Publications by authors named "Gian Cesare Guidi"

Although there is comprehensive information on several parameters related to acute changes of the oxygen transport system in athletes, little information is available on chronic adaptations of the respiratory system at rest, as reflected by the out-of-competition venous blood-gas status. Such changes may represent markers of a more efficient oxygen metabolism at rest, associated with a superior physical recovery. Venous blood-gas status was investigated in two subpopulations of competitive athletes (47 male professional road cyclists, 72 male elite road cyclists) who had observed an 18-24-h resting period from the last training session, and 58 male sedentary blood donors.

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The appropriate development of hemostasis encompasses a delicate equilibrium between anti- and prothrombotic forces developing during three distinct phases (primary hemostasis, coagulation and fibrinolysis) that are closely linked to each other and precisely regulated to close vessel wounds, promote vascular healing and maintain vessel patency. Imbalance in each of these systems produces either hemorrhagic or thrombotic disorders. Inherited bleeding disorders, caused by quantitative or qualitative alterations of either platelets or plasma proteins involved in blood coagulation and fibrinolysis, may lead to serious and lifelong bleeding conditions, the severity of which is inversely associated with the degree of the underlying defect.

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The diagnostic approach to acute coronary syndromes (ACS) remains one of the most difficult and controversial challenges facing emergency physicians. In recent years, cardiac troponins have emerged as the biochemical "gold standard" for diagnosis of patients with acute chest pain, enhancing our ability to recognize ACS. Early diagnosis and treatment of myocardial ischemia improve patient outcomes, but conventional markers are often nondiagnostic at the time of arrival at the emergency department.

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Objective: A common threonine481serine polymorphism (T481S) has been shown in vitro to strongly activate the chloride channel Kb (CLC-Kb) expressed in the kidney, and the 481S allele has been associated with human hypertension. The study aim was to evaluate the association of the T481S polymorphism with blood pressure (BP) levels and the BP progression rate in Swedes.

Design And Methods: The cardiovascular cohort of the Malmö Diet and Cancer (MDC) study is a population surveyed in 1991-1996 (n=6103, DNA available on n=6055), 53% of whom had also been examined 11 +/- 4.

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Background: Cardiovascular morbidity is frequent after non-cardiac surgery and the early recognition of cardiac involvement is an essential tool for clinical risk stratification and management. The aim of this study was to investigate the behavior of traditional and emerging cardiac markers, including NT-prohormone-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) and ischemia-modified albumin (IMA), in the perioperative period in patients undergoing major uncomplicated orthopedic surgery.

Methods: A total of 37 patients undergoing major orthopedic surgery were longitudinally evaluated for NT-proBNP, IMA, cardiac troponin T (cTnT), creatine kinase isoenzyme MB and myoglobin 3 h before surgery and 4 and 72 h thereafter.

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Laboratory diagnosis is traditionally a three-part process that develops within the preanalytic, analytic and post-analytic phases. There is consolidated evidence that lack of standardization and monitoring of preanalytic variables, including procedures for patient identification, sample collection, handling and processing has an adverse influence on the reliability of test results, consuming valuable healthcare resources and compromising the patient's outcome. The preanalytic phase enfolds the greatest potential for quality improvement, once reliable strategies are identified and applied.

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Self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) is a cornerstone of diabetes care. However, the effectiveness of any glucose-monitoring programme depends on the ability to integrate SMBG into a program of self-care and therapeutic decision-making. Because the accuracy of SMBG is instrument dependent, we analysed 45 heparinized whole blood specimens using four marketed portable glucose meters to evaluate whether their precision and accuracy would be efficient and safe for clinical use.

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Introduction: Recent investigations show that activated factor VII, the primary enzyme in the extrinsic pathway of blood coagulation, exerts additional extra-coagulant functions, such as apoptosis and angiogenesis. On the basis of these recent acquisitions, the present study was aimed to evaluate activated factor VII in patients with systemic sclerosis and to establish a potential association with pathogenesis and complications of this severe autoimmune disorder.

Materials And Methods: Activated factor VII level was measured in twenty-eight consecutive scleroderma patients (2 men and 26 women, mean age 49.

