Publications by authors named "Cicconetti P"

Actually, in literature there are no epidemiologic studies on the prevalence of resistant hypertension in the elderly; however the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey observed in the adult population prevalence of 12.8% to clinical measurement. But, especially in elderly, it's necessary exclude pseudoresistance forms due to white coat hypertension, arterial stiffness, poor patient compliance to therapy, excessive salt intake, abuse of non-steroidal ant-inflammatory drugs and the forms of secondary hypertension.

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Real-time three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography allows us to measure right ventricular (RV) end-diastolic volume irrespective of its shape. Tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) and speckle tracking imaging (STI) are new tools to assess myocardial function. We sought to evaluate RV function by 3D echocardiography and myocardial strain imaging in adult patients with atrial septal defect (ASD) before and 6 months after transcatheter closure in order to assess the utility of these new indexes in comparison with standard two-dimensional (2D) and Doppler parameters.

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Background: Aortic stiffness may be associated with an increased incidence of cardiovascular events and has been reported to be related to arterial wall motion velocities as measured by tissue Doppler imaging.

Objective: To investigate the potential clinical application of tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) for assessment of aortic function parameters in healthy and hypertensive adults.

Methods: 110 hypertensive and 80 healthy adults were examined.

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The ME was described for the first time in 1993. Subsequently other studies with similar designs were performed. The present study, therefore, proposes: (i) to verify the existence of the benefits of exposure to music in elderly subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), (ii) to explore whether it is possible to find any lasting improvement after training, conducted for a long period of time, with such musical pieces, in the measurable cognitive performances.

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Cardiovascular events (CE) occur most frequently in the morning hours in hypertensive subjects. We studied the association between the morning blood pressure (BP) surge and CE in prognosis of 10 normotensive and 32 well-controlled hypertensive elderly, in whom ambulatory BP monitoring was performed and who were followed prospectively for 5 years. The morning surge (MS) of BP was calculated as mean systolic BP during 2h after awakening--mean systolic BP during 1h that included the lowest sleep BP.

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Everybody is subject to a physical clock, determining the calendar age, and also to a biological clock, the speed of which depends on the interaction between the genetic reserves and the environment. Stress is taken into account more and more as one of the main factors responsible for the acceleration of the biological clock and the dishomogeneity of the aging process. Despite the fact that centenarians are prone to chronic stress due to a progressive loss of self-sufficiency, more than a half of our centenarians were not depressed and had a low trait-anxiety: they showed an emotional tendency to react with a low anxiety-intensity to stressful conditions.

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The purpose of the work was to verify whether our MCPS can be a tool for predicting the risk of developing disabilities. We considered 45 elderly subjects divided into three groups of 15 subjects each. Group 1 consisted of cases with a "moderate-severe" degree of polypathology, with no associated condition of disability evaluated by means of the activities of daily living (ADL).

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24h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) can easily detect the circadian blood pressure (BP) pattern: usually, systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP) show a nocturnal fall. Nocturnal BP values do not however always decline in essential hypertension: the subjects who show a nocturnal BP fall of at least 10% are called dippers; in other subjects, called non-dippers, BP behaviour is characterized by a lack of or very limited nocturnal BP fall. Several studies have investigated the relationship between the lack of or reduction of nocturnal BP fall (non-dipping pattern) and cardiovascular risk, showing not only an increase of target-organ damage (heart, brain, kidney), but a greater frequency of cardiovascular events (stroke, myocardial infarction, etc.

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The aim of our studies was to establish a standard method of assessment that allows an early identification of frailty in the elderly, i.e., to predict who are at risk of developing disabilities, in order to be able to intervene with preventive global and individualized measures.

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Sleep is an active nervous process, which is structured in phases characterized by subsequent cycles of various psycho-physiological phenomena. It performs vital, yet mysterious functions and is in all likelihood involved in many processes, including cognitive processes. In old age the internal structure of sleep changes, but these physiological variations allow, in healthy subjects, a satisfactory quantity and quality of sleep.

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Several studies have shown a relationship between BISH and cerebrovascular events, but no studies have investigated a relationship with cognitive function. The aim was to assess the cognitive function in the elderly with recent BISH. According to WHO Guidelines (1999), we selected 10 elderly normotensives, 10 elderly with recently diagnosed (<2 years) BISH, and 10 elderly with recently diagnosed (<2 years) isolated systolic hypertension (ISH).

