6 results match your criteria: "University of Pavia and IRCCS S. Matteo[Affiliation]"

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  • * Recent trials involving over 12,000 patients have shown the safety of various combinations of oral antiplatelet and anticoagulant medications for these individuals.
  • * The ANMCO position paper presents a decision-making algorithm for antithrombotic strategies during key phases: before the procedure, at discharge, and for long-term care.
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Both EBV⁺ and MSI gastric cancers (GCs) have high lymphoid infiltration which is rare in MSS/EBV cancers. PD-L1/PD-1 interaction leads to a down-regulated immune response and it is one of the most promising targets for gastric cancer immunotherapy. PD-L1/PD-1 and CD8 expression were immunohistochemically investigated in a series of 169 FFPE GCs, including 33 EBV⁺, 59 MSI and 77 MSS/EBV cases.

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Persistence of baroreceptor control of cerebral blood flow velocity at a simulated altitude of 5000 m.

J Hypertens

September 2007

Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pavia and IRCCS S. Matteo, Pavia, and Department of Internal Medicine, Unita' Ospedaliera S. Maria Nuova, Firenze, Italy.

Objective: To assess the effects of acute exposure to simulated high altitude on baroreflex control of mean cerebral blood flow velocity (MCFV).

Patients And Methods: We compared beat-to-beat changes in RR interval, arterial blood pressure, mean MCFV (by transcranial Doppler velocimetry in the middle cerebral artery), end-tidal CO2, oxygen saturation and respiration in 19 healthy subjects at baseline (Albuquerque, 1779 m), after acute exposure to simulated high altitude in a hypobaric chamber (barometric pressure as at 5000 m) and during oxygen administration (to achieve 100% oxygen saturation) at the same barometric pressure (HOX). Baroreflex control on each signal was assessed by univariate and bivariate power spectral analysis performed on time series obtained during controlled (15 breaths/min) breathing, before and during baroreflex modulation induced by 0.

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Objective: To assess the influence of different breathing patterns on autonomic cardiovascular modulation during acute exposure to altitude-induced hypoxia.

Design: We measured relative changes in minute ventilation (VE), oxygen saturation (%SaO2), spectral analysis of RR interval and blood pressure, and response to stimulation of carotid baroreceptors (neck suction) at baseline and after acute (1 h) hypobaric hypoxia (equivalent to 5,000 m, in a hypobaric chamber).

Methods: We studied 19 human subjects: nine controls and 10 Western yoga trainees of similar age, while breathing spontaneously, at 15 breaths/min (controlled breathing) and during 'complete yogic breathing' (slow diaphragmatic + thoracic breathing, approximately 5 breaths/min) in yoga trainees, or simple slow breathing in controls.

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Background: Cardiac autonomic reinnervation after human cardiac transplantation has been demonstrated frequently but to date only for sympathetic efferents. Standard surgical techniques leave many parasympathetic branches intact in the original atria and thus with less stimulus to reinnervate the donor atria.

Methods And Results: We used changes in the RR-interval power spectrum induced by sinusoidal modulation of arterial baroreceptors by neck suction at different frequencies to detect both parasympathetic and sympathetic reinnervation in 79 subjects with "standard" and 10 "bicaval" heart transplants.

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