41 results on '"Magrini F."'
Search Results
2. Differences between office and ambulatory blood pressures in children and adolescents attending a hospital hypertension clinic.
- Author
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Salice P, Ardissino G, Barbier P, Bacà L, Vecchi DL, Ghiglia S, Colli AM, Galli MA, Marra G, Testa S, Edefonti A, Magrini F, and Zanchetti A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Hypertension physiopathology, Male, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, White Coat Hypertension diagnosis, White Coat Hypertension physiopathology, Blood Pressure physiology, Blood Pressure Determination methods, Hypertension diagnosis
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Information on ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) in children is scarce. While in adults office BP (OBP) is higher than ABP and the difference increases as OBP increases, information in children suggests that at this young age ABP is no lower and often higher than OBP. This study was aimed at describing OBP-ABP differences in a cohort of children of different ages and BPs, and investigating whether OBP-ABP differences are dependent on age or OBP level., Methods: We retrospectively compared OBP and 24-h, daytime and night-time ABP in 433 children and adolescents aged 4-18 years, referred to our hospital clinic., Results: OBP was found to be significantly lower than 24-h and daytime ABP in the low age tertile (4-10 years) but not in the medium and high tertiles. OBP was also lower than ABP in normotensive patients (n = 182), but higher than ABP in untreated hypertensive patients (n = 92) despite similar ages. Continuous analyses showed a weak correlation of OBP-ABP differences with age, and a much stronger correlation with OBP so that 24-h ABP was higher than OBP at OBP values less than 117/73 mmHg and lower than OBP at higher OBP values. Logistic regression analysis indicates that also in children OBP accounts for most of the OBP-ABP difference., Conclusion: There is a common relation both in children and adults between OBP and ABP. It is only because high OBP is common in the elderly, and the lowest OBP is usually found in young children that large positive OBP-ABP differences have been associated with old age, and negative differences with childhood. OBP-ABP differences, often defined as white-coat effect, can have different directions and are likely to be largely due to regression to the mean.
- Published
- 2013
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3. Systolic blood pressure peak during maximal exercise testing: a possible determinant of endothelial turnover in healthy subjects.
- Author
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Ciulla MM, Gianni C, Broglia P, Lonati S, Silvestris I, Paliotti R, Giofrè F, Rampoldi E, Cortelezzi A, and Magrini F
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- Adult, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reference Values, Blood Pressure physiology, Endothelial Cells physiology, Exercise Test
- Published
- 2009
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4. How long shall the patient rest before clinic blood pressure measurement?
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Sala C, Santin E, Rescaldani M, and Magrini F
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- Adult, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Rest, Stroke Volume, Blood Pressure physiology, Blood Pressure Determination methods, Blood Pressure Determination standards, Hypertension diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: The optimal time at rest before clinic blood pressure (BP) measurement is still undefined. In this study in patients with essential hypertension, the time course of the hemodynamic changes during a 16-min rest in the chair-seated position was evaluated and compared with that observed in a stabilized postural condition, such as after a prolonged supine rest., Methods: In 55 untreated essential hypertensive patients, BP, heart rate, stroke volume (impedance cardiography), and systemic vascular resistances were measured every other minute during a 16-min rest in the chair-seated position and, in random sequence, in the last 16 min of a 60-min supine rest., Results: Overall, systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) decreased by 11.6 and 4.3 mm Hg, respectively, during the chair-seated rest; only a 1.8-mm Hg decrease in SBP was observed in the control supine study. The chair-seated fall in BP was associated with a decrease in systemic vascular resistances, in the absence of significant changes in cardiac index. From the logarithmic curve of SBP and DBP decrements, a half-time of 5.8 and 5.5 min respectively, was calculated. Decrements in SBP, but not DBP, were inversely related to the corresponding baseline values., Conclusions: In untreated essential hypertensive patients a significant decrease in SBP and DBP associated with a systemic vasodilation was observed during a 16-min rest in the chair-seated position. Because approximately 75% of the spontaneous fall in BP occurred within 10 min, it appears that this time at rest before clinic BP evaluation could improve the precision and accuracy of the measurement.
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- 2006
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5. Reproducibility of nocturnal blood pressure fall in early phases of untreated essential hypertension: a prospective observational study.
- Author
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Cuspidi C, Meani S, Salerno M, Valerio C, Fusi V, Severgnini B, Lonati L, Magrini F, and Zanchetti A
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- Adult, Aging, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Cohort Studies, Diastole, Female, Humans, Hypertension diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Systole, Blood Pressure, Circadian Rhythm, Hypertension physiopathology
- Abstract
A number of studies have shown that a smaller than normal nocturnal blood pressure (BP) decrease is associated with cardiovascular disease. However, no large prospective studies have examined the reliability of nocturnal dipping within individuals. The aim of our study was to investigate the short-term variability of nocturnal BP fall in a large cohort of patients with recently diagnosed essential hypertension. In all, 414 uncomplicated never treated hypertensive patients referred to our outpatient hypertension hospital clinic (mean age 46+/-12 years; 257 M, 157 F) prospectively underwent: (1). repeated clinic BP measurements; (2). routine examinations recommended by WHO/ISH guidelines; and (3). ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) twice within a 4-week period. Dipping pattern was defined as a reduction in the average systolic and diastolic BP at night greater than 10% compared to average daytime values. Overall, 311 patients (75.1%) showed no change in their diurnal variations in BP. Of the 278 patients who had a dipping pattern on the first ABPM, 219 (78.7%) confirmed this type of profile on the second ABPM, while 59 (21.3%) showed a nondipping pattern. Among 37 dipper patients with >20% of nocturnal systolic BP decrease (extreme dippers), only 16 (43.2%) had this marked fall in BP on the second ABPM. Of the 136 patients who had a nondipping pattern on the first ABPM, 92 (67.6%) confirmed their initial profile on the second ABPM, while 44 (32.4%) did not. Patients with reproducible nondipping profile were older (48+/-12 years) than those with reproducible dipping profile (44+/-12 years, P<0.05). These findings indicate that: (1). short-term reproducibility of nocturnal fall in BP in untreated middle-aged hypertensives is rather limited: overall, one-fourth of patients changed their initial dipping patterns when they were studied again after a few weeks; (2). this was particularly true for extreme dipping and nondipping patterns; (3). abnormalities in nocturnal BP fall, assessed by a single ABPM, cannot be taken as independent predictors of increased cardiovascular risk.
- Published
- 2004
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6. Cardiovascular target organ damage in essential hypertensives with or without reproducible nocturnal fall in blood pressure.
- Author
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Cuspidi C, Meani S, Salerno M, Valerio C, Fusi V, Severgnini B, Lonati L, Magrini F, and Zanchetti A
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- Adult, Albuminuria urine, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Carotid Arteries diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Hypertension urine, Male, Middle Aged, Radioimmunoassay, Blood Pressure, Circadian Rhythm, Echocardiography, Hypertension diagnostic imaging, Hypertension physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: The clinical significance of classifying patients as dippers and non-dippers on the basis of a single period of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) has been questioned. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between nocturnal dipping status, defined on the basis of two periods of ABPM, and cardiac and extracardiac target organ damage in essential hypertension., Methods: A total of 375 never-treated essential hypertensive patients [mean 24-h blood pressure (BP) > or = 125/80 mmHg; mean +/- SD age 45.9 +/- 11.9 years] referred for the first time to our outpatient clinic underwent the following procedures: (i) repeated clinic BP measurements; (ii) blood sampling for routine chemistry examinations; (iii) 24-h urine collection for microalbuminuria; (iv) ABPM over two 24-h periods within 4 weeks; (v) echocardiography; and (vi) carotid ultrasonography., Results: A reproducible nocturnal dipping (decrease in BP > 10% from mean daytime BP in both ABPM periods) and non-dipping profile (decrease in BP < or = 10% in both ABPM periods) was found in 199 (group I) and 79 patients (group II), respectively; 97 patients (group III) had a variable dipping profile. The three groups did not differ with regard to age, gender, body mass index, clinic BP, 48-h BP and heart rate. Left ventricular mass index, interventricular septum thickness, left atrium and aortic root diameters were significantly higher in group II compared with group I (mean +/- SD 108.5 +/- 19.5 versus 99.7 +/- 19.6 g/m, P < 0.05; 9.3 +/- 0.9 versus 9.1 +/- 0.9 mm, P < 0.05; 33.6 +/- 3.6 versus 32.2 +/- 3.7 mm, P < 0.01; 36.9 +/- 4.6 mm versus 35.5 +/- 4.6, P < 0.05, respectively). The smaller differences seen between groups II and III and between groups I and III were not statistically significant. The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (defined as a left ventricular mass index > 134 g/m in men and > 110 g/m in women) was greater in group II (19%) than in group I (6%) (P < 0.05), whereas the differences between groups II and III and between groups I and III did not reach statistical significance. Differences among the three groups in the prevalence of carotid structural alterations (such as carotid plaques or intima-media thickening) were not statistically significant, and microalbuminuria had a similar prevalence in all three groups., Conclusions: Despite similar clinic and 48-h BP values, never-treated hypertensive patients with a persistent non-dipper pattern showed a significantly greater extent of cardiac structural alterations compared with subjects with a reproducible dipping pattern, but not those with a variable BP nocturnal profile. A non-dipping pattern diagnosed on two concordant ABPM periods instead of a single monitoring therefore represents a clinical trait associated with more pronounced cardiac abnormalities. Finally, in non-dipping middle-aged hypertensives, echocardiography appears to provide a more accurate risk stratification than carotid ultrasonography or microalbuminuria.
- Published
- 2004
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7. Is the nocturnal fall in blood pressure reduced in essential hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome?
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Cuspidi C, Meani S, Fusi V, Severgnini B, Valerio C, Catini E, Sala C, Magrini F, and Zanchetti A
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- Adult, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Circadian Rhythm, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Blood Pressure physiology, Hypertension complications, Hypertension physiopathology, Metabolic Syndrome complications, Metabolic Syndrome physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine whether an impaired reduction in nocturnal blood pressure (BP), defined on the basis of two periods of ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), is present in hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome, as defined by the NCEP criteria., Methods: 460 grade 1 and 2 untreated essential hypertensives (mean age 45.9 +/- 11.9 years) referred for the first time to our outpatient hospital clinic underwent the following procedures: 1) medical history and physical examination; 2) repeated clinic BP measurements; 3) routine examinations; 4) ABPM over two 24-hour periods within 4 weeks. Metabolic syndrome was defined as at least three of the following alterations: increased waist circumference, increased triglycerides, decreased HDL-cholesterol, increased BP, or high fasting glucose. Nocturnal dipping was defined as a night-time reduction in average SBP and DBP >10% compared to average daytime values., Results: The 135 patients with metabolic syndrome (group I) were similar for age, gender and known duration of hypertension to the 325 patients without it (group II). There were no significant differences between the two groups in average 48-hour, daytime, night-time SBP/DBP values and the percentage nocturnal SBP and DBP decrease (-17.7 / -15.7 vs. -18.4 / -16.2, p = ns). A reproducible nocturnal dipping (decrease in BP >10% from mean daytime in both ABPM periods) and non-dipping profile (decrease in BP < or =10% in both ABPM periods) was found in 74 (54.8%) and 29 (21.4%) in group I and in 169 (52.1%) and 73 (22.4%) in group II, respectively (p = ns); 32 patients (23.7%) in group I and 83 patients (25.5%) in group II had a variable dipping profile (p = ns)., Conclusions: This study shows that no significant difference exists in nocturnal BP patterns, assessed by two ABPMs, in untreated essential hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome compared to those without it.