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The phlebotomy technique, particularly the use of small-bore needles, may influence the reliability of coagulation testing and platelet count. Routine coagulation tests were assayed in blood specimens collected from 22 consecutive patients in three separate, sequential phlebotomies, using butterfly devices with different needle sizes. Test results of samples collected with 23 and 25 G needles were compared with those obtained with the currently recommended 21 G needle.

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Poor standardization of preanalytic variables exerts a strong influence on the reliability of coagulation testing, consuming valuable health care resources and compromising patient outcome. Most uncertainties emerge from patient misidentification and the procedures for specimen collection and handling. Location of unsuitable venous access or problematic phlebotomies may produce spurious activation of the hemostatic system and hemolytic specimens.

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Background: There are controversial evidences on the effect of different types and workloads of physical exercise on primary hemostasis. In particular, little is known on the chronic influence of a strenuous and regular aerobic training regimen on platelet function.

Methods: The aim of this investigation was to compare platelet function between sedentary controls and trained athletes at rest and to evaluate whether a greater amount of exercise performed in professional cyclists may contribute to increased platelet chronic responsiveness compared to both elite cyclists and sedentary individuals.

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Background: Despite remarkable advances in technology and laboratory automation, results of laboratory testing still suffer from a high degree of preanalytical variability. Although there is no definitive evidence, the use of small-gauge needles for venipuncture is usually discouraged to reduce the chance of producing unsuitable specimens.

Methods: The purpose of this investigation was to assess the influence of the needle size used to collect venous blood on the measurement of 14 common analytes, including free hemoglobin, the most representative enzymes, protein-bound substances and electrolytes.

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Changes have occurred in the organization, complexity and role of medical laboratories in healthcare, requiring a great increase in global productivity and diagnostic efficiency by enrolled professionals to withstand new challenges. Such a radical evolution, which should be very attractive for new generations of professionals, is counterbalanced by an increasing shortage of laboratory vocations worldwide, particularly in community hospital and large reference laboratories, which may lead to a serious crisis in the field of laboratory medicine in the very near future. Some reasons can be highlighted, including the decreased interaction between clinicians and laboratory professionals, centralized testing, and the development of innovative, minimally invasive techniques that can easily be handled without direct control or supervision by laboratory staff.

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Background: Blood doping is commonplace in competitive athletes who seek to enhance their aerobic performances through illicit techniques.

Presentation Of The Hypothesis: Cobalt, a naturally-occurring element with properties similar to those of iron and nickel, induces a marked and stable polycythemic response through a more efficient transcription of the erythropoietin gene.

Testing The Hypothesis: Although little information is available so far on cobalt metabolism, reference value ranges or supplementation in athletes, there is emerging evidence that cobalt is used as a supplement and increased serum concentrations are occasionally observed in athletes.

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Considerable attention has been focused on definition and enhancement of the analytical quality in laboratory testing over the past decades. Advances in laboratory technology and computer informatics have allowed a major sense of confidence with the analytical phase and more efforts should now be focused on extra-analytical areas of improvement, that should further strengthen the link between cost effectiveness and clinical outcome. Deduction and implementation of common reference intervals, to be possibly shared by a regional network of clinical laboratories, appear so far a crucial step to increase efficiency and harmonization.

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Laboratory testing is an integral part of the decision-making process, and results of laboratory testing often strongly influence medical diagnoses and therapies. There is a long history of quality requirements in laboratory medicine, which have mainly concerned the analytic phase of this process. Owing to the substantial advances in technology, laboratory automation and analytic quality, there is increasing evidence that further quality improvements should be targeted to extra-analytic phases of laboratory testing.

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Competition is a natural part of human nature. Techniques and substances employed to enhance athletic performance and to achieve unfair success in sport have a long history, and there has been little knowledge or acceptance of potential harmful effects. Among doping practices, blood doping has become an integral part of endurance sport disciplines over the past decade.

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Objectives: Myocardial involvement is frequent in systemic sclerosis, but symptoms are usually delayed and non-specific, thus often misrecognized. The aim of this study was the evaluation of the early subclinical cardiac involvement in patients with systemic sclerosis by means of non-invasive laboratory cardiac markers.

Design And Methods: Cardiac troponin T (cTnT), ischemia modified albumin (IMA) and NT-prohormone-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) were measured in 40 female patients with systemic sclerosis and in 40 matched healthy controls.

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