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Featured researches published by Aurelia Grosu.


Circulation | 2018

Clinical Presentation and Outcome in a Contemporary Cohort of Patients with Acute Myocarditis: The Multicenter Lombardy Registry

Enrico Ammirati; Manlio Cipriani; Claudio Moro; Claudia Raineri; Daniela Pini; Paola Sormani; Riccardo Mantovani; Marisa Varrenti; Patrizia Pedrotti; Cristina Conca; Antonio Mafrici; Aurelia Grosu; Daniele Briguglia; Silvia Guglielmetto; Giovanni B. Perego; Stefania Colombo; Salvatore Ivan Caico; Cristina Giannattasio; Alberto Maestroni; Valentina Carubelli; Marco Metra; Carlo Lombardi; Jeness Campodonico; Piergiuseppe Agostoni; Giovanni Peretto; Laura Scelsi; Annalisa Turco; Giuseppe Di Tano; Carlo Campana; Armando Belloni

Background: There is controversy about the outcome of patients with acute myocarditis (AM), and data are lacking on how patients admitted with suspected AM are managed. We report characteristics, in-hospital management, and long-term outcome of patients with AM based on a retrospective multicenter registry from 19 Italian hospitals. Methods: A total of 684 patients with suspected AM and recent onset of symptoms (<30 days) were screened between May 2001 and February 2017. Patients >70 years of age and those >50 years of age without coronary angiography were excluded. The final study population comprised 443 patients (median age, 34 years; 19.4% female) with AM diagnosed by either endomyocardial biopsy or increased troponin plus edema and late gadolinium enhancement at cardiac magnetic resonance. Results: At presentation, 118 patients (26.6%) had left ventricular ejection fraction <50%, sustained ventricular arrhythmias, or a low cardiac output syndrome, whereas 325 (73.4%) had no such complications. Endomyocardial biopsy was performed in 56 of 443 (12.6%), and a baseline cardiac magnetic resonance was performed in 415 of 443 (93.7%). Cardiac mortality plus heart transplantation rates at 1 and 5 years were 3.0% and 4.1%. Cardiac mortality plus heart transplantation rates were 11.3% and 14.7% in patients with complicated presentation and 0% in uncomplicated cases (log-rank P<0.0001). Major AM-related cardiac events after the acute phase (postdischarge death and heart transplantation, sustained ventricular arrhythmias treated with electric shock or ablation, symptomatic heart failure needing device implantation) occurred in 2.8% at the 5-year follow-up, with a higher incidence in patients with complicated forms (10.8% versus 0% in uncomplicated AM; log-rank P<0.0001). &bgr;-Adrenoceptor blockers were the most frequently used medications both in complicated (61.9%) and in uncomplicated forms (53.8%; P=0.18). After a median time of 196 days, 200 patients had follow-up cardiac magnetic resonance, and 8 of 55 (14.5%) with complications at presentation had left ventricular ejection fraction <50% compared with 1 of 145 (0.7%) of those with uncomplicated presentation. Conclusions: In this contemporary study, overall serious adverse events after AM were lower than previously reported. However, patients with left ventricular ejection fraction <50%, ventricular arrhythmias, or low cardiac output syndrome at presentation were at higher risk compared with uncomplicated cases that had a benign prognosis and low risk of subsequent left ventricular systolic dysfunction.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2017

Strategy to identify subjects with diabetes mellitus more suitable for selective echocardiographic screening: The DAVID-Berg study

Mauro Gori; Paolo Canova; Alice Calabrese; Giovanni Cioffi; Roberto Trevisan; Renata De Maria; Aurelia Grosu; Attilio Iacovoni; Alessandra Fontana; Paola Ferrari; Stephen J. Greene; Mihai Gheorghiade; Gianfranco Parati; Antonello Gavazzi; Michele Senni

BACKGROUND Despite the burden of pre-clinical heart failure (HF) among diabetes mellitus (DM) patients, routine screening echocardiography is not currently recommended. We prospectively assessed risk prediction for HF/death of a screening strategy combining clinical data, electrocardiogram, NTproBNP, and echocardiogram, aiming to identify DM patients more suitable for selective echocardiography. METHODS Among 4047 screened subjects aged≥55/≤80years, the DAVID-Berg Study prospectively enrolled 623 outpatients with DM, or hypertension, or known cardiovascular disease but with no HF history/symptoms. The present analysis focuses on data obtained during a longitudinal follow-up of the 219 patients with DM. RESULTS Mean age was 68years, 61% were men, and median DM duration was 4.9years. During a median follow-up of 5.2years, 50 subjects developed HF or died. A predictive model using clinical data demonstrated moderate predictive power, which significantly improved by adding electrocardiogram (C-statistic 0.75 versus 0.70; p<0.05), but not NTproBNP (C-statistic 0.72, p=0.20). Subjects with normal clinical variables or abnormal clinical variables but normal electrocardiogram had low events rate (1.3 versus 2.4events/100-person-years, p=NS). Conversely, subjects with both clinical and electrocardiogram abnormalities (47%) carried higher risk (9.0events/100-person-years, p<0.001). The predictive power for mortality/HF development increased when echocardiography was added (13.6events/100-person-years, C-statistic 0.80, p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS Our prospective study found that a selective echocardiographic screening strategy guided by abnormal clinical/electrocardiogram data can reliably identify DM subjects at higher risk for incident HF and death. This screening approach may hold promise in guiding HF prevention efforts among DM patients.


