3,733 results on '"Guglielmo, M."'
Search Results
152. Quantitative versus qualitative evaluation of static stress computed tomographic perfusion to detect hemodinamically significant coronary artery disease in intermediate to high risk patients: P719
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Guglielmo, M., Guaricci, A I., Baggiano, A., Fazzari, F., Andreini, D., Calligaris, G., Galli, S., Teruzzi, G., Trabattoni, D., Fabbiocchi, F., Lualdi, A., Montorsi, P., Bartorelli, A., Pepi, M., and Pontone, G.
- Published
- 2017
153. Prediction of myocardial blood flow under stress conditions by means of a computational model.
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Di Gregorio S, Vergara C, Pelagi GM, Baggiano A, Zunino P, Guglielmo M, Fusini L, Muscogiuri G, Rossi A, Rabbat MG, Quarteroni A, and Pontone G
- Subjects
- Humans, Coronary Angiography methods, Coronary Circulation, Predictive Value of Tests, Reproducibility of Results, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Perfusion Imaging methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Quantification of myocardial blood flow (MBF) and functional assessment of coronary artery disease (CAD) can be achieved through stress myocardial computed tomography perfusion (stress-CTP). This requires an additional scan after the resting coronary computed tomography angiography (cCTA) and administration of an intravenous stressor. This complex protocol has limited reproducibility and non-negligible side effects for the patient. We aim to mitigate these drawbacks by proposing a computational model able to reproduce MBF maps., Methods: A computational perfusion model was used to reproduce MBF maps. The model parameters were estimated by using information from cCTA and MBF measured from stress-CTP (MBF
CTP ) maps. The relative error between the computational MBF under stress conditions (MBFCOMP ) and MBFCTP was evaluated to assess the accuracy of the proposed computational model., Results: Applying our method to 9 patients (4 control subjects without ischemia vs 5 patients with myocardial ischemia), we found an excellent agreement between the values of MBFCOMP and MBFCTP . In all patients, the relative error was below 8% over all the myocardium, with an average-in-space value below 4%., Conclusion: The results of this pilot work demonstrate the accuracy and reliability of the proposed computational model in reproducing MBF under stress conditions. This consistency test is a preliminary step in the framework of a more ambitious project which is currently under investigation, i.e., the construction of a computational tool able to predict MBF avoiding the stress protocol and potential side effects while reducing radiation exposure., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. Recommendations in pre-procedural imaging assessment for TAVI intervention: SIC-SIRM position paper part 2 (CT and MR angiography, standard medical reporting, future perspectives).
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Marano R, Pontone G, Agricola E, Alushi B, Bartorelli A, Cameli M, Carrabba N, Esposito A, Faletti R, Francone M, Galea N, Golino P, Guglielmo M, Palmisano A, Petronio S, Petullà M, Pradella S, Ribichini F, Romeo F, Russo V, Scandura S, Schicchi N, Spaccarotella C, Tomai F, Indolfi C, and Centonze M
- Subjects
- Angiography, Aortic Valve diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve surgery, Humans, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Aortic Valve Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Stenosis surgery, Cardiology, Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement methods
- Abstract
Non-invasive cardiovascular imaging owns a pivotal role in the preoperative assessment of patient candidates for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI), providing a wide range of crucial information to select the patients who will benefit the most and have the procedure done safely. This document has been developed by a joined group of experts of the Italian Society of Cardiology and the Italian Society of Medical and Interventional Radiology and aims to produce an updated consensus statement about the pre-procedural imaging assessment in candidate patients for TAVI intervention. The writing committee consisted of members and experts of both societies who worked jointly to develop a more integrated approach in the field of cardiac and vascular radiology. Part 2 of the document will cover CT and MR angiography, standard medical reporting, and future perspectives., (© 2022. Italian Society of Medical Radiology.)
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
155. Atom Interferometry with the Sr optical clock transition for gravity measurements
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Leonardo Salvi, Liang Hu, Jonathan Tinsley, Enlong Wang, Nicola Poli, and Guglielmo M. Tino
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- 2022
156. Artificial intelligence with spatial-attention for ventricular volumes and mass assessment in cardiac magnetic resonance images with susceptibility artifacts
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Penso, M, primary, Babbaro, M, additional, Guglielmo, M, additional, Moccia, S, additional, Giacari, G M, additional, Chiesa, M, additional, Maragna, R, additional, Rabbat, M G, additional, Pepi, M, additional, and Pontone, G, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
157. Atom Interferometry with the Sr optical clock transition for gravity measurements
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Salvi, Leonardo, primary, Hu, Liang, additional, Tinsley, Jonathan, additional, Wang, Enlong, additional, Poli, Nicola, additional, and Tino, Guglielmo M., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
158. ST segment elevations: Always a marker of acute myocardial infarction?
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Coppola, G., Carità, P., Corrado, E., Borrelli, A., Rotolo, A., Guglielmo, M., Nugara, C., Ajello, L., Santomauro, M., and Novo, S.
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- 2013
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159. Artificial Intelligence in Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography: From Anatomy to Prognosis
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Muscogiuri, G, Van Assen, M, Tesche, C, De Cecco, C, Chiesa, M, Scafuri, S, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Guaricci, A, Rabbat, M, Pontone, G, Muscogiuri G, Van Assen M, Tesche C, De Cecco CN, Chiesa M, Scafuri S, Guglielmo M, Baggiano A, Fusini L, Guaricci AI, Rabbat MG, Pontone G, Muscogiuri, G, Van Assen, M, Tesche, C, De Cecco, C, Chiesa, M, Scafuri, S, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Guaricci, A, Rabbat, M, Pontone, G, Muscogiuri G, Van Assen M, Tesche C, De Cecco CN, Chiesa M, Scafuri S, Guglielmo M, Baggiano A, Fusini L, Guaricci AI, Rabbat MG, and Pontone G
- Abstract
Cardiac computed tomography angiography (CCTA) is widely used as a diagnostic tool for evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD). Despite the excellent capability to rule-out CAD, CCTA may overestimate the degree of stenosis; furthermore, CCTA analysis can be time consuming, often requiring advanced postprocessing techniques. In consideration of the most recent ESC guidelines on CAD management, which will likely increase CCTA volume over the next years, new tools are necessary to shorten reporting time and improve the accuracy for the detection of ischemia-inducing coronary lesions. The application of artificial intelligence (AI) may provide a helpful tool in CCTA, improving the evaluation and quantification of coronary stenosis, plaque characterization, and assessment of myocardial ischemia. Furthermore, in comparison with existing risk scores, machine-learning algorithms can better predict the outcome utilizing both imaging findings and clinical parameters. Medical AI is moving from the research field to daily clinical practice, and with the increasing number of CCTA examinations, AI will be extensively utilized in cardiac imaging. This review is aimed at illustrating the state of the art in AI-based CCTA applications and future clinical scenarios.
- Published
- 2020
160. Sequential Strategy Including FFR CT Plus Stress-CTP Impacts on Management of Patients with Stable Chest Pain: The Stress-CTP RIPCORD Study
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Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Del Torto, A, Vivona, P, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Soldi, M, Martini, C, Fraschini, E, Rabbat, M, Baessato, F, Cicala, G, Danza, M, Cavaliere, A, Loffreno, A, Palmisano, V, Ricci, F, Rizzon, G, Tonet, E, Viani, G, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Fabbiocchi, F, Montorsi, P, Trabattoni, D, Rossi, A, Fazzari, F, Gaibazzi, N, Andreini, D, Assanelli, E, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, Guaricci, A, Pontone, G, Baggiano A, Fusini L, Del Torto A, Vivona P, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Soldi M, Martini C, Fraschini E, Rabbat MG, Baessato F, Cicala G, Danza ML, Cavaliere A, Loffreno A, Palmisano V, Ricci F, Rizzon G, Tonet E, Viani GM, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Annoni AD, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Fabbiocchi F, Montorsi P, Trabattoni D, Rossi A, Fazzari F, Gaibazzi N, Andreini D, Assanelli EM, Bartorelli AL, Pepi M, Guaricci AI, Pontone G, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Del Torto, A, Vivona, P, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Soldi, M, Martini, C, Fraschini, E, Rabbat, M, Baessato, F, Cicala, G, Danza, M, Cavaliere, A, Loffreno, A, Palmisano, V, Ricci, F, Rizzon, G, Tonet, E, Viani, G, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Fabbiocchi, F, Montorsi, P, Trabattoni, D, Rossi, A, Fazzari, F, Gaibazzi, N, Andreini, D, Assanelli, E, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, Guaricci, A, Pontone, G, Baggiano A, Fusini L, Del Torto A, Vivona P, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Soldi M, Martini C, Fraschini E, Rabbat MG, Baessato F, Cicala G, Danza ML, Cavaliere A, Loffreno A, Palmisano V, Ricci F, Rizzon G, Tonet E, Viani GM, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Annoni AD, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Fabbiocchi F, Montorsi P, Trabattoni D, Rossi A, Fazzari F, Gaibazzi N, Andreini D, Assanelli EM, Bartorelli AL, Pepi M, Guaricci AI, and Pontone G
- Abstract
Stress computed tomography perfusion (Stress-CTP) and computed tomography-derived fractional flow reserve (FFRCT) are functional techniques that can be added to coronary computed tomography angiography (cCTA) to improve the management of patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). This retrospective analysis from the PERFECTION study aims to assess the impact of their availability on the management of patients with suspected CAD scheduled for invasive coronary angiography (ICA) and invasive FFR. The management plan was defined as optimal medical therapy (OMT) or revascularization and was recorded for the following strategies: cCTA alone, cCTA+FFRCT, cCTA+Stress-CTP and cCTA+FFRCT+Stress-CTP. In 291 prospectively enrolled patients, cCTA+FFRCT, cCTA+Stress-CTP and cCTA+FFRCT+Stress-CTP showed a similar rate of reclassification of cCTA findings when FFRCT and Stress-CTP were added to cCTA. cCTA, cCTA+FFRCT, cCTA+Stress-CTP and cCTA+FFRCT+Stress-CTP showed a rate of agreement versus the final therapeutic decision of 63%, 71%, 89%, 84% (cCTA+Stress-CTP and cCTA+FFRCT+Stress-CTP vs cCTA and cCTA+FFRCT: p < 0.01), respectively, and a rate of agreement in terms of the vessels to be revascularized of 57%, 64%, 74%, 71% (cCTA+Stress-CTP and cCTA+FFRCT+Stress-CTP vs cCTA and cCTA+FFRCT: p < 0.01), respectively, with an effective radiation dose (ED) of 2.9 ± 1.3 mSv, 2.9 ± 1.3 mSv, 5.9 ± 2.7 mSv, and 3.1 ± 2.1 mSv. The addition of FFRCT and Stress-CTP improved therapeutic decision-making compared to cCTA alone, and a sequential strategy with cCTA+FFRCT+Stress-CTP represents the best compromise in terms of clinical impact and radiation exposure.