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- 2004
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8. Reduced nocturnal fall in blood pressure, assessed by two ambulatory blood pressure monitorings and cardiac alterations in early phases of untreated essential hypertension.
- Author
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Cuspidi C, Michev I, Meani S, Severgnini B, Fusi V, Corti C, Salerno M, Valerio C, Magrini F, and Zanchetti A
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- Adult, Albuminuria physiopathology, Body Height physiology, Body Surface Area, Carotid Artery, Common diagnostic imaging, Carotid Artery, Common physiopathology, Diastole physiology, Echocardiography, Female, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Reproducibility of Results, Retinal Diseases physiopathology, Statistics as Topic, Stroke Volume physiology, Systole physiology, Time Factors, Ultrasonography, Interventional, Ventricular Function, Left physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Hypertension physiopathology
- Abstract
To investigate whether in recently diagnosed essential hypertensives a reduced nocturnal fall in blood pressure (BP), established on the basis of two 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitorings (ABPM) is related to a greater cardiovascular damage. In all, 355 consecutive, recently diagnosed, never-treated essential hypertensives referred for the first time to our outpatient clinic were included in the study. Each patient underwent the following procedures: (1) two 24-h ABPMs performed within 3 weeks, (2) 24-h urinary collection for microalbuminuria, (3) nonmydriatic photography of ocular fundi, (4) echocardiography, (5) carotid ultrasonography. We defined nondipping profile as a night-day systolic and diastolic fall < or =10 % (mean of two ABPMs). A dipper BP profile was found in 238 patients, whereas in 117 patients a nondipper profile was present. The two groups were similar for age, gender, body mass index, smoking habit, clinic BP, 48-h BP and heart rate, while, by definition, night-time systolic and diastolic BP were significantly higher in nondippers than in dippers (130/81 vs 121/74 mmHg, P < 0.0001).The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) defined by four different criteria: (a) LV mass index (LVMI) > or = 125 g/m(2) in both genders; (b) LVMI > or = 134 gm(2) in men and > or = 110 in women; (c) LVMI> or = 125 g/m(2) in men and > or = 110 g/m(2) in women; (d) LVMI > or = 51 g/m(2.7) in men and > or = 47 g/m(2.7) in women was significantly higher in nondippers than in dippers (a: 12 vs 7%, P < 0.05; b: 16 vs 7%, P < 0.01; c: 20 vs 11%, P < 0.01; d: 35 vs 23% P < 0.02) and this finding was associated with a significant increase in aortic root and left atrium dimensions. There were no differences between the two groups in the prevalence of carotid and retinal changes and microalbuminuria. In conclusion our findings suggest that never-treated hypertensives with a reduced BP fall in the night time, defined on the basis of two ABPMs, have a higher prevalence of TOD than dippers, in terms of echocardiographic LVH. In this population setting, cardiac structural alterations are a more sensitive marker of the impact of the nocturnal BP load on cardiovascular system than other extracardiac signs of TOD.
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- 2003
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9. Target organ damage and non-dipping pattern defined by two sessions of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in recently diagnosed essential hypertensive patients.
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Cuspidi C, Macca G, Sampieri L, Fusi V, Severgnini B, Michev I, Salerno M, Magrini F, and Zanchetti A
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- Adult, Albuminuria urine, Carotid Arteries diagnostic imaging, Circadian Rhythm, Echocardiography, Female, Humans, Hypertension diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Retina pathology, Tunica Intima diagnostic imaging, Tunica Media diagnostic imaging, Blood Pressure, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Hypertension physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate in a selected population of patients with a recent diagnosis of hypertension whether a reduced nocturnal fall in blood pressure, confirmed by two 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) sessions is associated with more prominent target organ damage (TOD)., Methods: The study was structured in two phases: in the first, 141 consecutive, recently diagnosed, never-treated essential hypertensives underwent 24 h ABPM twice within 3 weeks; in the second phase, 118 of these patients showing reproducible dipping or non-dipping patterns underwent the following procedures: (1) routine blood chemistry, (2) 24 h urinary collection for microalbuminuria, (3) amydriatic photography of ocular fundi, (4) echocardiography and (5) carotid ultrasonography., Results: The 92 patients with (>10%) night-time fall in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (dippers) in both monitoring sessions were similar for age, gender, body surface area, smoking habit, clinic BP, 24 h and 48 h BP to the 26 patients with a < or = 10% nocturnal fall (non-dippers) in both sessions. The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (defined by two criteria: (1) LV mass index > or = 125 g/m2 in both genders; (2) LV mass index > or = 120 and 100 g/m2 in men and women, respectively) and that of carotid intima-media (IM) thickening (IM thickness > or = 0.8 mm) were significantly higher in non-dippers than in dippers (23 versus 5%, P < 0.01; 50 versus 22%, P < 0.05; and 38 versus 18%, P < 0.05, respectively). There were no differences among the two groups in the prevalence of retinal changes and microalbuminuria. The strength of the association of LV mass index with night-time BP was slightly but significantly greater than that with daytime BP., Conclusions: This study suggests that a blunted reduction in nocturnal BP, persisting over time, may play a pivotal role in the development of some expressions of TOD, such as LVH and IM thickening, during the early phase of essential hypertension, despite similar clinic BP, 24 h and 48 h BP levels observed in non-dippers and dippers.
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- 2001
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10. Blood pressure-independent cardiac hypertrophy in acromegalic patients.
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Ciulla M, Arosio M, Barelli MV, Paliotti R, Porretti S, Valentini P, Tortora G, Buonamici V, Moraschi A, Capiello V, and Magrini F
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- Adult, Collagen metabolism, Densitometry, Echocardiography, Electrocardiography, Female, Humans, Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardium metabolism, Reproducibility of Results, Television, Time Factors, Acromegaly complications, Acromegaly physiopathology, Blood Pressure, Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular diagnostic imaging, Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular etiology
- Abstract
Objective: Acromegaly is frequently associated with an increase in left ventricular mass, even in the absence of systemic hypertension. Pathological studies on acromegalic hearts have shown an extensive interstitial fibrosis, suggesting the existence of a specific acromegalic cardiomyopathy. The aim of this study was to assess left ventricular wall structure in acromegaly by ultrasonic tissue characterization., Design and Methods: We studied 10 untreated acromegalic patients and 10 age-matched healthy control subjects. The echo patterns of two-dimensional long-axis end-diastolic echocardiograms were assessed by colour-scale analysis of the interventricular septum, with estimates of the mean colour scale value, the broad band (Bb) and the derived collagen volume fraction (dCVF). We also measured electrocardiographic QT interval dispersion (QTd) as a marker of dyshomogeneous ventricular repolarization., Results: Seven patients had left ventricular hypertrophy according to the sex-independent criteria; of these, two had arterial hypertension. None of our patients had echocardiographic evidence of diastolic or systolic dysfunction. All patients showed significantly increased myocardial echoreflectivity (Bb = 106.4+/-12.1 versus 79.3+/-6.5; dCVF% = 2.78+/-0.53 versus 1.58+/-0.29; P < 0.0001) and QTd (66+/-13 ms versus 54+/-8 ms, P < 0.05). A significant correlation was found between dCVF and the duration of acromegaly (r = 0.80; P = 0.005)., Conclusions: Left ventricular remodelling observed in acromegaly is not related to the presence of arterial hypertension; we hypothesize that the increased echoreflectivity and QTd are long-term consequences of cardiac hypertrophy and prolonged exposure to high levels of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-I.
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- 1999
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11. Prolonged water immersion. Effects on blood pressure maturation in normotensive rats.
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Magrini F, Reggiani P, Ciulla M, Meazza R, and Branzi G
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- Animals, Body Weight physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Hydrostatic Pressure, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Urine physiology, Water, Weightlessness, Blood Pressure physiology, Immersion physiopathology
- Abstract
The purpose of this experiment was to study the impact of simulated microgravity and of chronic removal of hydrostatic pressure gradients on blood pressure maturation and body growth in rats. A special device was developed in our laboratory to transfer prolonged "dry" water immersion (a technique that has been used for training astronauts under hypogravic conditions) to six Sprague-Dawley test rats (immersion-G group). The time course of heart rate, systolic blood pressure, urinary output, and body weight was monitored from weaning to maturity and then compared with those responses from six sex- and age-matched Sprague-Dawley rats grown in a gravity environment (group G). A downward shift in systolic blood pressure and body weight maturation curves was observed in immersion-G rats from the age of 60 days. Cessation of dry water immersion produced a gradual, significant rise in systolic blood pressure but not in body weight to control values. No marked changes in heart rate and urinary output between G and immersion-G rats were noticed throughout the investigation. Our results provide indirect evidence that an interference in the natural history of blood pressure maturation was introduced by immersion, which dissociated the effects of body weight increase during growth from the effects of ageing per se. It is concluded that the physiological increase in systolic blood pressure during growth is partly gravity-dependent.
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- 1992
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12. The effects of a microgravitational environment on the blood pressure maturation curve in normotensive rats.
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Magrini F, Ciulla M, Meazza R, and Reggiani P
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- Animals, Heart Rate physiology, Immersion physiopathology, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Urine physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Environment, Controlled, Gravitation
- Abstract
In order to determine whether gravity influences the growth of terrestrial mammals, systolic blood pressure, heart rate, urinary output and body weight were measured at 10-day intervals from the age of 30 days (weaning) to 150 days in 12 male Sprague-Dawley rats. Six rats were grown in a gravitational environment. 'Dry' water immersion was used to subject six rats to a microgravitational environment between the ages of 30 and 90 days. A downward shift in systolic blood pressure and body weight maturation curves was observed in the microgravitational group from the age of 60 days. After the 'dry' water immersion was stopped, the fully developed rats showed a significant increase in systolic blood pressure, which returned to control values, but not in body weight. We conclude that the physiological increase in systolic blood pressure taking place in rats during growth is partly dependent on gravity.
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- 1989
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13. Marked blood pressure fluctuations during narcoleptic attacks alternating with abnormal wakefulness: effects of treatment with clonidine.
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Reggiani P, Magrini F, Mondadori C, Branzi G, and Zanchetti A
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- Brain physiopathology, Clonidine pharmacology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Narcolepsy physiopathology, Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha physiology, Blood Pressure drug effects, Clonidine therapeutic use, Narcolepsy drug therapy, Wakefulness drug effects
- Abstract
A middle-aged man was admitted to our department because of sleep-wake cycle disorders (alternating hypersomnia and sleeplessness), bipolar behavioural disturbances and marked fluctuations in blood pressure and heart rate. Neither evident precipitating stimuli nor an obvious cause for his illness were found. When tests that normally activate intrinsic autonomic responses were performed, two distinct circulatory patterns were recognized. During hypersomnia (phase A), cardiovascular reflex activity was blunted or abolished and orthostasis could not be maintained. The clinical, biochemical, behavioural pictures and the observed decrease in sympathetic outflow resembled the effects of clonidine administration. On the contrary, during sleeplessness (phase B) the autonomic pathways were functionally integral and orthostatic hypotension was not detected. The clinical, biochemical, behavioural features and cardiovascular overactivity closely mimicked the abrupt withdrawal syndrome encountered with clonidine. Three hypothetical mechanisms are advanced to explain this intriguing case as well as the acute and chronic relief of our patient's clinical problem following institution of clonidine therapy (phase C). The role played by central alpha adrenoceptors in integrating sleep-wake, cardiovascular and behavioural functions is also suggested.
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- 1989
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14. Mechanism of spontaneous supine blood pressure variations in chronic autonomic insufficiency.
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Niarchos AP, Magrini F, Tarazi RC, and Bravo EL
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- Aged, Blood Volume, Cardiac Output, Erectile Dysfunction etiology, Erectile Dysfunction physiopathology, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neurologic Manifestations, Plasma Volume, Posture, Renin blood, Stroke Volume, Sweating, Urination Disorders etiology, Urination Disorders physiopathology, Vasoconstriction, Venous Pressure, Autonomic Nervous System, Blood Pressure, Hypotension, Orthostatic physiopathology, Nervous System Diseases physiopathology, Vascular Resistance
- Published
- 1978
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15. Haemodynamic determinants of the arterial blood pressure rise during growth in conscious puppies.
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Magrini F
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- Animals, Body Weight, Dogs, Follow-Up Studies, Hemodynamics, Male, Plasma Volume, Vascular Resistance, Aging, Blood Pressure, Cardiovascular Physiological Phenomena
- Published
- 1978
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16. Selective reduction of renal perfusion pressure and blood flow in man: humoral and hemodynamic effects.
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Fiorentini C, Guazzi MD, Olivari MT, Bartorelli A, Necchi G, and Magrini F
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- Adult, Arterial Occlusive Diseases physiopathology, Cardiac Output, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Hypertension physiopathology, Kidney blood supply, Male, Middle Aged, Regional Blood Flow, Renal Artery physiopathology, Renin blood, Time Factors, Vascular Resistance, Blood Pressure, Hemodynamics, Kidney physiopathology, Perfusion
- Published
- 1981
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17. [Hemodynamic factors which conditions the hypotensive response to phentolamine. Limitations of the screening test for pheochromocytoma].
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Guazzi M, Fiorentini C, Polese A, Magrini F, and Osculati G
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- Humans, Hypotension chemically induced, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms diagnosis, Blood Pressure drug effects, Phentolamine pharmacology, Pheochromocytoma diagnosis
- Published
- 1973
18. Brain and kidney, victims of atrial microembolism in elderly hospitalized patients? Data from the REPOSI study
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Corrao, S, Argano, C, Nobili, A, Marcucci, M, Djade, Cd, Tettamanti, M, Pasina, L, Franchi, C, Marengoni, A, Salerno, F, Violi, F, Mannucci, Pm, Perticone, F, Sparacio, E, Alborghetti, S, Di Costanzo, R, Prisco, D, Silvestri, E, Cenci, C, Barnini, T, Delitala, G, Carta, S, Atzori, S, Guarnieri, G, Zanetti, M, Spalluti, A, Serra, Mg, Bleve, Ma, Vanoli, M, Grignani, G, Casella, G, Gasbarrone, L, Maniscalco, G, Gunelli, M, Tirotta, D, Brucato, A, Ghidoni, S, Di Corato, P, Bernardi, M, Li Bassi, S, Santi, L, Agnelli, G, Iorio, A, Marchesini, E, Mannarino, E, Lupattelli, G, Rondelli, P, Paciullo, F, Fabris, F, Carlon, M, Turatto, F, Baroni, Mc, Zardo, M, Manfredini, R, Molino, C, Pala, M, Fabbian, F, Nuti, R, Valenti, R, Ruvio, M, Cappelli, S, Paolisso, G, Rizzo, Mr, Laieta, Mt, Salvatore, T, Sasso, Fc, Utili, R, Durante Mangoni, E, Pinto, D, Olivieri, O, Stanzial, Am, Fellin, R, Volpato, S, Fotini, S, Barbagallo, M, Dominguez, L, Plances, L, D'Angelo, D, Rini, G, Mansueto, P, Pepe, I, Licata, G, Calvo, L, Valenti, M, Borghi, C, Strocchi, E, Rinaldi, Er, Zoli, M, Fabbri, E, Magalotti, D, Auteri, A, Pasqui, Al, Puccetti, L, Pasini, Fl, Capecchi, Pl, Bicchi, M, Sabbà, C, Vella, Fs, Marseglia, A, Luglio, Cv, Palasciano, G, Modeo, Me, Aquilino, A, Raffaele, P, Pugliese, S, Capobianco, C, Postiglione, A, Barbella, Mr, De Stefano, F, Fenoglio, L, Brignone, C, Bracco, C, Giraudo, A, Musca, G, Cuccurullo, O, Cricco, L, Fiorentini, A, Cappellini, Md, Fabio, G, Seghezzi, S, De Amicis, Mm, Fargion, S, Bonara, P, Bulgheroni, M, Lombardi, R, Magrini, F, Massari, F, Tonella, T, Peyvandi, F, Tedeschi, A, Rossio, R, Moreo, G, Ferrari, B, Roncari, L, Monzani, V, Savojardo, V, Folli, C, Magnini, M, Mari, D, Rossi, Pd, Damanti, S, Prolo, S, Lilleri, Ms, Micale, G, Podda, M, Selmi, C, Meda, F, Accordino, S, Conca, A, Monti, V, Corazza, Gr, Miceli, E, Lenti, Mv, Padula, D, Balduini, Cl, Bertolino, G, Provini, S, Quaglia, F, Murialdo, G, Bovio, M, Dallegri, F, Ottonello, L, Quercioli, A, Barreca, A, Secchi, Mb, Ghelfi, D, Chin, Ws, Carassale, L, Caporotundo, S, Anastasio, L, Sofia, L, Carbone, M, Traisci, G, De Feudis, L, Di Carlo, S, Davì, G, Guagnano, Mt, Sestili, S, Bergami, E, Rizzioli, E, Cagnoni, C, Bertone, L, Manucra, A, Buratti, A, Tognin, T, Liberato, Nl, Bernasconi, G, Nardo, B, Bianchi, Gb, Giaquinto, S, Benetti, G, Quagliolo, M, Centenaro, Gr, Purrello, F, Di Pino, A, Piro, S, Mancuso, G, Calipari, D, Bartone, M, Gullo, F, Cortellaro, M, Magenta, M, Perego, F, Meroni, Mr, Cicardi, M, Magenta, Ag, Sacco, A, Bonelli, A, Dentamaro, G, Rozzini, R, Falanga, L, Giordano, A, Perin, Pc, Lorenzati, B, Gruden, G, Bruno, G, Montrucchio, G, Greco, E, Tizzani, P, Fera, G, Di Luca, Ml, Renna, D, Perciccante, A, Coralli, A, Tassara, R, Melis, D, Rebella, L, Menardo, G, Bottone, S, Sferrazzo, E, Ferri, C, Striuli, R, Scipioni, R, Salmi, R, Gaudenzi, P, Gamberini, S, Ricci, F, Morabito, C, Fava, R, Semplicini, A, Gottardo, L, Vendemiale, G, Serviddio, G, Forlano, R, Bolondi, L, Rasciti, L, Serio, I, Masala, C, Mammarella, A, Raparelli, V, Rossi Fanelli, F, Delfino, M, Amoroso, A, Basili, S, Perri, L, Serra, P, Fontana, V, Falcone, M, Landolfi, R, Grieco, A, Gallo, A, Zuccalà, G, Franceschi, F, De Marco, G, Chiara, C, Marta, S, Bellusci, M, Setti, D, Pedrazzoli, F, Romanelli, G, Pirali, C, Amolini, C, Rosei, Ea, Rizzoni, D, Castoldi, L, Picardi, A, Gentilucci, Uv, Mazzarelli, C, Gallo, P, Guasti, Luigina, Castiglioni, Luana, Maresca, ANDREA MARIA, Squizzato, Alessandro, Contini, Sara, Molaro, Marta, Annoni, G, Corsi, M, Zazzetta, S, Bertolotti, M, Mussi, C, Scotto, R, Ferri, Ma, Veltri, F, Arturi, F, Succurro, E, Sesti, G, Gualtieri, U, Sciacqua, A, Quero, M, Bagnato, C, Loria, P, Becchi, Ma, Martucci, G, Fantuzzi, A, Maurantonio, M, Corinaldesi, R, De Giorgio, R, Serra, M, Grasso, V, Ruggeri, E, Carozza, Lm, Pignatti, F., Corrao S, Argano C, Nobili A, Marcucci M, Djade CD, Tettamanti M, Pasina L, Franchi C, Marengoni A, Salerno F, Violi F, Mannucci PM, Perticone F, REPOSI Investigator, Bernardi M, Borghi,C, Strocchi E, Rinaldi ER, Zoli M, Bolondi L, Corrao, S, Argano, C, Nobili, A, Marcucci, M, Djade, C. D, Tettamanti, M, Pasina, L, Franchi, C, Marengoni, A, Salerno, F, Violi, F, Mannucci, P. M, Perticone, F, Reposi, Investigator, Zanetti, Michela, Djade, CD, Mannucci, PM, Perticone, F. Mansueto, P, REPOSI Investigators, Corrao, S., Argano, C., Nobili, A., Marcucci, M., Djade, C. D., Tettamanti, M., Pasina, L., Franchi, C., Marengoni, A., Salerno, F., Violi, F., Mannucci, P. M., Rizzo, Mr, Paolisso, G, Mannucci, P, Sparacio, E, Alborghetti, S, Di Costanzo, R, Djade, C, Prisco, D, Silvestri, E, Cenci, C, Barnini, T, Delitala, G, Carta, S, Atzori, S, Guarnieri, G, Zanetti, M, Spalluti, A, Serra, M, Bleve, M, Vanoli, M, Grignani, G, Casella, G, Gasbarrone, L, Maniscalco, G, Gunelli, M, Tirotta, D, Brucato, A, Ghidoni, S, Di Corato, P, Bernardi, M, Li Bassi, S, Santi, L, Agnelli, G, Iorio, A, Marchesini, E, Mannarino, E, Lupattelli, G, Rondelli, P, Paciullo, F, Fabris, F, Carlon, M, Turatto, F, Baroni, M, Zardo, M, Manfredini, R, Molino, C, Pala, M, Fabbian, F, Nuti, R, Valenti, R, Ruvio, M, Cappelli, S, Rizzo, M, Laieta, M, Salvatore, T, Sasso, F, Utili, R, Durante Mangoni, E, Pinto, D, Olivieri, O, Stanzial, A, Fellin, R, Volpato, S, Fotini, S, Barbagallo, M, Dominguez, L, Plances, L, D'Angelo, D, Rini, G, Mansueto, P, Pepe, I, Licata, G, Calvo, L, Valenti, M, Borghi, C, Strocchi, E, Rinaldi, E, Zoli, M, Fabbri, E, Magalotti, D, Auteri, A, Pasqui, A, Puccetti, L, Pasini, F, Capecchi, P, Bicchi, M, Sabbà, C, Vella, F, Marseglia, A, Luglio, C, Palasciano, G, Modeo, M, Aquilino, A, Raffaele, P, Pugliese, S, Capobianco, C, Postiglione, A, Barbella, M, De Stefano, F, Fenoglio, L, Brignone, C, Bracco, C, Giraudo, A, Musca, G, Cuccurullo, O, Cricco, L, Fiorentini, A, Cappellini, M, Fabio, G, Seghezzi, S, De Amicis, M, Fargion, S, Bonara, P, Bulgheroni, M, Lombardi, R, Magrini, F, Massari, F, Tonella, T, Peyvandi, F, Tedeschi, A, Rossio, R, Moreo, G, Ferrari, B, Roncari, L, Monzani, V, Savojardo, V, Folli, C, Magnini, M, Mari, D, Rossi, P, Damanti, S, Prolo, S, Lilleri, M, Micale, G, Podda, M, Selmi, C, Meda, F, Accordino, S, Conca, A, Monti, V, Corazza, G, Miceli, E, Lenti, M, Padula, D, Balduini, C, Bertolino, G, Provini, S, Quaglia, F, Murialdo, G, Bovio, M, Dallegri, F, Ottonello, L, Quercioli, A, Barreca, A, Secchi, M, Ghelfi, D, Chin, W, Carassale, L, Caporotundo, S, Anastasio, L, Sofia, L, Carbone, M, Traisci, G, De Feudis, L, Di Carlo, S, Davì, G, Guagnano, M, Sestili, S, Bergami, E, Rizzioli, E, Cagnoni, C, Bertone, L, Manucra, A, Buratti, A, Tognin, T, Liberato, N, Bernasconi, G, Nardo, B, Bianchi, G, Giaquinto, S, Benetti, G, Quagliolo, M, Centenaro, G, Purrello, F, Di Pino, A, Piro, S, Mancuso, G, Calipari, D, Bartone, M, Gullo, F, Cortellaro, M, Magenta, M, Perego, F, Meroni, M, Cicardi, M, Magenta, A, Sacco, A, Bonelli, A, Dentamaro, G, Rozzini, R, Falanga, L, Giordano, A, Perin, P, Lorenzati, B, Gruden, G, Bruno, G, Montrucchio, G, Greco, E, Tizzani, P, Fera, G, Di Luca, M, Renna, D, Perciccante, A, Coralli, A, Tassara, R, Melis, D, Rebella, L, Menardo, G, Bottone, S, Sferrazzo, E, Ferri, C, Striuli, R, Scipioni, R, Salmi, R, Gaudenzi, P, Gamberini, S, Ricci, F, Morabito, C, Fava, R, Semplicini, A, Gottardo, L, Vendemiale, G, Serviddio, G, Forlano, R, Bolondi, L, Rasciti, L, Serio, I, Masala, C, Mammarella, A, Raparelli, V, Rossi Fanelli, F, Delfino, M, Amoroso, A, Basili, S, Perri, L, Serra, P, Fontana, V, Falcone, M, Landolfi, R, Grieco, A, Gallo, A, Zuccalà, G, Franceschi, F, De Marco, G, Chiara, C, Marta, S, Bellusci, M, Setti, D, Pedrazzoli, F, Romanelli, G, Pirali, C, Amolini, C, Rosei, E, Rizzoni, D, Castoldi, L, Picardi, A, Gentilucci, U, Mazzarelli, C, Gallo, P, Guasti, L, Castiglioni, L, Maresca, A, Squizzato, A, Contini, S, Molaro, M, Annoni, G, Corsi, M, Zazzetta, S, Bertolotti, M, Mussi, C, Scotto, R, Ferri, M, Veltri, F, Arturi, F, Succurro, E, Sesti, G, Gualtieri, U, Sciacqua, A, Quero, M, Bagnato, C, Loria, P, Becchi, M, Martucci, G, Fantuzzi, A, Maurantonio, M, Corinaldesi, R, De Giorgio, R, Grasso, V, Ruggeri, E, Carozza, L, and Pignatti, F
- Subjects
Male ,Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna ,REPOSI study ,Kidney ,Disability Evaluation ,Retrospective Studie ,Risk Factors ,hospitalized patient ,Atrial Fibrillation ,80 and over ,Odds Ratio ,LS4_4 ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Multivariate Analysi ,Stroke ,Aged, 80 and over ,Medicine (all) ,Brain ,Atrial fibrillation ,Female ,atrial microembolism ,Human ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Socio-culturale ,Renal function ,elderly ,Cognition Disorder ,Internal medicine ,Thromboembolism ,medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Renal insufficiency, chronic ,Heart Atria ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Anticoagulants ,Dementia ,Cognition Disorders ,Multivariate Analysis ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Risk Factor ,Settore MED/09 - MEDICINA INTERNA ,Anticoagulant ,Retrospective cohort study ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Blood pressure ,Heart failure ,Aged, Anticoagulants, Atrial fibrillation, Dementia, Renal insufficiency, chronic, Stroke ,hospitalized patients ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background It is well known that atrial fibrillation (AF) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) are associated with a higher risk of stroke, and new evidence links AF to cognitive impairment, independently from an overt stroke (CI). Our aim was to investigate, assuming an underlying role of atrial microembolism, the impact of CI and CKD in elderly hospitalized patients with AF. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the data collected on elderly patients in 66 Italian hospitals, in the frame of the REPOSI project. We analyzed the clinical characteristics of patients with AF and different degrees of CI. Multivariate logistic analysis was used to explore the relationship between variables and mortality. Results Among the 1384 patients enrolled, 321 had AF. Patients with AF were older, had worse CI and disability and higher rates of stroke, hypertension, heart failure, and CKD, and less than 50% were on anticoagulant therapy. Among patients with AF, those with worse CI and those with lower estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) had a higher mortality risk (odds ratio 1.13, p = 0.006). Higher disability levels, older age, higher systolic blood pressure, and higher eGFR were related to lower probability of oral anticoagulant prescription. Lower mortality rates were found in patients on oral anticoagulant therapy. Conclusions Elderly hospitalized patients with AF are more likely affected by CI and CKD, two conditions that expose them to a higher mortality risk. Oral anticoagulant therapy, still underused and not optimally enforced, may afford protection from thromboembolic episodes that probably concur to the high mortality.
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- 2015
19. Reproducibility of nocturnal blood pressure fall in early phases of untreated essential hypertension: a prospective observational study.
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C.Cuspid, Meani, S., Salerno, M., Valerio, C., Fusi, V., Severgnini, B., Lonati, L., Magrini, F., and Zanchetti, A.
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ESSENTIAL hypertension ,BLOOD pressure ,HYPERTENSION ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,AMBULATORY blood pressure monitoring ,BLOOD circulation disorders - Abstract
A number of studies have shown that a smaller than normal nocturnal blood pressure (BP) decrease is associated with cardiovascular disease. However, no large prospective studies have examined the reliability of nocturnal dipping within individuals. The aim of our study was to investigate the short-term variability of nocturnal BP fall in a large cohort of patients with recently diagnosed essential hypertension. In all, 414 uncomplicated never treated hypertensive patients referred to our outpatient hypertension hospital clinic (mean age 46±12 years; 257?M, 157 F) prospectively underwent: (1) repeated clinic BP measurements; (2) routine examinations recommended by WHO/ISH guidelines; and (3) ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) twice within a 4-week period. Dipping pattern was defined as a reduction in the average systolic and diastolic BP at night greater than 10% compared to average daytime values. Overall, 311 patients (75.1%) showed no change in their diurnal variations in BP. Of the 278 patients who had a dipping pattern on the first ABPM, 219 (78.7%) confirmed this type of profile on the second ABPM, while 59 (21.3%) showed a nondipping pattern. Among 37 dipper patients with >20% of nocturnal systolic BP decrease (extreme dippers), only 16 (43.2%) had this marked fall in BP on the second ABPM. Of the 136 patients who had a nondipping pattern on the first ABPM, 92 (67.6%) confirmed their initial profile on the second ABPM, while 44 (32.4%) did not. Patients with reproducible nondipping profile were older (48±12 years) than those with reproducible dipping profile (44±12 years, P<0.05). These findings indicate that: (1) short-term reproducibility of nocturnal fall in BP in untreated middle-aged hypertensives is rather limited: overall, one-fourth of patients changed their initial dipping patterns when they were studied again after a few weeks; (2) this was particularly true for extreme dipping and nondipping patterns; (3) abnormalities in nocturnal BP fall, assessed by a single ABPM, cannot be taken as independent predictors of increased cardiovascular risk.Journal of Human Hypertension (2004) 18, 503-509. doi:10.1038/sj.jhh.1001681 Published online 29 January 2004 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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20. A Comparison of Blood Pressure Control in a Hypertension Hospital Clinic Between 1997 and 2000.
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Cuspidi, C., Michev, I., Fusi, V., Severgnini, B., Sala, C., Meani, S., Corti, C., Valerio, C., Magrini, F., and Zanchetti, A.
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BLOOD pressure ,HYPERTENSION - Abstract
Aims: (1) To evaluate the prevalence of clinic blood pressure (BP) control in a large sample of treated hypertensives followed in our hypertension clinic during the year 2000, and to compare it with our 1997 data. (2) To investigate the prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) according to different levels of BP control. Methods and results: One thousand consecutive hypertensive patients who attended our hypertension hospital clinic in a period of 7 months during the year 2000 and who had regularly been followed by the same medical team were included in the study. LVH was assessed using two different electrocardiographic criteria (Sokolow-Lyon and Cornell). This population had similar clinical characteristics of a cohort including 700 patients seen at our centre during 1997 in which BP control rate was 34% (Cuspidi et al. , J Hypertens 1999; 17: 835-41). During follow-up, 441 of the treated patients had clinic BP < 140/90 mmHg, 283 < 150/95 mmHg and 276 ≥ 150/95 mmHg, indicating that BP control was satisfactory in 44.1%, borderline in 28.3% and unsatisfactory in 27.6% of the cases. Thirty-five patients (3.6%) had LVH according to Cornell criteria and 25 (2.6%) according to Sokolow criteria. A significantly lower prevalence of LVH was detected in patients with optimal BP control (< 130/85 mmHg) compared to those with unsatisfactory BP (2.3% vs 9.4%, respectively, p < 0.01). Conclusion: The study demonstrates that: (1) hypertensive patients in a hypertension clinic have satisfactory BP control in 44.1% of cases, indicating a significant improvement of BP control in this clinical setting during the last 3 years; (2) prevalence of LVH is significantly related to BP control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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21. Impact of carotid intima-media thickening on risk stratification in elderly hypertensives
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Cuspidi, C., Michev, I., Macca, G., Meani, S., Salerno, M., Valerio, C., Lonati, L., Leonetti, G., Magrini, F., alberto zanchetti, Cuspidi, C, Michev, I, Macca, G, Meani, S, Salerno, M, Valerio, C, Lonati, L, Leonetti, G, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,carotid intima-media thickening, risk stratification ,Age Factors ,Blood Pressure ,Carotid Arteries ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Echocardiography ,Risk Factors ,Hypertension ,Humans ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Tunica Intima ,Tunica Media ,Aged - Abstract
Background: It has been shown that aging and arterial hypertension are both associated with an increased prevalence of carotid structural abnormalities, such as intima-media (IM) thickening or plaques, which are a powerful independent predictor of cardiovascular (CV) events. We investigated the impact of carotid IM thickening in profiling the absolute CV risk stratification according the 1999 World Health Organization/International Society of Hypertension (WHO/ISH) guidelines in elderly hypertensive patients. Methods: Two hundred and thirty untreated elderly patients (>65 years) referred to our outpatient hospital clinic were included in the study. They underwent the following procedures: (i) medical history, physical examination and clinic blood pressure measurement; (ii) routine blood chemistry and urine analysis; (iii) electrocardiogram. The risk was initially stratified according to the routine procedures indicated by WHO/ISH guidelines and subsequently reassessed by adding the results of carotid ultrasonography (IM thickening as diffuse IM thickness >0.9 and
22. Non-motor effects of deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus in Parkinson's disease: preliminary physiological results.
