Publications by authors named "Genovesi-Ebert A"

: The article reviews the rate of embolic risk in permanent and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation reported in the current literature. The data analyzed suggest that the embolic risk in the two forms of atrial fibrillation is different and therefore careful clinical judgment is needed to offer patients tailored anticoagulation treatments.

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A standardized and evidence-based approach to the cardiological management of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery has been recently defined by Task Forces of the American Heart Association (AHA), American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) that published their guidelines in 2007 and 2009, respectively. Both the recommendations moved from risk indices to a practical, stepwise approach of the patient, which integrates clinical risk factors and test results with the estimated stress of the planned surgical procedure. In the present paper the main topics of the guidelines are discussed, and moreover, emphasis is placed on four controversial issues such as the use of prophylactic coronary revascularization in patients with myocardial ischemia, the perioperative management of patients with congestive heart failure, the routine use of betablockers and statins, and, finally, the management of antiplatelet therapies in patients with coronary stents.

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Aims: This study tested the hypothesis that the addition of full-dose atorvastatin (80 mg/day) to conventional medical treatment could reduce ischaemic recurrences after non-ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (NSTE-AMI) in patients with severe and diffuse coronary artery disease (CAD) not amenable to any form of mechanical revascularisation.

Methods And Results: The study was an open-label, randomised, controlled, blinded end-point classification trial, employing the PROBE (Prospective Open Treatment and Blinded End Point Evaluation) design. A total of 290 patients (mean age 74.

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Unlabelled: The prevention of symptomatic heart failure represents the treatment of patients in the A and B stages of AHA/ACC heart failure classification. Stage A refers to patients without structural heart disease but at risk to develop chronic heart failure. The major risk factors in stage A are hypertension, diabetes, atherosclerosis, family history of coronary artery disease and history of cardiotoxic drug use.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study compared diabetic and non-diabetic hypertensive patients who experienced their first acute NSTEMI to assess in-hospital complications.
  • Diabetic patients exhibited significantly worse clinical parameters, including higher blood pressure and heart rate, more severe ST segment depression, and a greater left ventricular mass index.
  • Diabetic patients faced more in-hospital complications (40.3%) compared to non-diabetics (18.1%), with heart failure being notably more common in the diabetic group.
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Background: Dipyridamole stress echo (DSE) positivity is usually titrated according to presence and severity of the induced wall motion abnormalities. The purpose of our study is to assess whether the location of DSE positivity might add to prognostic stratification.

Methods: The study enrolled 112 patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) and without a history of prior myocardial infarction.

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This case describes a 42-year-old male affected by hypereosinophilic syndrome associated with angioimmunoblastic lymphoma. Heart involvement was suspected at ECG mimicking left ventricular hypertrophy. MRI clarified the extensive endomyocardial fibrosis, confirming the role of this technique in in-vivo tissue characterization.

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To date, several diagnostic tools allow an accurate non-invasive evaluation of coronary artery disease; this is due to the great progress in echocardiographic and nuclear imaging techniques in the last 10 years. The large availability of different stress imaging techniques allows to choose the most appropriate technique for each patient according to the clinical characteristics. This paper presents the state of the art of echocardiographic and nuclear stress imaging for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease and for the prognostic stratification of infarcted patients.

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Background: Aim of the study was to evaluate the prognostic and decision making value of Holter detected myocardial ischemia after acute myocardial infarction in comparison with clinically detected postinfarction angina and exercise test.

Methods: To this aim the patients consecutively admitted to our coronary care unit with acute myocardial infarction during one year were retrospectively evaluated. One hundred and eighty-nine patients (age 70+/-11 years, 137 male and 51 female) had a 24 hour Holter monitoring.

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Recent reports have shown that four distinct left ventricular anatomical patterns, with different hypertension severity and hemodynamic features, are associated with sustained arterial hypertension (normal anatomy, concentric remodeling, concentric hypertrophy and eccentric hypertrophy). The aim of this study was to evaluate left ventricular diastolic function in these different left ventricular anatomic patterns. To achieve this aim, 94 borderline-to-severe essential hypertensive patients (60 never treated before, 34 off treatment for at least 3 weeks before the study) underwent an echo-Doppler study; left ventricular thickness, dimension and mass index were obtained.

