Publications by authors named "Pomidossi G"

The optimal reperfusion strategy in very elderly patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction is still a subject of debate. The aim of this multicenter study was to determine the medium-term outcomes of nonagenarians after primary percutaneous intervention for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. A systematic review of the databases of 7 Italian centers showed that these had performed 5,023 primary angioplasties over the previous 5 years, 100 of which (2%) involved patients > or =90 years old.

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Introduction: Coronary artery aneurysm is an uncommon disease. It is defined as a coronary artery dilatation, exceeding the diameter of the normal adjacent segment or the diameter of the patient's largest coronary vessel by 1.5 to 2 times.

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Background: It has been shown that concomitant percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) of above-the-knee (ATK) and below-the-knee (BTK) arteries is highly beneficial for limb salvage in patients with critical limb ischaemia (CLI), but few published studies have specifically investigated outcomes in diabetic patients with CLI associated with isolated small BTK-vessel disease. This study aimed to evaluate the long-term results of successful PTA for limb salvage in such patients.

Materials And Methods: From among the 634 patients with CLI in our database, we retrospectively selected a consecutive series of 101 diabetics (16%) with 107 critically ischaemic limbs (33 Rutherford 5 and 74 Rutherford 6) and no critical ATK lesion, who underwent PTA on isolated BTK lesions.

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Background: In humans, angiotensin II enhances the sympathetic coronary vasoconstriction elicited by the cold pressor test (CPT) and diving. Whether this enhancement depends on the circulating angiotensin II or on the locally produced angiotensin II is unknown, however.

Methods And Results: We addressed this issue in 14 patients with severe coronary artery disease by evaluating the effects of a 2-minute CPT (n=14) and a 30-second dive (n=8) on mean arterial pressure (MAP, arterial catheter), heart rate (ECG), coronary sinus blood flow (CBF, thermodilution technique), and coronary vascular resistance (MAP/CBF ratio).

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In order to obtain accurate measurements of coronary sinus blood flow (CSBF), a new catheter (7 French) with a radiopaque, flexible, and basket-shaped tip was developed for guiding a standard 3 Fr Doppler catheter in the coronary sinus (CS) in man. The radiopaque "basket" tip of the catheter allows the operator to stabilize the position of the Doppler transducer in the center of the CS and to accurately measure the CS internal diameter radiologically. CSBF was calculated as the product of CS cross-sectional area by mean CSBF velocity.

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Background: In humans with coronary artery disease, ACE inhibition attenuates coronary sympathetic vasoconstriction. Whether this is due to removal of angiotensin (Ang) II production or to a reduced bradykinin breakdown, however, is unknown.

Methods And Results: In eight normotensive patients with angiographic evidence of mild left coronary artery lesions (< or = 50%), mean arterial pressure (MAP, intra-arterial catheter), heart rate (HR, ECG lead), coronary sinus blood flow (CBF, thermodilution method), and coronary vascular resistance (CVR, ratio between MAP and CBF) were measured before and during a 15-minute left intracoronary infusion of Ang II at a dose that had no direct coronary or systemic vasomotor effects.

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Calcium antagonist pretreatment and intracoronary high doses of nitrates (9 mg of isosorbide dinitrate) do not counteract coronary vasoconstriction occurring after rotational atherectomy. In 30 patients undergoing Rotablator atherectomy, intracoronary injection of the alpha 1-sympathetic blocker urapidil abolished or prevented significant vasoconstriction occurring 15 minutes after the procedure despite repeated injections of nitrates.

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Dihydropyridines (DHPs) exert a powerful coronary vasodilator action, but whether they actually affect the coronary vasomotor effects elicited by an increase in cardiac sympathetic drive is controversial. We assessed the effects of the DHP calcium antagonist amlodipine on coronary hemodynamics and vascular response to sympathetic activation in patients with coronary heart disease. In the control condition, mean arterial pressure (MAP, aortic catheter), heart rate (HR, ECG), rate-pressure product (RPP), coronary sinus blood flow (CBF, thermodilution) and coronary vascular resistance (CVR) (ratio between MAP and CBF) were measured in all our case series (13 patients with angiographically documented severe coronary artery disease) before and during a 2-min cold pressor test (CPT) and a 30-s diving (D) and, in the 8 patients of this case series who were smokers, also before and during smoking a cigarette (S, nicotine content 1.