- Published
- 2020
161. Plaque quantification by coronary computed tomography angiography using intravascular ultrasound as a reference standard: A comparison between standard and last generation computed tomography scanners
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Conte, E, Mushtaq, S, Pontone, G, Li Piani, L, Ravagnani, P, Galli, S, Collet, C, Sonck, J, Di Odoardo, L, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Trabattoni, D, Annoni, A, Mancini, M, Formenti, A, Muscogiuri, G, Magatelli, M, Nicoli, F, Poggi, C, Fiorentini, C, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, Montorsi, P, Andreini, D, Conte E., Mushtaq S., Pontone G., Li Piani L., Ravagnani P., Galli S., Collet C., Sonck J., Di Odoardo L., Guglielmo M., Baggiano A., Trabattoni D., Annoni A., Mancini M. E., Formenti A., Muscogiuri G., Magatelli M., Nicoli F., Poggi C., Fiorentini C., Bartorelli A. L., Pepi M., Montorsi P., Andreini D., Conte, E, Mushtaq, S, Pontone, G, Li Piani, L, Ravagnani, P, Galli, S, Collet, C, Sonck, J, Di Odoardo, L, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Trabattoni, D, Annoni, A, Mancini, M, Formenti, A, Muscogiuri, G, Magatelli, M, Nicoli, F, Poggi, C, Fiorentini, C, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, Montorsi, P, Andreini, D, Conte E., Mushtaq S., Pontone G., Li Piani L., Ravagnani P., Galli S., Collet C., Sonck J., Di Odoardo L., Guglielmo M., Baggiano A., Trabattoni D., Annoni A., Mancini M. E., Formenti A., Muscogiuri G., Magatelli M., Nicoli F., Poggi C., Fiorentini C., Bartorelli A. L., Pepi M., Montorsi P., and Andreini D.
- Abstract
Aims: The emerging role of coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) as a non-invasive tool for atherosclerosis evaluation is supported by data reporting a good correlation between CCTA and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) for plaque volume quantification. Aim of the present study was to evaluate whether a last generation CT-scanner may improve coronary plaque volume assessment using IVUS as standard-of-reference. Methods and results: From a registry of 1915 consecutive, all-comers, patients who underwent a clinically indicated IVUS evaluation we enrolled 59 patients who underwent CCTA with a 64-slice CT (Group 1) and 59 patients who underwent CCTA with whole-heart coverage CT scanner (Group 2). Patients who underwent CCTA with unfavourable heart rhythm were not excluded from the analysis. Image quality (4-point Likert scale) focused on plaque analysis was evaluated. Plaque volume quantification by CCTA was compared to IVUS. No difference in clinical characteristics was found between Group 1 and Group 2. Plaque volume quantification by CCTA was considered not feasible in 11 plaques of Group 1 and in 4 plaques of Group 2 (P = 0.09). Higher correlation for plaque volume quantification by CCTA vs. IVUS was demonstrated in Group 2 when compared with Group 1 (r = 0.9888 vs. 0.9499; P < 0.0001). The Bland-Altman analysis showed plaque volume overestimation by CCTA of 11.9 mm3 in Group 1 and 4 mm2 in Group 2 (P < 0.001). Effective radiation dose of CCTA was significantly lower in Group 2 vs. Group 1 (2.7 ± 0.9 vs. 8.1 ± 3.6 mSv, respectively; P < 0.001). Conclusions: CCTA using a new scanner generation showed to be an accurate non-invasive tool to assess and quantify coronary plaque volume.
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- 2020
162. Diagnostic Accuracy of Single-shot 2-Dimensional Multisegment Late Gadolinium Enhancement in Ischemic and Nonischemic Cardiomyopathy
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Muscogiuri, G, Gatti, M, Dell'Aversana, S, Andreini, D, Guaricci, A, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Gripari, P, Rabbat, M, Pepi, M, Pontone, G, Muscogiuri G, Gatti M, Dell'Aversana S, Andreini D, Guaricci AI, Guglielmo M, Baggiano A, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Annoni A, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Gripari P, Rabbat MG, Pepi M, Pontone G., Muscogiuri, G, Gatti, M, Dell'Aversana, S, Andreini, D, Guaricci, A, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Gripari, P, Rabbat, M, Pepi, M, Pontone, G, Muscogiuri G, Gatti M, Dell'Aversana S, Andreini D, Guaricci AI, Guglielmo M, Baggiano A, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Annoni A, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Gripari P, Rabbat MG, Pepi M, and Pontone G.
- Abstract
Purpose:The aim of this study was to assess the reliability of single-shot 2-dimensional multislice late gadolinium enhancement (2D-MSLGE) compared with gold standard single-slice 2D inversion recovery segmented gradient echo (2D-SSLGE).Materials and Methods:Sixty-seven patients prospectively underwent clinically indicated cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging and were enrolled. The image quality was assessed using a 4-point scale. Segments positive for LGE were classified as ischemic or nonischemic for 2D-MSLGE and 2D-SSLGE. Interobserver and intraobserver variability was assessed for both sequences by 2 readers. The endpoints were as follows: (a) detection of myocardial segments involved by LGE and (b) classification of LGE as ischemic and nonischemic pattern. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and diagnostic accuracy value were calculated for the 2 endpoints.Results:2D-MSLGE and 2D-SSLGE were successfully performed in all patients with comparable image quality (1.56±0.59 vs. 1.54±0.58, P=0.84). For the overall population, 2D-MSLGE correctly identified 1093 of 1139 myocardial segments positive for LGE (96%; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 95%-97%), as compared with 2D-SSLGE. Similarly, 2D-MSLGE correctly identified 1128 of 1139 (99%; 95% CI: 98%-99%) and 1108 of 1139 (97%; 95% CI: 96%-98%) of nonischemic and ischemic LGE patterns.Interobserver and intraobserver variability for quantification of LGE using 2D-MSLGE was 0.98 and 0.99, respectively. The acquisition time was shorter for 2D-MSLGE as compared with 2D-SSLGE (2.0±0.5 vs. 6.0±2.0 min, P: 0.01).Conclusions:As compared with 2D-SSLGE, 2D-MSLGE is a reliable tool in both ischemic and nonischemic cardiac disease; it is associated with shorter scan times without the need for prolonged breath holding and may be beneficial for those with dysrhythmia.
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- 2020
163. (Epicardial and microvascular) angina or atypical chest pain: Differential diagnoses with cardiovascular magnetic resonance
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Baggiano, A, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Guaricci, A, Del Torto, A, Pontone, G, Baggiano A, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Guaricci AI, Del Torto A, Pontone G, Baggiano, A, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Guaricci, A, Del Torto, A, Pontone, G, Baggiano A, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Guaricci AI, Del Torto A, and Pontone G
- Abstract
Angina pectoris is a chest discomfort caused by myocardial ischaemia, and it is classified as 'typical' or 'atypical' if specific features are present. Unfortunately, there is a heterogeneous list of cardiac diseases characterized by this symptom as onset sign. Mostly, angina is due to significant epicardial coronary artery stenosis, which causes inadequate oxygen supply increase after raised myocardial oxygen demand. In the absence of significant epicardial stenoses, another potential cause of angina is microvascular dysfunction, related to inadequate response of resistance coronary vessels to vasodilator stimuli. The unique capability of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) in providing extremely detailed morphological and functional information, along with precise stress perfusion defects and wall motion abnormalities depiction, translates it into the test with one of the best diagnostic performance and prognostic stratification among non-invasive cardiac imaging modality. Moreover, CMR is also extremely accurate in detecting non-ischaemic cardiac causes of chest pain (such as myocardial and pericardial inflammation, or stress-related cardiomyopathy), and is very useful in helping physicians to correctly approach patients affected by chest pain.
