Publications by authors named "Baruffi S"

Background: As limited evidence is available on health professionals' experience during the post-pandemic period, the interplay between job satisfaction components, mental distress and well-being was investigated among workers of an Italian geriatric institution.

Methods: In Spring 2022, 205 participants (females =75.6%), primarily healthcare assistants (36.

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Objectives: Pain is one of the most common symptoms among oncological patients and has a strong negative impact on quality of life. The aim of this study is to assess if frailty and polypharmacy are associated with persistent pain in oncological patients undergoing rehabilitation.

Design: Observational, prospective, longitudinal study.

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Advanced age alone appears to be a risk factor for increased susceptibility to cardiac arrhythmias. We previously observed in the aged rat heart that sinus rhythm ventricular activation is delayed and characterized by abnormal epicardial patterns although conduction velocity is normal. While these findings relate to an advanced stage of aging, it is not yet known when and how ventricular electrical impairment originates and which is the underlying substrate.

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Heart repair by stem cell treatment may involve life-threatening arrhythmias. Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) appear best suited for reconstituting lost myocardium without posing arrhythmic risks, being commissioned towards cardiac phenotype. In this study we tested the hypothesis that mobilization of CPCs through locally delivered Hepatocyte Growth Factor and Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 to heal chronic myocardial infarction (MI), lowers the proneness to arrhythmias.

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Aims: The effect of histone deacetylase inhibitors on dystrophic heart function is not established. To investigate this aspect, dystrophic mdx mice and wild-type (WT) animals were treated 90 days either with suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA, 5 mg/kg/day) or with an equivalent amount of vehicle.

Methods And Results: The following parameters were evaluated: (i) number of ventricular arrhythmias in resting and stress conditions (restraint test) or after aconitine administration; (ii) cardiac excitability, conduction velocity, and refractoriness; (iii) expression and distribution of connexins (Cxs) and Na(v)1.

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Ventricular arrhythmias are frequently observed in the elderly population secondary to alterations of electrophysiological properties that occur with the normal aging process of the heart. However, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. The aim of the present study was to determine specific age-related changes in electrophysiological properties and myocardial structure in the ventricles that can be related to a structural-functional arrhythmogenic substrate.

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Cardiac arrhythmias are frequent in the elderly population, perhaps secondary to an increased prevalence of hypertension and coronary artery disease as well as aging related changes resulting in loss of pacemaker cells and degenerative alteration of the conduction system. Independent from underlying structural heart disease, advanced age alone appears to be a risk factor for increased susceptibility to ventricular arrhythmia. However, the electrophysiological basis of this phenomenon is still unclear.

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In a rat model of diabetic cardiomyopathy, we tested whether specific changes in myocyte turnover and intercellular coupling contribute to preserving ventricular performance after a short period of hyperglycemia. In 41 rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes and 24 control animals, cardiac electromechanical properties were assessed by telemetry ECG, epicardial potential mapping, and hemodynamic measurements to document normal ventricular function. Myocardial remodeling, expression of gap-junction proteins and myocyte regeneration were evaluated by tissue morphometry, immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting.

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Stimulation of myocardium by either a native pacemaker or an artificial stimulus requires the initiation of a self-propagating wave of depolarization originating from the site of initial activation. In the present study we perform artificial stimulation at a site of focal discharge with the aim to compare the two mechanisms of impulse formation. High resolution epicardial mapping in senescent rat hearts provided examples of focal discharge during sinus rhythm at a single epicardial breakthrough (BKT) point emerging from an isolated Purkinje-ventricular muscle junction (PMJ) site.

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The presence of a basal nonselective cation permeability was mainly investigated in primary cultures of rat cardiac microvascular endothelial cells (CMEC) by applying both the patch-clamp technique and Fura-2 microfluorimetry. With low EGTA in the pipette solution, the resting membrane potential of CMEC was -21.2 +/- 1.

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Objectives: Goals of epidemiological studies are the description of the measures of frequency of diseases, the attempt to clarify possible etiopathogenic mechanisms, and the provision of data to support health policy decisions. To increase the familiarity of rheumatologists toward epidemiology, we describe the methodology used in a prevalence study of musculoskeletal complaints performed in Chiavari, Italy.

Methods: A questionnaire, originally developed by the Epidemiology Unit of the Arthitis Research Council in Manchester, UK, to investigate the prevalence of rheumatoid arthritis, was used after translation and validation.

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In non-excitable cells, many agonists increase the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) by inducing an inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP(3))-mediated Ca(2+) release from the intracellular stores. Ca(2+) influx from the extracellular medium may then sustain the Ca(2+) signal. [Ca(2+)](i) recovers its resting level as a consequence of Ca(2+)-removing mechanisms, i.

