Publications by authors named "Mattei P"

To evaluate the effect of endogenous estrogens on endothelial function in humans, we examined whether menopause is associated with impairment in endothelium-dependent vasodilation in normotensive and essential hypertensive women. In 73 normotensive subjects (37 women, 36 men) and 73 hypertensive patients (36 women, 37 men), we studied endothelial function by measuring forearm blood flow modifications (strain-gauge plethysmography) induced by intrabrachial acetylcholine (0.15, 0.

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Background: Essential hypertension is characterized by impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation. The present study was designed to investigate whether this abnormality is a primary defect or a consequence of blood pressure increases.

Methods And Results: In offspring of essential hypertensive patients (n = 34) and normotensive subjects (n = 30), we evaluated forearm blood flow (strain-gauge plethysmography) modifications induced by intrabrachial acetylcholine (0.

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Background: The present study was designed to directly test the vasodilation action of insulin and its relation to endothelium-dependent mechanisms.

Methods And Results: In 18 normotensive subjects and 27 patients with untreated mild to moderate essential hypertension, we studied the effect of intrabrachial insulin on the changes in forearm blood flow (strain-gauge plethysmography) induced by intrabrachial acetylcholine (at doses of 0.15, 0.

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Objective: To evaluate whether microalbuminuria, defined as urinary albumin excretion between 30 and 300 mg/24 h, is associated with endothelial dysfunction in essential hypertensive patients.

Design: We correlated urinary albumin excretion with vasodilatation in response to endothelium-dependent (acetylcholine) and -independent (sodium nitroprusside) agonists in the forearm vascular bed in essential hypertensive patients with (n = 13) and without (n = 23) microalbuminuria and matched normotensive controls (n = 21).

Method: We studied forearm vascular responses (strain-gauge plethysmography) to intrabrachial infusion of acetylcholine (0.

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Background: Experimental data from normotensive and hypertensive animals indicate that aging is associated with impaired endothelium-dependent relaxations to acetylcholine, and this possibility appears to be confirmed in the human coronary artery. In the present study, we evaluated the effect of age on endothelial responsiveness in the forearm vessels of either normotensive control subjects or essential hypertensive patients.

Methods And Results: Within the normotensive or hypertensive group (n = 53 and n = 57, respectively), subjects were selected with similar blood pressure, plasma cholesterol, and glucose values, and hypercholesterolemic subjects, diabetics, and smokers were excluded.

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Angiotensin II (Ang II) potentiates sympathetic neurotransmission by presynaptic facilitation of norepinephrine release. We investigated whether endogenous Ang II modulates peripheral sympathetic activity in sodium-depleted essential hypertensive patients. We evaluated the effect of intrabrachial infusion of saralasin, an Ang II antagonist (5 micrograms/100 mL forearm tissue per minute), and benazeprilat, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (2 micrograms/100 mL forearm tissue per minute), on forearm vasoconstriction (measured by strain-gauge venous plethysmography) induced by the application of lower body negative pressure (-10 mm Hg for 5 minutes).

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Idrapril is the prototype of a new class of ACE inhibitors, characterised by the presence of a hydroxdmic group. Six untreated in-patients with essential hypertension were given single oral doses of the calcium salt of idrapril, idrapril calcium (200 mg) and placebo according to a double blind, randomised experimental design. Supine and upright blood pressure, heart rate, plasma idrapril serum UCE, active renin and angiotensin II were measured at timed intervals for 24 hours after dosing.

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We describe a new multistep technique for three-dimensional reconstruction and analysis of the in vivo planum temporale (PT) based on the manipulation of magnetic resonance raw data obtained with a special protocol. Measurements of left and right plana confirm previous neuroanatomical descriptions of a larger left planum temporale. This method can be easily adopted, allowing anatomically valid PT measurements.