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- 2020
164. Role of CMR Mapping Techniques in Cardiac Hypertrophic Phenotype
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Baggiano, A, Del Torto, A, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Fusini, L, Babbaro, M, Collevecchio, A, Mollace, R, Scafuri, S, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Mostardini, G, Andreini, D, Guaricci, A, Pepi, M, Fontana, M, Pontone, G, Baggiano A, Del Torto A, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Fusini L, Babbaro M, Collevecchio A, Mollace R, Scafuri S, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Annoni AD, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Mostardini G, Andreini D, Guaricci AI, Pepi M, Fontana M, Pontone G, Baggiano, A, Del Torto, A, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Fusini, L, Babbaro, M, Collevecchio, A, Mollace, R, Scafuri, S, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Mostardini, G, Andreini, D, Guaricci, A, Pepi, M, Fontana, M, Pontone, G, Baggiano A, Del Torto A, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Fusini L, Babbaro M, Collevecchio A, Mollace R, Scafuri S, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Annoni AD, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Mostardini G, Andreini D, Guaricci AI, Pepi M, Fontana M, and Pontone G
- Abstract
Non-ischemic cardiomyopathies represent a heterogeneous group of myocardial diseases potentially leading to heart failure, life-threatening arrhythmias, and eventually death. Myocardial dysfunction is associated with different underlying pathological processes, ultimately inducing changes in morphological appearance. Thus, classification based on presenting morphological phenotypes has been proposed, i.e., dilated, hypertrophic, restrictive, and right ventricular cardiomyopathies. In light of the key diagnostic and prognostic role of morphological and functional features, cardiovascular imaging has emerged as key element in the clinical workflow of suspected cardiomyopathies, and above all, cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) represents the ideal technique to be used: thanks to its physical principles, besides optimal spatial and temporal resolutions, incomparable contrast resolution allows to assess myocardial tissue abnormalities in detail. Traditionally, weighted images and late enhancement images after gadolinium-based contrast agent administration have been used to perform tissue characterization, but in the last decade quantitative assessment of pre-contrast longitudinal relaxation time (native T1), post-contrast longitudinal relaxation time (post-contrast T1) and transversal relaxation time (T2), all displayed with dedicated pixel-wise color-coded maps (mapping), has contributed to give precious knowledge insight, with positive influence of diagnostic accuracy and prognosis assessment, mostly in the setting of the hypertrophic phenotype. This review aims to describe the available evidence of the role of mapping techniques in the assessment of hypertrophic phenotype, and to suggest their integration in the routine CMR evaluation of newly diagnosed cardiomyopathies with increased wall thickness.
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- 2020
165. Interpretability of Coronary CT Angiography Performed With a Novel Whole-Heart Coverage High-Definition CT Scanner in 300 Consecutive Patients With Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts
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Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Pontone, G, Pompilio, G, Guglielmo, M, Annoni, A, Baggiano, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Muscogiuri, G, Nicoli, F, Giannitto, C, Magatelli, M, Tanzilli, A, Consiglio, E, Fiorentini, C, Bartorelli, A, Pirillo, S, Pepi, M, Andreini, D, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Pontone G, Pompilio G, Guglielmo M, Annoni A, Baggiano A, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Muscogiuri G, Nicoli F, Giannitto C, Magatelli M, Tanzilli A, Consiglio E, Fiorentini C, Bartorelli AL, Pirillo SP, Pepi M, Andreini D, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Pontone, G, Pompilio, G, Guglielmo, M, Annoni, A, Baggiano, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Muscogiuri, G, Nicoli, F, Giannitto, C, Magatelli, M, Tanzilli, A, Consiglio, E, Fiorentini, C, Bartorelli, A, Pirillo, S, Pepi, M, Andreini, D, Mushtaq S, Conte E, Pontone G, Pompilio G, Guglielmo M, Annoni A, Baggiano A, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Muscogiuri G, Nicoli F, Giannitto C, Magatelli M, Tanzilli A, Consiglio E, Fiorentini C, Bartorelli AL, Pirillo SP, Pepi M, and Andreini D
- Abstract
Aims: Coronary CT angiography (CCTA) is an accurate non-invasive tool for the evaluation of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). However, inability to sustain a long breath-hold, high heart rate (HR) and atrial fibrillation may affect image quality. Moreover, radiation exposure is still a matter of some concern. A scanner combining 0.23-mm spatial resolution, new iterative reconstruction and fast gantry rotation time has been recently introduced in the clinical field. The aims of our study were to evaluate interpretability, radiation exposure and diagnostic accuracy of CCTA performed with the latest generation of cardiac-CT scanners compared to invasive coronary angiography (ICA) in the assessment of bypass grafts, and non-grafted and post-anastomotic native coronary arteries. Methods and results: We prospectively enrolled 300 patients undergoing clinically indicated CCTA with a 16-cm z-axis coverage, 256-detector rows, and 0.28-sec gantry rotation time scanner. Coronary artery and graft interpretability, image quality and effective dose (ED) were assessed in all patients and diagnostic accuracy was evaluated in a subgroup of 100 patients who underwent ICA. Mean HR during the scan was 69.6 ± 10.8. Sinus rhythm was present in 118 patients with HR < 75 bpm and in 112 patients with HR ≥ 75 bpm, while 70 patients had atrial fibrillation. CABG interpretability was 100%. Compared to ICA, CCTA was able to correctly detecting occlusions or significant stenoses of all CABG segments. Overall interpretability of native coronary segments was 95.6%. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and accuracy of coronary arteries were 98.3%, 97.4%, 93.1%, 99.3% and 96.5%, respectively. The diagnostic accuracy in a patient based analysis was 95.2%. Mean ED was 3.14 ± 1.7 mSv. Conclusions: The novel whole-heart coverage CT scanner allows to evaluating CABG and native coronary arteries with excellent interpretability and low radiation exposure even
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- 2020
166. The incremental role of coronary computed tomography in chronic coronary syndromes
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Baessato, F, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Scafuri, S, Babbaro, M, Mollace, R, Collevecchio, A, Guaricci, A, Rabbat, M, D'Andrea, A, Pontone, G, Baessato F, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Baggiano A, Fusini L, Scafuri S, Babbaro M, Mollace R, Collevecchio A, Guaricci AI, Rabbat M, D'Andrea A, Pontone G, Baessato, F, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Scafuri, S, Babbaro, M, Mollace, R, Collevecchio, A, Guaricci, A, Rabbat, M, D'Andrea, A, Pontone, G, Baessato F, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Baggiano A, Fusini L, Scafuri S, Babbaro M, Mollace R, Collevecchio A, Guaricci AI, Rabbat M, D'Andrea A, and Pontone G
- Abstract
In the context of chronic coronary syndromes (CCS), coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) has gained broad acceptance as a noninvasive anatomical imaging tool with ability of excluding coronary stenosis with strong negative predictive value. Atherosclerotic plaque lesions are independent predictors of cardiovascular outcomes in high risk patients with known coronary artery disease (CAD). Calcium detection is commonly expressed through the coronary artery calcium score (CACS), but further research is warranted to confirm the powerness of a CACS-only strategy in both diagnosis and prognosis assessment. Recent studies evidence how defined plaque composition characteristics effectively relate to the risk of plaque instabilization and the overall ischemic burden. Fractional flow reserve from CCTA (FFR-CT) has been demonstrated as a reliable method for noninvasive functional evaluation of coronary lesions severity, while the assessment of perfusion imaging under stress conditions is growing as a useful tool for assessment of myocardial ischemia. Moreover, specific applications in procedural planning of transcatheter valve substitution and follow-up of heart transplantation have gained recent importance. This review illustrates the incremental role of CCTA, which can potentially revolutionize the diagnosis and management pathway within the wide clinical spectrum of CCS.
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- 2020
167. State-of-the-art-myocardial perfusion stress testing: Static CT perfusion
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Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Pontone, G, Baggiano, A, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Tanzilli, A, Nicoli, F, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, Andreini, D, Mushtaq S., Conte E., Pontone G., Baggiano A., Annoni A., Formenti A., Mancini M. E., Guglielmo M., Muscogiuri G., Tanzilli A., Nicoli F., Bartorelli A. L., Pepi M., Andreini D., Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Pontone, G, Baggiano, A, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Tanzilli, A, Nicoli, F, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, Andreini, D, Mushtaq S., Conte E., Pontone G., Baggiano A., Annoni A., Formenti A., Mancini M. E., Guglielmo M., Muscogiuri G., Tanzilli A., Nicoli F., Bartorelli A. L., Pepi M., and Andreini D.
- Abstract
Large multicenter studies and meta-analysis have documented the diagnostic accuracy and the prognostic implications of stress echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance and, mainly, nuclear stress tests. However, none of them provides a comprehensive anatomical and functional evaluation within the same study as stress CT perfusion. Myocardial CT perfusion is the only non-invasive modality that allows to quantifying coronary stenosis and determining its functional relevance, constituting a potential “one-stop-shop” method for the diagnosis and global management of patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease. In comparison with the dynamic modality, that requires increased radiation, precise acquisition protocols and dedicated post-processing softwares, static CT perfusion was associated with less radiation exposure, non-inferior diagnostic accuracy, easier interpretation of images and is nowadays more widely available.