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Unlabelled: Simulations of cardiac tissue bidomain model indicate that point cathodal stimulation gives rise to a dog-bone depolarized region (virtual cathode) extending across fibers, limited by two symmetric hyperpolarized regions (virtual anode) extending along fibers. These predictions were experimentally confirmed by optical mapping studies of transmembrane potentials while no direct validation is reported at the extracellular level. The present study aims at defining the influence of the virtual cathode on extracellular potentials by means of high-density epicardial mapping.

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Intracellular Ca2+ signals elicited by nucleotide agonists were investigated in primary cultures of rat cardiac microvascular endothelial cells using the fura-2 technique. UTP increased the intracellular [Ca2+] in 94% of the cells, whereas 2MeSATP was active in 32%. The rank order of potency was ATP = UTP > 2MeSATP and the maximal response to 2MeSATP was lower compared to UTP and ATP.

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The purpose of this study is to report new methods for manufacturing precision electrode arrays for recording high-resolution potential distributions from epicardial surfaces of small-animal hearts. Electrode arrays of 64 leads (8 x 8) and 121 leads (11 x 11) were constructed with a tulle substrate to which insulated, fine silver wires (60-micrometer diameter) were attached by knots at mesh node intervals of 540 x 720 micrometers. Insulation was removed at the tips of the knots.

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Background: Understanding the relations between the architecture of myocardial fibers, the spread of excitation, and the associated ECG signals is necessary for addressing the forward problem of electrocardiography, that is, predicting intracardiac and extracardiac ECGs from known intracardiac activity. So far, these relations have been studied experimentally only in small myocardial areas. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that potential distributions measured over extensive epicardial regions during paced beats reflect the direction of superficial and intramural fibers through which excitation is spreading in both the initial and later stages of ventricular excitation.

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Authors review principles and occurrence of sex-impairment correlated with neoplasia and related treatments. Main altering effects appear due to chemotherapy and hormone manipulation, but even surgery and radiotherapy, as well as supportive care are able to induce sex dysfunctions, either physically or psychologically. A specific grading scale (with increasing intensity from 0 to 4) is proposed, following general WHO suggestions in medical oncology, with the aim of recording and prospectively evaluating clinical data in a reproducible fashion.

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An olive-shaped probe (25 X 12 mm) with 41 evenly distributed recording electrodes on its surface was introduced into the left ventricles of seven open-chest dogs via the left atrium. In two other dogs a cylindrical probe (40 X 3 mm) was used. Electrical stimuli were delivered at 66 endocardial, midwall, or epicardial sites in the left and right ventricular walls and the septum.

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We tried to establish whether some of the manifestations of electrical anisotropy previously observed on the canine ventricular epicardium during the spread of excitation were also present during repolarization, with the appropriate polarity. To this end we determined the potential distribution on the ventricular surface of exposed dog hearts during ventricular excitation and repolarization. The ventricles were paced by means of epicardial or intramural electrodes.

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Experiments using an isolated heart, perfused by a support dog were done to compare estimates of activation times, recovery times and activation recovery intervals from cardiac surface electrograms to estimates from distant electrocardiographic leads and to known features concerning normal activation and recovery sequences. The isolated heart was suspended in a tank with 600 electrodes located at sites 0.5 cm to 7.

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We studied the normal spread of excitation on the anterior and posterior ventricular surface of open-chest dogs by recording unipolar electrograms from an array of 1124 electrodes spaced 2 mm apart. The array had the shape of the ventricular surface of the heart. The electrograms were processed by a computer and displayed as epicardial equipotential maps at 1-msec intervals.

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The potential distribution in a homogeneous, cylindrical volume conductor surrounding an isolated paced dog heart was first measured and then calculated by using a mathematical model that stimulates an anisotropic excitation wavefront spreading through the heart muscle. The study was performed with a view to establish to what extent the anisotropy of cardiac generators affects the potential field in the extra-cardiac conducting media at a great distance from the heart. The model considers an oblique dipole layer on the wavefront which, assuming axial symmetry of the electrical properties of the fibers, can be viewed as the superposition of an axial and transverse dipole layer.

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Previous work on the spread of excitation on the dog's ventricular surface enabled us to locate up to 30 breakthrough points (BKTPs) where excitation reaches the ventricular surface. In particular the equipotential contour maps enabled us to detect 3 to 5 BKTPs on the anterior right ventricular surface, near the a-v groove when a large part of ventricular surface was still at rest. With a view to investigating the mechanism underlying the early excitation of these basal regions, we stimulated the heart at several right ventricular BKTPs and in other points located at a distance from the BKTPs.

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