Andrea Lovaria
University of Milan
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Journal of Hepatology | 2002
Francesco Salerno; M. Merli; M. Cazzaniga; Valentina Valeriano; Plinio Rossi; Andrea Lovaria; Daniele Meregaglia; Antonio Nicolini; Lorenzo Lubatti; Oliviero Riggio
BACKGROUND/AIMS Patients undergoing transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) are at risk of early death due to end-stage liver failure. The aim of this study was to compare model of end-stage liver disease (MELD) and Child-Pugh scores as predictors of survival after TIPS. METHODS We studied 140 cirrhotic patients treated with elective TIPS. Concordance (c)-statistic was used to assess the ability of MELD or Child-Pugh scores to predict 3-month survival. The prediction of overall survivals was estimated by comparing actuarial curves of subgroups of patients stratified according to either Child-Pugh scores or MELD risk scores. RESULTS During a median follow-up of 23.7 months, 55 patients died, 14 underwent liver transplantation and seven were lost to follow-up. For 3-month survival, the discrimination power of MELD score was superior to Child-Pugh score (0.84 vs. 0.70, z=2.07; P=0.038). Unlike Pugh score, MELD score identified two subgroups of Child C patients with different overall survivals (P=0.027). The comparison between observed and predicted survivals showed that MELD score overrates death risk. CONCLUSIONS MELD score is superior to Child-Pugh score as predictor of short-term outcome after TIPS. Its accuracy, however, decreases for long-term predictions.
American Journal of Hypertension | 2000
Flavio Airoldi; Simone Palatresi; Ivana Marana; Chiara Bencini; Riccardo Benti; Andrea Lovaria; Cristina Alberti; Barbara Nador; Antonio Nicolini; Virgilio Longari; Paolo Gerundini; Alberto Morganti
The effects of percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA) on the renal function of stenotic kidneys are usually assessed by evaluating the changes in serum creatinine, which is quite a rough indicator of glomerular filtration rate (GFR). In 27 hypertensive patients with 19 atherosclerotic and 11 fibromuscular significant renal artery stenoses, we investigated with renal scintigraphy the short-term (5 days) and long-term (10 months) effects of a technically successful PTRA (in seven cases combined with a stent implantation) on GFR of the stenotic and contralateral kidneys; these measurements were combined with those of plasma renin activity (PRA) and of angiotensin II (AII). We found that in short-term studies after PTRA GFR rose from 29.7 +/- 3.5 to 34.6 +/- 3.1 mL/min and from 36.9 +/- 4.0 to 45.1 +/- 4.3 mL/min, respectively, in atherosclerotic and fibromuscular poststenotic kidneys. In long-term studies GFR further and significantly increased, to 37.8 +/- 3.2 mL/min in the former group, whereas it stabilized in the latter group (46.0 +/- 3.6 mL/min). In patients with fibromuscular stenosis these changes in GFR were associated with clear-cut reductions in blood pressure (BP), PRA, and AII; these decrements also occurred in patients with atherosclerotic stenosis but to a much lesser extent. We also found that in short- and long-term studies the percent of PTRA-induced increments of GFR in the poststenotic kidneys were inversely correlated with the baseline values of GFR. In addition, the absolute and percent increments of GFR were positively correlated with the basal levels of AII. Thus the time course of the improvement in GFR after angioplasty may differ in kidneys, depending on the etiology of the stenosis, in that in those with fibromuscular stenosis it was entirely apparent within a few days whereas in those with atherosclerotic stenosis it required several months to be fully expressed. Also, it appears that the more compromised kidneys are those that benefit most from the dilatation and that AII levels are useful indicators of the possibility that the stenotic kidney will have a favorable functional outcome in terms of restoration of renal blood flow.