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- 2020
168. Performance of a deep learning algorithm for the evaluation of CAD-RADS classification with CCTA
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Muscogiuri, G, Chiesa, M, Trotta, M, Gatti, M, Palmisano, V, Dell'Aversana, S, Baessato, F, Cavaliere, A, Cicala, G, Loffreno, A, Rizzon, G, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Saba, L, Andreini, D, Pepi, M, Rabbat, M, Guaricci, A, De, C, C. N., C, G., P, Muscogiuri G, Chiesa M., Trotta M., Gatti M., Palmisano V., Dell'Aversana S, Baessato F., Cavaliere A., Cicala G., Loffreno A., Rizzon G., Guglielmo M., Baggiano A., Fusini L., Saba L., Andreini D., Pepi M., Rabbat M. G., Guaricci A. I., De Cecco, C. N. Colombo, G. Pontone, Muscogiuri, G, Chiesa, M, Trotta, M, Gatti, M, Palmisano, V, Dell'Aversana, S, Baessato, F, Cavaliere, A, Cicala, G, Loffreno, A, Rizzon, G, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Saba, L, Andreini, D, Pepi, M, Rabbat, M, Guaricci, A, De, C, C. N., C, G., P, Muscogiuri G, Chiesa M., Trotta M., Gatti M., Palmisano V., Dell'Aversana S, Baessato F., Cavaliere A., Cicala G., Loffreno A., Rizzon G., Guglielmo M., Baggiano A., Fusini L., Saba L., Andreini D., Pepi M., Rabbat M. G., Guaricci A. I., De Cecco, C. N. Colombo, and G. Pontone
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Background and aims: Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasing its role in diagnosis of patients with suspicious coronary artery disease. The aim of this manuscript is to develop a deep convolutional neural network (CNN) to classify coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) in the correct Coronary Artery Disease Reporting and Data System (CAD-RADS) category. Methods: Two hundred eighty eight patients who underwent clinically indicated CCTA were included in this single-center retrospective study. The CCTAs were stratified by CAD-RADS scores by expert readers and considered as reference standard. A deep CNN was designed and tested on the CCTA dataset and compared to on-site reading. The deep CNN analyzed the diagnostic accuracy of the following three Models based on CAD-RADS classification: Model A (CAD-RADS 0 vs CAD-RADS 1–2 vs CAD-RADS 3,4,5), Model 1 (CAD-RADS 0 vs CAD-RADS>0), Model 2 (CAD-RADS 0–2 vs CAD-RADS 3–5). Time of analysis for both physicians and CNN were recorded. Results: Model A showed a sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value and accuracy of 47%, 74%, 77%, 46% and 60%, respectively. Model 1 showed a sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value and accuracy of 66%, 91%, 92%, 63%, 86%, respectively. Conversely, Model 2 demonstrated the following sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value and accuracy: 82%, 58%, 74%, 69%, 71%, respectively. Time of analysis was significantly lower using CNN as compared to on-site reading (530.5 ± 179.1 vs 104.3 ± 1.4 sec, p=0.01) Conclusions: Deep CNN yielded accurate automated classification of patients with CAD-RADS.
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- 2020
169. Rationale and design of the EPLURIBUS Study (Evidence for a comPrehensive evaLUation of left ventRicle dysfnctIon By a whole-heart coverage cardiac compUted tomography Scanner)
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Andreini, D, Conte, E, Mushtaq, S, Pontone, G, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Annoni, A, Mancini, M, Formenti, A, Nicoli, F, Tanzilli, A, Muscogiuri, G, Magini, A, Agostoni, P, Bartorelli, A, Fiorentini, C, Pepi, M, Andreini D., Conte E., Mushtaq S., Pontone G., Guglielmo M., Baggiano A., Annoni A., Mancini M. E., Formenti A., Nicoli F., Tanzilli A., Muscogiuri G., Magini A., Agostoni P., Bartorelli A. L., Fiorentini C., Pepi M., Andreini, D, Conte, E, Mushtaq, S, Pontone, G, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Annoni, A, Mancini, M, Formenti, A, Nicoli, F, Tanzilli, A, Muscogiuri, G, Magini, A, Agostoni, P, Bartorelli, A, Fiorentini, C, Pepi, M, Andreini D., Conte E., Mushtaq S., Pontone G., Guglielmo M., Baggiano A., Annoni A., Mancini M. E., Formenti A., Nicoli F., Tanzilli A., Muscogiuri G., Magini A., Agostoni P., Bartorelli A. L., Fiorentini C., and Pepi M.
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BACKGROUND: Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is the standard of reference for myocardial fibrosis detection by late gadolinium enhancement. Cardiac computed tomography (CCT) is emerging as a promising alternative. The Evidence for a comPrehensive evaLUation of left ventRicle dysfnctIon By a whole-heart coverage cardiac compUted tomography Scanner study will assess the feasibility and diagnostic accuracy of a comprehensive functional and anatomical cardiac evaluation with CCT as compared with CMR and invasive coronary angiography as standard of reference. METHODS: Consecutive patients with a newly diagnosed left ventricle (LV) dysfunction (left ventricular ejection fraction <50%) and a clinical indication to CMR will be screened. Exclusion criteria will be contraindications to contrast agents and impaired renal function. CCT will be performed per protocol within 10 days from CMR. A total of 100 patients will be enrolled within 24 months. We will evaluate with CCT volume and ejection fraction of the LV and right ventricle, presence, extent and pattern of delayed enhancement and cardiac venous system. Moreover, presence and degree of coronary stenoses will be evaluated among patients undergoing invasive coronary angiography in the 6 months following CCT. RESULTS: The primary study endpoints will be: first, to assess the diagnostic performance of CCT vs. CMR to detect the delayed enhancement in a territory-based and patient-based analysis; second, to assess the agreement between CCT and CMR in the discrimination between ischemic vs. nonischemic delayed enhancement patters in a territory-based analysis; third, to assess the correlation between CCT and CMR for LV and right ventricle end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes and ejection fraction measurements. CONCLUSION: The Evidence for a comPrehensive evaLUation of left ventRicle dysfnctIon By a whole-heart coverage cardiac compUted tomography Scanner study will assess the diagnostic performance of CCT using the latest
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- 2020
170. Anomalous origin of the left circumflex artery from the right coronary sinus with retro-aortic course: A potential malign variant
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Del Torto, A, Baggiano, A, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Pontone, G, Del Torto A, Baggiano A, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Pontone G, Del Torto, A, Baggiano, A, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Pontone, G, Del Torto A, Baggiano A, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, and Pontone G
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- 2020
171. Primary Failure Eruption: Genetic Investigation, Diagnosis and Treatment: A Systematic Review.
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Inchingolo F, Ferrara I, Viapiano F, Ciocia AM, Palumbo I, Guglielmo M, Inchingolo AD, Palermo A, Bordea IR, Inchingolo AM, Di Venere D, and Dipalma G
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Aim: The aim of this systematic review is to explore the pathology, diagnosis, treatment, and genetic basis of Primary Failure of Eruption (PFE) in the field of pediatric dentistry and orthodontics., Methods: The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed for this review. The databases PubMed, Science Direct, Scopus, and Web of Science were searched from 1 July 2013 to 1 July 2023, using keywords "primary failure of tooth eruption" OR "primary failure of eruption" OR "tooth eruption failure" OR "PFE" AND "orthodontics". The study selection process involved screening articles based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria., Results: A total of 1151 results were obtained from the database search, with 14 papers meeting the inclusion criteria. The review covers various aspects of PFE, including its clinical features, diagnosis, treatment options, and genetic associations with mutations in the PTH1R gene. Differentiation between PFE and Mechanical Failure of Eruption (MFE) is crucial for accurate treatment planning. Orthodontic and surgical interventions, along with multidisciplinary approaches, have been employed to manage PFE cases. Genetic testing for PTH1R mutations plays a significant role in confirming the diagnosis and guiding treatment decisions, although some cases may not be linked to this mutation., Conclusions: This systematic review provides valuable insights into the diagnosis, treatment, and genetic basis of PFE. Early diagnosis and personalized treatment planning are crucial for successful management. Genetic testing for PTH1R mutations aids in accurate diagnosis and may influence treatment decisions. However, further research is needed to explore the complex genetic basis of PFE fully and improve treatment outcomes for affected individuals.
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- 2023
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172. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance for Prophylactic Implantable-Cardioverter Defibrillator Therapy in Ischemic Cardiomyopathy: The DERIVATE-ICM International Registry.
