1,285 results on '"Scalia G"'
Search Results
2. Reactions induced by 11Be beam at Rex-Isolde
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Jeppesen H., Fraile L.M., Tengblad O., Maira Vidal A., Borge M.J.G., Perez-Bernal F., Martel I., Acosta L., Torresi D., Scuderi V., Strano E., Scalia G., Rizzo F., Santonocito D., Pellegriti M.G., Randisi G., Papa M., Fisichella M., Lattuada M., Musumarra A., Amorini F., Figuera P., Di Pietro A., Voulot D., Wenander F., Gomez-Camacho J., Milin M., Raabe R., and Zadro M.
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The collision induced by the three Beryllium isotopes, 9,10,11Be, on a 64Zn target were investigated at Ec.m. ≈ 1.4 the Coulomb barrier. The experiments with the radioactive 10,11Be beams were performed at the Rex-Isolde facility at CERN. In the case of 9,10Be, elastic scattering angular distributions were measured whereas, in the 11Be case, the quasielastic scattering angular distribution was obtained. A strong damping of the quasielastic cross-section was observed in the 11Be case, in the angular range around the Coulomb-nuclear interference peak. In this latter case a large total-reaction cross-section is found. Such a cross-section is more than a factor of two larger than the ones extracted in the reactions induced by the non-halo Beryllium isotopes. A large contribution to the total-reaction cross-section in the 11Be case could be attributed to transfer and/or break-up events.
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- 2011
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3. Human error contribution to accidents in the manufacturing sector: A structured approach to evaluate the interdependence among performance shaping factors
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La Fata, C.M., Adelfio, L., Micale, R., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2023
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4. Improved FMECA for effective risk management decision making by failure modes classification under uncertainty
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La Fata, C.M., Giallanza, A., Micale, R., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2022
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5. Regenerative scheduling problem in engineer to order manufacturing: an economic assessment
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Micale, R., La Fata, C. M., Enea, M., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2021
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6. Evaluation of routing policies using an interval-valued TOPSIS approach for the allocation rules
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Montanari, R., Micale, R., Bottani, E., Volpi, A., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2021
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7. Ranking of occupational health and safety risks by a multi-criteria perspective: Inclusion of human factors and application of VIKOR
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La Fata, C.M., Giallanza, A., Micale, R., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2021
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8. Deep learning assisted measurement of echocardiographic left heart parameters: improvement in interobserver variability and workflow efficiency
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Mor-Avi, V, Blitz, A, Schreckenberg, M, Addetia, K, Kebed, K, Scalia, G, Badano, L, Kirkpatrick, J, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Tude Rodrigues, A, Sadeghpour, A, Tucay, E, Prado, A, Tsang, W, Ogunyankin, K, Rossmanith, A, Schummers, G, Laczik, D, Asch, F, Lang, R, Mor-Avi V., Blitz A., Schreckenberg M., Addetia K., Kebed K., Scalia G., Badano L., Kirkpatrick J. N., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Sadeghpour A., Tucay E. S., Prado A. D., Tsang W., Ogunyankin K. O., Rossmanith A., Schummers G., Laczik D., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Mor-Avi, V, Blitz, A, Schreckenberg, M, Addetia, K, Kebed, K, Scalia, G, Badano, L, Kirkpatrick, J, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Tude Rodrigues, A, Sadeghpour, A, Tucay, E, Prado, A, Tsang, W, Ogunyankin, K, Rossmanith, A, Schummers, G, Laczik, D, Asch, F, Lang, R, Mor-Avi V., Blitz A., Schreckenberg M., Addetia K., Kebed K., Scalia G., Badano L., Kirkpatrick J. N., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Sadeghpour A., Tucay E. S., Prado A. D., Tsang W., Ogunyankin K. O., Rossmanith A., Schummers G., Laczik D., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Machine learning techniques designed to recognize views and perform measurements are increasingly used to address the need for automation of the interpretation of echocardiographic images. The current study was designed to determine whether a recently developed and validated deep learning (DL) algorithm for automated measurements of echocardiographic parameters of left heart chamber size and function can improve the reproducibility and shorten the analysis time, compared to the conventional methodology. The DL algorithm trained to identify standard views and provide automated measurements of 20 standard parameters, was applied to images obtained in 12 randomly selected echocardiographic studies. The resultant measurements were reviewed and revised as necessary by 10 independent expert readers. The same readers also performed conventional manual measurements, which were averaged and used as the reference standard for the DL-assisted approach with and without the manual revisions. Inter-reader variability was quantified using coefficients of variation, which together with analysis times, were compared between the conventional reads and the DL-assisted approach. The fully automated DL measurements showed good agreement with the reference technique: Bland–Altman biases 0–14% of the measured values. Manual revisions resulted in only minor improvement in accuracy: biases 0–11%. This DL-assisted approach resulted in a 43% decrease in analysis time and less inter-reader variability than the conventional methodology: 2–3 times smaller coefficients of variation. In conclusion, DL-assisted approach to analysis of echocardiographic images can provide accurate left heart measurements with the added benefits of improved reproducibility and time savings, compared to conventional methodology.
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- 2023
9. Normal Values of Left Ventricular Mass by Two-Dimensional and Three-Dimensional Echocardiography: Results from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study
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Lee, L, Cotella, J, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Schreckenberg, M, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Lee L., Cotella J. I., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Schreckenberg M., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Lee, L, Cotella, J, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Schreckenberg, M, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Lee L., Cotella J. I., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Schreckenberg M., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Although increased left ventricular (LV) mass is associated with adverse outcomes, measured values vary widely depending on the specific technique used. Moreover, the impact of sex, age, and race on LV mass remains controversial, further limiting the clinical use of this parameter. Accordingly, the authors studied LV mass using a variety of two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiographic techniques in a large population of normal subjects encompassing a wide range of ages. Methods: Transthoracic echocardiograms obtained from 1,854 healthy adult subjects (52% men) enrolled in the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography (WASE) Normal Values Study, were divided into three age groups (young, 18-35 years; middle aged, 36-55 years; and old, >55 years). LV mass was obtained using five conventional techniques, including linear and two-dimensional methods, as well as direct three-dimensional measurement. All LV mass values were indexed to body surface area, and differences according to sex, age, and race were analyzed for each technique. Results: LV mass values differed significantly among the five techniques. Three-dimensional measurements were considerably smaller than those obtained using the other techniques and were closer to magnetic resonance imaging normal values reported in the literature. For all techniques, LV mass in men was significantly larger than in women, with and without body surface area indexing. These technique- and sex-related differences were larger than measurement variability. In women, age differences in LV mass were more pronounced and depicted significantly larger values in older age groups for all techniques, except three-dimensional echocardiography, which showed essentially no differences. LV mass was overall larger in black subjects than in white or Asian subjects. Conclusions: Significant differences in LV mass values exist across echocardiographic techniques, which are therefore not interchangeable. Sex-, race-, a
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- 2023
10. Age-, Sex-, and Race-Based Normal Values for Left Ventricular Circumferential Strain from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Mor-Avi, V, Cotella, J, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Addetia, K, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singulane C. C., Miyoshi T., Mor-Avi V., Cotella J. I., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Addetia K., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Mor-Avi, V, Cotella, J, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Addetia, K, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singulane C. C., Miyoshi T., Mor-Avi V., Cotella J. I., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Addetia K., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Left ventricular (LV) circumferential strain has received less attention than longitudinal deformation, which has recently become part of routine clinical practice. Among other reasons, this is because of the lack of established normal values. Accordingly, the aim of this study was to establish normative values for LV circumferential strain and determine sex-, age-, and race-related differences in a large cohort of healthy adults. Methods: Complete two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiograms were obtained in 1,572 healthy subjects (51% men), enrolled in the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study. Subjects were divided into three age groups (<35, 35-55, and >55 years) and stratified by sex and by race. Vendor-independent semiautomated speckle-tracking software was used to determine LV regional circumferential strain and global circumferential strain (GCS) values. Limits of normal for each measurement were defined as 95% of the corresponding sex and age group falling between the 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles. Intergroup differences were analyzed using unpaired t tests. Results: Circumferential strain showed a gradient, with lower magnitude at the mitral valve level, increasing progressively toward the apex. Compared with men, women had statistically higher magnitudes of regional and global strain. Older age was associated with a stepwise increase in GCS despite an unaffected ejection fraction, a decrease in LV volume, and relatively stable global longitudinal strain in men, with a small gradual decrease in women. Asian subjects demonstrated significantly higher GCS magnitudes than whites of both sexes and blacks among women only. In contrast, no significant differences in GCS were found between white and black subjects of either sex. Importantly, despite statistical significance of these differences across sex, age, and race, circumferential strain values were similar in all groups, with variations of the order of magnitude
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- 2023
11. High rate of detection of ultrasound signs of prostatitis in patients with HPV-DNA persistence on semen: role of ultrasound in HPV-related male accessory gland infection
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La Vignera, S., Condorelli, R. A., Cannarella, R., Giacone, F., Mongioi’, L., Scalia, G., Favilla, V., Russo, G. I., Cimino, S., Morgia, G., and Calogero, A. E.
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- 2019
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12. A combined interval-valued ELECTRE TRI and TOPSIS approach for solving the storage location assignment problem
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Micale, R., La Fata, C.M., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2019
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13. Sustainable vehicle routing based on firefly algorithm and TOPSIS methodology
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Micale, R., Marannano, G., Giallanza, A., Miglietta, P.P., Agnusdei, G.P., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2019
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14. Microstructural and morphological properties of homoepitaxial (001)ZnTe layers investigated by x-ray diffuse scattering
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Di Luccio, T., Scalia, G., Tapfer, L., Morales, P., Traversa, M., Prete, P., and Lovergine, N.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
The microstructural and morphological properties of homoepitaxial (001)ZnTe layers are investigated by x-ray diffuse scattering. High resolution reciprocal space maps recorded close to the ZnTe (004) Bragg peak show different diffuse scattering features. One kind of cross-shaped diffuse scattering streaks along <111> directions can be attributed to stacking faults within the epilayers. Another kind of cross-shaped streaks inclined at an angle of about 80deg with respect to the <110> in-plane direction arises from the morphology of the epilayers. (abridged version)
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- 2005
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15. Economic assessment based on scenario analysis for the production of a new functional pasta
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Micale, R., Giallanza, A., Enea, M., and La Scalia, G.
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- 2018
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16. Structural and morphological investigation of Langmuir-Blodgett SWCNT/behenic acid multilayers
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Di Luccio, T., Antolini, F., Aversa, P., Scalia, G., and Tapfer, L.
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter - Abstract
The goal of our work has been the incorporation of single wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) in Langmuir-Blodgett organic multilayers. We deposited multilayers consisting of six cadmium behenate (CdBe) layers alternated with one layer of SWCNTs. SWCNTs and CdBe molecules were spread at the air/water interface and deposited at a fixed compression pressure for CdBe (27mN/m) and two different compression pressures for the nanotubes, 15 and 45mN/m, respectively. Low angle X-ray measurements exhibited distinct satellite peaks in all the samples demonstrating that the periodicity of the LB CdBe reference sample was conserved when SWCNTs were inserted in the structure. In agreement with the observations at optical and electronic microscopes, the samples deposited at the higher compression pressure (45mN/m) presented more densely-packed and more uniform coverage of nanotubes., Comment: 13 pages including 4 figures and 1 table. Carbon, in press
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- 2003
17. A Novel Speckle-Tracking Echocardiographic Parameter Assessing Left Ventricular Loading During VA ECMO in a Pre-clinical Model of Cardiogenic Shock
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Sato, K., primary, Heinsar, S., additional, Obonyo, N., additional, Wildi, K., additional, Liu, K., additional, Farah, S., additional, Ainola, C., additional, Sato, N., additional, Ijuin, S., additional, Ro, S. Kyun, additional, Fior, G., additional, Gandini, L., additional, Bouquet, M., additional, Wilson, E., additional, Passmore, M., additional, Hyslop, K., additional, Chan, J., additional, Platts, D., additional, Scalia, G., additional, Suen, J., additional, Bassi, G. Li, additional, and Fraser, J., additional
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- 2023
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18. Normal Values of Left Atrial Size and Function and the Impact of Age: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Singh, A, Carvalho Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Prado, A, Addetia, K, Bellino, M, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singh A., Carvalho Singulane C., Miyoshi T., Prado A. D., Addetia K., Bellino M., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Hitschrich N., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Singh, A, Carvalho Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Prado, A, Addetia, K, Bellino, M, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singh A., Carvalho Singulane C., Miyoshi T., Prado A. D., Addetia K., Bellino M., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Hitschrich N., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Left atrial (LA) evaluation includes volumetric and functional parameters with an abundance of diagnostic and prognostic implications. Solid normal reference ranges are compulsory for accurate interpretation in individual patients, but previous studies have yielded mixed conclusions regarding the effects of age, sex, and/or race. The present report from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study focuses on two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) measures of LA structure and function, with subgroup analysis by age, sex, and race. Methods: Transthoracic 2D and 3D echocardiographic images were obtained in 1,765 healthy individuals (901 men, 864 women) evenly distributed among age subgroups: 18 to 40 years (n = 745), 41 to 65 years (n = 618), and >65 years (n = 402); the racial distribution was 38.4% white, 39.9% Asian, and 9.7% black. Images were analyzed using dedicated LA analysis software to measure LA volumes and phasic function from 3D volume and 2D strain curves. Results: Three-dimensional maximum and minimum LA volumes adjusted for body surface area were nearly identical for men and women, but women demonstrated higher 3D total and passive emptying fractions (EFs). Two-dimensional reservoir strain was similar for both sexes. Age was associated with an incremental rise in LA volumes alongside characteristic shifts in functional indices. Total 2D EF and reservoir and conduit strain varied inversely with age, counteracted by higher booster strain, with a greater magnitude of effect in women. Active 3D EF was significantly higher, while total and passive EFs decreased with age. Interracial differences were noted in LA volumes, without substantial differences in functional indices. Conclusion: Although similar normal values for LA volumes and strain can be applied to both sexes, meaningful differences in LA size occur with aging. Indices of function also shift with age, with a compensatory rise in booster function, which may serve t
- Published
- 2022
19. Normal Values of Left Ventricular Size and Function on Three-Dimensional Echocardiography: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Zhang Y., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Zhang Y., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., and Hwang J. -W.