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A modified procedure for administering the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, focusing on a hypothesized deficit of organizational strategy in information processing, was used to administer the test to 20 schizophrenic patients. By using this procedure, 61.5% of the poor performers (eight of 13) were dramatically transformed into good performers without any task instruction or reinforcement.

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Those having chronic and recurrent appendicitis represent a small portion of patients with disorders of the appendix. We present a series of nine patients who underwent appendectomy for chronic or recurrent appendicitis at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, between July 1984 and October 1992. There were seven women and two men (median age of 30 years, range of 15 to 63 years).

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Patients with essential hypertension show impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation induced by acetylcholine. Because dietary potassium supplementation increases endothelium-dependent relaxations to acetylcholine in hypertensive rats, we designed the present study to investigate whether potassium increases endothelium-dependent vasodilation in essential hypertensive patients. Therefore, in patients with essential hypertension (n = 13) and in normotensive control subjects (n = 13) we evaluated the effect of intrabrachial potassium chloride (0.

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Recent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies found abnormalities of medial temporal lobe and basal ganglia structures. We used an inversion recovery (IR) protocol with the assistance of the Talairach atlas to identify neuroanatomical regions of interest in 19 male schizophrenic patients and 14 matched control subjects. The patient group showed smaller amygdala-hippocampus volume as compared with normal control subjects.

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Traumatic diaphragmatic rupture is a rare childhood injury and is often difficult to diagnose. This is particularly true in infants. We present the case of a 3-month-old infant with traumatic rupture of the right diaphragm that became clinically apparent only after extubation.

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Experimental data indicate the existence of a vascular tissue renin-angiotensin system in several different vessels from various animal models. Active renin can be locally synthesized into the vessel wall or taken up from circulating plasma to produce vascular angiotensin II. Using the human forearm technique, we produced evidence indicating the release of active and inactive renin and of angiotensin II from the vessels of hypertensive patients.

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Endothelium-dependent vasodilatation to acetylcholine is reduced in the forearm of essential hypertensive patients. To investigate whether endothelium-dependent vasodilatation is reduced also in secondary hypertension, we evaluated the effects of an intrabrachial infusion of acetylcholine on forearm blood flow (strain-gauge venous plethysmography) in essential hypertensive (n = 12), primary aldosteronism hypertensive (n = 8), and renovascular hypertensive (n = 8) patients and normotensive control subjects (n = 12). To further evaluate the role of a cyclooxygenase-dependent endothelium-derived vasoconstrictor substance, we repeated the infusion of acetylcholine in the presence of indomethacin.

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Spontaneous pneumothorax and tension pneumothorax are being increasingly recognized as complications of traumatic diaphragmatic hernia, particularly when presentation is delayed. This underscores the importance of suspecting the diagnosis of diaphragmatic hernia in patients with a recent or remote history of blunt or penetrating trauma to the chest or abdomen and an unusual or an atypical thoracic process. Once the diagnosis is suspected, confirmation with contrast studies, CT, or MRI should be obtained and surgical repair undertaken without delay.

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Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were used to examine the size and asymmetry of the planum temporale (PT) in 20 schizophrenic patients and 12 strictly matched healthy volunteers. PT lengths from coronal sections were measured and then summed to obtain an estimate of their areas. Schizophrenics showed the lack of the physiological PT area asymmetry evidenced in the control sample and a statistically significant diagnosis by side interaction was observed (F = 4.

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Endothelium-dependent vasodilation is reduced in essential hypertensive subjects. To evaluate whether this abnormality is a primary defect or is a consequence of blood pressure increment, in offspring of essential hypertensive and normotensive subjects (n = 13 subjects for each group) matched for age, sex, body weight, and blood pressure, we studied the response of forearm vasculature to acetylcholine (ACh) (an endothelium-dependent vasodilator), sodium nitroprusside (a direct vasodilator of vascular smooth muscle), and forearm ischemia (13 min plus 1 min of exercise) to induce maximal vasodilation. Drugs were infused into the brachial artery at cumulative doses (ACh: 0.

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