European Heart Journal | 2014

Coronary artery disease in systemic sclerosis not clinically apparent: findings from optical coherence tomography

Chiara Bernelli; Kenichi Komukai; Vasile Sirbu; Aurelia Grosu; Giulio Guagliumi

A 42-year-old female was referred for intermittent effort angina. She had low body mass index, no coronary risk factors and an unremarkable past medical history except for a Raynauds phenomenon. Owing to a normal exercise stress test ( Panel A ), symptoms were initially attributed to anxiety. However, a 24h-EKG monitoring revealed diffuse ST-segment depression during …


European Heart Journal | 2005

End-systolic pressure/volume relationship during dobutamine stress echo: a prognostically useful non-invasive index of left ventricular contractility

Aurelia Grosu; Tonino Bombardini; Michele Senni; Vincenzo Duino; Mauro Gori; Eugenio Picano


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

Natriuretic peptides and the Framingham risk score for screening of asymptomatic left ventricular systolic dysfunction in high-risk patients in primary care. The DAVID-BERG study.

Attilio Iacovoni; Renata De Maria; Antonello Gavazzi; Aurelia Grosu; Alessandra Fontana; Silvia Guideri; Mauro Gori; Paola Ferrari; A. Filippi; Maria Rosaria Rutili; Luigi Donzelli; Marina Parolini; Michele Senni


Sleep and Breathing | 2018

Beneficial effects of adaptive servo-ventilation on natriuretic peptides and diastolic function in acute heart failure patients with preserved ejection fraction and sleep-disordered breathing

Emilia D’Elia; Paolo Ferrero; Claudia Vittori; Attilio Iacovoni; Aurelia Grosu; Mauro Gori; Vincenzo Duino; Stefano Perlini; Michele Senni


European Heart Journal | 2018

P5661Influence of midwall fractional shortening on incident heart failure and death in asymptomatic subjects at high risk of events. Insights from the DAVID-Berg study

S Burocchi; Mauro Gori; Giovanni Cioffi; Alice Calabrese; Paolo Canova; R. De Maria; Aurelia Grosu; Alessandra Fontana; Attilio Iacovoni; Paola Ferrari; M Volpe; Antonello Gavazzi; Michele Senni


Circulation | 2018

Clinical Presentation and Outcome in a Contemporary Cohort of Patients With Acute Myocarditis

Enrico Ammirati; Manlio Cipriani; Claudio Moro; Claudia Raineri; Daniela Pini; Paola Sormani; Riccardo Mantovani; Marisa Varrenti; Patrizia Pedrotti; Cristina Conca; Antonio Mafrici; Aurelia Grosu; Daniele Briguglia; Silvia Guglielmetto; Giovanni B. Perego; Stefania Colombo; Salvatore Ivan Caico; Cristina Giannattasio; Alberto Maestroni; Valentina Carubelli; Marco Metra; Carlo Lombardi; Jeness Campodonico; Piergiuseppe Agostoni; Giovanni Peretto; Laura Scelsi; Annalisa Turco; Giuseppe Di Tano; Carlo Campana; Armando Belloni


European Heart Journal | 2017

2060Prognostic relevance of preclinical diastolic dysfunction across left ventricular ejection fraction categories. The DAVID-Berg study

Mauro Gori; Alice Calabrese; Paolo Canova; Giovanni Cioffi; R. De Maria; Aurelia Grosu; Attilio Iacovoni; Alessandra Fontana; Paola Ferrari; Gianfranco Parati; Antonello Gavazzi; Michele Senni


Global Cardiology Science and Practice | 2015

Microvascular ischaemia after cardiac arrest in a patient with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Giovanni Quarta; Attilio Iacovoni; Chiara Marrone; Aurelia Grosu; Paolo Brambilla; Iacopo Olivotto; Antonello Gavazzi; Michele Senni

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Mauro Gori

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Attilio Iacovoni

University of Naples Federico II

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Alice Calabrese

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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