano, M., Dagianti, A., and Penco, M.
- Subjects
Male ,Physical Exertion ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Immunoglobulins ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Syndrome ,Chlamydia Infections ,Chlamydophila pneumoniae ,Middle Aged ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Angina Pectoris ,Risk Factors ,Chronic Disease ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the presence of Chlamydia pneumoniae antibodies in patients with angiographically verified atherosclerotic coronary artery disease. A total of 114 consecutive patients were investigated between April 1995 and June 1996. Patients were divided into two groups: 72 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI; 53 men, 19 women, mean age 62.27 +/- 10.1 years), and 42 patients with chronic ischemic heart disease (CAD; 37 men, 5 women, mean age 62.75 +/- 9.2 years). A control group of 50 normal subjects matched for age (mean 62 +/- 9 years), sex, social status and geographical area was used. Identification of Chlamydia pneumoniae was carried out with the microimmunofluorescence method, on two serum samples taken from patients on admission and after 15 days. The IgM, IgG and IgA anti-Chlamydia pneumoniae titers were assessed, valuesor = 1:16,or = 1:32 andor = 1:8 being respectively considered positive. Acute (IgMor = 16 or four fold rise of IgG titer) and chronic (IgGor = 128 e IgAor = 32 or only elevated IgA titer) infections were analyzed. IgM antibodies were not found in AMI, CAD and control groups. IgG positivity (IgGor = 32) was found in 38% of the control group, in 58.3% of the AMI group (p0.05) and 42.8% of the CAD group (p0.01). IgA positivityor = 8) was found in 22% of the control group, in 31.9% of the AMI group (NS) and in 33.3% of the CAD group (por = 0.05). Acute infection was observed in 5.5% of AMI patients and in 12% of CAD patients (NS), whereas no subject of the control group showed these values. Chronic infection was observed in 9.7% of AMI patients and in 16.6% of CAD patients (NS) whereas nobody of the control group showed these values. In conclusion, our results suggest that Chlamydia pneumoniae infection is present only in the AMI and CAD groups. It is possible to suppose that this infection may be linked to atherosclerosis through an endothelial damage or a systemic endogenous procoagulant and inflammatory activity.
- Published
- 1999
42. Transesophageal dipyridamole echocardiography for diagnosis of coronary artery disease
- Author
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Luciano Agati, Dario Vizza, Paolo Voci, Francesco Fedele, Maria Penco, Marco Renzi, Armando Dagianti, and Susanna Sciomer
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Myocardial ischemia ,Coronary Disease ,Coronary Angiography ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Coronary artery disease ,STRESS ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,Internal medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Wall motion ,Esophagus ,business.industry ,Dipyridamole ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Myocardial Contraction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Echocardiography ,Ventricle ,Exercise Test ,Cardiology ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug ,Artery - Abstract
The value of transthoracic dipyridamole echocardiography has been extensively documented. However, in some patients, because of a poor acoustic window, the rest transthoracic examination is not always feasible and the transesophageal approach is more convenient. Therefore, transesophageal echocardiography with high dose dipyridamole (up to 0.84 mg/kg body weight over 10 min) was performed in 32 patients in whom the transthoracic dipyridamole test either was not feasible (n = 29) or yielded ambiguous results (n = 3). The transesophageal echocardiographic test results were considered abnormal when new dipyridamole-induced regional wall motion abnormalities were observed. All 32 patients underwent coronary angiography; significant coronary artery disease was defined as ≥70% lumen diameter narrowing in at least one major vessel. All patients also performed a bicycle exercise test 1 day before transesophageal dipyridamole echocardiography. Transesophageal stress studies were completed in all patients, with a maximal imaging time (in tests with a negative result) of 20 min. No side effects or intolerance to drug or transducer was observed. The left ventricle was always visualized in the four-chamber and transgastric short-axis views. High quality two-dimensional echocardiographic images were obtained in all patients both at rest and at peak dipyridamole infusion and were digitally analyzed in a quad-screen format. Coronary angiography showed coronary artery obstruction in 24 patients: 6 had single-, 9 double- and 9 triple-vessel disease. The transesophageal dipyridamole test showed a specificity of 100% and an overall sensitivity of 92%. The sensitivity of this test for single-, double- and triple-vessel disease was 67%, 100% and 100%, respectively. It is concluded that transesophageal dipyridamole echocardiographic testing is a useful detector of myocardial ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease, particularly in those in whom a transthoracic study either is not feasible or yields ambiguous results.
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- 1992
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43. Infezione da Chlamydia Pneumoniae e sindromi coronariche
- Author
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Varveri, A, Sgorbini, L, Romano, Silvio, Aurigemma, G, DAGIANTI A., Jr, Sessa, R, DI PIETRO, M, DEL PIANO, M, Dagianti, A, and Penco, M.