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Pontone G, Guaricci AI, Fusini L, Baggiano A, Guglielmo M, Muscogiuri G, Volpe A, Abete R, Aquaro G, Barison A, Bogaert J, Camastra G, Carigi S, Carrabba N, Casavecchia G, Censi S, Cicala G, De Cecco CN, De Lazzari M, Di Giovine G, Di Roma M, Dobrovie M, Focardi M, Gaibazzi N, Gismondi A, Gravina M, Lanzillo C, Lombardi M, Lorenzoni V, Lozano-Torres J, Martini C, Marzo F, Masi A, Memeo R, Moro C, Nese A, Palumbo A, Pavon AG, Pedrotti P, Marra MP, Pica S, Pradella S, Presicci C, Rabbat MG, Raineri C, Rodriguez-Palomares JF, Sbarbati S, Schoepf UJ, Squeri A, Sverzellati N, Symons R, Tat E, Timpani M, Todiere G, Valentini A, Varga-Szemes A, Masci PG, and Schwitter J
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Female, Contrast Media, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Predictive Value of Tests, Gadolinium, Death, Sudden, Cardiac etiology, Death, Sudden, Cardiac prevention & control, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy adverse effects, Registries, Risk Factors, Defibrillators, Implantable adverse effects, Myocardial Ischemia complications, Myocardial Ischemia diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Ischemia therapy, Cardiomyopathies diagnostic imaging, Cardiomyopathies therapy, Cardiomyopathies complications
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Background: Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) therapy is the most effective prophylactic strategy against sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) and left ventricle ejection fraction (LVEF) ≤35% as detected by transthoracic echocardiograpgy (TTE). This approach has been recently questioned because of the low rate of ICD interventions in patients who received implantation and the not-negligible percentage of patients who experienced SCD despite not fulfilling criteria for implantation., Objectives: The DERIVATE-ICM registry (CarDiac MagnEtic Resonance for Primary Prevention Implantable CardioVerter DebrillAtor ThErapy; NCT03352648) is an international, multicenter, and multivendor study to assess the net reclassification improvement (NRI) for the indication of ICD implantation by the use of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) as compared to TTE in patients with ICM., Methods: A total of 861 patients with ICM (mean age 65 ± 11 years, 86% male) with chronic heart failure and TTE-LVEF <50% participated. Major adverse arrhythmic cardiac events (MAACE) were the primary endpoints., Results: During a median follow-up of 1,054 days, MAACE occurred in 88 (10.2%). Left ventricular end-diastolic volume index (HR: 1.007 [95% CI: 1.000-1.011]; P = 0.05), CMR-LVEF (HR: 0.972 [95% CI: 0.945-0.999]; P = 0.045) and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) mass (HR: 1.010 [95% CI: 1.002-1.018]; P = 0.015) were independent predictors of MAACE. A multiparametric CMR weighted predictive derived score identifies subjects at high risk for MAACE compared with TTE-LVEF cutoff of 35% with a NRI of 31.7% (P = 0.007)., Conclusions: The DERIVATE-ICM registry is a large multicenter registry showing the additional value of CMR to stratify the risk for MAACE in a large cohort of patients with ICM compared with standard of care., Competing Interests: Funding Support and Author Disclosures The Italian Ministry of Health, Rome, Italy (RC 2017 R659/17-CCM698) has provided funding for this study. Dr De Cecco has received a grant from Siemens. Dr Pontone has received institutional fees from General Electric, Bracco, Heartflow, Medtronic, Bayer, and Bhoeringher. Dr Schwitter has received research support from Bayer Healthcare Switzerland. Dr Schoepf has received grants from Astellas, Bayer, General Electric, and Siemens Healthcare; personal fees from Guerbet; and speaking honoraria from Heartflow. Dr Varga-Szemes has received grants from Siemens Healthcare and personal fees from Elucid Bioimaging. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (Copyright © 2023 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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173. Pre-treatment risk factors to predict early cisplatin-related nephrotoxicity in locally advanced head and neck cancer patients treated with chemoradiation: A single Institution experience.
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Cavalieri S, Platini F, Barretta F, Nuzzolese I, Ottini A, Bergamini C, Resteghini C, Colombo E, Iacovelli NA, Franceschini M, Calareso G, Di Pede P, De Feo G, Gandelli M, Toffolatti L, Guglielmo M, Ripamonti CI, Cosmai L, Licitra L, and Alfieri S
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- Humans, Male, Cisplatin adverse effects, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck drug therapy, Retrospective Studies, Creatinine adverse effects, Uric Acid adverse effects, Chemoradiotherapy adverse effects, Risk Factors, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell drug therapy, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell pathology, Head and Neck Neoplasms drug therapy, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Acute Kidney Injury chemically induced, Acute Kidney Injury drug therapy
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Objectives: Cisplatin is essential in the curative treatment of locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (LA-HNSCC) patients. The assessment of risk factors to predict an early cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity could help in better managing one of the most relevant cisplatin-related dose-limiting factors., Material and Methods: We retrospectively collected data of LA-HNSCC patients treated at our Institution from 2008 to 2019. Patients received cisplatin in a curative setting concurrently with radiation. Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) was assessed as a dichotomous variable (CreaIncr) based on pre-treatment values, and values recorded at days 6-20 post-first cycle of cisplatin. Univariable logistic regression models were performed to investigate associations between CreaIncr and clinical characteristics. A multivariable logistic model on a priori selected putative covariates was performed., Results: Of the 350 LA-HNSCC treated patients, 204 were analyzed. Ninety (44 %) suffered from any grade AKI (grade I 51.1 %): out of them, 84.4 % received high-dose cisplatin (100 mg/m2 q21). On the univariable logistic regression model, male sex, age, serum uric acid, creatinine, concomitant drugs, and cisplatin schedule were significantly associated with a higher rate of AKI. At multivariable model, age (p = 0.034), baseline creatinine (p = 0.027), concomitant drugs (p = 0.043), and cisplatin schedule (one-day bolus or fractionated high-dose vs. weekly; p = 0.001) maintained their significant association., Conclusions: Identifying pre-treatment risk factors in LA-HNSCC patients may improve decision-making in a setting where cisplatin has a curative significance. A strict monitoring of AKI could avoid cisplatin dose adjustments, interruptions, and treatment delays, thus limiting a negative impact on outcomes., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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174. Symptoms, Outcomes, and Regurgitant Severity in Guideline-Directed Mitral Valve Surgery: A Multicenter Prospective Study.
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Uretsky S, Biederman RWW, Han Y, Jacob R, Martin ET, Langer M, Choi AD, Sultan I, Cavalcante JL, Shah DJ, Tong MS, Wolff SD, Guglielmo M, and Pontone G
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- Humans, Mitral Valve diagnostic imaging, Mitral Valve surgery, Prospective Studies, Predictive Value of Tests, Mitral Valve Insufficiency diagnostic imaging, Mitral Valve Insufficiency surgery, Cardiac Surgical Procedures
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- 2023
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175. Cardiac CT in CRT as a Singular Imaging Modality for Diagnosis and Patient-Tailored Management.
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Gerrits W, Danad I, Velthuis B, Mushtaq S, Cramer MJ, van der Harst P, van Slochteren FJ, Meine M, Suchá D, and Guglielmo M
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Between 30-40% of patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) do not show an improvement in left ventricular (LV) function. It is generally known that patient selection, LV lead implantation location, and device timing optimization are the three main factors that determine CRT response. Research has shown that image-guided CRT placement, which takes into account both anatomical and functional cardiac properties, positively affects the CRT response rate. In current clinical practice, a multimodality imaging approach comprised of echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, or nuclear medicine imaging is used to capture these features. However, with cardiac computed tomography (CT), one has an all-in-one acquisition method for both patient selection and the division of a patient-tailored, image-guided CRT placement strategy. This review discusses the applicability of CT in CRT patient identification, selection, and guided placement, offering insights into potential advancements in optimizing CRT outcomes.
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- 2023
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176. Myocardial Bridging: Review on the Role of Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography.
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Rovera C, Moretti C, Bisanti F, De Zan G, and Guglielmo M
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Myocardial bridging (MB) is a congenital coronary anomaly in which a segment of a coronary artery, most frequently the left anterior descending artery, deviates from its epicardial route by passing through the myocardium. The advent of cardiac computed tomography angiography (CCTA), equipped with its multiplane and three-dimensional functionalities, has notably enhanced the ability to identify MBs. Furthermore, novel post-processing methods have recently emerged to extract functional insights from anatomical evaluations. MB is generally considered a benign entity with very good survival rates; however, there is an increasing volume of evidence that certain MB characteristics may be associated with cardiovascular morbidity. This review is intended to depict the diagnostic and prognostic role of CCTA in the MB context.
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- 2023
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177. Technology roadmap for cold-atoms based quantum inertial sensor in space
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Sven Abend, Baptiste Allard, Aidan S. Arnold, Ticijana Ban, Liam Barry, Baptiste Battelier, Ahmad Bawamia, Quentin Beaufils, Simon Bernon, Andrea Bertoldi, Alexis Bonnin, Philippe Bouyer, Alexandre Bresson, Oliver S. Burrow, Benjamin Canuel, Bruno Desruelle, Giannis Drougakis, René Forsberg, Naceur Gaaloul, Alexandre Gauguet, Matthias Gersemann, Paul F. Griffin, Hendrik Heine, Victoria A. Henderson, Waldemar Herr, Simon Kanthak, Markus Krutzik, Maike D. Lachmann, Roland Lammegger, Werner Magnes, Gaetano Mileti, Morgan W. Mitchell, Sergio Mottini, Dimitris Papazoglou, Franck Pereira dos Santos, Achim Peters, Ernst Rasel, Erling Riis, Christian Schubert, Stephan Tobias Seidel, Guglielmo M. Tino, Mathias Van Den Bossche, Wolf von Klitzing, Andreas Wicht, Marcin Witkowski, Nassim Zahzam, Michał Zawada, Interférométrie (LCAR), Laboratoire Collisions Agrégats Réactivité (LCAR), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Fédération de recherche « Matière et interactions » (FeRMI), Institut National des Sciences Appliquées - Toulouse (INSA Toulouse), Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées - Toulouse (INSA Toulouse), Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire national de métrologie et d'essais - Systèmes de Référence Temps-Espace (LNE - SYRTE), Systèmes de Référence Temps Espace (SYRTE), Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire de Paris, Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire de Paris, Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire Photonique, Numérique et Nanosciences (LP2N), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Institut d'Optique Graduate School (IOGS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire de Paris, and Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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[PHYS]Physics [physics] ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Computer Networks and Communications ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
International audience; Recent developments in quantum technology have resulted in a new generation of sensors for measuring inertial quantities, such as acceleration and rotation. These sensors can exhibit unprecedented sensitivity and accuracy when operated in space, where the free-fall interrogation time can be extended at will and where the environment noise is minimal. European laboratories have played a leading role in this field by developing concepts and tools to operate these quantum sensors in relevant environment, such as parabolic flights, free-fall towers, or sounding rockets. With the recent achievement of Bose–Einstein condensation on the International Space Station, the challenge is now to reach a technology readiness level sufficiently high at both component and system levels to provide “off the shelf” payload for future generations of space missions in geodesy or fundamental physics. In this roadmap, we provide an extensive review on the status of all common parts, needs, and subsystems for the application of atom-based interferometers in space, in order to push for the development of generic technology components.
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- 2023
178. Domestic violence detection amid the COVID-19 pandemic: the value of the WHO questionnaire in emergency medicine
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M Di Franco, Daniela Catalano, G Carpinteri, Giuseppe Fabio Martines, and Guglielmo M. Trovato
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Domestic Violence ,medicine.medical_specialty ,020205 medical informatics ,Population ,Poison control ,02 engineering and technology ,World Health Organization ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Pandemic ,Injury prevention ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Pandemics ,Original Paper ,education.field_of_study ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,Human factors and ergonomics ,General Medicine ,Family medicine ,Communicable Disease Control ,Emergency Medicine ,Domestic violence ,Female ,AcademicSubjects/MED00010 ,business - Abstract
Summary Background Gender-based violence affects 35–45% of women worldwide, mostly coming from domestic violence. A good screening procedure in clinical practice is useful, but WHO does not advise universal screening, recommending further research. Aim (i) To report the frequency of domestic violence cases among admissions to the Emergency Room of a major Italian Hospital in 2020, including during complete ‘Lockdown’ period; (ii) to document acute and chronic health effects of domestic violence and (iii) to asses usefulness of the WHO screening as a tool for uncovering cases which would otherwise remain hidden. Design and methods A database containing all the information recorded for each of 19 160 patients in the Emergency Room was constructed by a keyword search (‘violence’, ‘assault’, ‘trauma’) to filter the data and retrieve cases of violence in the period between 1 January and 2 June 2020. The self-administered questionnaire of the WHO Multi-country Study on Women’s Health and Domestic Violence against Women was used in women referred to the emergency room for any cause, excluding trauma. Results A recent history of domestic violence was disclosed by 22.67%, after completing the WHO questionnaire. Of those not participating in the survey, diagnosis of domestic violence was only 0.6% (128/19 160). Conclusion Power of detection of domestic violence by the WHO questionnaire is very high, while the frequency of occurrence of these events in this population was considerable. Seemingly, it elicits the responsiveness to the topic of the volunteer interviewees. Its use should be firmly recommended, reasonably, while Covid-19 pandemic is affecting health, rights and response.
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- 2020
179. The Regulatory B Cell Compartment Expands Transiently During Childhood and Is Contracted in Children With Autoimmunity
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Kalampokis, Ioannis, Venturi, Guglielmo M., Poe, Jonathan C., Dvergsten, Jeffrey A., Sleasman, John W., and Tedder, Thomas F.
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- 2017
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180. Design of a dual species atom interferometer for space
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Schuldt, Thilo, Schubert, Christian, Krutzik, Markus, Bote, Lluis Gesa, Gaaloul, Naceur, Hartwig, Jonas, Ahlers, Holger, Herr, Waldemar, Posso-Trujillo, Katerine, Rudolph, Jan, Seidel, Stephan, Wendrich, Thijs, Ertmer, Wolfgang, Herrmann, Sven, Kubelka-Lange, André, Milke, Alexander, Rievers, Benny, Rocco, Emanuele, Hinton, Andrew, Bongs, Kai, Oswald, Markus, Franz, Matthias, Hauth, Matthias, Peters, Achim, Bawamia, Ahmad, Wicht, Andreas, Battelier, Baptiste, Bertoldi, Andrea, Bouyer, Philippe, Landragin, Arnaud, Massonnet, Didier, Lévèque, Thomas, Wenzlawski, Andre, Hellmig, Ortwin, Windpassinger, Patrick, Sengstock, Klaus, von Klitzing, Wolf, Chaloner, Chris, Summers, David, Ireland, Philip, Mateos, Ignacio, Sopuerta, Carlos F., Sorrentino, Fiodor, Tino, Guglielmo M., Williams, Michael, Trenkel, Christian, Gerardi, Domenico, Chwalla, Michael, Burkhardt, Johannes, Johann, Ulrich, Heske, Astrid, Wille, Eric, Gehler, Martin, Cacciapuoti, Luigi, Gürlebeck, Norman, Braxmaier, Claus, and Rasel, Ernst
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- 2015
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181. Eyeing the retinal vessels: A window on the heart and beyond
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Trovato, Guglielmo M., primary
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- 2022
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182. C61 MULTIDISCIPLINARY MANAGEMENT IN A CASE OF EOSINOPHILIC MYOCARDITIS WITH CHURG STRAUSS SYNDROME: FROM ECG TO ENDOMYOCARDIAL BIOPSY
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Amelotti, N, primary, Mapelli, M, additional, Pires, I, additional, Guglielmo, M, additional, Majocchi, B, additional, Catto, V, additional, Campodonico, J, additional, Vignati, C, additional, Baggiano, A, additional, Ribatti, V, additional, Moltrasio, M, additional, Vettor, G, additional, Sicuso, R, additional, Pontone, G, additional, Basso, C, additional, and Agostoni, P, additional
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- 2022
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183. P315 A CASE OF TAKOTSUBO CARDIOMYOPATHY IN A PATIENT WITH TAKAYASU’S ARTERITIS: THE CORONARY VASOSPASM AS A MISSING LINK BETWEEN THE IMMUNE SYSTEM AND ACUTE PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS
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Mapelli, M, primary, Pires, I, additional, Amelotti, N, additional, Guglielmo, M, additional, Conte, E, additional, and Agostoni, P, additional
- Published
- 2022
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184. 4Ps medicine of the fatty liver: the research model of predictive, preventive, personalized and participatory medicine—recommendations for facing obesity, fatty liver and fibrosis epidemics
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Trovato, Francesca Maria, Catalano, Daniela, Musumeci, Giuseppe, and Trovato, Guglielmo M
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- 2014
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185. Sustainable medical research by effective and comprehensive medical skills: overcoming the frontiers by predictive, preventive and personalized medicine
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Trovato, Guglielmo M
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- 2014
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186. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and Atherosclerosis at a crossroad: The overlap of a theory of change and bioinformatics
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Guglielmo M Trovato and Guglielmo Trovato
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business.industry ,Bioinformatics ,Fatty liver ,Non alcoholic ,Minireviews ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Arterial stiffness ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,sense organs ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,business ,Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease ,Methodology of research - Abstract
Atherosclerosis (ATH) and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) are medical conditions that straddle a communal epidemiology, underlying mechanism and a clinical syndrome that has protean manifestations, touching every organ in the body. These twin partners, ATH and NAFLD, are seemingly straightforward and relatively simple topics when considered alone, but their interdependence calls for more thought. The study of the mutual relationship of NAFLD and ATH should involve big data analytics approaches, given that they encompass a constellation of diseases and are related to several recognized risk factors and health determinants and calls to an explicit theory of change, to justify intervention. Research studies on the "association between aortic stiffness and liver steatosis in morbidly obese patients", published recently, sparsely hypothesize new mechanisms of disease, claiming the "long shadow of NAFLD" as a risk factor, if not as a causative factor of arterial stiffness and ATH. This statement is probably overreaching the argument and harmful for the scientific credence of this area of medicine. Despite the verification that NAFLD and cardiovascular disease are strongly interrelated, current evidence is that NAFLD may be a useful indicator for flagging early arteriosclerosis, and not a likely causative factor. Greater sustainable contribution by precision medicine tools, by validated bioinformatics approaches, is needed for substantiating conjectures, assumptions and inferences related to the management of big data and addressed to intervention for behavioral changes within an explicit theory of change.
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- 2020
187. SEPSIS. Educational and Best Practice Frontiers. Beyond the Boundaries of Fatality, Enhancing Clinical Skills and Precision Medicine
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Guglielmo M. Trovato
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemical Health and Safety ,business.industry ,Best practice ,Organ dysfunction ,Psychological intervention ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Precision medicine ,Sepsis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intensive care ,Intervention (counseling) ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,medicine.symptom ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,Safety Research - Abstract
Dissemination and exploitation of knowledge regarding affordable clinical skills and innovative precision medicine, two current topics in active development in medicine, may contribute to improve also sepsis management. Sepsis is a life-threatening organ dysfunction due to a dysregulated host response to infection. Sepsis is strongly related to all body organs or to systemic diseases and to the quality of the best-practice in use, which is particularly critical in surgical or intervention techniques. Trauma, surgical and mini-invasive procedures, vascular or endoscopic interventions, otolaryngology, obstetrics-gynecological and urological procedures, malnutrition, dental, skin, chronic liver, kidney and respiratory disease are frequently involved. Accordingly, apart from the clinical risk analysis and management of the process of care, the actual factors that may be easily neglected are the techniques used, the personal skills of the health professionals and the quality of the equipment. The quest for biomarkers consistent with the unmet needs of medical doctors and of their patient and the efforts for overcoming bacterial antibiotic resistances are currently the main foci of medical research. In addition, in this regard, research and innovation would benefit from greater knowledge, skills and use of bioinformatics and omics. The caveats related to in-silico approaches must be flagged: algorithms may equally warrant scientific innovations or hide the lack of them; a patient is more than a set of covariates. Epidemiology and prevention includes all the actions suitable for achieving an adequate hygiene and immunization of populations and for safer hospital policies and procedures during Patients' stays. In any subset, the most unresolved critical point in sepsis is a timely diagnosis. This is impaired by low degrees of suspicion for the possibility of emerging sepsis, by the shortage of use of the simplest microbiological testing but, equally or more, by the insufficient diffusion of non-invasive imaging skills suitable to detect and monitor the emerging sites and sources of infection. In primary care, in emergency facilities, in hospital wards and in intensive care units, inclusion of appropriate knowledge, skills, expertise and imaging equipment must be extended as much as possible. The low cost of UltraSound machines and of increasing bioinformatics literacy by e-learning, makes such investments affordable even in limited-resources contexts. Frontier educational and best practice intervention enhancing affordable clinical skills and innovative precision medicine may lead beyond the boundaries of fatal outcomes in sepsis.