- Abstract
Background: Echocardiography remains the most widely used modality to assess left ventricular (LV) chamber size and function. Currently this assessment is most frequently performed using two-dimensional (2D) echocardiography. However, three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography has been shown to be more accurate and reproducible than 2D echocardiography. Current normative reference values for 3D LV analysis are based predominantly on data from North America and Europe. The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to sample normal subjects from around the world to provide more universal global reference ranges. The aim of this study was to assess the worldwide feasibility of LV 3D echocardiography and report on size and functional measurements. Methods: A total of 2,262 healthy subjects were prospectively enrolled from 19 centers in 15 countries. Three-dimensional LV full-volume data sets were obtained and analyzed offline using vendor-neutral software. Measurements included LV end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes, LV ejection fraction (LVEF), global longitudinal strain (GLS), and global circumferential strain. Results were categorized by age (18-40, 41-65, and >65 years), sex, and race. Results: A total of 1,589 subjects (feasibility 70%) had adequate LV data sets for analysis. Mean normal values for indexed end-diastolic volume, end-systolic volume, and LVEF in men and women were 70 ± 15 and 65 ± 12 mL/m2, 28 ± 7 and 25 ± 6 mL/m2, and 60 ± 5% and 62 ± 5%, respectively. Men had larger LV volumes and lower LVEFs than women. GLS and global circumferential strain were higher in magnitude in women. In both sexes, LV volumes were lower and LVEF tended to be higher with increasing age, especially considering the differences between the youngest and oldest age groups. Although GLS was similar across age groups in men, in women, the youngest and middle-age cohorts revealed higher magnitudes of GLS compared with the oldest age group. Global circumfere
- Published
- 2022
20. Sex-, Age-, and Race-Related Normal Values of Right Ventricular Diastolic Function Parameters: Data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Carvalho Singulane, C, Singh, A, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Soulat-Dufour, L, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Carvalho Singulane C., Singh A., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Soulat-Dufour L., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Carvalho Singulane, C, Singh, A, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Soulat-Dufour, L, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Carvalho Singulane C., Singh A., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Soulat-Dufour L., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Although the assessment of right ventricular (RV) diastolic function is feasible, it has garnered far less momentum for use compared with its left ventricular counterpart. The scarcity of data defining normative RV diastolic function and the fact that implications of RV diastolic dysfunction in different disease states on outcomes are less well known both hinder integration into routine clinical assessment. The aim of this study was to establish normal values of RV diastolic parameters stratified by sex, age, and race using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study. Methods: A subset of 888 normal subjects from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography database were analyzed, including measurements of tricuspid valve (TV) inflow E- and A-wave velocities, E-wave deceleration time, and TV annular tissue Doppler e′ and a′ velocities. Additionally, right atrial (RA) maximal volume and RA peak reservoir strain were measured. Patients were grouped by age ([removed]65 years) and stratified by sex and race. Differences were analyzed using unpaired t tests. Results: Compared with men, women had significantly higher TV e′ and E-wave and A-wave velocities, though differences were modest. Increasing age was associated with stepwise lower TV E wave, e′ velocity, and TV E/A ratio and higher a′ velocity and E/e′ ratio. RA peak reservoir strain was also lower, and RA end-systolic volume trended toward being smaller for older age groups. Asian subjects demonstrated significantly higher a′ velocities, lower E wave, the smallest RA end-systolic volumes, and the lowest RA peak strain values compared with white subjects of both sexes. Conclusions: This study provides normal values for parameters used in the assessment of RV diastolic function stratified by race, sex, and age. The results demonstrate significant differences in RV diastolic parameters between age groups, which manifest in both individual parameters and composite ratios of TV inflo
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- 2022
21. Three-Dimensional Transthoracic Static and Dynamic Normative Values of the Mitral Valve Apparatus: Results from the Multicenter World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Henry, M, Cotella, J, Mor-Avi, V, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Lang, R, Asch, F, Henry M. P., Cotella J., Mor-Avi V., Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Lang R. M., Asch F. M., Henry, M, Cotella, J, Mor-Avi, V, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Lang, R, Asch, F, Henry M. P., Cotella J., Mor-Avi V., Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Lang R. M., and Asch F. M.
- Abstract
Background: Recent advances in mitral valve (MV) percutaneous interventions have escalated the need for a more quantitative and comprehensive assessment of the MV, which can be best achieved using three-dimensional echocardiography. Understanding normal valve size, structure, and function is essential for differentiation of healthy from disease states. The aims of this study were to establish normative values for MV apparatus size and morphology and to determine how they vary across age, sex, and race groups using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study. Methods: Three-dimensional volumetric data sets obtained on transthoracic echocardiography in 748 normal subjects (51% men) were analyzed using commercial MV analysis software (TomTec Imaging Systems) to determine annular and leaflet dimensions and areas. The subjects were divided into groups by sex (378 men and 370 women) and age (18 to 40 years [n = 266], 41 to 65 years [n = 249], and >65 years [n = 233]) to identify sex- and age-related differences. In addition, differences among black, white, and Asian populations were studied. Inter- and intraobserver variability was assessed in a subset of 30 subjects and expressed as mean absolute difference between pairs of repeated measurements. Results: Compared with women, men had larger annular size measurements, larger tenting size parameters, and larger leaflet length and area. Compared with the black and white populations, the Asian population showed significantly smaller mitral annular size. Although many of the age, sex, and race differences in MV parameters were statistically significant, they were comparable with or smaller than the corresponding measurement variability. Indexing to body surface area and height did not eliminate these differences consistently, suggesting that parameters may need to be indexed according to their dimensionality. Conclusions: This analysis of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography d
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- 2022
22. Normal Values of Three-Dimensional Right Ventricular Size and Function Measurements: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Singulane, C, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia, Karima, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Zhang, Yun, Singulane, Cristiane C, Hitschrich, Niklas, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, Lang, Roberto M, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Singulane, C, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia, Karima, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Zhang, Yun, Singulane, Cristiane C, Hitschrich, Niklas, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, and Lang, Roberto M
- Abstract
Background: Normal values for three-dimensional (3D) right ventricular (RV) size and function are not well established, as they originate from small studies that involved predominantly white North American and European populations, did not use RV-focused views, and relied on older 3D RV analysis software. The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to generate reference ranges for normal subjects around the world. The aim of this study was to assess the worldwide capability of 3D imaging of the right ventricle and report size and function measurements, including their dependency on age, sex, and ethnicity. Methods: Healthy subjects free of cardiac, pulmonary, and renal disease were prospectively enrolled at 19 centers in 15 countries, representing six continents. Three-dimensional wide-angle RV data sets were obtained and analyzed using dedicated RV software (TomTec) to measure end-diastolic volume (EDV), end-systolic volume (ESV), stroke volume, and ejection fraction (EF). Results were categorized by sex, age (18-40, 41-65, and >65 years) and ethnicity. Results: Of the 2,007 subjects with attempted 3D RV acquisitions, 1,051 had adequate image quality for confident measurements. Upper and lower limits for body surface area-indexed EDV, ESV, and EF were 48 and 95 mL/m2, 19 and 43 mL/m2, and 44% and 58%, respectively, for men and 42 and 81 mL/m2, 16 and 36 mL/m2, and 46% and 61%, respectively, for women. Men had significantly larger EDVs, ESVs, and stroke volumes (even after body surface area indexing) and lower EFs than women (P < .05). EDV and ESV did not show any meaningful differences among age groups. Three-dimensional RV volumes were smallest in Asians. Conclusions: Reliability of 3D RV acquisition is low worldwide, underscoring the importance of future improvements in imaging techniques. Sex and race must be taken into consideration in the assessment of both RV volumes and EF.
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- 2023
23. Normative values of the aortic valve area and Doppler measurements using two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography: results from the Multicentre World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Cotella, J, Miyoshi, T, Mor-Avi, V, Addetia, K, Schreckenberg, M, Sun, D, Slivnick, J, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutiérrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Prado, A, Asch, F, Lang, R, Cotella, Juan I, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Mor-Avi, Victor, Addetia, Karima, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Sun, Deyu, Slivnick, Jeremy A, Blankenhagen, Michael, Hitschrich, Niklas, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutiérrez-Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Ronderos, Ricardo, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Zhang, Mei, Prado, Aldo D, Asch, Federico M, Lang, Roberto M, Cotella, J, Miyoshi, T, Mor-Avi, V, Addetia, K, Schreckenberg, M, Sun, D, Slivnick, J, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutiérrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Prado, A, Asch, F, Lang, R, Cotella, Juan I, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Mor-Avi, Victor, Addetia, Karima, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Sun, Deyu, Slivnick, Jeremy A, Blankenhagen, Michael, Hitschrich, Niklas, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutiérrez-Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Ronderos, Ricardo, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Zhang, Mei, Prado, Aldo D, Asch, Federico M, and Lang, Roberto M
- Abstract
AIMS: Aortic valve area (AVA) used for echocardiographic assessment of aortic stenosis (AS) has been traditionally interpreted independently of sex, age and race. As differences in normal values might impact clinical decision-making, we aimed to establish sex-, age- and race-specific normative values for AVA and Doppler parameters using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography (WASE) Study. METHODS AND RESULTS: Two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiographic studies were obtained from 1903 healthy adult subjects (48% women). Measurements of the left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) diameter and Doppler parameters, including AV and LVOT velocity time integrals (VTIs), AV mean pressure gradient, peak velocity, were obtained according to ASE/EACVI guidelines. AVA was calculated using the continuity equation. Compared with men, women had smaller LVOT diameters and AVA values, and higher AV peak velocities and mean gradients (all P < 0.05). LVOT and AV VTI were significantly higher in women (P < 0.05), and both parameters increased with age in both sexes. AVA differences persisted after indexing to body surface area. According to the current diagnostic criteria, 13.5% of women would have been considered to have mild AS and 1.4% moderate AS. LVOT diameter and AVA were lower in older subjects, both men and women, and were lower in Asians, compared with whites and blacks. CONCLUSION: WASE data provide clinically relevant information about significant differences in normal AVA and Doppler parameters according to sex, age, and race. The implementation of this information into clinical practice should involve development of specific normative values for each ethnic group using standardized methodology.
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- 2023
24. Prevalence of human papilloma virus infection in patients with male accessory gland infection
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La Vignera, S., Vicari, E., Condorelli, R.A., Franchina, C., Scalia, G., Morgia, G., Perino, A., Schillaci, R., and Calogero, A.E.
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- 2015
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25. Hybrid deep learning-based feature-augmented detection for molecular communication systems
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Vakilipoor, Fardad, Scazzoli, D., Ratti, F., Scalia, G., and Magarini, M.
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- 2022
26. Two-Dimensional Echocardiographic Right Ventricular Size and Systolic Function Measurements Stratified by Sex, Age, and Ethnicity: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Echocardiographic assessment of right ventricular (RV) systolic function is an important component of clinical decision making. Although professional societies have worked to define normal ranges of RV size and function, their guidelines have not included the impacts of age, sex, and ethnicity on these parameters, as they have for the left ventricle. The World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to investigate the effects of age, sex, and ethnicity on all cardiac chambers. The aim of this study was to explore whether these differences exist for RV systolic parameters. Methods: Adequate two-dimensional RV-focused views for the measurement of systolic parameters, including fractional area change and global and free wall longitudinal strain, were available in 1,913 subjects (mean age, 47 ± 17 years; 51% men). Basal and mid-RV dimensions, length, tricuspid annular peak systolic excursion, tissue Doppler S′ velocity, and myocardial performance index were also measured. Subjects were grouped by age ([removed]65 years), with results also stratified by sex and ethnicity (Asian, black, or white) and analyzed using vendor-independent software. Differences among groups were evaluated using analysis of variance. Results: Women had smaller absolute and indexed RV areas and absolute RV dimensions and higher magnitudes of fractional area change, free wall strain, and global longitudinal strain compared to men. With respect to age, most of the statistically significant differences were noted between the [removed]65-year age groups, with RV areas and lengths smaller in older age groups and RV functional parameters (S′, fractional area change, tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion, global longitudinal strain, free wall strain, and myocardial performance index) showing minimal decreases or no changes with age. Although there were no meaningful differences in functional parameters among ethnic groups, RV size was smallest in Asians. Conclusions
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- 2021
27. Normal Values of Cardiac Output and Stroke Volume According to Measurement Technique, Age, Sex, and Ethnicity: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Henry, M, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Rossmanith, A, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Alizadehasl, A, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Patel H. N., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Henry M. P., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Rossmanith A., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Alizadehasl A., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Henry, M, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Rossmanith, A, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Alizadehasl, A, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Patel H. N., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Henry M. P., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Rossmanith A., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Alizadehasl A., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., and Hwang J. -W.
- Abstract
Background: Assessment of cardiac output (CO) and stroke volume (SV) is essential to understand cardiac function and hemodynamics. These parameters can be examined using three echocardiographic techniques (pulsed-wave Doppler, two-dimensional [2D], and three-dimensional [3D]). Whether these methods can be used interchangeably is unclear. The influence of age, sex, and ethnicity on CO and SV has also not been examined in depth. In this report from the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study, the authors compare CO and SV in healthy adults according to age, sex, ethnicity, and measurement techniques. Methods: A total of 1,450 adult subjects (53% men) free of heart, lung, and kidney disease were prospectively enrolled in 15 countries, with even distributions among age groups and sex. Subjects were divided into three age groups (young, 18–40 years; middle aged, 41–65 years; and old, >65 years) and three main racial groups (whites, blacks, and Asians). CO and SV were indexed (cardiac index [CI] and SV index [SVI], respectively) to body surface area and height and measured using three echocardiographic methods: Doppler, 2D, and 3D. Images were analyzed at two core laboratories (one each for 2D and 3D). Results: CI and SVI were significantly lower by 2D compared with both Doppler and 3D methods in both sexes. SVI was significantly lower in women than men by all three methods, while CI differed only by 2D. SVI decreased with aging by all three techniques, whereas CI declined only with 2D and 3D. CO and SV were smallest in Asians and largest in whites, and the differences persisted after normalization for body surface area. Conclusions: The present results provide normal reference values for CO and SV, which differ by age, sex, and race. Furthermore, CI and SVI measurements by the different echocardiographic techniques are not interchangeable. All these factors need to be taken into account when evaluating cardiac function and hemodynamics in i
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- 2021
28. Normal Values of Right Atrial Size and Function According to Age, Sex, and Ethnicity: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Soulat-Dufour, L, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Diehl, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prad, A, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Alagesan, R, Alizadehasl, A, Badano, L, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Soulat-Dufour L., Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Citro R., Daimon M., Fajardo P. G., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Diehl M., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prad A. D., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Alagesan R., Alizadehasl A., Badano L., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Soulat-Dufour, L, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Diehl, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prad, A, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Alagesan, R, Alizadehasl, A, Badano, L, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Soulat-Dufour L., Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Citro R., Daimon M., Fajardo P. G., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Diehl M., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prad A. D., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Alagesan R., Alizadehasl A., Badano L., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Yun H. R., and Hwang J. -W.
- Abstract
Background: The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study is a multicenter, international, prospective, cross-sectional study whose aims were to evaluate healthy adult individuals to establish age- and sex-normative values of echocardiographic parameters and to determine whether differences exist among people from different countries and of different ethnicities. The present report focuses on two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) right atrial (RA) size and function. Methods: Transthoracic 2D and 3D echocardiographic images were obtained in 2,008 healthy adult individuals evenly distributed among subgroups according to sex (1,033 men, 975 women) and age 18 to 40 years (n = 854), 41 to 65 years (n = 653), and >65 years (n = 501). For ethnicity, 34.9% were white, 41.6% Asian, and 9.7% black. Images were analyzed in a core laboratory according to current American Society of Echocardiography/European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging guidelines. RA measurements included 2D dimensions, 2D and 3D RA volumes (RAVs) indexed to body surface area (BSA), emptying fraction (EmF), and global longitudinal strain, including total/reservoir, passive/conduit, and active/contractile phases. Differences among age and sex categories and among countries were also examined. Results: RAVs were larger in men (even after BSA indexing), while 3D total EmF and global longitudinal strain magnitudes were higher in women. For both sexes, there were no significant age-related differences in 2D RAV measurements, but 3D RAV values differed minimally with age, remaining significant after BSA indexing. RA total EmF and reservoir strain and passive EmF and conduit strain magnitude were lower in older groups for both sexes. Interestingly, whereas RA active EmF increased with age, contractile strain magnitude decreased. Considerable geographic variations were identified: Asians of both sexes had significantly lower BSA than non-Asians, and their 2D and 3D end-systolic RAVs were
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- 2021
29. A Structured Methodology for the Safety Key Performance Indicator Prioritization: A Case Study
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La Fata C. M., Giallanza A., Micale R., La Scalia G., La Fata C.M., Giallanza A., Micale R., and La Scalia G.
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Settore ING-IND/17 - Impianti Industriali Meccanici ,analytic hierarchy process, occupational health and safety, safety key performance indicator - Abstract
Nowadays, companies have become more and more attentive to the management and evaluation of activities, processes and actions related to the safety in workplaces. This attention stems from both the need to comply with law requirements and to improve the productivity of the company by ensuring the reduction of occupational injuries and diseases. Accordingly, performance evaluation is a fundamental step also theorized by the most important guidelines on Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems (OHSMSs). With this recognition, the present paper provides a methodology to prioritize Safety Key Performance Indicators (SKPIs) starting from an initial set selected from the literature. Referring to a passengers' transportation company located in the Southern of Italy, the ranking of the most suitable SKPIs to monitor the effectiveness of measures taken by the company to prevent and/or mitigate risks in workplaces is obtained by the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) method.
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- 2021
30. Left Ventricular Diastolic Function in Healthy Adult Individuals: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study
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Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Desale, S, Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Blitz, A, Lang, R, Asch, F, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Regina Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Zhang, M, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Palermo, C, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Fasawe, D, Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Citro R., Daimon M., Desale S., Fajardo P. G., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Blitz A., Lang R. M., Asch F. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Regina Afonso T., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Zhang M., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Palermo C., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Fasawe D., Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Desale, S, Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Blitz, A, Lang, R, Asch, F, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Regina Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Zhang, M, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Palermo, C, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Fasawe, D, Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Citro R., Daimon M., Desale S., Fajardo P. G., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Blitz A., Lang R. M., Asch F. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Regina Afonso T., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Zhang M., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Palermo C., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., and Fasawe D.
- Abstract
Background: The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography (WASE) study was conducted to describe echocardiographic normal values in adults and to compare races and nationalities using a uniform acquisition and measurement protocol. This report focuses on left ventricular (LV) diastolic function. Methods: WASE is an international, cross-sectional study. Participants were enrolled with equal distribution according to age and gender. Echocardiograms were analyzed in a core laboratory based on the latest American Society of Echocardiography/European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging guidelines. Left ventricular diastolic function was assessed by E, E/A, e' velocities, E/e', left atrial volume index (LAVI), and tricuspid regurgitation velocity. Determination of LV diastolic function was made using the algorithm proposed by the guidelines. Results: A total of 2,008 subjects from 15 countries were enrolled. The majority were of white or Asian race (42.8%, 41.8%, respectively). E and E/e' were higher in female patients, while LAVI was similar in both genders. Consistent increase in E/e' and decrease in E/A, E, and e' were found as age increased. The upper limit of normal for LAVI was higher in WASE compared with the guidelines. The lower limits of normal for e' were smaller in elder groups than those in the guidelines, while the upper limits of normal for E/e' were below the guideline values. These findings suggest that the cutoff value for LAVI should be shifted upward and age-specific cutoff values for e' should be considered. In WASE, <93.6% of patients were classified as normal LV diastolic function using the guidelines' algorithm, and the proportion increased to 97.4% when applying the revised cutoff values for LAVI obtained in our study. Conclusions: Guideline-recommended normal values for e' velocities and LAVI should be reconsidered. The algorithm for the determination of LV diastolic function proposed by the guidelines is useful, but adjustments to LAVI c
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- 2020
31. Single Centre 5 Year Transcatheter Aortic Valve Haemodynamics in a Contemporary Cohort
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Gadowski, T., Poon, K., Raffel, C., Murdoch, D., Scalia, G., Burstow, D., and Walters, D.
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- 2024
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32. Early Versus Latest Generation of the MitraClip for Mitral Regurgitation
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Thaw, K., Scalia, W., Hlaing, S., Savage, M., Poon, K., Murdoch, D., Raffel, C., Lau, K., Tomlinson, S., Scalia, G., and Walters, D.
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- 2024
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33. Resting Left Atrial Reservoir Stain—A Single Parameter to Exclude HFpEF
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Tomlinson, S., Savage, M., Edwards, N., McKenzie, S., Wong, Y., Dashwood, A., Chamberlain, R., Loy, J., Grisanti, C., Scalia, G., and Chan, W.
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- 2024
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34. Longitudinal Effects of Clozapine on Echocardiographic Parameters
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Sargent, S., Ruane, L., Scalia, W., and Scalia, G.
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- 2024
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35. Left Ventricular dP/dT >1200ms Predicts Greater and Sustained Drop in LVEF Post Mitral TEER
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Lander, K., Higgins, M., Lau, K., Murdoch, D., Mulligan, A., Raffel, C., Walters, D., and Scalia, G.
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- 2024
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36. Diastolic Parameters Across the Spectrum of Ejection Fraction
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Ruane, L. and Scalia, G.
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- 2024
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37. Cardiac Implantable Electronic Device Lead Associated Tricuspid Regurgitation—Evolution Over Time
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Wiemers, P., O'Leary, J., Ruane, L., Haqqani, H., Denman, R., Humphries, J., and Scalia, G.
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- 2024
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38. Ascending Aortic Dimensions From a Large Australian Adult Cohort. Should We be Indexing by Height Not BSA?
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Humphries, J. and Scalia, G.
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- 2024
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39. Development of new photon-counting detectors for single-molecule fluorescence microscopy
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Michalet, X., Colyer, R. A., Scalia, G., Ingargiola, A., Lin, R., Millaud, J. E., Weiss, S., Siegmund, Oswald H. W., Tremsin, Anton S., Vallerga, John V., Cheng, A., Levi, M., Aharoni, D., Arisaka, K., Villa, F., Guerrieri, F., Panzeri, F., Rech, I., Gulinatti, A., Zappa, F., Ghioni, M., and Cova, S.
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- 2013
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40. Genesis of improved quality in imaging through a national Australian echocardiography registry.
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Eccleston, D, Scalia, G, Kearney, L, Cross, D, Cehic, D, Disney, P, Xu, X-F, Cain, P, Srivastava, PM, Eccleston, D, Scalia, G, Kearney, L, Cross, D, Cehic, D, Disney, P, Xu, X-F, Cain, P, and Srivastava, PM
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite rapid technological advances and growth, quality in imaging has not received the focus seen elsewhere in cardiovascular medicine, resulting in significant gaps between guidelines and practice. Contemporary echocardiography practice requires comprehensive real-time data collection to allow dynamic auditing and benchmarking of key performance indices. The American College of Cardiology (ACC) proposed additional data standardisation, structured reporting identifying key data elements and imaging registries. In the absence of an Australian echocardiography registry, we developed a national clinical quality registry (GenesisCare Cardiovascular Outcomes Echo Registry). We hypothesised that measurement and local reporting of data would improve compliance of echo studies with quality guidelines and hence their clinical value. METHODS AND RESULTS: We prospectively collected data on 4 099 281 echocardiographic studies entered directly into a central electronic database from 63 laboratories across four Australian states between 2010 and 2021. Real-time auditing of key data elements and introduction of quality improvement pathways were performed to maximise completeness and uniformity of data acquisition and reporting. We compared completeness of key data element acquisition (AV peak velocity, left ventricular ejection fraction, E/e', LA area, rhythm, RVSP) by time and state using de-identified data. Key performance outcomes benchmarked against the aggregated study cohort and international standards were reported to individual sites to drive quality improvement. Between 2010 and 2014 there were significant improvements in data completeness (72.0%+/-26.8% vs 86.8%+/-13.5%, p=0.02), which were maintained to 2020. In addition, interstate variability fell for both EF and E/e' (p<0.002). CONCLUSIONS: This large-scale collaboration provides a platform for the development of major quality improvement initiatives in echocardiography. Introduction of local quality as
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- 2022
41. Largest neurosurgical social media group and its impact on communication and research
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Chaurasia, B., Umana, G.E., Scalia, G., Barresi, F., Yağmurlu, K., Soldozy, S., Deora, H., Raudino, G., Graziano, F., Nicoletti, G.F., Cicero, S. Lo, Maugeri, R., Tomasi, S.O., Zileli, M., Graffeo, C.S., Herrera, R.R., Shah, A., Ha, Y., Chaurasiya, R.K., Kim, H.S., Sameshima, T., Borba, L., Rotta, J.M., Chowdhury, D., Chaurasia, R.K., Grotenhuis, J.A., Linfante, I., Sekhar, L.N., Chaurasia, B., Umana, G.E., Scalia, G., Barresi, F., Yağmurlu, K., Soldozy, S., Deora, H., Raudino, G., Graziano, F., Nicoletti, G.F., Cicero, S. Lo, Maugeri, R., Tomasi, S.O., Zileli, M., Graffeo, C.S., Herrera, R.R., Shah, A., Ha, Y., Chaurasiya, R.K., Kim, H.S., Sameshima, T., Borba, L., Rotta, J.M., Chowdhury, D., Chaurasia, R.K., Grotenhuis, J.A., Linfante, I., and Sekhar, L.N.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND: The use of social media to communicate and disseminate knowledge has increased exponentially, especially in the field of neurosurgery. 'Neurosurgery cocktail' (NC) was developed by a group of young neurosurgeons as a means of sharing didactic materials and clinical experiences via social media. It connects 35.000 neurosurgeons worldwide on multiple platforms, primarily Facebook and Twitter. Given the rising utilization of social media in neurosurgery, the popularity of NC has also increased since its inception. In this study, the authors surveyed the social media analytics of NC for both Facebook and Twitter. Besides, we reviewed the literature on the use of social media in neurosurgery. METHODS: Facebook and Twitter metrics were extracted through each respective platform's analytics tools from December 2020 (earliest available date for data analysis) through January 2021. A literature search was conducted using PubMed (MEDLINE) and Scopus databases. RESULTS: On Facebook, as of January 2021, the group had a total of 25.590 members (87.6% male), most commonly (29%) between 35 and 44 years of age with over 100 countries were represented. As of January 2021, they had amassed 6457 followers on Twitter. During the last 28 d between December 2020 and January 2021, the account published 65 tweets that garnered a total of 196,900 impressions. Twelve articles were identified in our literature review on the use of social media within the neurosurgical community. CONCLUSIONS: NC is one of the most widely utilized neurosurgical social media resources available. Sharing knowledge has been broadened thanks to the recent social media evolution, and NC has become a leading player in disseminating neurosurgical knowledge.
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- 2022
42. Normal Values of Aortic Root Size According to Age, Sex, and Race: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Amuthan, V, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Patel, Hena N, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Addetia, Karima, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Zhang, Yun, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Hitschrich, Niklas, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, Lang, Roberto M, Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Amuthan, V, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Patel, Hena N, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Addetia, Karima, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Zhang, Yun, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Hitschrich, Niklas, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, and Lang, Roberto M
- Abstract
Background: Accurate measurements of the aortic annulus and root are important for guiding therapeutic decisions regarding the need for aortic surgery. Current echocardiographic guidelines for identification of aortic root dilatation are limited because current normative values were derived predominantly from white individuals in narrow age ranges, and based partially on M-mode measurements. Using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study, the authors sought to establish normal ranges of aortic dimensions across sexes, races, and a wide range of ages. Methods: Adult individuals free of heart, lung, and kidney disease were prospectively enrolled from 15 countries, with even distributions among sexes and age groups: young (18–40 years), middle aged (41–65 years) and old (>65 years). Transthoracic two-dimensional echocardiograms of 1,585 subjects (mean age, 47 ± 17 years; 50.4% men; mean body surface area [BSA], 1.77 ± 0.22 m2) were analyzed in a core laboratory following American Society of Echocardiography guidelines. Measurements, indexed separately by BSA and by height, included the aortic annulus, sinuses of Valsalva, and sinotubular junction. Differences among age, sex, and racial groups were evaluated using unpaired two-tailed Student's t tests. Results: All aortic root dimensions were larger in men compared with women. After indexing to BSA, all measured dimensions were significantly larger in women, whereas men continued to show larger dimensions after indexing to height. Of note, the upper limits of normal for all aortic dimensions were lower across all age groups, compared with the guidelines. Aortic dimensions were larger in older age groups in both sexes, a trend that persisted regardless of BSA or height adjustment. Last, differences in aortic dimensions were also observed according to race: Asians had the smallest nonindexed aortic dimensions at all levels. Conclusions: There are significant differences in aortic dimensions acco
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- 2022
43. Percutaneous ASD Closure in a Large Australian Series: Short- and Long-Term Outcomes
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Walters, D.L., Boga, T., Burstow, D., Scalia, G., Hourigan, L.A., and Aroney, C.N.