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Priori, A., Cinnante, C., Genitrini, S., Pesenti, A., Tortora, G., Bencini, C., Barelli, M. V., Buonamici, V., Carella, F., Girotti, F., Soliveri, P., Magrini, F., Morganti, A., Albanese, A., Broggi, S., Scarlato, G., and Barbieri, S.
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BRAIN stimulation ,CARDIOVASCULAR system ,BASAL ganglia ,BLOOD pressure - Abstract
Although deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a clinically effective therapy for patients with advanced Parkinson's disease (PD), its physiological effects on the brain and possible actions on non-motor functional systems remain largely unknown. This study evaluated the effects of DBS of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) on neurophysiological variables and on cardiovascular physiology. Nine patients affected by PD undergoing chronic DBS of the STN have been studied. We performed electroencephalography (EEG), somatosensory (SEPs) and visual evoked potentials (VEPs), exteroceptive masseteric silent period and sympathetic skin response (SSR) studies with DBS ON and OFF. To assess the effects of stimulation on the cardiovascular system the tilt test and plasma renin activity were studied. When we turned the DBS OFF, both SEP N20 and the VEP P100 component increased significantly in amplitude whereas the SSR decreased in amplitude and increased in latency. Although plasma renin activity tended to increase with DBS OFF, its modification induced by postural changes and blood pressure values did not significantly differ with DBS ON and OFF. We conclude that DBS of the STN in PD, besides inducing a clinical improvement, induces several non-motor effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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23. In Memoriam: Alberto Zanchetti (Parma July 27, 1926 - Milan March 24, 2018)
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Daniel T. Lackland, Cristina Giannattasio, Cesare Cuspidi, Guido Grassi, Alberto Morganti, Peter J. Schwartz, Gianfranco Parati, Michael Weber, Andrea Stella, Giuseppe Mancia, Fabio Magrini, Mancia, G, Magrini, F, Morganti, A, Stella, A, Schwartz, P, Cuspidi, C, Giannattasio, C, Grassi, G, Parati, G, Weber, M, and Lackland, D
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Research ,Reticular Formation ,Professor Alberto Zanchetti ,Art history ,Neurophysiology ,Blood Pressure ,Journalism, Medical ,History, 20th Century ,History, 21st Century ,Death, Sudden ,Italy ,Hypertension ,Internal Medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Periodicals as Topic ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Zanchetti ,Brain Stem - Published
- 2018
24. Prevalence and correlates of advanced retinopathy in a large selected hypertensive population. The Evaluation of Target Organ Damage in Hypertension (ETODH) study
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Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Alberto Zanchetti, Cristiana Valerio, Fabio Magrini, Cesare Cuspidi, Eleonora Catini, Carla Sala, Cuspidi, C, Meani, S, Valerio, C, Fusi, V, Catini, E, Sala, C, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Blood Pressure ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Hypertensive retinopathy ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,Registries ,advanced retinopathy , hypertensive population ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Retinal Degeneration ,Retinal Vessels ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Cotton wool spots ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Regression Analysis ,Population study ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Microalbuminuria ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Objective. To describe the prevalence of advanced retinal microvascular lesions and their associations with cardiac and extracardiac signs of target organ damage (TOD) in a large selected hypertensive population. Methods. A total of 2172 non-diabetic untreated and treated uncomplicated essential hypertensives consecutively attending for the first time our hospital outpatient hypertension clinic and included in the Evaluation of Target Organ Damage in Hypertension (ETODH), an observational ongoing registry of hypertension-related TOD, were considered for this analysis. Advanced hypertensive retinopathy was defined by the presence of any of the following lesions: flame-shaped haemorrhages, soft exudates or cotton wool spots and papilloedema. Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), carotid structural abnormalities, such as plaques and intima media (IM) thickening, and microalbuminuria were diagnosed according to the 2003 ESH/ESC guidelines criteria. Results. Among the whole study population, 33 patients (1.5%) were found to have advanced hypertensive retinopathy. Patients with these retinal lesions were similar to those without for age, body mass index, known duration of hypertension, smoking habit, total serum cholesterol, fasting blood glucose and prevalence of antihypertensive treatment; whereas mean systolic and diastolic blood pressures were higher in the former group. The prevalence rates of LVH, carotid plaques, carotid IM thickening and microalbuminuria in patients with and without retinopathy were 57%, 67%, 69%, 19% and 25%, 47%, 44%, 12%, respectively. In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, advanced retinopathy was significantly associated with LVH (OR=4.0), carotid IM thickening (OR=2.9), carotid plaques (OR=2.8), but not with microalbuminuria. Conclusions. Our study indicates that: (i) advanced retinopathy is a rare finding in non-diabetic hypertensive patients seen in a specialist setting; (ii) a strong relation exists between retinal microvascular lesions and cardiac and macrovascular markers of TOD. © 2005 Taylor & Francis Group Ltd.
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- 2005
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25. Left ventricular hypertrophy in treated hypertensive patients with good blood pressure control outside the clinic, but poor clinic blood pressure control
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Cristiana Valerio, I. Michev, Giovanni Bertazzoli, Fabio Magrini, Cesare Cuspidi, Alberto Zanchetti, M Salerno, Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Cuspidi, C, Michev, I, Meani, S, Salerno, M, Valerio, C, Fusi, V, Bertazzoli, G, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Male ,Blood pressure control ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Physiology ,Group ii ,Blood Pressure ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Mass index ,Sex Distribution ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Aged ,business.industry ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Ambulatory ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Objective: The aim of the study was to evaluate the prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in treated patients with good blood pressure (BP) control during multiple home BP (HBP) measurements and during 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), but with unsatisfactory BP control in the clinic. These patients were compared with treated hypertensives whose BP was well controlled under the three circumstances. Methods: Seventy-two treated consecutive patients (group I, age 56 ± 10 years) with clinic BP values ≥ 140/90 mmHg, and a difference between clinic and self-measured HBP > 10 mmHg for diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and/or > 20 mmHg for systolic blood pressure (SBP), underwent the following procedures: (1) clinic BP measurement; (2) routine diagnostic work-up; (3) HBP monitoring; (4) 24-h ABPM; (5) echocardiography. Thirty-five hypertensive patients with satisfactory BP control according to clinic (< 140/90 mmHg), HBP (≤ 131/82 mmHg) and ABP criteria (≤ 125/79 mmHg) were included as the control group (group II, age 55 ± 9 years). Results: In group I, 33 subjects out of the 72 (46%) with clinic BP > 140/90 mmHg had BP values controlled outside the clinic (23 according to HBP criteria and 22 according to ABP criteria). The prevalence of LVH (LV mass index > 134 g/m2 in men and > 110 g/m2 in women) was significantly higher in these patients (15.1 versus 2.8%, P < 0.01) than in group II (BP also controlled in the clinic), despite the fact that HBP and ABP were reduced to similar levels in the two groups. Conclusions: Our data provide evidence that treated hypertensive patients with good BP control at home or during ambulatory monitoring, but incomplete BP control in the clinic, have more pronounced cardiac alterations than patients with both clinic and out of the clinic BP control. This finding offers a new piece of information about the diagnostic value of BP measurement in the clinic to assess BP control during antihypertensive treatment. © 2003 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
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- 2003
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26. Left ventricular concentric remodelling and extracardiac target organ damage in essential hypertension
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Cristiana Valerio, Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Alberto Zanchetti, I. Michev, C Corti, G. Macca, Fabio Magrini, B Severgnini, Cesare Cuspidi, Carla Sala, Cuspidi, C, Macca, G, Michev, I, Fusi, V, Severgnini, B, Corti, C, Meani, S, Valerio, C, Sala, C, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Male ,Left ventricular concentric remodelling, extracardiac organ damage ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Heart Ventricles ,Essential hypertension ,Retina ,Muscle hypertrophy ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,Ventricular remodeling ,Ventricular Remodeling ,business.industry ,Carotid ultrasonography ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Carotid Arteries ,Blood pressure ,Echocardiography ,Hypertension ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Microalbuminuria ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Left ventricular (LV) concentric remodelling is an adaptive change in cardiac geometry frequently observed in arterial hypertension. This study was addressed to investigate the extent of extracardiac target organ damage (TOD) in patients with LV concentric remodelling. Two groups of never-treated essential hypertensives, 31 with normal LV geometry (group I, relative wall thickness: 0.39) and 31 with LV concentric remodelling (group II, relative wall thickness: 0.47) matched for age, sex, body mass index and mean 24-h systolic blood pressure (BP), were included in the study. They underwent clinical and laboratory examination, 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), 24-h urinary collection for microalbuminuria, non-mydriatic photography of ocular fundi, echocardiography and carotid ultrasonography. In both groups age (I: 51 +/- 11 years; II: 51 +/- 11 years), body mass index (I: 25 +/- 3 kg/m(2); II: 26 +/- 3 kg/m(2)), clinic and 24-h ABPM values (I: 149 +/- 11/95 +/- 8, 142 +/- 11/91 +/- 7 mm Hg; II: 150 +/- 11/98 +/- 9, 142 +/- 12/92 +/- 9 mm Hg) were similar by design. There were no differences between patients with normal LV geometry and with LV concentric remodelling in LVM index (97 +/- 16 vs 99 +/- 16), carotid intima-media thickness (0.7 +/- 0.02 vs 0.7 +/- 0.02) and carotid plaques prevalence (35% vs 35%). Furthermore, no significant differences among the two groups were found in the prevalence of retinal changes and microalbuminuria. These results suggest that in hypertensive patients with similar BP and LVMI levels, LV concentric remodelling is not associated with more prominent TOD.