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- 2020
188. Editorial: Lung Ultrasound in the Diagnosis of Infective Lung Diseases
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Guglielmo M. Trovato and Marco Sperandeo
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fake news ,Medicine (General) ,digital medicine ,R5-920 ,pleural effusion ,pneumonitis ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,digital health (eHealth) - Published
- 2021
189. Quantitative Evaluation of COVID-19 Pneumonia Lung Extension by Specific Software and Correlation with Patient Clinical Outcome. Quantitative Evaluation of COVID-19 Pneumonia Lung Extension by Specific Software and Correlation with Patient Clinical Outcome
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Annoni AD, Conte E, Mancini ME, Gigante C, Agalbato C, Formenti A, Muscogiuri G, Mushtaq S, Guglielmo M, Baggiano A, Bonomi A, Pepi M, Pontone G, Andreini D, Annoni, A, Conte, E, Mancini, M, Gigante, C, Agalbato, C, Formenti, A, Muscogiuri, G, Mushtaq, S, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Bonomi, A, Pepi, M, Pontone, G, and Andreini, D
- Subjects
Coronavirus infection ,Pneumonia ,Computed tomography ,Lung - Abstract
Lung infection named as COVID-19 is an infectious disease caused by the most recently discovered coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). CT (computed tomography) has been shown to have good sensitivity in comparison with RT-PCR, particularly in early stages. However, CT findings appear to not always be related to a certain clinical severity. The aim of this study is to evaluate a correlation between the percentage of lung parenchyma volume involved with COVID-19 infection (compared to the total lung volume) at baseline diagnosis and correlated to the patient’s clinical course (need for ventilator assistance and or death). All patients with suspected COVID-19 lung disease referred to our imaging department for Chest CT from 24 February to 6 April 2020were included in the study. Specific CT features were assessed including the amount of high attenuation areas (HAA) related to lung infection. HAA, defined as the percentage of lung parenchyma above a predefined threshold of −650 (HAA%, HAA/total lung volume), was automatically calculated using a dedicated segmentation software. Lung volumes and CT findings were correlated with patient’s clinical course. Logistic regressions were performed to assess the predictive value of clinical, inflammatory and CT parameters for the defined outcome. In the overall population we found an average infected lung volume of 31.4 ± 26.3% while in the subgroup of patients who needed ventilator assistance and who died as well as the patients who died without receiving ventilator assistance the volume of infected lung was significantly higher 41.4 ± 28.5 and 72.7 ± 36.2 (p < 0.001). In logistic regression analysis best predictors for ventilation and death were the presence of air bronchogram (p = 0.006), crazy paving (p = 0.007), peripheral distribution (p < 0.001), age (p = 0.002), fever at admission (p = 0.007), dyspnea (p = 0.002) and cardiovascular comorbidities (p < 0.001). In multivariable analysis, quantitative CT parameters and features added incremental predictive value beyond a model with only clinical parameters (area under the curve, 0.78 vs. 0.74, p = 0.02). Our study demonstrates that quantitative evaluation of lung volume involved by COVID-19 pneumonia helps to predict patient’s clinical course.
- Published
- 2021
190. Characterization of a rare IL-10–competent B-cell subset in humans that parallels mouse regulatory B10 cells
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Iwata, Yohei, Matsushita, Takashi, Horikawa, Mayuka, DiLillo, David J., Yanaba, Koichi, Venturi, Guglielmo M., Szabolcs, Paul M., Bernstein, Steven H., Magro, Cynthia M., Williams, Armistead D., Hall, Russell P., St Clair, E. William, and Tedder, Thomas F.
- Published
- 2011
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191. Therapeutic B Cell Depletion Impairs Adaptive and Autoreactive CD4⁺ T Cell Activation in Mice
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Bouaziz, Jean-David, Yanaba, Koichi, Venturi, Guglielmo M., Wang, Yaming, Tisch, Roland M., Poe, Jonathan C., and Tedder, Thomas F.
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- 2007
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192. Additional value of CMR feature tracking parameters for the evaluation of the risk of complex ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death in patients with Mitral Valve Prolapse
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Pavon, A, primary, Guglielmo, M, additional, Arangalage, D, additional, Bonanni, M, additional, Angelini, G, additional, Paiocchi, V, additional, Leo, L, additional, Valgimigli, M, additional, Pedrazzini, G, additional, Pontone, G, additional, Monney, P, additional, and Faletra, F, additional
- Published
- 2022
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193. Editorial: Lung Ultrasound in the Diagnosis of Infective Lung Diseases
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Trovato, Guglielmo M., primary and Sperandeo, Marco, additional
- Published
- 2022
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194. The prognostic role of right ventricular dysfunction in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
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Mushtaq S, Monti L, Rossi A, Pontone G, Conte E, Nicoli F, di Odoardo L, Guglielmo M, Indolfi E, Bombace S, Baggiano A, Gripari P, Pepi M, Bartorelli A, Oliveira M, Santos A, Francone M, and Andreini D
- Subjects
- Humans, Prognosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Predictive Value of Tests, Hypertrophy, Right Ventricular, Ventricular Dysfunction, Right etiology, Ventricular Dysfunction, Right complications, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic complications, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) primarily affects the left ventricle (LV) sparing the right ventricle (RV) in vast majority of cases. However, several studies employing CMR have revealed that myocardial hypertrophy may also involve the RV. To assess RV size and function in a large prospectively cohort of HCM patients and to evaluate whether these parameters in association with other MR findings can predict cardiac events. Two participating centers prospectively included patients with known or suspected HCM between 2011 and 2017. CMR studies were performed with three different scanners. Outcome measures were a composite of ventricular arrhythmias, hospitalization for HF and cardiac death. Of 607 consecutive patients with known or suspected HCM, 315 had complete follow-up information (mean 65 ± 20 months). Among them, 115 patients developed major cardiac events (MACE) during follow-up. At CMR evaluation, patients with events had higher left atrium (LA) diameter (41.5 ± 8 mm vs. 37.17 ± 7.6 mm, p < 0.0001), LV mass (156.7 vs. 144 g, p = 0.005) and myocardial LGE (4.3% vs. 1.9%, p = 0.001). Similarly, patients with events had lower RV stroke volume index (42.7 vs. 47.0, p = 0.0003) and higher prevalence of both RV hypertrophy (16.4% vs. 4.7%, p = 0.0005) and reduced RV ejection fraction (12.2% vs. 4.4%, p = 0.006). In the multivariate analysis, LA diameter and RV stroke volume index were the strongest predictors of events (p < 0.001 and p = 0.0006, respectively). Anatomic and functional RV anomalies detected and characterized with CMR may have may have a major role in predicting the prognosis of HCM patients., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2023
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195. Quantification of extracellular volume with cardiac computed tomography in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy.
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Baggiano A, Conte E, Spiritigliozzi L, Mushtaq S, Annoni A, Carerj ML, Cilia F, Fazzari F, Formenti A, Frappampina A, Fusini L, Gaudenzi Asinelli M, Junod D, Mancini ME, Mantegazza V, Maragna R, Marchetti F, Penso M, Tassetti L, Volpe A, Baessato F, Guglielmo M, Rossi A, Rovera C, Andreini D, Rabbat MG, Guaricci AI, Pepi M, and Pontone G
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- Humans, Middle Aged, Aged, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Predictive Value of Tests, Myocardium pathology, Heart, Contrast Media, Fibrosis, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated pathology
- Abstract
Background: Cardiac computed tomography (CCT) was recently validated to measure extracellular volume (ECV) in the setting of cardiac amyloidosis, showing good agreement with cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). However, no evidence is available with a whole-heart single source, single energy CT scanner in the clinical context of newly diagnosed left ventricular dysfunction. Therefore, the aim of this study was to test the diagnostic accuracy of ECV
CCT in patients with a recent diagnosis of dilated cardiomyopathy, having ECVCMR as the reference technique., Methods: 39 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed dilated cardiomyopathy (LVEF <50%) scheduled for clinically indicated CMR were prospectively enrolled. Myocardial segment evaluability assessment with each technique, agreement between ECVCMR and ECVCCT , regression analysis, Bland-Altman analysis and interclass correlation coefficient (ICC) were performed., Results: Mean age of enrolled patients was 62 ± 11 years, and mean LVEF at CMR was 35.4 ± 10.7%. Overall radiation exposure for ECV estimation was 2.1 ± 1.1 mSv. Out of 624 myocardial segments available for analysis, 624 (100%) segments were assessable by CCT while 608 (97.4%) were evaluable at CMR. ECVCCT demonstrated slightly lower values compared to ECVCMR (all segments, 31.8 ± 6.5% vs 33.9 ± 8.0%, p < 0.001). At regression analysis, strong correlations were described (all segments, r = 0.819, 95% CI: 0.791 to 0.844). On Bland-Altman analysis, bias between ECVCMR and ECVCCT for global analysis was 2.1 (95% CI: -6.8 to 11.1). ICC analysis showed both high intra-observer and inter-observer agreement for ECVCCT calculation (0.986, 95%CI: 0.983 to 0.988 and 0.966, 95%CI: 0.960 to 0.971, respectively)., Conclusions: ECV estimation with a whole-heart single source, single energy CT scanner is feasible and accurate. Integration of ECV measurement in a comprehensive CCT evaluation of patients with newly diagnosed dilated cardiomyopathy can be performed with a small increase in overall radiation exposure., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest Gianluca Pontone declares the following conflict of interest: Honorarium as speaker/consultant and/or research grant from GE Healthcare, Bracco, Heartflow, Boheringher., (Copyright © 2023 Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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196. Identification of subclinical cardiac amyloidosis in aortic stenosis patients undergoing transaortic valve replacement using radiomic analysis of computed tomography myocardial texture.
