Publications by authors named "Pintor C"

Introduction: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the main cause of cardioembolic stroke. In high-bleeding-risk patients, long-life anticoagulation therapy is not permitted, and left atrial appendage (LAA) closure may be considered. LAA is also a critical substrate for AF.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Since the first description of Brugada syndrome (BrS), several studies were carried out aimed at diagnosis, arrhythmic risk stratification, and available strategies for sudden death prevention. In high-risk patients, the use of an implantable cardiac defibrillator was an evident option since the first description of the syndrome. Nevertheless, this strategy, while proven, as expected, to be effective in sudden death prevention, does not prevent arrhythmias and may not be an adequate or accepted solution for all patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aims: The rate of plant decomposition depends on both the decomposition environment and the functional traits of the individual species (e.g. leaf and litter quality), but their relative importance in determining interspecific differences in litter decomposition remains unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To evaluate the impact of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) on cancer incidence in HIV-infected children throughout a 20-year period.

Patients And Methods: An observational population study was conducted on 1,190 perinatally HIV-infected children enrolled onto the Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children from 1985 to 2004 and never lost to follow-up (total observation time, 10,037.66 years).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The 28-item version of the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-28) developed by Goldberg and Hillier in 1979 is constructed on the basis of a principal components analysis of the GHQ-60. When used on a Spanish population, a translation of the GHQ-28 developed for an English population may lead to worse predictive values.

Methods: We used our Spanish sample to replicate the entire process of construction of the GHQ-28 administered in a primary-care setting.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Respiratory allergies are inversely related to early acquisition of food-borne and fecal-oral infections, consumption of unpasteurized milk, early exposure to stables and high endotoxin concentrations in a farming environment. We tested therefore if infection by Salmonella in early life can protect from development of respiratory allergies later in life.

Methods: During 2003, we studied two groups of Sardinian children (age 6-18 years) who had been hospitalized before 4 years of age (during 1989-2001) with non-typhoid salmonellosis (n = 148) or acute enteritis of nonbacterial etiology (NB-enteritis) (n = 167).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study shows the relationship between BMI of 3000 adolescents and their perceived-weight status, and the strategies for weight loss. The finding indicate that substantial numbers of teenage females perceive themselves as overweight when BMI suggest they are not, while males have a reasonably accurate weight. Diet was the most frequently selected method for losing weight especially among females that wrongly perceive themselves overweight (O.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Present transfusional regimen protocols increase the life expectancy of patients with beta-thalassemia major, but cause a progressive iron overload that can be prevented or limited only by appropriate iron chelation. Siderosis is responsible for the clinical complications of the disease. Short stature and hypogonadism are extremely frequent in patients with thalassemia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We propose some considerations about adolescence, a topic that starts from the know-how of paediatricians and then includes other meanings. One of the most boisterous periods of our life and at the same time one of the most fascinating ones is adolescence. Complex changes characterize this age and these can lead to suffering and confusion even in normal conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The clinical phenotype of homozygous beta thalassemia varies in severity from the mild thalassemia intermedia to the severe thalassemia major. This variability depends largely on the molecular heterogeneity of beta thalassemia defects. We report the first case of a homozygous state for nondeletion Sardinian delta-beta(0) thalassemia, which resulted in a symptomless clinical phenotype with a peculiar hemoglobin (Hb) pattern (99.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hexarelin (Hex) is a new synthetic hexapeptide with potent growth hormone (GH)-releasing activity in both animals and men. We evaluated the GH response to a maximal dose of Hex (2 micrograms/kg iv) and GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) (1-29, 1 microgram/kg iv) in 45 short normal children (24 males and 21 females, age 5.9-14 yr, 24 prepubertal and 21 in Tanner stage 2 or 3 of pubertal maturation), in 10 prepubertal obese children (7 males and 3 females, age 7.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To examine pulsatile TSH secretion, serum TSH was determined every 30 min for 24 h in eight short normal prepubertal children (3 males and 5 females, age 4.0-12.6 yr).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We evaluated the growth hormone (GH) response to an acute clonidine test (0.15 mg/m2 po) in 30 normal prepubertal children (stature between the 3rd and 97th centile), in 29 short children (stature < 3rd centile for age) with height velocity (HV) > 10th centile and in 20 short children with HV < 10th centile. The three groups had comparable chronological ages.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have evaluated the effect of oral administration of arginine chlorhydrate on the growth hormone response to growth hormone releasing hormone in a group of nine short prepubertal children (six boys and four girls). Arginine chlorhydrate 10 g, administered orally 60 min before an i.v.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have evaluated baseline and l-dopa-stimulated peripheral growth hormone releasing hormone (pGHRH) secretion in 6 obese pre-pubertal children and in 7 age-matched controls. Baseline pGHRH levels were no different between obese (36.6 +/- 9.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have evaluated the effect of acute administration of atenolol, a selective beta-adrenergic antagonist, on the GH response to GHRH in nine obese children and in eight age-matched controls. The GH response to GHRH (1-29, 1 microgram/kg iv), evaluated both as the GH peak and as integrated area under the curve, was significantly lower in the obese children than in the controls. Pretreatment with atenolol (50 or 100 mg orally in subjects with body weight less than or greater than 40 kg, respectively, administered 120 min before the GHRH injection) significantly increased the GH response to GHRH in the obese subjects, such that their mean peak GH levels and mean integrated area under the curve after atenolol plus GHRH were similar to those of the control children after GHRH.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We evaluated the effect of six-month treatment with growth hormone (GH) or low-dose oxandrolone in a group of boys with constitutional growth delay (CGD). Sixteen boys were randomly assigned to two treatment groups. Group 1 received GH (0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A cohort of brain neurotransmitters, especially catecholamines and acetylcholine, play a crucial role in the control of neurosecretory growth hormone-releasing hormone (GH-RH)- and somatostatin (SS)-producing neurons, and hence growth hormone (GH) secretion. Stimulation of alpha 2-adrenoceptors or of muscarinic cholinergic receptors in the hypothalamus stimulates GH release, probably via stimulation of GH-RH and inhibition of somatostatin release, respectively. Additionally, stimulation of dopamine receptors is stimulatory to GH release, while activation of beta-receptors inhibits GH release via stimulation of hypothalamic somatostatin function.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have evaluated the effect of pubertal maturation on the GH response to growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH), pyridostigmine (PD) and the combined administration of PD + GHRH in a group of short normal children. Fifteen were prepubertal (13 boys and 2 girls, age 5.0 - 12.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have evaluated the effect of the administration of galanin (Gal), a newly identified hypothalamic peptide, on baseline and GHRH-induced GH rise in five obese children and in seven controls. The GH response to GHRH (hpGRF(1-29), 1 microgram/kg i.v.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have evaluated the effects of the combined administration of Galanin (Gal) plus growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and of pyridostigmine (PD), a cholinergic agonist, plus Gal on GH secretion in 15 children (12 males and three females, age 7.7-14.5 y) with short stature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have evaluated the effect of galanin (Gal), a newly identified hypothalamic peptide, on growth hormone (GH) secretion in 10 children with normal stature (NS), nine with constitutional growth delay (CGD), and five with isolated GH deficiency (IGHD). Gal was infused intravenously at a rate of 8 or 15 micrograms/kg/h. All children also underwent an acute oral clonidine test (0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF