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Dive into the research topics where Attilio Maseri is active.

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Featured researches published by Attilio Maseri.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1978

“Variant” angina: One aspect of a continuous spectrum of vasospastic myocardial ischemia: Pathogenetic Mechanisms, Estimated Incidence and Clinical and Coronary Arteriographic Findings in 138 Patients☆

Attilio Maseri; Silva Severi; Maurizio De Nes; Antonio L'Abbate; Sergio Chierchia; Mario Marzilli; Anna Maria Ballestra; Oberdan Parodi; A. Biagini; Alessandro Distante

Abstract From January 1970 to December 1977, transient reversible episodes of S-T segment elevation were documented in 138 patients (80 with angina only at rest, 58 with angina both on exertion and at rest). Electrocardiographic monitoring in 33 patients with hemodynamic monitoring revealed that (1) during 6,009 transient episodes of myocardial ischemia, pain was always a late phenomenon and, in some patients, often did not occur; (2) during such transient episodes, ST-T wave behavior was often variable in the same patient with alternation of elevation, depression or only T wave changes with or without pain; (3) independent of the direction of the S-T segment and T wave changes, the episodes were never preceded by an increase of the hemodynamic determinants of myocardial demand but were associated with obvious impairment of left ventricular function. Thallium scintigraphy in 32 patients revealed a regional massive and localized reduction of myocardial perfusion during S-T segment elevation and pseudonormalization of T waves. During S-T segment depression the reduction of thallium uptake was diffuse with fuzzy limits. Coronary angiography revealed no significant stenosis in 8 patients and single, double and triple vessel disease in 38, 34 and 26 patients, respectively. Angiography in all 37 patients studied during angina revealed a severe coronary vasospasm involving vessels with extremely variable extent of atherosclerosis. Severe arrhythmias were recorded in 27 patients, and a myocardial infarction occurred in 28. A total of five patients died within 1 month of hospital admission. Thus, variable intensity and extension of coronary vasospasm and the presence of collateral vessels may result in different degrees of ischemia and various electrocardiographic patterns with or without anginal pain. Vasospastic angina can occur in the presence of extremely variable degrees of coronary atherosclerosis and in any phase of ischemie heart disease. It may evolve into acute myocardial infarction and sudden death: Variant angina appears to be only its most striking electrocardiographic manifestation. When vasospastic angina is appropriately searched for, its incidence rate appears to be high.


Circulation | 1980

Sequence of events in angina at rest: primary reduction in coronary flow.

Sergio Chierchia; Claudio Brunelli; Ignazio Simonetti; M Lazzari; Attilio Maseri

To investigate the events that lead to acute myocardial ischemia we monitored continuously the ECG, the left ventricular (four patients) or aortic (two patients) pressure and the great cardiac vein oxygen saturation (CSO2S) by a fiberoptic catheter in six patients with frequent anginal attacks at rest. We recorded 137 transient ischemic episodes (10 with chest pain) characterized by ST-segment elevation in 28 episodes, depression in three episodes and by pseudonormalization of previously inverted or flat T waves in 106 episodes. The onset of electrocardiographic and hemodynamic changes was preceded by a large drop in CSO2S in all 135 episodes with ST-T changes in the anterior leads but not in two episodes with ST elevation on inferior leads. The fall in CSOS2, consistently followed by signs of left ventricular function impairment and never preceded by any detectable increase in the hemodynamic determinants of myocardial oxygen consumption, probably reflects a reduction in regional perfusion. Thus, a reduction in coronary flow may cause transient ischemia in patients with angina at rest. These episodes may be associated with variable, often minor electrocardiographic changes and occasionally with anginal pain.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1983

Impairment of Myocardial Perfusion and Function During Painless Myocardial Ischemia

