Publications by authors named "Emma Arezzi"

We present the case of a 64-year-old man who, during the implantation of an active-fixation leadless pacemaker (LP, Aveir VR, Abbott, USA), underwent several external defibrillation shocks up to 240 Joules, due to symptomatic sustained supraventricular tachycardia at 160 bpm. The shocks, delivered both before and after the screwing of the device in the low interventricular septum, did not cause any technical damage to the device, and no complications were observed. The device was then deployed successfully.

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Background: Diagnostic reliability of indexations of peak exercise ST-segment depression (deltaST) for heart rate reserve (HRi) or chronotropic reserve (CR) to identify significant coronary artery disease (CAD) by bicycle exercise testing has not been evaluated previously.

Methods: Upright bicycle exercise testing (25 W increment every 3 min) was performed in consecutive patients in primary prevention with at least one of the following criteria: history of exercise-induced chest discomfort and cardiovascular risk factors; overt peripheral arterial disease; type 2 diabetes associated with two or more additional cardiovascular risk factors. Coronary angiography was performed to define significant CAD (stenosis > or = 70% of the main coronary arteries or of their major branches, or isolated left main stenosis > or = 50%, or two or more stenoses 50-69%).

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Background: Chronotropic incompetence (CI) is often seen in subjects with chronic congestive heart failure (CHF). The prevalence of CI, its mechanisms and association with beta-blocker use as well as exercise capacity have not been clearly defined.

Methods And Results: Cardiopulmonary exercise tolerance testing data for 278 consecutive patients with systolic CHF was analyzed.

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Diagnostic reliability of indexations of peak exercise ST segment depression (DeltaST) for heart rate reserve (HRi) or chronotropic reserve (CR) to identify significant coronary artery disease (CAD) by cycle-ergometer exercise testing has not been evaluated previously. Exercise testing by upright cycle-ergometer (25 W/3 min) were performed in consecutive patients in primary prevention with history of exercise-related chest discomfort and cardiovascular risk factors, or with overt peripheral artery disease, with or type-2 diabetes associated with two or more additional cardiovascular risk factors. Coronary angiography was performed after the test to assess significant CAD.

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Objective: Clinical relevance of left ventricular (LV) diastolic dysfunction in the absence of congestive heart failure (CHF) and LV systolic dysfunction is not fully established.

Methods: Asymptomatic outpatients, sedentary, with cardiovascular risk factors but no history of cardiovascular events, underwent echocardiographic evaluation of LV structure and function by standard Doppler, color M-mode, and Doppler tissue methods, and exercise testing with simultaneous noninvasive assessment of LV stroke index and cardiac index. LV ejection fraction less than 50% and significant valvular disease or stress test suggestive of coronary disease were additional exclusion criteria.

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Background: Whether the practice of family doctors of assessing individuals' cardiovascular risk profile improves individuals' knowledge of risk factors in primary prevention has not been established. Accordingly, we evaluated patients' knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and lifestyle in healthy subjects whose family doctors provided individual cardiovascular risk score.

Methods: Subjects who visited their family doctor in a time frame of 3 months, who accepted to fill-in a simple questionnaire measuring their knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and of non-pharmacological interventions able to reduce cardiovascular risk were evaluated.

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Background: The relationship between peripheral circulation and blood pressure (BP) response to maximal exercise is an intriguing and not yet well defined topic.

Aims: Aims of the present study were to investigate in well trained young healthy males the possible relationships between the endothelial or the smooth muscle component of the peripheral circulation and 1) the BP response to physical exercise on treadmill 2) the body mass composition.

Subjects And Methods: Fifteen subjects (18-36 years), regularly performing physical activity 3 times weekly underwent the following examinations: body composition by bioelectrical impedance analysis; measurement of the forearm blood flow (FBF) at rest and during post-ischemic hyperemia by strain-gauge plethysmography at the upper arm; measurement of brachial artery diameter (BAD) at rest and after 4-min ischemia by echography; BP response to maximal exercise on treadmill with the determination of maximal oxygen consumption and the measurement of lactic acid serum concentration.

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Aims: To evaluate whether the peak systolic velocities of the displacement of the lateral mitral anulus (Sa) and of the mid-portion of the interventricular septal wall (Sm) correlate with measures of left ventricular load, left ventricular mass, and Doppler stroke volume in normotensive and hypertensive subjects without clinically overt cardiovascular disease.