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Objectives: The aim of this study was to assess whether transient episodes of symptomatic or silent myocardial ischemia after baroreceptor modulation of heart rate.

Background: Animal and human studies have shown that myocardial infarction is accompanied by an impairment of the baroreceptor influences on the sinus node. However, whether this also occurs during transient myocardial ischemia has never been documented.

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Background: In humans, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition attenuates the vasoconstriction induced by sympathetic stimulation in a number of peripheral districts. Whether this is also the case in the coronary circulation is unknown, however.

Methods And Results: In nine normotensive patients with angiographically assessed coronary atherosclerosis, we measured the changes in mean arterial pressure (intra-arterial catheter), heart rate, rate-pressure product (RPP), coronary sinus blood flow (CBF, thermodilution method), and coronary vascular resistance (CVR, ratio between mean arterial pressure and CBF) induced by the cold pressor test (CPT, 2 minutes) and diving (30 seconds), i.

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The cold pressor test (CPT) is commonly used to determine the vasospastic origin of angina and to investigate the factors modulating coronary vasomotor tone. However, coronary vasoconstriction associated with this manoeuvre is often limited, particularly in patients with mild coronary atherosclerosis. To identify stimuli that can more powerfully constrict the coronary arteries we compared the effects on coronary blood flow (thermodilution) and vascular resistance (mean aortic pressure divided by coronary blood flow) of CPT (2 min) and diving (D, 45 s) in subjects with angiographically documented mild (n = 11) or severe (n = 11) left anterior descending coronary artery stenosis.

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Although intravenous digital subtraction ventriculography (IDSV) is increasingly used to estimate end-diastolic left ventricular volume (EDV), end-systolic left ventricular volume (ESV) and left ventricular ejection fraction (EF), its ability to reproduce the precise estimates provided by left ventricle cineangiography (LVCA) and its role in clinical cardiology have not been unequivocally established. In 32 patients subjected to cardiac catheterization for a variety of cardiac disorders and a normal or reduced left ventricular function the EDV, ESV and EF provided by a 30 degrees right anterior oblique LVCA were compared with those provided by a 30 degrees right anterior oblique IDSV. The mean EDV, ESV and EF obtained by IDSV in the 32 patients were superimposable on those obtained by LVCA.

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This paper reviews the haemodynamic effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors in hypertension, focusing on their ability to cause a fall in systemic vascular resistance, with no change in cardiac output and no reduction and even an increase in blood flow to vital organs such as the brain, the kidney and the heart. The haemodynamic effects of ACE inhibitors are qualitatively similar in congestive heart failure, except that, in the presence of impaired cardiac function, the fall in resistance is accompanied by a pronounced increase in cardiac output and tissue perfusion. In both conditions ACE inhibition opposes sympathetic influences and enhances vagal influences and, in hypertension, this intervention is followed by a regression of left ventricular hypertrophy providing a multifold background for a cardioprotective action.

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A number of studies have shown that blood pressure values obtained by ambulatory monitoring are lower than those obtained in the doctor's office by cuff readings. However, there is still no suitable information on 'normal' 24-h ambulatory blood pressure values. In 19 normotensive and 13 borderline hypertensive subjects, defined by repeated office blood pressure measurements, we recorded intra-arterial blood pressure under ambulatory conditions for 24 h (Oxford method) in order (1) to assess the 24-h blood pressure values of normal subjects, and (2) to compare their 24-h blood pressure values with those of borderline hypertensive patients.

