Publications by authors named "Marcello Pili"

Thalassemia major is an inherited hemoglobin disorder resulting in a chronic hemolytic anemia. Transfusion therapy together with elevated gastrointestinal absorption of iron determines iron overload, which causes most of the mortality and morbidity associated with the disease. Heart complications represent the leading cause of mortality in this disease, although, because of an improvement in chelation treatment, an important and progressive increase of life expectancy mainly as a result of a reduction in mortality due to cardiac dysfunction has been demonstrated in recent years.

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Studies of the standardized, 3D, 16-segments map of the circumferential distribution of T2* values, of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) in thalassemia major (TM) and thalassemia intermedia (TI) patients and of electrocardiogram (ECG) changes associated with TM, have been carried out. Similarly, the segment-dependent correction map of the T2* values and the artifactual variations in normal subjects and the T2* correction map to correct segmental measurements in patients with different levels of myocardial iron burden have been evaluated. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance can be a suitable guide to cardiac management in TI, as well as in TM; TI patients show lower myocardial iron burden and more pronounced high cardiac output findings than TM patients.

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Diabetes mellitus (DM) is an established risk factor predisposing to male erectile dysfunction (ED), and it has been calculated that more than 50% of diabetic men develop ED within ten years of diagnosis. It has been suggested that the risk of ED increases with metabolic indices of inadequate diabetes control and with a longer duration of disease. Loss of the functional integrity of the endothelium and subsequent endothelial dysfunction plays an integral role in the pathogenesis of diabetic ED.

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Erectile dysfunction (ED) has multifactor pathogenesis, with neurological, vascular, endocrinological and psychogenic components described. However, about 50-85% of ED population report the presence of one or more comorbidities i.e.

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Introduction: It has been reported that lack of sexual activity due to erectile dysfunction (ED) may be associated with testosterone (T) decline.

Aim: To investigate whether the known changes in sex hormones associated with resumption of sexual activity are sustained in the long term.

Main Outcome Measures: Primary endpoints were variations from baseline of steroid hormones: total T, free T (f T), and estradiol (E).

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