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- 2002
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27. Short-term Reproducibility of Nocturnal Non-dipping Pattern in Recently Diagnosed Essential Hypertensives
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Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Alberto Zanchetti, Fabio Magrini, M Salerno, G. Macca, Cesare Cuspidi, C Corti, B Severgnini, I. Michev, Cristiana Valerio, Cuspidi, C, Macca, G, Michev, I, Salerno, M, Fusi, V, Severgnini, B, Corti, C, Meani, S, Valerio, C, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Systole ,Short-term reproducibility of nocturnal non-dipping ,Population ,Diastole ,Nocturnal ,Essential hypertension ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Diurnal temperature variation ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Circadian Rhythm ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Ambulatory ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Objective: To investigate in a selected population of patients with a recently diagnosed essential hypertension the short-term intrasubject variability of diurnal changes in blood pressure (BP). Methods: Two hundred and eight consecutive, recently diagnosed, never treated essential hypertensives (119 men, 89 women, 46 ± 12 years) underwent 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) twice within 3 weeks. Dipping pattern was defined as a reduction in average systolic and diastolic BP at night greater than 10% compared to average daytime values. Results: 177 subjects (85%) showed no change in their diurnal variations in BP. Of the 159 subjects who had a dipping pattern on first ABPM, 134 (90.6%) confirmed this type of profile on the second ABPM, while 15 (9.4%) showed a non-dipping pattern. Of the 59 subjects who had a non-dipping pattern on the first ABPM, 43 (72.2%) confirmed their initial profile on the second ABPM, while 16 (28.8%) did not. Conclusion: These findings indicate that short-term reproducibility of diurnal changes in BP in early phases of untreated essential hypertension, characterized by a large prevalence of dipping pattern, is overall satisfactory. However, our study underlines that also in this particularly selected population of hypertensives the definition of non-dipping status on the basis of a single ABPM remains unreliable in about one-third of patients.
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- 2002
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28. Isolated ambulatory hypertension and changes in target organ damage in treated hypertensive patients
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Fabio Magrini, Cesare Cuspidi, Alberto Zanchetti, Veronica Fusi, Eleonora Catini, Stefano Meani, Cristiana Valerio, Cuspidi, C, Meani, S, Fusi, V, Valerio, C, Catini, E, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Isolated ambulatory hypertension, target organ damage ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Essential hypertension ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Excretion ,Electrocardiography ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,Antihypertensive Agents ,business.industry ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Echocardiography ,Hypertension ,Ambulatory ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Microalbuminuria ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Isolated ambulatory hypertension is a condition characterized by elevated ambulatory but normal clinic blood pressure (BP), and has been reported to be associated with increased cardiovascular risk in untreated subjects. However, little is known about the relationship between this condition and intermediate end points such as target organ damage (TOD) in treated hypertensives. We investigated the impact of isolated ambulatory hypertension on left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and microalbuminuria (MA) in a selected sample of treated nondiabetic hypertensives with effective and prolonged clinic BP control (BP
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- 2005
29. What is the accuracy of clinic blood pressure measurement?
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Cesare Cuspidi, Carla Sala, Fabio Magrini, Erika Santin, Marta Rescaldani, Sala, C, Santin, E, Rescaldani, M, Cuspidi, C, and Magrini, F
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Supine position ,Systole ,Posture ,Essential hypertension ,Sitting ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Sex Factors ,Diastole ,Internal Medicine ,Medicine ,Outpatient clinic ,Humans ,In patient ,Single-Blind Method ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Clinical Practice ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,clinic blood pressure measurement ,Female ,business ,human activities - Abstract
Background: In clinical practice, blood pressure (BP) is frequently measured at the end of the visit in patients sitting on one side of the bed and not on a chair according to guidelines. Methods: In 540 consecutive subjects with essential hypertension (EH) attending a hospital outpatient clinic, BP was measured in the following sequence: 1) patient seated on chair for at least 5 min, 2) patient supine, 3) patient seated on bed, and 4) patient standing for a few minutes. Results: We found that mean (±SEM) BP was 143.5/87.2 ± 0.9/0.5, 153.4/89.7 ± 1.0/0.5, 148.9/90.9 ± 1.0/0.5, and 144.8/91.7 ± 1.0/0.6 mm Hg, respectively (P
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- 2004
30. Cardiovascular target organ damage in essential hypertensives with or without reproducible nocturnal fall in blood pressure
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Cristiana Valerio, M Salerno, Laura Lonati, B Severgnini, Veronica Fusi, Fabio Magrini, Cesare Cuspidi, Stefano Meani, Alberto Zanchetti, Cuspidi, C, Meani, S, Salerno, M, Valerio, C, Fusi, V, Severgnini, B, Lonati, L, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Physiology ,Radioimmunoassay ,Blood Pressure ,Essential hypertension ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Cardiovascular target organ damage ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Outpatient clinic ,Medicine ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,business.industry ,Carotid ultrasonography ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Circadian Rhythm ,Blood pressure ,Carotid Arteries ,Echocardiography ,Hypertension ,Cardiology ,Microalbuminuria ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Blood sampling - Abstract
Objective: The clinical significance of classifying patients as dippers and non-dippers on the basis of a single period of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) has been questioned. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between nocturnal dipping status, defined on the basis of two periods of ABPM, and cardiac and extracardiac target organ damage in essential hypertension. Methods: A total of 375 never-treated essential hypertensive patients [mean 24-h blood pressure (BP) ≥ 125/80 mmHg; mean ± SD age 45.9 ± 11.9 years] referred for the first time to our outpatient clinic underwent the following procedures: (i) repeated clinic BP measurements; (ii) blood sampling for routine chemistry examinations; (iii) 24-h urine collection for microalbuminuria; (iv) ABPM over two 24-h periods within 4 weeks; (v) echocardiography; and (vi) carotid ultrasonography. Results: A reproducible nocturnal dipping (decrease in BP > 10% from mean daytime BP in both ABPM periods) and non-dipping profile (decrease in BP < 10% in both ABPM periods) was found in 199 (group I) and 79 patients (group II), respectively; 97 patients (group III) had a variable dipping profile. The three groups did not differ with regard to age, gender, body mass index, clinic BP, 48-h BP and heart rate. Left ventricular mass index, interventricular septum thickness, left atrium and aortic root diameters were significantly higher in group II compared with group I (mean ± SD 108.5 ± 19.5 versus 99.7 ± 19.6 g/m2, P < 0.05; 9.3 ± 0.9 versus 9.1 ± 0.9 mm, P < 0.05; 33.6 ± 3.6 versus 32.2 ± 3.7 mm, P < 0.01; 36.9 ± 4.6 mm versus 35.5 ± 4.6, P < 0.05, respectively). The smaller differences seen between groups II and III and between groups I and III were not statistically significant. The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (defined as a left ventricular mass index > 134 g/m2 in men and > 110 g/m2 in women) was greater in group II (19%) than In group I (6%) (P < 0.05), whereas the differences between groups Il and III and between groups I and 111 did not reach statistical significance. Differences among the three groups in the prevalence of carotid structural alterations (such as carotid plaques or intima-media thickening) were not statistically significant, and microalbuminuria had a similar prevalence in all three groups. Conclusions: Despite similar clinic and 48-h BP values, never-treated hypertensive patients with a persistent non-dipper pattern showed a significantly greater extent of cardiac structural alterations compared with subjects with a reproducible dipping pattern, but not those with a variable BP nocturnal profile. A non-dipping pattern diagnosed on two concordant ABPM periods instead of a single monitoring therefore represents a clinical trait associated with more pronounced cardiac abnormalities. Finally, in non-dipping middle-aged hypertensives, echocardiography appears to provide a more accurate risk stratification than carotid ultrasonography or microalbuminuria. © 2004 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
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- 2004
31. Home blood pressure measurement and its relationship with blood pressure control in a large selected hypertensive population
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Cristiana Valerio, B Severgnini, Alberto Zanchetti, Cesare Cuspidi, Gastone Leonetti, Eleonora Catini, M Salerno, Fabio Magrini, Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Cuspidi, C, Meani, S, Fusi, V, Salerno, M, Valerio, C, Severgnini, B, Catini, E, Leonetti, G, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Physical examination ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Informed consent ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medical history ,education ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Home blood pressure ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Blood pressure ,Italy ,Hypertension ,Physical therapy ,Female ,business - Abstract
Despite the impressive increase of home blood pressure monitoring (BPM) among hypertensive patients over the last few years, a limited number of studies have analysed the rate of home BPM and its relationship with target blood pressure (BP) control, in representative samples of the hypertensive population. The objectives of the study were first to evaluate the prevalence of home BPM in a large selected group of treated hypertensive patients referred to our outpatient hypertension hospital clinic. Second, to assess the rate of satisfactory clinic BP control in patients with or without familiarity with home BPM. In all, 1350 consecutive hypertensive patients who attended our hypertension centre during a period of 12 months and were regularly followed up by the same medical team were included in the study. After informed consent all patients underwent the following procedures: (1) accurate medical history (implemented by a structured questionnaire on demographic and clinical characteristics, including questions concerning home BPM); (2) physical examination; (3) clinic BP measurement; (4) routine examinations; and (5) standard 12-lead electrocardiogram. A total of 897 patients (66%) out of 1350 (687 men, 663 women, age 58.6±12.3 years, mean clinic BP 141±16/87±9mmHg) were regularly practising home BPM. In this group of patients, home BPM was associated with a significantly greater rate of satisfactory BP control (49.2 vs 45.6%, P
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- 2004
32. Reproducibility of nocturnal blood pressure fall in early phases of untreated essential hypertension: A prospective observational study
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Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Cristiana Valerio, Alberto Zanchetti, B Severgnini, Fabio Magrini, M Salerno, Cesare Cuspidi, Laura Lonati, Cuspidi, C, Meani, S, Salerno, M, Valerio, C, Fusi, V, Severgnini, B, Lonati, L, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Systole ,Blood Pressure ,Essential hypertension ,Cohort Studies ,Diastole ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Reproducibility ,biology ,Dipper ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Nocturnal blood pressure ,Untreated hypertension ,Surgery ,Circadian Rhythm ,Hypertension ,Cardiology ,Observational study ,Female ,Early phase ,business ,Reproducibility nocturnal blood pressure fall - Abstract
A number of studies have shown that a smaller than normal nocturnal blood pressure (BP) decrease is associated with cardiovascular disease. However, no large prospective studies have examined the reliability of nocturnal dipping within individuals. The aim of our study was to investigate the short-term variability of nocturnal BP fall in a large cohort of patients with recently diagnosed essential hypertension. In all, 414 uncomplicated never treated hypertensive patients referred to our outpatient hypertension hospital clinic (mean age 46±12 years; 257M, 157 F) prospectively underwent: (1) repeated clinic BP measurements; (2) routine examinations recommended by WHO/ISH guidelines; and (3) ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) twice within a 4-week period. Dipping pattern was defined as a reduction in the average systolic and diastolic BP at night greater than 10% compared to average daytime values. Overall, 311 patients (75.1%) showed no change in their diurnal variations in BP. Of the 278 patients who had a dipping pattern on the first ABPM, 219 (78.7%) confirmed this type of profile on the second ABPM, while 59 (21.3%) showed a nondipping pattern. Among 37 dipper patients with > 20% of nocturnal systolic BP decrease (extreme dippers), only 16 (43.2%) had this marked fall in BP on the second ABPM. Of the 136 patients who had a nondipping pattern on the first ABPM, 92 (67.6%) confirmed their initial profile on the second ABPM, while 44 (32.4%) did not. Patients with reproducible nondipping profile were older (48±12 years) than those with reproducible dipping profile (44±12 years, P< 0.05). These findings indicate that: (1) short-term reproducibility of nocturnal fall in BP in untreated middle-aged hypertensives is rather limited: overall, one-fourth of patients changed their initial dipping patterns when they were studied again after a few weeks; (2) this was particularly true for extreme dipping and nondipping patterns; (3) abnormalities in nocturnal BP fall, assessed by a single ABPM, cannot be taken as independent predictors of increased cardiovascular risk. © 2004 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved.
