Publications by authors named "Luisa Ruzza"

Background: Congestion predicts a poor prognosis, but its assessment is challenging in clinical practice and requires a multiparametric approach. We investigated if the coronary sinus (CS) diameter can predict mortality in a human model of rapid fluid unloading.

Methods: We measured by echocardiography the CS, and the inferior vena cava (IVC) for comparison, in 60 patients with end-stage chronic kidney disease (ESKD) immediately before and after hemodialysis (HD; age 76 [57-81] years, 40% female, left ventricular ejection fraction 57 [53-56]%).

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Acute increases of blood pressure values are common causes of patients' presentation to emergency departments, and their management represents a clinical challenge. They are usually described as 'hypertensive crises', 'hypertensive urgencies', terms that should be abandoned because they are misleading and inappropriate according to a recent task force of the European Society of Cardiology, which recommended to focus only on 'hypertensive emergencies'. The latter can be esasily identified by using the Brain, Arteries, Retina, Kidney, and/or Heart (BARKH) strategy as herein described.

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Acute increases of high blood pressure values, usually described as 'hypertensive crises', 'hypertensive urgencies' or 'hypertensive emergencies', are common causes of patients' presentation to emergency departments. Owing to the lack of ad hoc randomized clinical trials, current recommendations/suggestions for treatment of these patients are not evidenced-based and, therefore, the management of acute increases of blood pressure values represent a clinical challenge. However, an improved understanding of the underlying pathophysiology has changed radically the approach to management of the patients presenting with these conditions in recent years.

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Background: Two-dimensional echocardiography is the main noninvasive imaging tool to identify cardiac masses but is unable to provide detailed tissue characterization.

Aim: The aim of the study was to assess the ability of low mechanical index (MI) contrast echocardiography to detect presence and amount of tissue vascularization as validated by histopathology study of cardiac masses.

Methods And Results: Twelve consecutive patients (5 females and 7 males, age range 51-82 years) underwent conventional and contrast two-dimensional echocardiography with low MI.

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Background: In hemodialysis, the relationship between the increased concentration of natriuretic peptides and volume overload, inflammatory activity, endothelial dysfunction, left ventricular function and mass, and silent ischemic events is not clear. To investigate the relationship, a 3-year prospective cohort study was conducted in 50 adult hemodialysis patients in NYHA class I-II who were free from diabetes and ischemic heart events.

Methods: Doppler echocardiogram, plasma NT-proBNP, troponin T and I, CRP, TNF alpha, big-endothelin 1, and cystatin-C, were determined both before and after a dialysis session.

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Background: The diagnostic value of natriuretic peptides in uremic cardiomyopathy has not been defined, nor has the effect of a hemodialysis (HD) session on peptides.

Methods: We performed an observational study of 100 white adult outpatients in New York Heart Association class I-II, with neither diabetes nor ischemic heart disease, 50 of whom had idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and 50 of whom had uremic cardiomyopathy and were undergoing HD. We measured plasma N-terminal proB-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), BNP, and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) both before and after a dialysis session.

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