Journal of Hypertension | 1996
L. Burdick; Flavio Airoldi; Ivana Marana; Marco Giussani; Cristina Alberti; Massimo Cianci; Andrea Lovaria; Silvia Saccheri; Gabriella Gazzano; Alberto Morganti
Objective To compare the accuracy of four echo-Doppler-derived velocimetric indices (pulsatility and resistance indices, acceleration and acceleration time) in detecting renal artery stenosis in hypertensive patients. Patients and methods In 73 hospitalized patients with moderate-to-severe hypertension, 18 of whom had normal renal arteries and 55 renal artery stenosis (50-95%) either atherosclerotic (30 cases, five bilateral) or fibromuscular dysplasia (25 cases, two bilateral), we measured the four velocimetric indices using the lateral abdominal approach and sampling Doppler waveforms distally to the stenosis. The diagnostic accuracy of each index was calculated using as cut-off limit the ideal threshold determined with the receiver-operating characteristic curves. Results On average all of the indices were altered significantly in arteries with stenosis of both aetiologies with respect to normal arteries, the alterations of pulsatility and resistance indices being, however, less pronounced than those of acceleration and acceleration time, particularly in atherosclerotic stenosis. With the cut-off limits of 0.93, 0.59 and 7.4 m/s2 and 60 ms, respectively, for pulsatility and resistance indices, acceleration and acceleration time, their diagnostic accuracies were 80, 73, 93 and 92%. In stenotic arteries, only the acceleration time was correlated with the degree of arterial narrowing, whereas, in normal arteries, only pulsatility and resistance indices were directly correlated with the age of patients. Conclusions Acceleration and acceleration time are more accurate indices than pulsatility and resistance to screen for renal artery stenosis, probably because their alterations are less attenuated by the counterbalancing effects of age and of atherosclerosis.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2002
Silvia Saccheri; Andrea Lovaria; A. Sangiovanni; Antonio Nicolini; Cristina De Fazio; G. Ronchi; Pierangelo Fasani; Ersilio Del Ninno; M. Colombo
PURPOSE To establish whether segmental transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) treatment may improve the rates of survival in patients with compensated cirrhosis and inoperable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). MATERIALS AND METHODS Fifty-six patients with compensated cirrhosis and inoperable HCC were treated with segmental TACE. One hundred forty treatments (mean, 2.5 per patient; 30-60 mg Epirubicin, 4-10 mL Lipiodol, and Gelfoam particles) were administered. RESULTS During the 69-month study, 25 patients (45%) died of tumor progression, 12 (21%) of liver failure, nine (16%) of gastrointestinal hemorrhage, and three (5%) of other causes; seven patients (13%) are still alive. The 3-year rate of survival was 32%. Intention-to-treat analysis determined that patients with Child-Pugh class A disease (n = 44; 79%) or a single <5-cm HCC (n = 21; 37%) had a higher rate of survival than those with Child-Pugh class B disease (n = 12; 21%; P <.002) or a larger HCC (n = 35; 63%; P <.02) and patients (n = 41) who were treated with more than one course of TACE had a higher rate of survival than those who were treated with a single TACE procedure (n = 15; P <.0003). Multivariate analysis was used to predict rates of survival by number of treatments (hazard ratio, 0.6; CI, 0.48-0.86; P <.004), Child-Pugh class (hazard ratio, 2.8; CI, 1.41-5.74; P <.003), and tumor size (hazard ratio, 3.8; CI, 1.81-8.01; P <.001). The 3-year rate of survival in patients with Child-Pugh class A disease and a < or =5-cm-HCC (n = 16) was 56%. This result was similar to the 50% 3-year rate of survival in untreated historic controls with similar characteristics. CONCLUSION The rate of survival in patients with compensated cirrhosis and inoperable HCC did not appear to improve with use of TACE therapy.
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 1997
Daniele Gasparini; Andrea Lovaria; Silvia Saccheri; Antonio Nicolini; Giorgio Favini; Luigi Inglese; Pier Luigi Giorgetti; Pier Tommaso Basadonna
AbstractPurpose: To evaluate the feasibility and short-term follow-up results of treating iliac aneurysms by the Cragg Endopro System 1 stent-graft. Methods: Nine lesions (two pseudoaneurysms and seven atherosclerotic aneurysms) were treated in eight patients by percutaneous implantation of a total of 10 stent-grafts. The procedure was followed by anticoagulation with heparin for 6 days, then antiplatelet therapy. Follow-up was by color Doppler ultrasound scan at 2 days and 3 months after the procedure for all patients, and by venous digital subtraction angiography and/or angio-CT up to 12 months later for four patients. Results: Initial clinical success rate was 100% and there were two minor complications. In one case the delivery system was faulty resulting in failure to deploy the stent-graft. An additional device had to be used. At 3–12 months all prostheses were patent but one patient (12.5%) had a minimal pergraft leak. Conclusion: Percutaneous stent-grafting with this device is a safe and efficacious treatment of iliac artery aneurysms.