Sergio Chierchia; Mauro Lazzari; Ben Freedman; Claudio Brunelli; Attilio Maseri

Left ventricular (or pulmonary and systemic arterial) hemodynamics were measured for a mean of 13.6 hours during continuous electrocardiographic monitoring in 14 patients admitted to the coronary care unit because of angina at rest. Of 293 episodes of transient ST segment and T wave changes identified, 247 (84%) were completely asymptomatic. Sixty-three percent of asymptomatic episodes were associated with an elevation of the left ventricular end-diastolic or pulmonary artery diastolic pressure of 5 mm Hg or more; in 15% there were smaller elevations (2 to 4 mm Hg) and in 22% there were no changes or less than a 2 mm Hg elevation of pressure. The peak contraction and relaxation dP/dt (first derivative of left ventricular pressure) were reduced to 100 mm Hg/s or more in 84 and 81% of asymptomatic episodes, respectively. Great cardiac vein oxygen saturation measured in three patients showed an increased myocardial oxygen extraction similar to that seen in painful episodes, which preceded and accompanied asymptomatic electrocardiographic changes. These results indicate that asymptomatic electrocardiographic changes represent transient myocardial ischemia. Comparison of asymptomatic and symptomatic episodes revealed that asymptomatic episodes were generally shorter (253 +/- 159 versus 674 +/- 396 seconds, probability [p] less than 0.001) and produced less impairment of left ventricular function: there were smaller elevations of left ventricular end-diastolic or pulmonary artery diastolic pressure (5.9 +/- 5.0 versus 16.5 +/- 6.9 mm Hg, p less than 0.001), and smaller reductions of peak left ventricular contraction dP/dt (252 +/- 156 versus 395 +/- 199 mm Hg/s, p less than 0.001) and relaxation dP/dt (259 +/- 191 versus 413 +/- 209 mm Hg/s, p less than 0.001). In individual patients, however, asymptomatic and symptomatic episodes of similar duration and severity were observed. The duration and severity of ischemia appear important for the genesis of anginal pain, but additional factors must be involved.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1980

Long-term prognosis of “variant” angina with medical treatment

Silva Severi; Graham Daves; Attilio Maseri; Paolo Marzullo; Antonio L'Abbate

Abstract One hundred thirty-eight patients with “variant angina” were followed up for periods of 2 to 8 years. All patients had a history of angina at rest, and 42 percent also had exertional angina. Normal coronary arteries were found in 9 of the 107 patients who underwent coronary arteriography; the remainder had stenosis greater than 50 percent in diameter of at least one major vessel. Coronary vasospasm was demonstrated in all 37 patients studied with coronary arteriography during angina at rest. Twenty-eight patients had acute myocardial infarction and five patients died within 1 month of admission to hospital. Of the 133 surviving patients, 120 were treated medically and 13 underwent coronary arterial surgery. In the medically treated group, only seven patients died and only four had acute myocardial infarction during the remainder of the follow-up period. Symptoms became less frequent and less severe; approximately 50 percent of the patients remained completely asymptomatic for at least 12 months by the end of the 4th year. Death, acute myocardial infarction and persistence of symptoms were more frequent in those patients with more severe coronary atherosclerotic disease although, even in this group, the overall incidence of death and acute myocardial infarction was small. It is concluded that the prognosis of patients with “variant” angina receiving appropriate medical therapy is reasonably good after the acute phase, even in the presence of severe coronary atherosclerosis.


American Heart Journal | 1982

Vasospastic ischemic mechanism of frequent asymptomatic transient ST-T changes during continuous electrocardiographic monitoring in selected unstable angina patients☆

A. Biagini; Maria Giovanna Mazzei; Clara Carpeggiani; Roberto Testa; R. Antonelli; Claudio Michelassi; Antonio L'Abbate; Attilio Maseri

Asymptomatic episodes of ST segment and/or T wave changes are often reported during Holter monitoring in patients with angina pectoris. However, the interpretation of such changes is debated relative to silent myocardial ischemia. We studied 11 patients admitted to the CCU because of frequent episodes of unstable anginal attacks who had undergone repeated periods of Holter monitoring, characterized by predominantly occurring asymptomatic episodes of ST segment and/or T wave changes associated with less frequent typical anginal attacks. In a total of 89 days of Holter monitoring, the patients evidenced 520 episodes of transient ECG changes including 180 of ST elevation, 73 of ST depression, and 267 of T wave alterations. Only 12% of episodes were symptomatic. Coronary injection during asymptomatic ST-T changes was performed in eight patients. In six it was possible to document spontaneous coronary spasm. In seven patients ergonovine administration induced anginal pain, ST-T changes, and coronary spasm. In all patients the anginal attacks completely disappeared with medical treatment and the asymptomatic episodes were abolished in six and reduced in four. Our findings support the hypothesis that in certain selected unstable anginal patients, transient asymptomatic ECG changes are caused by acute myocardial ischemia.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1979