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- 2004
33. High prevalence of retinal vascular changes in never-treated essential hypertensives: an inter- and intra-observer reproducibility study with non-mydriatic retinography
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Cesare Cuspidi, Fabio Magrini, Eleonora Catini, Daniela E. Salerno, A. Esposito, Cristiana Valerio, Alberto Zanchetti, M Salerno, Stefano Meani, Cuspidi, C, Salerno, M, Salerno, D, Meani, S, Valerio, C, Esposito, A, Catini, E, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fundus Oculi ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Comorbidity ,Retinography ,Essential hypertension ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Retinal Diseases ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,Clinical significance ,Obesity ,Ultrasonography ,Observer Variation ,business.industry ,Microcirculation ,Reproducibility of Results ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,retinal vascular changes ,Surgery ,Radiography ,Blood pressure ,chemistry ,Italy ,Organ Specificity ,Hypertension ,Cardiology ,Microalbuminuria ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Background: The clinical significance of stratifying cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients on the basis of retinal changes such as arteriolar narrowing or arterio-venous crossing has been criticized. Aim: Objectives of the study were: (i) to compare the prevalence of retinal abnormalities detected by non-mydriatic retinography with that of other quantitative markers of target organ damage (TOD), such as echocardiographically determined left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), carotid structural abnormalities and microalbuminuria in recently diagnosed and never treated hypertensives; (ii) to assess the inter- and intra-observer reproducibility in evaluating retinal microvascular changes. Methods: One hundred ninety-seven grade 1 (73%) and grade 2 essential hypertensives (119 males; mean age 46.8 ± 12.0 years, duration of hypertension: 2.3 ± 1.8 years) referred for the first time to our outpatient hypertension hospital clinic were subjected to the following procedures: (i) repeated clinic blood pressure (BP) measurements; (ii) electrocardiogram; (iii) routine blood chemistry and urinalysis; (iv) 24-h urine collection for microalbuminuria; (v) 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring; (vi) non-mydriatic retinography; (vii) echocardiogram; (viii) carotid ultrasonography. Retinal changes were evaluated according to a modified Keith, Wagener and Barker (KWB) classification by two physicians, who had no knowledge of the patients' characteristics. These following markers of TOD were considered: (i) left ventricular mass index ≥125 g/m2 in men and ≥110 g/m2 in women; (ii at least one carotid plaque (focal thickening >1.3 mm) or diffuse common carotid thickening (≥0.9 mm); (iii) microalbuminuria (urinary albumin excretion ≥30 and
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- 2004
34. Is the nocturnal fall in blood pressure reduced in essential hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome?
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Alberto Zanchetti, Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, B Severgnini, Cristiana Valerio, Carla Sala, Eleonora Catini, Cesare Cuspidi, Fabio Magrini, Cuspidi, C, Meani, S, Fusi, V, Severgnini, B, Valerio, C, Catini, E, Sala, C, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Waist ,Cross-sectional study ,Nocturnal fall in blood pressure , metabolic syndrome ,Blood Pressure ,Physical examination ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical history ,Metabolic Syndrome ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Circadian Rhythm ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Blood pressure ,Endocrinology ,Hypertension ,Ambulatory ,Cardiology ,Female ,Metabolic syndrome ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine whether an impaired reduction in nocturnal blood pressure (BP), defined on the basis of two periods of ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), is present in hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome, as defined by the NCEP criteria. Methods: 460 grade 1 and 2 untreated essential hypertensives (mean age 45.9 ± 11.9 years) referred for the first time to our outpatient hospital clinic underwent the following procedures: 1) medical history and physical examination; 2) repeated clinic BP measurements; 3) routine examinations; 4) ABPM over two 24-hour periods within 4 weeks. Metabolic syndrome was defined as at least three of the following alterations: increased waist circumference, increased triglycerides, decreased HDL-cholesterol, increased BP, or high fasting glucose. Nocturnal dipping was defined as a night-time reduction in average SBP and DBP > 10% compared to average daytime values. Results: The 135 patients with metabolic syndrome (group I) were similar for age, gender and known duration of hypertension to the 325 patients without it (group II). There were no significant differences between the two groups in average 48-hour, daytime, night-time SBP/DBP values and the percentage nocturnal SBP and DBP decrease (-17.7/-15.7 vs.-18.4/-16.2, p = ns). A reproducible nocturnal dipping (decrease in BP > 10% from mean daytime in both ABPM periods) and non-dipping profile (decrease in BP ≤ 10% in both ABPM periods) was found in 74 (54.8%) and 29 (21.4%) in group I and in 169 (52.1%) and 73 (22.4%) in group II, respectively (p = ns); 32 patients (23.7%) in group I and 83 patients (25.5%) in group II had a variable dipping profile (p = ns). Conclusions: This study shows that no significant difference exists in nocturnal BP patterns, assessed by two ABPMs, in untreated essential hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome compared to those without it. © 2004 Taylor & Francis on licence from Blood Pressure.
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- 2004
35. Non-dipper treated hypertensive patients do not have increased cardiac structural alterations
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Fabio Magrini, Alberto Zanchetti, Giovanni Bertazzoli, Stefano Meani, Cesare Cuspidi, I. Michev, Cristiana Valerio, Cuspidi, C, Michev, I, Meani, S, Valerio, C, Bertazzoli, G, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Male ,lcsh:Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hypertension ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Diastole ,Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Blood Pressure ,Comorbidity ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Risk Assessment ,antihypertensive treatment ,Non-dipper and cardiac structural alterations ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Mass index ,ambulatory blood pressure ,Ultrasonography ,Angiology ,biology ,Dipper ,business.industry ,Research ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,left ventricular hypertrophy ,Treatment Outcome ,Blood pressure ,Italy ,Blood chemistry ,lcsh:RC666-701 ,Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Non-dipping pattern in hypertensive patients has been shown to be associated with an excess of target organ damage and with an adverse outcome. The aim of our study was to assess whether a reduced nocturnal fall in blood pressure (BP), established on the basis of a single 24-h BP monitoring, in treated essential hypertensives is related to more prominent cardiac alterations. Methods We enrrolled 229 treated hypertensive patients attending the out-patient clinic of our hypertension centre; each patient was subjected to the following procedures : 1) clinic BP measurement; 2) blood and urine sampling for routine blood chemistry and urine examination; 3) standard 12-lead electrocardiogram; 4) echocardiography; 5) ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM). For the purpose of this study ABPM was carried-out in three subgroups with different clinic BP profile : 1) patients with satisfactory BP control (BP < 140/90 mmHg; group I, n = 58); 2) patients with uncontrolled clinic BP (clinic BP values ≥ 140 and/or 90 mmHg) but lower self-measured BP (< 20 mmHg for systolic BP and/or 10 mmHg for diastolic BP; group II, n = 72); 3) patients with refractory hypertension, selected according to WHO/ISH guidelines definition (group III, n = 99). Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) was defined by two gender-specific criteria (LV mass index ≥125/ m2 in men and 110 g/m2 in women, ≥51/gm2.7 in men and 47/g/m2.7 in women). Results Of the 229 study participants 119 (51.9%) showed a fall in SBP/DBP < 10% during the night (non-dippers). The prevalence of non-dippers was significantly lower in group I (44.8%) and II (41.6%) than in group III (63.9%, p < 0.01 III vs II and I). The prevalence of LVH varied from 10.3 to 24.1% in group I, 31.9 to 43.1% in group II and from 60.6 to 67.7% in group III (p < 0.01, III vs II and I). No differences in cardiac structure, analysed as continuous variable as well as prevalence of LVH, were found in relationship to dipping or non-dipping status in the three groups. Conclusions In treated essential hypertensives with or without BP control the extent of nocturnal BP decrease is not associated with an increase in LV mass or LVH prevalence; therefore, the non-dipping profile, diagnosed on the basis of a single ABPM, does not identify hypertensive patients with greater cardiac damage.
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- 2003
36. Awareness of hypertension guidelines in primary care: results of a regionwide survey in Italy
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B Severgnini, Giovanni Bertazzoli, Gastone Leonetti, Carla Sala, Stefano Meani, Cesare Cuspidi, M Salerno, I. Michev, Cristiana Valerio, Alberto Zanchetti, Fabio Magrini, Cuspidi, C, Michev, I, Meani, S, Severgnini, B, Sala, C, Salerno, M, Valerio, C, Bertazzoli, G, Leonetti, G, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Control (management) ,Psychological intervention ,Primary care ,World Health Organization ,Awareness of hypertension guidelines ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Multiple choice ,Response rate (survey) ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Professional development ,Awareness ,Blood pressure ,Italy ,Family medicine ,Health Care Surveys ,Hypertension ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Population study ,Female ,business ,Family Practice - Abstract
Unsatisfactory blood pressure (BP) control so often described in treated hypertensive populations is also explained by insufficient physicians' awareness of experts' guidelines. We assessed awareness of current recommendations about hypertension management in a general practice setting, using the World Health Organization/International Society of Hypertension (WHO/ISH) 1999 guidelines as reference. In a regionwide survey, a total of 5133 physicians (three-quarters of all active general practitioners in Lombardy, a region of north-western Italy) were contacted by letter and received a multiple choice 10-item questionnaire. Data on physicians' demographic characteristics, information on hypertension prevalence and their perception of BP control among their patients were also requested in an additional form. The number of answers in agreement with WHO/ISH guidelines was used as an awareness measure. This was considered adequate if correct answers to six out of 10 questions, including an appropriate definition of hypertension, were provided. Of the 1256 returned questionnaires (a 24.5% response rate), 1162 were suitable for analysis. The mean score of correct answers was 5.3 points and only 20.1% of the study population correctly answered at least six of the questions (including that on the definition of hypertension in the elderly). Guidelines awareness was negatively related to increase in physicians' age and duration of clinical practice and by the male gender. Finally, the physicians reported a high rate of achieved BP control, and those who were considered to have achieved highest rates (> 75%) of control in their patients had a lower rate of adequate knowledge than those who reported less-successful therapeutic results (18 vs 25%, P < 0.01), suggesting that they ignored or disregarded the goal BP recommended by the guidelines. This large regional survey shows that a sufficient degree of guidelines awareness is present in a minority of primary-care physicians in the Italian region of Lombardy. Therefore, further efforts are required to intensify information strategies for improving professional education, training and practice organization aimed at achieving therapeutic goals. Physicians with longer duration of clinical practice represent a particularly relevant target group for these interventions.