Methods And Results: Tissue Doppler imaging was used to evaluate Sa and Sm in apical 4-chamber view; standard echocardiographic procedures were used to assess left ventricular structure and traditional parameters of systolic function (ejection fraction, stress-corrected midwall shortening, meridional and circumferential end-systolic stress); pulsed Doppler was employed to evaluate stroke volume. In 87 subjects meeting inclusion criteria, Sa and Sm were not significantly correlated either with left ventricular end-diastolic volume and end-systolic stress, or with stroke volume; in contrast, endocardial and midwall fractional shortening were lower with higher afterload, as expected.

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In older healthy men, aerobic exercise capacity is related to postischemic flow-mediated dilation of the brachial artery (FMD), but corresponding data in a younger population is not available. In addition, whether submaximal aerobic exercise performance also correlates with this kind of vasomotor reactivity is not known. Therefore, in 15 nonsmoking young healthy men [age 27 (5) years; body mass index: 24 (2) kg/m(2); mean (SD)] with different levels of ordinary physical activity, but not performing upper-extremity training, we measured FMD at 1 min after reactive hyperemia, and pulmonary oxygen uptake (VO(2)) at ventilatory anaerobic threshold (VO(2)AT) and at peak effort (peak VO(2)) during an incremental exercise on a treadmill.

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Background: Whether the practice of family doctors of assessing the global cardiovascular risk profile improves the knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and the attitude to lifestyle change in patients' secondary cardiovascular prevention is unknown.

Methods: We evaluated subjects who visited their family doctors and those with self-reported cardiovascular disease in the urban area of Naples, Italy. Patients self-administered a simple standard questionnaire to evaluate their knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and of simple lifestyle modifications to reduce the cardiovascular risk burden.

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Aims: To assess inter- and intra-study reproducibility of myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE) imaging for quantitative measurement of myocardial perfusion rate in humans in ambulatory setting.

Methods And Results: In 20 subjects, we performed 2 MCE tests 20-40 min apart on the same day under the same standardized protocol, and evaluated single-reader between-study and between-reading reproducibility of assessment of indicators of myocardial perfusion rate, such as the slope of video-intensity change k, and the factors A (peak video-intensity) and B (background video-intensity after bubble destruction) and the product k X A. The region of interest was placed at the mid-posterior interventricular septal wall visualized in apical 4-chamber view.

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Echocardiography can be used to estimate myocardial contractility by the assessment of the circumferential end-systolic stress-corrected left ventricular (LV) fractional shortening measured at midwall level (stress-corrected MWS). Whether stress-corrected MWS at rest predicts exercise peak oxygen uptake (peak VO(2)) is unknown. Also, it is not known whether the propagation rate of the early LV filling wave (E wave propagation rate, V(p)), a new pre-load insensitive index of LV diastolic function, and echocardiographically assessed indices of arterial stiffness correlate to peak VO(2).

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Background And Methods: Interstudy reproducibility of echocardiography for the assessment of parameters of left ventricular (LV) diastolic function is disputed. Therefore, we evaluated the reproducibility of echocardiography for assessment of LV diastolic Doppler parameters in 40 consecutive patients (age range: 19-77 years), who underwent 2 echocardiographic examinations by trained sonographers following a standard protocol, in conditions in which intrapatient sources of variability were minimized.

Results: Interstudy reproducibility of measurements of the ratio of early (E) to late (A) peak velocities of transmitral flow (E/A) at tips of the mitral valve leaflets was found to be very good and substantially greater than analogous measurement obtained at mitral annulus level.

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Background: Failure to achieve good blood pressure (BP) control is probably the most important reason for high rates of morbidity and mortality in patients with hypertension. Combination therapy has been shown to increase the percentage of patients in whom BP control is achieved. One combination is a calcium channel blocker (CCB) and an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE-I).

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Objective: Whether left ventricular (LV) systolic function differs between healthy men and women independent of afterload, LV geometry, age, heart rate and body size is disputed.

Methods: We studied 517 clinically healthy adults without history of cardiovascular or endocrinal disease (age range 20-70, 274 with essential arterial hypertension). Echocardiography was used to assess LV geometry and systolic function both at endocardial and midwall levels.

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Objective: To evaluate the extent to which pulse pressure (PP) is associated with echocardiographic abnormalities, and in particular to whether PP is related to LV hypertrophy taking into account other blood pressure (BP) components.

Design: Cross-sectional.

Setting: University hospital, hypertension outpatient unit.

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