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Featured researches published by Antonio Carozza.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001

Recurrent infective endocarditis: a multivariate analysis of 21 years of experience

Attilio Renzulli; Antonio Carozza; Gianpaolo Romano; Marisa De Feo; Alessandro Della Corte; Rosario Gregorio; Maurizio Cotrufo

BACKGROUND To evaluate which variables predict recurrence of endocarditis after surgical treatment, we reviewed our 21-year experience. METHODS Between January 1979 and May 2000, 308 consecutive valve replacement procedures for infective endocarditis were performed in 271 patients. Univariate and multivariate time-related analyses were performed to retrospectively evaluate the role of the following variables in the development of recurrent postoperative endocarditis: gender, site of endocarditis, previous valve disease, drug abuse, diabetes, positive valve/blood cultures, sepsis, perivalvular involvement, previous embolic events, type of replacement device, and persistent postoperative fever. RESULTS Clinical and echocardiographic follow-up was 97.36% complete, mean follow-up time was 53.2+/-3.4 months. Recurrent endocarditis developed in 58 cases (22.5%). Variables predicting recurrence were prosthetic endocarditis (p = 0.00001), positive valve culture (p = 0.0039), and persistence of fever at the seventh postoperative day (p = 0.000001). CONCLUSIONS Correct protocols of antibiotic therapy guided by microbiology may reduce the incidence of recurrent endocarditis to allow for surgery on sterile tissues and to prevent prosthetic infection. Recurrence rate is not affected by the choice of valve substitute, but can be prevented by complete surgical debridement.


International Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Intravascular hemolysis after mitral and aortic valve replacement with different types of mechanical prostheses

Gennaro Ismeno; Attilio Renzulli; Antonio Carozza; Marisa De Feo; Michele Iannuzzi; Pasquale Santè; Maurizio Cotrufo

Heart valve replacement with mechanical prosthesis is associated with mild intravascular hemolysis. In this study we evaluated the incidence of hemolysis in patients with different combinations of two mechanical valves. Between 1974 and 1996, 680 patients underwent mitral and aortic valve replacement with mechanical prostheses; we selected 90 patients, divided into six groups according to the prosthetic model (Group A, ball and tilting disc; Group B, ball and bileaflet; Group C, tilting disc and tilting disc; Group D, tilting disc and bileaflet; Group E, bileaflet and tilting disc; Group F, bileaflet and bileaflet; respectively, in mitral and aortic position). Blood tests were performed to check blood hemoglobin, serum lactic dehydrogenase, percent-correlated reticulocyte fraction, serum haptoglobin, and schistocytes. Chi square test was performed for categorical data. ANOVA and Bonferroni tests were performed in order to evaluate significant statistical differences between media and variance of the hematological data. A mild degree of intravascular hemolysis was observed in 30% of patients with double mechanical prostheses. LDH values were above the normal values in all groups, although a significant difference was found only between Group B versus Groups C and D. Reticulocytes and schistocytes and serum haptoglobin values were within the normal range and no differences were found between the groups. Low levels of blood hemoglobin were found in Groups D and F. The difference was statistically significant when compared with Groups A and E. In conclusion, hemolysis is frequent but never severe in patients with mitral and aortic mechanical prostheses. A higher incidence of subclinical hemolysis was found in patients with bileaflet valves regardless of the position of the implant.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Are blood and valve cultures predictive for long-term outcome following surgery for infective endocarditis?

Attilio Renzulli; Antonio Carozza; Claudio Marra; Gianpaolo Romano; Gennaro Ismeno; Marisa De Feo; Alessandro Della Corte; Maurizio Cotrufo

OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether perioperative bacteria identification in blood and/or in valve cultures can predict early and late outcome of surgery for infective endocarditis, a retrospective study was performed. METHODS Between January 1978 and December 1998, 232 patients, 79 (34.1%) female and 153 (65.9%) male with mean age of 44. 95+/-1.03 years (range 8-79) underwent surgery for infective endocarditis on a native (162 cases) or prosthetic (70 cases) valve. Patients were divided into three groups according to the perioperative x of microbiological tests: Group A: patients with preoperative positive blood cultures (83 cases); Group B: patients with positive valve cultures (35 cases); Group C: patients with negative blood and valve cultures (114 cases). Categorical values were compared by chi(2) analysis, whereas continuous data were compared by ANOVA and Bonferroni correction for post hoc comparisons. Analysis of late survival and complications was performed with Kaplan-Meier and Log Rank test. Late mortality, reoperation, perivalvular leak, recurrence of infection were considered as treatment failure. All data were presented as mean+/-standard error. RESULTS Hospital mortality was 10.8% (9/83) in Group A, 8.6% (3/35) in Group B, and 14.9% (17/114) in Group C (P=0.52; not significant (NS)). Ten-year survival was 62.7+/-8% in Group A, 43.9+/-19% in Group B and 62.7+/-7% in Group C (P=0.38; NS). Ten-year freedom from reoperation was 85.2+/-6% in Group A, 37.9+/-20% in Group B and 80+/-6% in Group C (P=0.0034). Ten-year freedom from treatment failure was 56.3+/-8% in Group A, 31.6+/-16% in Group B and 55. 3+/-7% in Group C (P=0.46; NS). CONCLUSIONS Positive blood and tissue cultures are not predictive for hospital mortality and late treatment failure in patients with infective endocarditis. Positive valve cultures, a common finding in patients with staphylococcal endocarditis, are predictive for a higher risk of reoperation.