Journal of Hypertension | 2001
Simone Palatresi; Virgilio Longari; Flavio Airoldi; Riccardo Benti; Barbara Nador; Chiara Bencini; Andrea Lovaria; Cecilia Del Vecchio; A. Nicolini; Franco Voltini; Paolo Gerundini; Alberto Morganti
Background Distal echo-Doppler velocimetric indices are widely used for revealing the presence of a renal artery stenosis but there is scarce information as to whether they reflect the renal hemodynamics in stenotic and non-stenotic kidneys. Objectives and methods We evaluated the pulsatility and resistive indices (PI and RI), acceleration (A) and acceleration time (A t) and correlated their values with those of effective renal plasma flow (ERPF), glomerular filtration rate (GFR), renal vascular resistance (RVR) and filtration fraction (FF) estimated by single kidney scintigraphy in 24 kidneys with 70–95% renal artery stenosis (atherosclerotic n = 17, fibromuscular n = 7) and in 27 non-stenotic kidneys (11 contralateral to renal artery stenosis and 16 of patients with essential hypertension). In patients with stenotic kidneys, these measurements were repeated within 7 days after a successful percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA) (in 11 arteries performed in combination with stent implantation). Results Prior to dilation we found that the stenotic kidneys had significantly lower values of ERPF, GFR and higher RVR than the non-stenotic kidneys and that these hemodynamic alterations were associated with those, also statistically significant, of the four velocimetric indices. In non-stenotic kidneys, there were highly significant relationships between PI and ERPF, and RVR (r = − 0.68 and 0.81 respectively P < 0.01); similar relationships were found for RI (r = − 0.67 and 0.78 P < 0.01) whereas no such correlations were found between these two velocimetric indices and GFR and FF; also no correlations were found between A and A t and ERPF, GFR, RVR and FF. In stenotic kidneys no significant correlations were found between any of the velocimetric and the hemodynamic indices. Renal artery dilation induced clear cut increments in ERPF, GFR and reduction in RVR in post-stenotic kidneys, which were associated with normalization of all four velocimetric indices. No relationships were observed between the renal hemodynamic and the velocimetric changes induced by dilation; however in post-stenotic kidneys the relationships between PI and RI, ERPF and RVR were restored as in non-stenotic kidneys. Conclusions These data indicate that PI and RI can be used to assess ERPF and RVR both in non-stenotic and post-stenotic kidneys; however, none of the velocimetric indices examined in this study can provide valid informations on the renal hemodynamics of stenotic kidneys and on their changes induced by PTRA.
Journal of Hypertension | 1989
Alberto Morganti; Patrizia Quorso; Paola Ferraris; Andrea Lovaria; Maria Fruscio; Silvia Saccheri; Alberto Zanchetti
We measured arterial pressure and plasma renin activity throughout the first week after a technically successful percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA) in 12 patients with hypertension and unilateral renal artery stenosis. Mean arterial pressure fell from 126 +/- 4 to 105 +/- 3 mmHg within 1-2 days of PTRA and stabilized thereafter; in addition, plasma renin activity decreased sharply during the first 2 days after the angioplasty (from 5.2 +/- 2.3 to 1.3 +/- 0.3 ng/ml per h) but continued to decline, reaching 0.8 +/- 0.2 ng/ml per h at the end of the study. When the antihypertensive effect of PTRA was examined in relation to baseline values of plasma renin activity, the patients with low, intermediate and high plasma renin activity showed percentage decreases in mean arterial pressure of, respectively, 6%, 16% and 19% by the sixth day of observation after the angioplasty. No overall correlation was found between the changes in arterial pressure and those in plasma renin activity induced by PTRA. These data suggest that the beneficial effect of PTRA on blood pressure can be estimated within a few days and that the reduction in the activity of the renin system is the principal but not the sole mechanism responsible for it.
Hepatology | 1998
M. Merli; Francesco Salerno; Oliviero Riggio; Roberto de Franchis; Franco Fiaccadori; Patrizia Meddi; Massimo Primignani; G. Pedretti; Alessandra Maggi; L. Capocaccia; Andrea Lovaria; Ugo Ugolotti; Filippo Maria Salvatori; Mario Bezzi; Plinio Rossi
Kidney International | 1998
Ivana Marana; Flavio Airoldi; L. Burdick; Cristina Alberti; Andrea Lovaria; Silvia Saccheri; Gabriella Gazzano; Simone Palatresi; Barbara Nador; Lucia Turolo; Alberto Morganti
Annales D Urologie | 1999
Andrea Lovaria; A. Nicolini; Meregaglia D; Saccheri S; Rivolta R; Rampoldi A; Rossi P; E. Montanari