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- 2003
37. Change in cardiovascular risk profile by echocardiography in medium-risk elderly hypertensives
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Alberto Zanchetti, Cesare Cuspidi, Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Giovanni Bertazzoli, Cristiana Valerio, Fabio Magrini, B Severgnini, L Michev, Cuspidi, C, Michev, L, Severgnini, B, Meani, S, Fusi, V, Valerio, C, Bertazzoli, G, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
- Subjects
Male ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical examination ,cardiovascular risk profile , echocardiography , elderly hypertensives ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Essential hypertension ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Sex Factors ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Blood pressure ,Blood chemistry ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Echocardiography ,Hypertension ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,business ,Risk assessment - Abstract
It has been clearly demonstrated that ageing and arterial hypertension are both associated with an increased prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), which is a powerful risk factor for cardiovascular (CV) events. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of echocardiographic LVH in profiling the absolute CV risk stratification according to the 1999 World Health Organization-International Society of Hypertension (WHO/ISH) guidelines in elderly hypertensive patients. A total of 223 never-treated elderly patients (> or =65 years) with essential hypertension (98 men, 125 women, mean age 72+/-5 years) referred to our outpatient hospital clinic were included in the study. They underwent the following procedures: (1) medical history, physical examination, and clinic blood pressure; (2) routine blood chemistry and urine analysis and (3) electrocardiogram. The risk was initially stratified according to the routine procedures suggested by WHO/ISH guidelines and subsequently reassessed by adding the results of echocardiography (LVH as left ventricular mass index >51 g/m(2.7) in men and >47g/m(2.7) in women). According to routine classification, 56% (n=125) were medium-risk patients, 29% (64) high-risk and 15% (34) very-high-risk patients. The overall prevalence of LVH was 56% (48% in medium-risk and 62% in high-risk or very-high-risk patients, P
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- 2003
38. Compliance to hypertension guidelines in clinical practice: A multicentre pilot study in Italy
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Gastone Leonetti, Stefano Meani, Cesare Cuspidi, Laura Lonati, M Cristofari, Gaetana Palumbo, G. Garavelli, A. Vaccarella, Alberto Zanchetti, I. Michev, Fabio Magrini, Cuspidi, C, Michev, I, Lonati, L, Vaccarella, A, Cristofari, M, Garavelli, G, Palumbo, G, Meani, S, Leonetti, G, and Magrini, F
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,MEDLINE ,Pilot Projects ,Physical examination ,World Health Organization ,Compliance to hypertension guidelines ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Creatinine ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Primary Health Care ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Guideline ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Blood pressure ,Italy ,chemistry ,Hypertension ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Female ,Microalbuminuria ,Guideline Adherence ,business ,Chi-squared distribution - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic approach to recently diagnosed hypertensive patients by primary care physicians in Italy and to find out whether general practitioners manage these patients according to 1999 WHO/ISH guidelines recommendations. In total, 228 consecutive patients (117 men and 111 women, mean age 51 ± 12 years) with recently diagnosed hypertension (< 2 years) referred for the first time to six outpatient hypertension centres throughout Italy were included in the study. The primary care physicians' approach was evaluated during the specialist visit by a specific questionnaire containing detailed questions about diagnostic work-up and treatment made at the time of the first diagnosis of hypertension. At the study visit, 71% of the patients were on treatment with antihypertensive drugs and 18.7% of them had blood pressure (BP) values lower than 140/90 mmHg. A complete clinical and laboratory evaluation according to the minimum work-up suggested by the guidelines had been carried out in only 10% of the patients. A full physical examination had been performed in 60% of the patients, electrocardiogram in 54%, serum total cholesterol in 53%, glucose in 49%, creatinine in 49%, urine analysis in 46%, potassium in 42%, and fundus oculi in 19%. Additional investigations such as ambulatory BP monitoring, echocardiogram, carotid ultrasonogram, and microalbuminuria had been carried out in a minority of patients (21, 18, 9, and 3%, respectively). The impact on hypertension guidelines on patients' management in everyday primary care practice appears marginal. Thus, our findings indicate that the majority of general practitioners manage hypertensive patients according to a simple BP-based approach rather than a more integrated approach based on global risk stratification.
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- 2002
39. High prevalence of cardiac and extracardiac target organ damage in refractory hypertension
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Veronica Fusi, Stefano Meani, Alberto Zanchetti, Fabio Magrini, M Salerno, Cesare Cuspidi, I. Michev, B Severgnini, Lorena Sampieri, G. Macca, Cuspidi, C, Macca, G, Sampieri, L, Michev, I, Salerno, M, Fusi, V, Severgnini, B, Meani, S, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
- Subjects
Carotid Artery Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart disease ,Physiology ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Muscle hypertrophy ,Refractory ,Retinal Diseases ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,cardiac and extracardiac organ damage , refractory hypertension ,High prevalence ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Target organ damage ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Echocardiography ,Hypertension ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Objective: Target organ damage (TOD) in chronically treated hypertensives is related to effective blood pressure (BP) control. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of cardiac and extracardiac TOD in patients with refractory hypertension (RH) compared with well-controlled treated hypertensives (C). Methods: Fifty-four consecutive patients with RH (57 ± 10 years), selected according to WHO/ISH guidelines definition, and 51 essential hypertensives (55 ± 10 years) with satisfactory BP control obtained by association therapy, underwent the following procedures: (1) clinic BP measurement; (2) blood sampling for routine chemistry examinations; (3) 24 h urine collection for microalbuminuria; (4) non-mydriatic retinography; (5) echocardiogram; (6) carotid ultrasonogram. In order to exclude 'office resistance' (defined as clinic BP > 140/90 mmHg and average 24 h BP ≤ 125/79 mmHg), all patients with RH were subjected to 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring. Results: Both groups were similar for age, gender, body surface area, smoking habit and duration of hypertension, glucose, creatinine and lipid levels. By definition, clinic BP was significantly higher in RH than C (161 ± 19/96 ± 9 versus 127 ± 6/80 ± 5 mmHg, respectively, P < 0.01). The increased prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and carotid intima-media (IM) thickening (40 versus 12%, P < 0.01, according to a non-gender-specific partition value of 125 g/m2; and 36 versus 14%, P < 0.01, according to IM thickness ≥ 1.0 mm, respectively); a higher prevalence of carotid plaques (65 versus 32%, P < 0.05), a more advanced retinal involvement (grade II and III, 73 and 5% versus 38 and 0%, P < 0.01) and a greater albumin urinary excretion (22 ± 32 mg/24 h versus 11 ± 13 mg/24 h, P < 0.01) were found in RH compared to C. Conclusions: Our study suggests that RH is a clinical condition associated with a high prevalence of TOD at cardiac, macro- and microvascular level and consequently with high absolute cardiovascular risk, which needs a particularly intensive therapeutic approach aimed to normalize BP levels and to induce TOD regression. © 2001 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
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- 2001
40. Target organ damage and non-dipping pattern defined by two sessions of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in recently diagnosed essential hypertensive patients
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Fabio Magrini, Veronica Fusi, Alberto Zanchetti, B Severgnini, M Salerno, Lorena Sampieri, G. Macca, Cesare Cuspidi, I. Michev, Cuspidi, C, Macca, G, Sampieri, L, Fusi, V, Severgnini, B, Michev, I, Salerno, M, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Physiology ,Population ,Blood Pressure ,Essential hypertension ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Retina ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,education ,Body surface area ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Carotid ultrasonography ,Reproducibility of Results ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Circadian Rhythm ,Blood pressure ,Carotid Arteries ,Blood chemistry ,Target organ damage and non-dipping pattern ,Echocardiography ,Hypertension ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Tunica Intima ,Tunica Media - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate in a selected population of patients with a recent diagnosis of hypertension whether a reduced nocturnal fall in blood pressure, confirmed by two 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) sessions is associated with more prominent target organ damage (TOD). Methods: The study was structured in two phases: in the first, 141 consecutive, recently diagnosed, never-treated essential hypertensives underwent 24 h ABPM twice within 3 weeks; in the second phase, 118 of these patients showing reproducible dipping or non-dipping patterns underwent the following procedures: (1) routine blood chemistry, (2) 24 h urinary collection for microalbuminuria, (3) amydriatic photography of ocular fundi, (4) echocardiography and (5) carotid ultrasonography. Results: The 92 patients with (>10%) night-time fall in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (dippers) in both monitoring sessions were similar for age, gender, body surface area, smoking habit, clinic BP, 24 h and 48 h BP to the 26 patients with a ≤10% nocturnal fall (non-dippers) in both sessions. The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (defined by two criteria: (1) LV mass index ≥ 125 g/m2 in both genders; (2) LV mass index ≥ 120 and 100 g/m2 in men and women, respectively) and that of carotid intima-media (IM) thickening (IM thickness ≥ 0.8 mm) were significantly higher in non-dippers than in dippers (23 versus 5%, P < 0.01; 50 versus 22%, P < 0.05; and 38 versus 18%, P < 0.05, respectively). There were no differences among the two groups in the prevalence of retinal changes and microalbuminuria. The strength of the association of LV mass index with night-time BP was slightly but significantly greater than that with daytime BP. Conclusions: This study suggests that a blunted reduction in nocturnal BP, persisting over time, may play a pivotal role in the development of some expressions of TOD, such as LVH and IM thickening, during the early phase of essential hypertension, despite similar clinic BP, 24 h and 48 h BP levels observed in non-dippers and dippers
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- 2001
41. Influence of different echocardiographic criteria for detection of left ventricular hypertrophy on cardiovascular risk stratification in recently diagnosed essential hypertensives
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I. Michev, Fabio Magrini, Lorena Sampieri, G. Macca, C Corti, Cesare Cuspidi, Alberto Zanchetti, Veronica Fusi, B Severgnini, M Salerno, Cuspidi, C, Macca, G, Sampieri, L, Michev, I, Fusi, V, Salerno, M, Severgnini, B, Corti, C, Magrini, F, and Zanchetti, A
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart disease ,MEDLINE ,Blood Pressure ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Muscle hypertrophy ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,Ventricule gauche ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,left ventricular hypertrophy , cardiovascular risk stratification ,Echocardiography ,Hypertension complications ,Hypertension ,Risk stratification ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Risk Adjustment ,business - Abstract
Background: Hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) need a prompter and more intensive pharmacological treatment than subjects without evidence of cardiac involvement. So the detection of LVH plays an important role for decision-making in hypertensives. Objective: To evaluate the impact of different echocardiographic criteria to define LVH in a more precise stratification of absolute cardiovascular risk in hypertensives without target organ damage (TOD) as assessed by routine investigations. Methods: A total of 100 never treated patients with grade 1 and 2 essential hypertension (53 men, 47 women, age 44 ± 12 years) referred for the first time to our outpatient clinic were included in the study. They underwent the following procedures: (1) family and personal medical history, (2) clinic blood pressure (BP) measurement, (3) routine blood chemistry and urine analysis, (4) electrocardiogram, (5) echocardiogram. Risk was stratified according to the criteria suggested by the 1999 WHO-ISH guidelines. TOD was initially evaluated by routine procedures only, and subsequently reassessed by using six different echocardiographic criteria to recognise LVH: (a) left ventricular mass index (LVMI)
- Published
- 2001
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