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Objective: To investigate the possible association between Doppler left ventricular filling pattern and exercise capacity in a group of normotensives to severe hypertensive patients.

Background: Invasive left ventricular filling indexes evaluated at rest are reported to be related to exercise capacity in heart failure. Whether exercise capacity is limited by abnormalities of left ventricular filling also in other less severe conditions is however unclear.

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It has been recognized as increasingly important to determine whether antihypertensive agents, while satisfactorily lowering the blood pressure, at the same time adversely or positively affect the cardiac hemodynamic profile. On theoretical grounds, one would expect that an ideal hypotensive drug should decrease blood pressure by decreasing total peripheral resistances, without affecting cardiac output, and should normalize left ventricular hypertrophy without deteriorating systolic or diastolic left ventricular function. We here briefly review the effects of urapidil on these variables in patients under chronic treatment investigated in a series of studies employing echocardiography.

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Ultrasonic backscatter of myocardial walls is directly related to the morphometrically evaluated collagen content in humans. The integrated backscatter is also increased in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, whereas it gives normal values in the physiological hypertrophy of elite athletes. We assessed the quantitatively evaluated myocardial reflectivity in 46 mild to moderate, clinically uncomplicated essential hypertensive patients, with echocardiographically assessed normal regional and global left ventricular function, and 22 age- and sex-matched normotensive control subjects.

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The aim of this study was to evaluate if Doppler indexes of left ventricular filling are related to exercise capacity. Since a correlation between left ventricular filling pattern and causal blood pressure has been recently reported along a wide range of pressure values, a group of subjects with blood pressure ranging from normal to severely elevated values was studied. Twenty-four subjects (11 normotensives, 13 mild to severe hypertensive patients) underwent an echo-Doppler study and a maximal multistage cycloergometric exercise test.

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Left atrial electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities have been reported as common findings in hypertension; however, their relationships with atrial anatomy are still uncertain. In addition, in arterial hypertension several studies demonstrated an abnormal left ventricular filling. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships of the ECG signs of left atrial abnormality to atrial anatomy and left ventricular filling as evaluated by pulsed-wave (PW) Doppler in a group of patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension.

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In arterial hypertension, casual blood pressure seems to be weakly related to the level of cardiac involvement. The aim of the present study was to assess if blood pressure during ambulatory monitoring, and during different stress tests, is a stronger predictor of anatomical and functional changes observed in hypertensive heart disease. To this aim, 29 untreated patients with borderline-to-moderate essential hypertension underwent an echo-Doppler evaluation to determine left ventricular thickness and mass.

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The relationships of age, heart rate, body build and, in particular, of arterial blood pressure and left ventricular mass to several Doppler indexes of diastolic function were evaluated in a series of 80 subjects with a wide range of blood pressure levels (106-217/68-144 mmHg). Body build and age results were inversely correlated to the indexes, reflecting the early contribution to left ventricular filling, whereas the increase in heart rate was associated with an increase in late diastolic contribution. Strong correlations (in most instances, P less than 0.

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In this study, exercise capacity was evaluated in patients with borderline and established, uncomplicated, essential hypertension as compared to normal subjects. To this aim, the response of blood pressure, heart rate and cardiac work to a multi-stage exercise test was investigated by analyzing the results of linear regression fitting of cardiovascular parameters (ie, heart rate, systolic blood pressure and rate-pressure product (RPP)) versus time of exercise. Compared to normal patients, both essential and borderline hypertensive patients had a shorter average duration of exercise test (ie, a decreased exercise capacity), always negative for transient myocardial ischemia.

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The aim of this study was to evaluate left ventricular anatomy and diastolic function in borderline essential hypertension. To this aim, 16 borderline hypertensive patients underwent echocardiographic and pulsed-wave Doppler evaluation. As control groups, 20 normotensive controls and 20 patients with established hypertension were evaluated by the same procedure.

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