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Objective: Isolated Systolic Hypertension (ISH) is a known risk factor for cognitive impairment, but the time of onset of neurocognitive changes relative to the onset of ISH has yet to be established. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between systolic BP values and neurocognitive function in the early stages of ISH.

Methods: Twenty elderly patients with recently (< 2 years) diagnosed ISH and 10 elderly normotensive controls underwent Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring (ABPM) and neurocognitive assessment, performed using the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE), and the recording of ERPs with an odd ball acoustic paradigm.

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Background: Human life expectancy is constantly increasing: the challenge for modern geriatric medicine is to identify the means to reach successfully extreme longevity.

Objective: To determine which are the survival determinants in centenarians using a neural network.

Methods: Sample of 110 centenarians living in Rome, mean age 101.

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The cardiovascular pathologies are the most common causes of death in the elderly patient. To single out the main risk factors in order to effectively prevent the onset of the disease, the authors experimented a special computerized tool, the neural network, that works out a mathematical relation that can obtain certain data (defined as output) as a function of other data (defined as input). Data were processed from a sample of 276 subjects of both sexes aged 26-69 years old.

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Cognitive impairment is an invalidating condition and its prevalence increases significantly with age. It is very important to identify the risk factors for cognitive impairment. Aside from age, sex, familiary history and educational level, the other major risk factors (hypertension, hypercolesterolemia, diabetes mellitus and tobacco), known to be associated frequently with different cerebrovascular diseases, might also contribute to degenerative forms of cognitive impairment because they might favour cerebral microvascular alterations with hypoperfusion, demyelinization and ischemic lesions of subcortical white matter.

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Several studies have shown a relationship between blood pressure (BP) and cognitive function. Yet very few studies have addressed circadian BP patterns in this context, perhaps due to poor availability of suitable methods to detect slight changes in the cognitive state. Today, brain event-related potentials (ERPs) allow us to detect subclinical changes in cognitive function.

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In Western countries data from clinical and epidemiological studies have induced the public health offices to promote a great deal of advertising and informative campaigning for smoking reduction. Cigarette smoking has been clearly linked to the most common causes of death in the elderly and contributes to the higher death rate and disability rate associated with many chronic illnesses that are common in this age group. The combination of smoking along with other risk factors like hypertension and diabetes increase high frequency diseases, disability as well as adding to an increase in mortality rate.

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Several studies have shown that cerebrovascular organ damage can related not only to average blood pressure (BP) levels, but also to BP variability. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between 24 hr BP variability and cognitive function in older hypertensives. Forty older, never treated hypertensives were submitted to 24 hr ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) and subdivided, according to the variability of the systolic BP (SBP), in two groups: 23 with higher (> PV) and 17 with lower (< PV) SBP variability, defined as the standard deviation (SD) of the mean 24 hr SBP values and as coefficient of variation (CV).

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Cigarette smoking has been clearly linked to the most common causes of death in the elderly and contributes to the higher death rate and disability rate associated with many chronic illnesses that are common in this age group. The combination of smoking along with other risk factors like hypertension and diabetes increase high frequency disease, and disability as well as adding to an increase in mortality rate. In order to verify if a healthy lifestyle really favours longevity and how much smoking is incompatible with extreme longevity, we investigated the prevalence of smokers and the total smoking exposure of a sample of centenarians as regards residual survival and health conditions.

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Hypertensive subjects can be subdivided into 2 groups, dippers and nondippers, according to the presence or the lack of a nocturnal fall of blood pressure of more than 10%. Several studies have investigated cardiac organ damage in the 2 groups with discordant results, but they included subjects with different onset, severity, and treatment of hypertension. The authors selected 23 dippers and 17 nondippers affected by newly (< 1 year) diagnosed grades 1 and 2 hypertension, never treated, who underwent 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and M-mode echocardiography.

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Background: Few studies have investigated the relationship between the lack of or reduction of nocturnal blood pressure (BP) fall and left ventricular mass (LVM) in elderly individuals with isolated systolic hypertension (ISH), notwithstanding the fact that ISH is the most frequent subtype of uncontrolled hypertension and a powerful risk factor for organ damage. The aim of this study was to identify the relationship between blunted nocturnal BP fall and LVM in elderly individuals with ISH that was recently diagnosed (within 2 years) and had never been treated.

Methods: A total of 64 elderly patients with recent ISH were recruited among the outpatients of the Hypertension Unit at 1st Institute of Medicine of "La Sapienza" University in Rome, and they underwent 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM).

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