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- 2012
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44. Co-circulation of SARS-CoV-2 Alpha and Gamma variants in Italy, February and March 2021
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Stefanelli, P., Trentini, F., Guzzetta, G., Marziano, V., Mammone, A., Schepisi, M. S., Poletti, P., Grane, C. M., Manica, M., del Manso, M., Andrianou, X., Ajelli, M., Rezza, G., Brusaferro, S., Merler, S., Di Martino, A., Ambrosio, L., Lo Presti, A., Fiore, S., Fabiani, C., Benedetti, E., Di Mario, G., Facchini, M., Puzelli, S., Calzoletti, L., Fontana, S., Venturi, G., Fortuna, C., Marsili, G., Amendola, A., Stuppia, L., Savini, G., Picerno, A., Lopizzo, T., Dell'Edera, D., Minchella, P., Greco, F., Viglietto, G., Atripaldi, L., Limone, A., D'Agaro, P., Licastro, D., Pongolini, S., Sambri, V., Dirani, G., Zannoli, S., Affanni, P., Colucci, M. E., Capobianchi, M. R., Icardi, G., Bruzzone, B., Lillo, F., Orsi, A., Pariani, E., Baldanti, F., Molecolare, U. V., Gismondo, M. R., Maggi, F., Caruso, A., Ceriotti, F., Boniotti, M. B., Barbieri, I., Bagnarelli, P., Menzo, S., Garofalo, S., Scutella, M., Pagani, E., Collini, L., Ghisetti, V., Brossa, S., Ru, G., Bozzetta, E., Chironna, M., Parisi, A., Rubino, S., Serra, C., Piras, G., Coghe, F., Vitale, F., Tramuto, F., Scalia, G., Palermo, C. I., Mancuso, G., Pollicino, T., Di Gaudio, F., Vullo, S., Reale, S., Cusi, M. G., Rossolini, G. M., Pistello, M., Mencacci, A., Camilloni, B., Severini, S., Di Benedetto, M., Terregino, C., Monne, I., Biscaro, V., Stefanelli P, Trentini F, Guzzetta G, Marziano V, Mammone A, Sane Schepisi M, Poletti P, Molina Grané C, Manica M, Del Manso M, Andrianou X, Ajelli M, Rezza G, Brusaferro S, Merler S, Vitale F, Tramuto F, Stefanelli P., Trentini F., Guzzetta G., Marziano V., Mammone A., Sane Schepisi M., Poletti P., Molina Grane C., Manica M., Del Manso M., Andrianou X., Ajelli M., Rezza G., Brusaferro S., Merler S., Sambri V, and (membro del COVID-19 National Microbiology Surveillance Study Group)
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Epidemiology ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,co-circulation ,lineage ,SARS-CoV-2 variant of concern ,transmissibility ,Humans ,Italy ,Models, Theoretical ,Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicata ,SARS-COV-2 VARIANT OF CONCERN, CO-CIRCULATION, LINEAGE, TRANSMISSIBILITY, HUMANS, ITALY, MODELS, THEORETICAL, COVID-19, SARS-COV-2 ,Theoretical ,Models ,Virology ,Human - Abstract
Background Several SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern (VOC) have emerged through 2020 and 2021. There is need for tools to estimate the relative transmissibility of emerging variants of SARS-CoV-2 with respect to circulating strains. Aim We aimed to assess the prevalence of co-circulating VOC in Italy and estimate their relative transmissibility. Methods We conducted two genomic surveillance surveys on 18 February and 18 March 2021 across the whole Italian territory covering 3,243 clinical samples and developed a mathematical model that describes the dynamics of co-circulating strains. Results The Alpha variant was already dominant on 18 February in a majority of regions/autonomous provinces (national prevalence: 54%) and almost completely replaced historical lineages by 18 March (dominant across Italy, national prevalence: 86%). We found a substantial proportion of the Gamma variant on 18 February, almost exclusively in central Italy (prevalence: 19%), which remained similar on 18 March. Nationally, the mean relative transmissibility of Alpha ranged at 1.55–1.57 times the level of historical lineages (95% CrI: 1.45–1.66). The relative transmissibility of Gamma varied according to the assumed degree of cross-protection from infection with other lineages and ranged from 1.12 (95% CrI: 1.03–1.23) with complete immune evasion to 1.39 (95% CrI: 1.26–1.56) for complete cross-protection. Conclusion We assessed the relative advantage of competing viral strains, using a mathematical model assuming different degrees of cross-protection. We found substantial co-circulation of Alpha and Gamma in Italy. Gamma was not able to outcompete Alpha, probably because of its lower transmissibility.
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- 2022
45. Characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern B.1.1.7, B.1.351 or P.1: data from seven EU/EEA countries, weeks 38/2020 to 10/2021
- Author
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Funk T., Pharris A., Spiteri G., Bundle N., Melidou A., Carr M., Gonzalez G., Garcia-Leon A., Crispie F., O'Connor L., Murphy N., Mossong J., Vergison A., Wienecke-Baldacchino A. K., Abdelrahman T., Riccardo F., Stefanelli P., Di Martino A., Bella A., Lo Presti A., Casaca P., Moreno J., Borges V., Isidro J., Ferreira R., Gomes J. P., Dotsenko L., Suija H., Epstein J., Sadikova O., Sepp H., Ikonen N., Savolainen-Kopra C., Blomqvist S., Mottonen T., Helve O., Gomes-Dias J., Adlhoch C., Macori G., Russell L., Yandle Z., Bennett C., O'Byrne E., Murphy A., Tuite G., Conroy A., Duffy M., Morley U., Keoghan B., Ford I., Kennedy M., McDonnell S., Flynn A., Clarke A., Crowley A., Martin C., Kelly E., Foxton J., Hare D., Dunford L., Connell J., Moran J., Dean J., Fanning S., Rajan L., De Gascun C., Kenny J., Cotter P., Walsh C., Lawton E., Fitzpatrick A., Mullins E., Della Bartola M., McCabe M., Stapleton P., Meaney C., Fanning L., Prentice M., MacSharry J., Dempsey C., Mallon P., Leon A., Chaturvedi A., Coughlan S., McAndrew G., Reddington K., Walsh F., Fitzpatrick D., Smyth C., O'Dwyer T., Chambers T., Clarke L., Jebb D., Klopp J., Kavanagh D., Haslam K., Buckley P., Lemass K., Fitzpatrick F., Burns K., Cafferkey J., Richmond A., Foley M., Sanchez-Morgado J., Chalapati S., Pinnamaneni N., Crosbie C., Limbachiya D., Tinago W., Garcia Leon A. A., Miles S., Alalwan D., Negi R., Macken A., Feeney E., Kenny G., McCann K., Kelly N., Blair M., McCann R., Kenny C., O'Brion C., Waqas S., Savinelli S., Doran P., Bracken T., Varghese P., Lambert J. S., Cotter A., Muldoon E., Sheehan G., McGinty T., Lambert J., Green S., Leamy K., de Barra E., McConkey S., Kelly C., Horgan M., Sadlier C., Yousif O., O'Donnell J., Fitzgerald M., Petty-Saphon N., Cuddihy J., Fiore S., Fabiani C., Benedetti E., Di Mario G., Facchini M., Puzelli S., Calzoletti L., Fontana S., Venturi G., Fortuna C., Marsili G., Amendola A., Stuppia L., Savini G., Picerno A., Lopizzo T., Dell'Edera D., Minchella P., Greco F., Mauro M. V., Viglietto G., Atripaldi L., Limone A., D'Agaro P., Licastro D., Marcello A., Capobianchi M. R., Icardi G., Bruzzone B., Lillo F., Orsi A., Pariani E., Baldanti F., Gismondo M. R., Maggi F., Caruso A., Ceriotti F., Boniotti B., Bagnarelli P., Garofalo S., Scutella M., Pagani E., Collini L., Ghisetti V., Ru G., Chironna M., Parisi A., Rubino S., Serra C., Piras G., Coghe F., Vitale F., Tramuto F., Scalia G., Palermo C. I., Mancuso G., Di Gaudio F., Vullo S., Reale S., Cusi M. G., Rossolini G. M., Pistello M., Mencacci A., Camilloni B., Severini S., Di Benedetto M., Calogero T., Monne I., Biscaro V., COVID Study Groups, Funk T., Pharris A., Spiteri G., Bundle N., Melidou A., Carr M., Gonzalez G., Garcia-Leon A., Crispie F., O'Connor L., Murphy N., Mossong J., Vergison A., Wienecke-Baldacchino A.K., Abdelrahman T., Riccardo F., Stefanelli P., Di Martino A., Bella A., Lo Presti A., Casaca P., Moreno J., Borges V., Isidro J., Ferreira R., Gomes J.P., Dotsenko L., Suija H., Epstein J., Sadikova O., Sepp H., Ikonen N., Savolainen-Kopra C., Blomqvist S., Mottonen T., Helve O., Gomes-Dias J., Adlhoch C., Macori G., Russell L., Yandle Z., Bennett C., O'Byrne E., Murphy A., Tuite G., Conroy A., Duffy M., Morley U., Keoghan B., Ford I., Kennedy M., McDonnell S., Flynn A., Clarke A., Crowley A., Martin C., Kelly E., Foxton J., Hare D., Dunford L., Connell J., Moran J., Dean