Significance of spasm in the pathogenesis of ischemic heart disease

Attilio Maseri; Antonio L'Abbate; Sergio Chierchia; Oberdan Parodi; Silva Severi; A. Biagini; Alessandro Distante; Mario Marzilli; Anna Maria Ballestra

Abstract The role of coronary arterial vasospasm in the pathogenesis of ischemic heart disease is reviewed on the basis of investigations carried out in our laboratory. Patients were selected because they had angina either at rest or both at rest and during exercise. With continuous hemodynamic and electrocardiographic monitoring of these patients, as well as thallium-201 scintigraphy and coronary arteriography during ischemic episodes, we were able to demonstrate a vasospastic origin for the attacks. During anginal episodes, electrocardiographic changes were variable, with S-T segment elevation, S-T segment depression, a rise in T wave potential and pseudonormalization of inverted T waves corresponding to various distributions of myocardial ischemia in different patients and even in the same patient at different times. Increases in hemodynamic variables that control myocardial oxygen consumption never preceded the onset of ischemic episodes, which challenges the theory that the limitation of a possible increase in flow caused by critical organic stenosis is the only cause of myocardial ischemia. In some patients in whom myocardial infarction developed, the lesion was always found in the same area in which the vasospastic phenomena had been seen angiographically. Vasospasm led to serious arrhythmias in some patients. We therefore believe that independent of atherosclerosis or superimposed on it, vasospasm plays an important role in producing myocardial ischemia—angina, myocardial infarction and possibly sudden death. Elucidation of its mechanisms will lead to more appropriate therapy.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1979

Management of vasospastic angina at rest with continuous infusion of isosorbide dinitrate. A double crossover study in a coronary care unit.

Alessandro Distante; Attilio Maseri; Silva Severi; A. Biagini; Sergio Chierchia

Abstract Twelve patients were studied who had frequent transient ischemic episodes at rest with a variable degree of coronary atherosclerosis and vasospastic origin of angina as evidenced by good exercise tolerance and results of thallium-201 scintigraphy during angina at rest, ergonovine maleate provocative test and coronary angiography. With the aim of keeping a constant blood drug level, the trial consisted of a continuous intravenous infusion of isosorbide dinitrate (1.25 to 5.0 mg/hour) during two periods (T 1 and T 2 ) of 24 hours (four patients) or 12 hours (eight patients) alternating with two equal periods (P 1 and P 2 ) of infusion of saline solution with a double crossover design (T 1 , P 1 , T 2 and P 2 ). Continuous electrocardiographic monitoring revealed that the total number of transient ischemic attacks at rest characterized by S-T segment elevation (four patients), S-T depression (two patients) and either S-T depression or elevation (six patients), with or without pain, was 100, 104 and 91, respectively, during the introductory control period and during P 1 and P 2 , but was reduced to 13 and 20, respectively, during periods T 1 and T 2 ( P = 0.002). Transient ischemic attacks at rest were completely prevented during both T 1 and T 2 in four patients and during T 1 or T 2 in three patients, and were not abolished but significantly reduced in T 1 and T 2 in the other five patients. The reduction in ischemic attacks was similar for episodes characterized by S-T segment elevation or depression and with or without pain. Side effects were negligible. Therefore, infusion of isosorbide dinitrate appears to be a very effective treatment for patients with vasospastic angina at rest.


Circulation | 1977

Regional myocardial perfusion in patients with atherosclerotic coronary artery disease, at rest and during angina pectoris induced by tachycardia.