The Scientific World Journal | 2012

The Need for a Specific Risk Prediction System in Native Valve Infective Endocarditis Surgery

Marisa De Feo; Maurizio Cotrufo; Antonio Carozza; Luca Salvatore De Santo; F Amendolara; Salvatore Giordano; Ester Della Ratta; Gianantonio Nappi; Alessandro Della Corte

The need for a specific risk score system for infective endocarditis (IE) surgery has been previously claimed. In a single-center pilot study, preliminary to future multicentric development and validation, bivariate and multivariate (logistic regression) analysis of early postoperative mortality predictors in 440 native valve IE patients were performed. Mathematical procedures assigned scores to the independent predictors emerged (AUC of the ROC curve: 0.88). Overall mortality was 9.1%. Six predictors were identified and assigned scores, including age (5–13 points), renal failure (5), NYHA class IV (9), critical preoperative state (11), lack of preoperative attainment of blood culture negativity (5), perivalvular involvement (5). Four risk classes were drawn ranging from “very low risk” (≤5 points, mean predicted mortality 1%), and to “very high risk” (≥20 points, 43% mortality). IE-specific risk stratification models are both needed, as disease-specific factors (e.g., cultures, abscess), beside the generic ones (e.g., age, renal impairment) affect mortality, and feasible.


Heart and Vessels | 1999

Surgery for tricuspid valve endocarditis: A selective approach

Attilio Renzulli; Marisa De Feo; Antonio Carozza; Alessandro Della Corte; Rosario Gregorio; Gennaro Ismeno; Maurizio Cotrufo

SummaryThe authors report their 18-year experience in the surgical treatment of infective tricuspid endocarditis. Between January 1981 and January 1999, 238 cases of infective endocarditis were seen, with a tricuspid involvement in 21 cases (8.8%). Tricuspid valve repair was performed in 9 patients with infective lesions involving one single leaflet. The surgical principle of the repair was to avoid any prosthetic material implantation. Posterior leaflet vegetectomy was performed in another 2 patients with infected intracavitary leads. Tricuspid valve replacement was performed in 10 patients with involvement of the whole valvular apparatus. One patient died of septic shock 3 days postoperatively. All the other patients had a good postoperative recovery. Follow-up ranged between 12 and 155 months (mean 68.9 ± 55 months). Five cases of late mortality were observed: 3 for cardiac reasons and 2 of cancer. All the other patients are alive. Late postoperative echocardiography in the patients with tricuspid repair showed tricuspid regurgitation to be absent in 6 patients, mild in 2, moderate in 1, and severe in 1. No recurrent infections were observed either in patients with valve repair or in those with valve replacement. Good early and long-term results can be achieved in the surgical treatment of tricuspid endocarditis as long as complete excision of the infected tissue is performed and risk factors are controlled.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2004

Marfan syndrome as a predisposing factor for traumatic aortic insufficiency

Francesco Onorati; Luca Salvatore De Santo; Antonio Carozza; Marisa De Feo; Attilio Renzulli; Maurizio Cotrufo

Despite the increase in car accidents, aortic valve injury from blunt trauma remains rare. In one case, a 30-year-old Marfan male, who was under observation at our outpatient clinic, suffered from aortic regurgitation due to a tear in the left coronary cusp of a previously echocardiographically normal valve. Acute ventricular failure demanded surgical management within 3 days after an automobile accident. The case was successfully treated by replacement of the aortic valve with a no. 23 Sorin Bicarbon prosthesis. The patient fully recovered and experienced an uneventful 6 months of follow-up.