J., Fanning S., Rajan L., De Gascun C., Kenny J., Cotter P., Walsh C., Lawton E., Fitzpatrick A., Mullins E., Della Bartola M., McCabe M., Stapleton P., Meaney C., Fanning L., Prentice M., MacSharry J., Dempsey C., Mallon P., Leon A., Chaturvedi A., Coughlan S., McAndrew G., Reddington K., Walsh F., Fitzpatrick D., Smyth C., O'Dwyer T., Chambers T., Clarke L., Jebb D., Klopp J., Kavanagh D., Haslam K., Buckley P., Lemass K., Fitzpatrick F., Burns K., Cafferkey J., Richmond A., Foley M., Sanchez-Morgado J., Chalapati S., Pinnamaneni N., Crosbie C., Limbachiya D., Tinago W., Garcia Leon A.A., Miles S., Alalwan D., Negi R., Macken A., Feeney E., Kenny G., McCann K., Kelly N., Blair M., McCann R., Kenny C., O'Brion C., Waqas S., Savinelli S., Doran P., Bracken T., Varghese P., Lambert J.S., Cotter A., Muldoon E., Sheehan G., McGinty T., Lambert J., Green S., Leamy K., de Barra E., McConkey S., Kelly C., Horgan M., Sadlier C., Yousif O., O'Donnell J., Fitzgerald M., Petty-Saphon N., Cuddihy J., Fiore S., Fabiani C., Benedetti E., Di Mario G., Facchini M., Puzelli S., Calzoletti L., Fontana S., Venturi G., Fortuna C., Marsili G., Amendola A., Stuppia L., Savini G., Picerno A., Lopizzo T., Dell'Edera D., Minchella P., Greco F., Mauro M.V., Viglietto G., Atripaldi L., Limone A., D'Agaro P., Licastro D., Marcello A., Capobianchi M.R., Icardi G., Bruzzone B., Lillo F., Orsi A., Pariani E., Baldanti F., Gismondo M.R., Maggi F., Caruso A., Ceriotti F., Boniotti B., Bagnarelli P., Garofalo S., Scutella M., Pagani E., Collini L., Ghisetti V., Ru G., Chironna M., Parisi A., Rubino S., Serra C., Piras G., Coghe F., Vitale F., Tramuto F., Scalia G., Palermo C.I., Mancuso G., Di Gaudio F., Vullo S., Reale S., Cusi M.G., Rossolini G.M., Pistello M., Mencacci A., Camilloni B., Severini S., Di Benedetto M., Calogero T., Monne I., Biscaro V., and COVID Study Groups
- Subjects
Infecções Respiratórias ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Critical Care ,Epidemiology ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,variants of concern ,Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicata ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care admission ,030212 general & internal medicine ,COVID-19 ,Europe ,SARS-CoV-2 ,surveillance ,Surveillance ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Odds ratio ,Confidence interval ,Variants of Concern ,COVID-19, Europe, SARS-CoV-2, surveillance, variants of concern ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Rapid Communication ,Human - Abstract
COVID study groups - PORTUGAL: Portuguese Laboratory Network for the Diagnosis of COVID-19 and Public Health Department of the Health Administrative Regions, Physicians that provided data and samples from suspected cases and SARS-CoV-2 genetic characterization. INSA laboratory team for the diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2. Algarve Biomedical Center and Unilabs. We compared 19,207 cases of SARS-CoV-2 variant B.1.1.7/S gene target failure (SGTF), 436 B.1.351 and 352 P.1 to non-variant cases reported by seven European countries. COVID-19 cases with these variants had significantly higher adjusted odds ratios for hospitalisation (B.1.1.7/SGTF: 1.7, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.0-2.9; B.1.351: 3.6, 95% CI: 2.1-6.2; P.1: 2.6, 95% CI: 1.4-4.8) and B.1.1.7/SGTF and P.1 cases also for intensive care admission (B.1.1.7/SGTF: 2.3, 95% CI: 1.4-3.5; P.1: 2.2, 95% CI: 1.7-2.8). ECDC internal funds. The ICSC and the AIID Cohort are supported by Science Foundation Ireland under the Science Foundation Ireland, Enterprise Ireland, IDA Ireland COVID-19 Rapid Response Funding Call (Grant number: COVID-RRC 20/COV/0103 and COVID-RRC 20/COV/0305). info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
- Published
- 2021
46. New perspectives in the surgical neuroanatomy of the subfrontal translamina terminalis approach
- Author
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Tomasi, S.O., Umana, G.E., De Simone, L.J., Raudino, G., Priola, S.M., Palmisciano, P., Scalia, G., Graziano, F., Capone, C., Cappai, P.F., Roetzer, S., Garcia-Oriola, G., Chaurasia, B., Fieggen, G.A., Iaconetta, G., Lawton, M.T., and Winkler, P.A.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Phenotypic and functional heterogeneity of low-density and high-density human lung macrophages. (VARRICCHI AUTORE CORRISPONDENTE)
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Balestrieri B., Granata F., Loffredo S., Petraroli A., Scalia G., Morabito P., Cardamone C., Varricchi G., Triggiani M., Balestrieri, B., Granata, F., Loffredo, S., Petraroli, A., Scalia, G., Morabito, P., Cardamone, C., Varricchi, G., and Triggiani, M.
- Subjects
IL-6 ,IL-12 ,Macrophage ,TNF-α ,IL-10 ,Lipopolysaccharide ,Monocyte ,Lung ,Cancer - Abstract
Background: Pulmonary macrophages are a highly heterogeneous cell population distributed in different lung compartments. Methods: We separated two subpopulations of macrophages from human lung parenchyma according to flotation over density gradients. Results: Two-thirds 65.4% of the lung macrophages have a density between 1.065 and 1.078 (high-density macrophages: HDMs), and the remaining one-third (34.6) had a density between 1.039 and 1.052 (low-density macrophages: LDMs). LDMs had a larger area (691 vs. 462 μm2) and cell perimeter (94 vs. 77 μm) compared to HDMs. A significantly higher percentage of HDMs expressed CD40, CD45, and CD86 compared to LDMs. In contrast, a higher percentage of LDMs expressed the activation markers CD63 and CD64. The release of TNF-α, IL-6, IL-10 and IL-12 induced by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was significantly higher in HDMs than in LDMs. Conclusion: The human lung contains two subpopulations of macrophages that differ in buoyancy, morphometric parameters, surface marker expression and response to LPS. These subpopulations of macrophages probably play distinct roles in lung inflammation and immune responses.
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- 2021
48. Comparison between Edwards SAPIEN 3 and Edwards SAPIEN 3 ULTRA in Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI): The First Australian Experience
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Abdul Halim, M., primary, Murdoch, D., additional, Scalia, G., additional, and Poon, K., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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49. Variations in LA Volume Indexation Across Different Ethnicities in Healthy Subjects With Normal Body Mass Index (BMI)
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Ferkh, A., primary, Pathan, F., additional, Kizana, E., additional, Singh, A., additional, Singulane, C., additional, Miyoshi, T., additional, Prado, A., additional, Addetia, K., additional, Bellino, M., additional, Daimon, M., additional, Fajardo, P., additional, Kasliwal, R., additional, Kirkpatrick, J., additional, Monaghan, M., additional, Muraru, D., additional, Ogunyankin, K., additional, Park, S., additional, Ronderos, R., additional, Sadeghpour, A., additional, Scalia, G., additional, Takeuchi, M., additional, Tsang, W., additional, Tucay, E., additional, Rodrigues, A., additional, Vivekanandan, A., additional, Zhang, Y., additional, Schreckenberg, M., additional, Blankenhagen, M., additional, Degel, M., additional, Hitschrich, N., additional, Asch, F., additional, Lang, R., additional, and Thomas, L., additional
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- 2022
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50. Prevalence of Disproportionate RV Filling Pressures to LV Filling Pressures
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Mulligan, A., primary, Burrage, M., additional, Savage, M., additional, Black, P., additional, and Scalia, G., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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