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Lo Iacono F, Maragna R, Guglielmo M, Chiesa M, Fusini L, Annoni A, Babbaro M, Baggiano A, Carerj ML, Cilia F, Del Torto A, Formenti A, Mancini ME, Marchetti F, Muratori M, Mushtaq S, Penso M, Pirola S, Tassetti L, Volpe A, Guaricci AI, Fontana M, Tamborini G, Treibel T, Moon J, D A Corino V, and Pontone G
- Subjects
- Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Myocardium, Tomography, Treatment Outcome, Aortic Valve diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve surgery, Aortic Valve Stenosis complications, Aortic Valve Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Stenosis surgery, Amyloidosis complications, Amyloidosis diagnostic imaging, Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement adverse effects
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Conflict of interest Gianluca Pontone declares the following conflict of interest: Honorarioim as speaker/consultant and/or research grant from GE Healthcare, Bracco, Heartflow, Boheringher.
- Published
- 2023
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197. Multimodality Imaging Evaluation to Detect Subtle Right Ventricular Involvement in Patients with Acute Myocarditis and Preserved Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction.
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Bonanni M, Angelini G, Leo LA, Schlossbauer SA, Bergamaschi L, Landi A, Sangiorgi GM, Forleo C, Pasotti E, Pedrazzini G, Valgimigli M, Faletra FF, Guglielmo M, and Pavon AG
- Abstract
Background: Evaluation of the right ventricle (RV) in patients with acute myocarditis (MY) remains challenging with both 2D transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) and cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). We examined the incremental diagnostic value of CMR feature tracking (FT) to evaluate RV involvement in patients with myocarditis. Methods: We enrolled 54 patients with myocarditis and preserved left ventricle (LV) ejection fraction (EF). The CMR protocol included T2-weighted images for edema detection and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) images. Global longitudinal strain (GLS) of the left ventricle (LV) and RV free wall strain (CMR-FWS) were obtained with CMR-FT. We identified 34 patients (62%) with inferior and lateral segment (IL-MY) involvement and 20 (38%) noIL-MY in case of any other myocardial segment involved. Here, 20 individuals who underwent CMR for suspected cardiac disease, which was not confirmed thereafter, were considered as the control population. Results: TTE and CMR showed normal RV function in all patients without visible RV involvement at the LGE or T2-weighted sequences. At CMR, LV-GLS values were significantly lower in patients with MY compared to the control group (median -19.0% vs. -21.0%, p = 0.029). Overall, CMR RV-FWS was no different between MY patients and controls (median -21.2% vs. -23.2 %, p = 0.201) while a significant difference was found between RV FWS in IL-MY and noIL-MY (median -18.17% vs. -24.2%, p = 0.004). Conclusions: CMR-FT has the potential to unravel subclinical RV involvement in patients with acute myocarditis, specifically in those with inferior and lateral injuries that exhibit lower RV-FWS values. In this setting, RV deformation analysis at CMR may be effectively implemented for a comprehensive functional assessment.
- Published
- 2023
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198. A deep-learning approach for myocardial fibrosis detection in early contrast-enhanced cardiac CT images.
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Penso M, Babbaro M, Moccia S, Baggiano A, Carerj ML, Guglielmo M, Fusini L, Mushtaq S, Andreini D, Pepi M, Pontone G, and Caiani EG
- Abstract
Aims: Diagnosis of myocardial fibrosis is commonly performed with late gadolinium contrast-enhanced (CE) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), which might be contraindicated or unavailable. Coronary computed tomography (CCT) is emerging as an alternative to CMR. We sought to evaluate whether a deep learning (DL) model could allow identification of myocardial fibrosis from routine early CE-CCT images., Methods and Results: Fifty consecutive patients with known left ventricular (LV) dysfunction (LVD) underwent both CE-CMR and (early and late) CE-CCT. According to the CE-CMR patterns, patients were classified as ischemic ( n = 15, 30%) or non-ischemic ( n = 35, 70%) LVD. Delayed enhancement regions were manually traced on late CE-CCT using CE-CMR as reference. On early CE-CCT images, the myocardial sectors were extracted according to AHA 16-segment model and labeled as with scar or not, based on the late CE-CCT manual tracing. A DL model was developed to classify each segment. A total of 44,187 LV segments were analyzed, resulting in accuracy of 71% and area under the ROC curve of 76% (95% CI: 72%-81%), while, with the bull's eye segmental comparison of CE-CMR and respective early CE-CCT findings, an 89% agreement was achieved., Conclusions: DL on early CE-CCT acquisition may allow detection of LV sectors affected with myocardial fibrosis, thus without additional contrast-agent administration or radiational dose. Such tool might reduce the user interaction and visual inspection with benefit in both efforts and time., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (© 2023 Penso, Babbaro, Moccia, Baggiano, Carerj, Guglielmo, Fusini, Mushtaq, Andreini, Pepi, Pontone and Caiani.)
- Published
- 2023
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199. Benefits of Natural Antioxidants on Oral Health.
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Malcangi G, Patano A, Ciocia AM, Netti A, Viapiano F, Palumbo I, Trilli I, Guglielmo M, Inchingolo AD, Dipalma G, Inchingolo F, Minetti E, and Inchingolo AM
- Abstract
In recent years, special attention has been paid to the correlation between oxidation-reduction mechanisms and human health. The free radicals produced via physiological cellular biochemical processes are major contributors to oxidation phenomena. Their instability is the major cause of cellular damage. Free radical reactive oxygen species containing oxygen are the best-known ones. The body neutralises the harmful effects of free radicals via the production of endogenous antioxidants (superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione, and melatonin). The field of study of nutraucetics has found antioxidant capacity in substances such as vitamins A, B, C, E, coenzyme Q-10, selenium, flavonoids, lipoic acid, carotenoids, and lycopene contained in some foods. There are several areas of investigation that aim to research the interaction between reactive oxygen species, exogenous antioxidants, and the microbiota to promote increased protection via the peroxidation of macromolecules (proteins, and lipids) by maintaining a dynamic balance among the species that make up the microbiota. In this scoping review, we aim to map the scientific literature on oxidative stress related to the oral microbiota, and the use of natural antioxidants to counteract it, to assess the volume, nature, characteristics, and type of studies available to date, and to suggest the possible gaps that will emerge from the analysis.
- Published
- 2023
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200. The Role of Non-Invasive Multimodality Imaging in Chronic Coronary Syndrome: Anatomical and Functional Pathways.
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Bergamaschi L, Pavon AG, Angeli F, Tuttolomondo D, Belmonte M, Armillotta M, Sansonetti A, Foà A, Paolisso P, Baggiano A, Mushtaq S, De Zan G, Carriero S, Cramer MJ, Teske AJ, Broekhuizen L, van der Bilt I, Muscogiuri G, Sironi S, Leo LA, Gaibazzi N, Lovato L, Pontone G, Pizzi C, and Guglielmo M
- Abstract
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is one of the major causes of mortality and morbidity worldwide, with a high socioeconomic impact. Currently, various guidelines and recommendations have been published about chronic coronary syndromes (CCS). According to the recent European Society of Cardiology guidelines on chronic coronary syndrome, a multimodal imaging approach is strongly recommended in the evaluation of patients with suspected CAD. Today, in the current practice, non-invasive imaging methods can assess coronary anatomy through coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) and/or inducible myocardial ischemia through functional stress testing (stress echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, single photon emission computed tomography-SPECT, or positron emission tomography-PET). However, recent trials (ISCHEMIA and REVIVED) have cast doubt on the previous conception of the management of patients with CCS, and nowadays it is essential to understand the limitations and strengths of each imaging method and, specifically, when to choose a functional approach focused on the ischemia versus a coronary anatomy-based one. Finally, the concept of a pathophysiology-driven treatment of these patients emerged as an important goal of multimodal imaging, integrating 'anatomical' and 'functional' information. The present review aims to provide an overview of non-invasive imaging modalities for the comprehensive management of CCS patients.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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