Asian Cardiovascular and Thoracic Annals | 1999

Brucella Endocarditis: Seven Cases Treated Surgically

Attilio Renzulli; Rosario Gregorio; Gianpaolo Romano; Antonio Carozza; Joseph Marmo; Riccardo Utili; Marisa De Feo; Maurizio Cotrufo

Brucella endocarditis is a lifethreatening, often under-diagnosed complication of brucellosis. Seven cases of brucella endocarditis treated surgically in the last 25 years are described. The infection was localized on the aortic valve in 5 cases and on a prosthetic mitral valve in 2. All patients had a positive history of risk factors for brucella infection and all were in cardiac failure (5 in New York Heart Association functional class III and 2 in class IV). All underwent valve replacement followed by antibiotic therapy. Follow-up ranged from 1 and 206 months. One patient died following prosthetic valve replacement to treat a periprosthetic leak unrelated to the brucella infection. Brucella antibody tests and careful clinical history are mandatory in all patients with negative blood cultures in order to identify brucella earlier during the course of the infection before embolization or annular involvement occur.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2017

Surgery for prosthetic valve endocarditis: a retrospective study of a national registry

Alessandro Della Corte; Michele Di Mauro; Guglielmo Mario Actis Dato; Fabio Barili; Diego Cugola; Sandro Gelsomino; Pasquale Santè; Antonio Carozza; Ester Della Ratta; Lorenzo Galletti; Roger Devotini; Riccardo Casabona; Francesco Santini; Antonio Salsano; Roberto Scrofani; Carlo Antona; Carlo de Vincentiis; Andrea Biondi; Cesare Beghi; Giangiuseppe Cappabianca; Michele De Bonis; Alberto Pozzoli; Francesco Nicolini; Filippo Benassi; Davide Pacini; Roberto Di Bartolomeo; Andrea De Martino; Uberto Bortolotti; Roberto Lorusso; Enrico Vizzardi

OBJECTIVES We described clinical-epidemiological features of prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) and assessed the determinants of early surgical outcomes in multicentre design. METHODS Data regarding 2823 patients undergoing surgery for endocarditis at 19 Italian Centers between 1979 and 2015 were collected in a database. Of them, 582 had PVE: in this group, the determinants of early mortality and complications were assessed, also taking into account the different chronological eras encompassed by the study. RESULTS Overall hospital (30-day) mortality was 19.2% (112 patients). Postoperative complications of any type occurred in 256 patients (44%). Across 3 eras (1980-2000, 2001-08 and 2009-14), early mortality did not significantly change (20.4%, 17.1%, 20.5%, respectively, P  = 0.60), whereas complication rate increased (18.5%, 38.2%, 52.8%, P  < 0.001), consistent with increasing mean patient age (56 ± 14, 64 ± 15, 65 ± 14 years, respectively, P  < 0.001) and median logistic EuroSCORE (14%, 21%, 23%, P  = 0.025). Older age, female sex, preoperative serum creatinine >-2 mg/dl, chronic pulmonary disease, low ejection fraction, non-streptococcal aetiology, active endocarditis, preoperative intubation, preoperative shock and triple valve surgery were significantly associated with mortality. In multivariable analysis, age (OR = 1.02; P  = 0.03), renal insufficiency (OR = 2.1; P  = 0.05), triple valve surgery (OR = 6.9; P  = 0.004) and shock (OR = 4.5; P  < 0.001) were independently associated with mortality, while streptococcal aetiology, healed endocarditis and ejection fraction with survival. Adjusting for study era, preoperative shock (OR = 3; P  < 0.001), Enterococcus (OR = 2.3; P  = 0.01) and female sex (OR = 1.5; P  = 0.03) independently predicted complications, whereas ejection fraction was protective. CONCLUSIONS PVE surgery remains a high-risk one. The strongest predictors of early outcome of PVE surgery are related to patients haemodynamic status and microbiological factors.


Journal of Heart Valve Disease | 2004

Native versus primary prosthetic valve endocarditis: comparison of clinical features and long-term outcome in 353 patients.

Romano G; Antonio Carozza; Della Corte A; De Santo Ls; Cristiano Amarelli; Michele Torella; De Feo M; Cerasuolo F; Maurizio Cotrufo


Texas Heart Institute Journal | 2001

Tricuspid repair for infective endocarditis: clinical and echocardiographic results.

Antonio Carozza; Attilio Renzulli; Marisa De Feo; Gennaro Ismeno; Alessandro Della Corte; Giovanni Dialetto; Maurizio Cotrufo

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Maurizio Cotrufo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Alessandro Della Corte

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Marisa De Feo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Romano G

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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F Ursomando

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Gennaro Ismeno

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Gianpaolo Romano

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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A. Della Corte

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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De Santo Ls

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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