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- 1998
44. Echocardiography in the coronary care unit: Diagnostic and prognostic impact in comparison with clinical and other indicators
- Author
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Alessandra Dagianti, Armando Dagianti, Antonio Vitarelli, Giuseppe Aurigemma, Silvio Romano, Luciano Raffale Pastore, Maria Penco, Susanna Sciomer, and Antonio Varveri
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,acute myocardial infarction ,echocardiography ,coronary care unit ,Myocardial Infarction ,Disease ,Chest pain ,law.invention ,Diagnosis, Differential ,law ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Coronary Care Units ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Intensive care unit ,Echocardiography, Doppler ,Italy ,Heart failure ,Coronary care unit ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Electrocardiography - Abstract
The clinical arena in which we must consider the role of echocardiography is characterized by 2 fundamental findings: (1) most patients with chest pain and suspected acute myocardial infarction (MI) do not present diagnostic electrocardiograms; and (2) an early and correct diagnosis is necessary to match the patient with the most adequate treatment. Echocardiography may be very useful in the coronary care unit, allowing a correct diagnosis of ischemic heart disease when electrocardiography is unclear, even before the rise of cardiac enzymes is detected. It may also play a role in decision-making for thrombolytic therapy. In addition, echocardiography provides useful information for early risk stratification. In fact, although high-risk patients are well identified by simple clinical or instrumental variables (i.e., Killip classification, enzymatic data, blood-gas analysis, electrocardiogram, etc.), most patients (>60%) are identified as low risk, and several subjects classified into the low-risk groups have a poor prognosis and are not detected using a single variable. In our experience, 2-dimensional echocardiography was able to further stratify between patients of low-risk classes. Therefore, echocardiography plays an important role in the early stratification of acute MI patients, especially in those without signs or symptoms of heart failure.
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- 1998
45. Valutazione degli attuale profilo di sicurezza degli stent medicati: restenosi e trombosi intrastent
- Author
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Pastore, Luciano Raffaele, Giarrusso, Pina, Dagianti, Alessandra, Sergnese, O, Salatino, Tiziana, and Codraro, Stefania
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- 2008
46. Terapia medica ed elettrica nel trattamento dello scompenso cardiaco
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Pastore, Luciano Raffaele, Giarrusso, Pina, Dagianti, Alessandra, Salatino, Tiziana, Sergnese, O, and Forte, C.
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- 2008
47. Clinical and prognostic usefulness of supine bicycle exercise echocardiography in the functional evaluation of patients undergoing elective percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty
- Author
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Armando Dagianti, Salvatore Rosanio, Maria Penco, Alessandra Dagianti, Susanna Sciomer, Monica Tocchi, Luciano Agati, and Francesco Fedele
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Supine position ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coronary Disease ,Balloon ,Coronary Angiography ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Angina Pectoris ,Restenosis ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Angioplasty ,medicine ,Supine Position ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary ,Prospective cohort study ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Echocardiography ,Predictive value of tests ,Cardiology ,Exercise Test ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Complication ,business - Abstract
Background Supine bicycle exercise echocardiography (SBEE) has never been used before and early after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) for assessing the functional outcome of the procedure and predicting late restenosis. Methods and Results We selected 76 subjects with stable angina, normal wall motion at rest, and exercise-induced wall-motion abnormalities before PTCA. SBEE with peak exercise imaging and the use of a 16-segment, four-grade score model was performed 54±15 hours after PTCA. No exercise-related adverse events occurred. Patients were grouped according to SBEE results: group 1 (n=35, 46%) with negative exercise ECG and echo; group 2 (n=19, 25%) with a positive exercise ECG but normal echo; and group 3 (n=22, 29%) with a positive exercise echo with either a positive (n=7, 32%) or negative (n=15, 68%) ECG. Exercise performance significantly improved in all groups. In group 3, peak wall-motion score index decreased from 1.27±0.11 before to 1.15±0.06 after PTCA ( P P 50%) was 37%. By multiple logistic regression analysis, clinical restenosis was associated with a positive post-PTCA exercise echo (odds ratio [OR] 3.08, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.66 to 5.72; P =.0004) and with increasing values of pre-PTCA wall-motion score index (OR 2.86, 95% CI 1.92 to 4.27; P =.005) and duration of wall-motion abnormalities (OR 2.12, 95% CI 1.07 to 4.20; P =.04). Conclusions SBEE is a safe and reliable tool to demonstrate changes in exercise-induced wall-motion abnormalities after PTCA and provides prognostic information in the risk assessment of clinical restenosis.
- Published
- 1997
48. Echocardiographic assessment of regional left ventricular diastolic dysfunction by color Kinesis
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Vitarelli, Antonino, Sciomer, Susanna, Dagianti, Alessandra, FERRO LUZZI, M, Caselli, A, Ciciarello, Francesco Luigi, Penco, M, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
- Published
- 1997
49. Detection of coronary artery disease by transesophageal dobutamine stress echocardiography using color kinesis
- Author
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Vitarelli, Antonino, Sciomer, Susanna, Dagianti, Alessandra, Caselli, A, Pugliese, M, Fedele, Francesco, and Dagianti, Armando
- Published
- 1997
50. Clinical and prognostic usefulness of supine bycicle exercise echocardiography in the functional evaluation of patients undergoing elective percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty
- Author
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Dagianti, A., Rosanio, S., Penco, Maria, DAGIANTI A., Jr, Sciomer, S., Tocchi, M., Agati, L., and Fedele, F.
- Published
- 1997
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