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The accuracy of 24-h blood pressure values obtained by ambulatory monitoring via the Spacelabs 5300 device was evaluated by comparison with simultaneous 24-h intra-arterial blood pressure recording from the contralateral arm. The comparison was made in eight essential hypertensive subjects in whom non-invasive blood pressure was measured every 15 (day) or 30 min (night). The measurements were automatically and visually edited to eliminate artefactual readings and hourly and 24-h means were calculated separately for systolic and diastolic blood pressure.

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The baroreceptor control of the sinus node was evaluated in 10 normotensive and 10 age-matched essential hypertensive subjects in whom ambulatory blood pressure was recorded intra-arterially for 24 hours and scanned by a computer to identify the sequences of three or more consecutive beats in which systolic blood pressure (SBP) and pulse interval (PI) progressively rose (+PI/+SBP) or fell (-PI/-SBP) in a linear fashion, according to a method validated in cats. In normotensive subjects, several hundred +PI/+SBP and -PI/-SBP sequences of 3 beats were found whereas the number of sequences of 4, 5, and more than 5 beats showed a progressive drastic reduction. The mean slopes of +PI/+SBP (7.

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Laboratory stressors are employed to assess the 'typical' cardiovascular reactivity to stress of a given subject. It is believed that this may assist in the diagnosis of hypertension and predict future development of blood pressure (BP) elevation. However, the internal consistency of the data obtained by laboratory stressing manoeuvres and their ability to reflect the effects of everyday stressful events occurring over a 24-h period have never been clearly established.

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The use of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has gained popularity because it is not subject to those limitations associated with traditional sphygmomanometry (inaccuracy of blood pressure readings, low number of readings, and failure to represent daytime blood pressure readings). In the present study, we provide evidence that the 24-hour mean blood pressure obtained through intraarterial blood pressure measurements in ambulatory patients provides a more accurate diagnosis (and perhaps a prognosis) of hypertension than that provided by cuff-obtained casual blood pressure measurement. Furthermore, despite a reduction in the amount and in the accuracy of the information obtained, blood pressure data provided by noninvasive blood pressure monitoring are also more accurate diagnostically than cuff-obtained casual blood pressure measurements.

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Drugs interfering with sympathetic influences on the cardiovascular system have been shown to effectively lower blood pressure in hypertension. However, sympathetic cardiovascular control is involved in blood pressure homeostasis, which means that these drugs may produce potential adverse haemodynamic effects that may reduce the benefit of their antihypertensive action. This paper summarises the results of a study in which we examined the effects of urapidil on the arterial baroreflex and the cardiopulmonary reflex in 6 essential hypertensive patients given 25 mg of the drug intravenously.

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The well-known limitations of traditional sphygmomanometer blood pressure measurements have led to the development of a number of invasive and non-invasive 24-h blood pressure monitoring techniques which provide information on blood pressure in daily life. A non-invasive portable blood pressure monitor (IRC Spacelab S5300 monitor) was used to assess the antihypertensive action of celiprolol, 400 mg once daily, in a randomized, double-blind, crossover, placebo-controlled study. After a washout period of 7 days, 15 patients with mild or moderate essential hypertension were subjected to three 24-h blood pressure recordings: at the end of washout, and after 1 month of placebo and celiprolol treatment.

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Data from animals and from man suggest that calcium antagonists interfere with alpha-adrenergic receptors and that this mechanism may be responsible for some of the vasodilation induced by these drugs. However, alpha-adrenergic receptors play a primary role in baroreceptor regulation of the cardiovascular system and blood pressure homeostasis, which might therefore be adversely affected by calcium antagonist treatment. We addressed this question in 14 essential hypertensives studied before treatment, 1 h after 20 mg oral nitrendipine and 5-7 days after daily administration of 20 mg oral nitrendipine.

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To test whether a new formulation of a slow release oxprenolol (SLOx) can produce a steady 24-h antihypertensive effect, we recorded 24-h intraarterial blood pressure (Oxford technique) in eight ambulant inpatients (age 44.5 +/- 3.0 years, mean +/- SE) with a mild or moderate hypertension who were untreated since three weeks.

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