Attilio Maseri; Antonio L'Abbate; A. Pesola; Claudio Michelassi; Mario Marzilli; M De Nes

We studied regional myocardial perfusion by scintigraphic computer-assisted analysis of initial distribution, washout rates, and residual activity of 38Xe injected into the left coronary artery of four patients with normal arteriograms and 14 patients with coronary stenosis.At rest, residual activity in poststenotic regions was always greater than in control regions, but initial washout rates were not slower. During angina, following xenon injections, the amount of indicator distributed to the poststenotic regions was markedly reduced; the increase of the initial washout rates was smaller than in control regions relative to rest, and residual activity was higher. Initial washout rates did not differ as much from those of normal myocardium because in severe ischemia too little indicator is deposited initially in these regions to produce a change of any magnitude. Indeed, when angina was induced immediately after the xenon injection, poststenotic washout rates became much slower during angina than at rest, a finding that implicates functional factors in impairing poststenotic myocardial perfusion during angina


American Journal of Cardiology | 1986

Comparison of verapamil and propranolol therapy for angina pectoris at rest: A randomized, multiple-crossover, controlled trial in the coronary care unit☆

Oberdan Parodi; Ignazio Simonetti; Claudio Michelassi; Clara Carpeggiani; A. Biagini; Antonio L'Abbate; Attilio Maseri

The effects of oral verapamil (V), 400 mg/day, oral propranolol (P), 300 mg/day, and placebo were compared in 10 patients admitted to the coronary care unit because of frequent attacks of angina at rest. Testing was done according to a randomized, double-blind, multiple-crossover, placebo-controlled trial, consisting of 8 consecutive 48-hour treatment periods with V or P or placebo. Three patients had variant angina, 5 had episodes of both ST-segment elevation and depression and 2 had only ST-segment depression. One patient had no critical coronary stenoses, 1 had 1-vessel disease, 7 had 2-vessel disease and 1 had 3-vessel disease. Electrocardiographic monitoring and tape recording were continued during the 16 days of the trial. A total of 1,602 episodes of transient diagnostic ST shift were recorded during the trial (1,309 episodes of ST-segment elevation, 293 of ST-segment depression); 43% were painless. Mean blood levels of V and P at the end of the active phases were 161 +/- 89 and 120 +/- 45 ng/ml, respectively. In the group as a whole, the average number of diagnostic ischemic ST-segment shifts per 24 hours was significantly reduced relative to corresponding placebo periods during V (2.6 +/- 2.4 vs 11.9 +/- 8.6; p less than 0.01) but not during P treatment (11.9 +/- 8.6 vs 12.0 +/- 7.3). Similar statistically significant reductions were observed in the number of anginal attacks and nitroglycerin tablets consumed. Considering individual patients, V reduced ischemic episodes during both active phases in all patients, whereas P was effective only in 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Circulation | 1979

Myocardial kinetics of thallium and potassium in man.

Antonio L'Abbate; A. Biagini; Claudio Michelassi; Attilio Maseri

Myocardial and blood kinetics of thallium-201 (201T1) and potassium42 (42K) were studied in five patients with normal coronary angiography. A mixture of 400 oCi of 201TI, 400 μCi of 42K, 50 μCi ofiodine-125 radioiodinated human serum albumin as intravascular indicator, and 400 μCi of tritiated water (THO) as extravascular indicator was injected as a bolus into the pulmonary artery, and blood timeconcentration curves were obtained from the aortic root and coronary sinus. These curves were numerically deconvoluted to obtain the frequency function of transit times (FFTT) of the four isotopes through the coronary system.Initial maximal myocardial extraction of the two tracers were similar. The net maximal myocardial uptake of 201TI per 100 g of tissue ranged from 1.0-2.7% of the injected dose and was positively related to myocardial blood flow (MBF) calculated from THO and to the ratio MBF/cardiac output (CO), while net uptake of 42K ranged from 1.4-2.4%, but was not correlated with MBF nor with MBF/CO.The analysis of the FFTT indicates that 42K, but not 201TI, is washed out from the myocardium more rapidly when MBF and the heart rate are higher. Thus, thallium appears to be a much more suitable agent than potassium isotopes for myocardial perfusion studies.

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Antonio L'Abbate

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Oberdan Parodi

National Research Council

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