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Dive into the research topics where B. Vasapollo is active.

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Featured researches published by B. Vasapollo.


Hypertension | 2008

Early and Late Preeclampsia Two Different Maternal Hemodynamic States in the Latent Phase of the Disease

Herbert Valensise; B. Vasapollo; G. Gagliardi; Gian Paolo Novelli

Because early and late preeclampsia (PE) are thought to be different disease entities, we compared maternal cardiac function at 24 weeks gestation in a group of normotensive asymptomatic patients with subsequent development of early (<34 weeks gestation) and late (≥34 weeks gestation) PE (blood pressure >140/90+proteinuria >300 mg/dL) to detect possible early differences in the hemodynamic state. A group of 1345 nulliparous normotensive asymptomatic women underwent at 24 weeks gestation uterine artery Doppler evaluation and maternal echocardiography calculating total vascular resistance. In the subsequent follow-up 107 patients showed PE: 32 patients had late and 75 had early PE. Five of 32 patients with late PE and 45 of 75 patients with early PE had bilateral notching of the uterine artery at 24 weeks (15.6% versus 60.0%; P<0.05). Total vascular resistance was 1605±248 versus 739±244 dyn · s · cm−5, and cardiac output was 4.49±1.09 versus 8.96±1.83 L in early versus late PE (P<0.001). Prepregnancy body mass index was higher in late versus early PE (28±6 versus 24±2 kg/m2; P<0.001). Early and late PE appear to develop from different hemodynamic states. Late PE appears to be more frequent in patients with high body mass index and low total vascular resistance; earlier forms of PE appear to be more frequent in patients with lower BMI and with bilateral notching of the uterine artery. These findings support the hypothesis of different hemodynamics and origins for early PE (placental mediated, linked to defective trophoblast invasion with high percentage of altered uterine artery Doppler) and late PE (linked to constitutional factors such as high body mass index).


Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2005

Intrauterine growth restriction and fetal body composition

Giovanni Larciprete; Herbert Valensise; G. Di Pierro; B. Vasapollo; B. Casalino; Domenico Arduini; S. Jarvis; Elio Cirese

To assess the differences in fetal body compartments between fetuses with normal growth and those with reduced intrauterine growth, during the third trimester, through ultrasonographic determination of subcutaneous tissue thickness (SCTT).


Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2003

Fetal subcutaneous tissue thickness (SCTT) in healthy and gestational diabetic pregnancies

Giovanni Larciprete; Herbert Valensise; B. Vasapollo; Gian Paolo Novelli; E. Parretti; F. Altomare; G. Di Pierro; Simona Menghini; G. Mello; Domenico Arduini

To determine reference values of fetal subcutaneous tissue thickness (SCTT) throughout gestation in a healthy population and to compare them with those from a population of pregnant women with gestational diabetes under standard therapy.


Hypertension | 2008

Total Vascular Resistance and Left Ventricular Morphology as Screening Tools for Complications in Pregnancy

B. Vasapollo; Gian Paolo Novelli; Herbert Valensise

We evaluated the predictive value of elevated total vascular resistance on the outcome of pregnancy in normotensive high-risk primigravidas with bilateral notching of the uterine artery Doppler. A total of 526 high-risk primigravidas referred to the obstetrics outpatient clinic of Tor Vergata University with bilateral notching of the uterine artery at 20 to 22 weeks’ gestation were submitted to a maternal echocardiographic examination and uterine artery Doppler evaluation at 24 weeks’ gestation. Blood pressure was recorded at the time of the examination, total vascular resistance was calculated, and the geometric pattern of the left ventricle was assessed. Patients were followed until the end of pregnancy to detect fetal/maternal adverse outcomes (gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, abruptio placentae, fetal growth restriction, perinatal death, etc). A total of 111 of the 526 pregnancies showed a bilateral notch at 24 weeks’ gestation, and 97 had an adverse outcome (18.44%). The best independent predictor for maternal and fetal complications was total vascular resistance (odds ratio: 91.25; 95% CI: 39.64 to 210.05; P<0.001). The cutoff value was 1400 dynes · s · cm−5, with a sensitivity and a specificity of 89% and 94%, respectively. A high relative wall thickness of the left ventricle (>0.37; odds ratio: 2.47; 95% CI: 1.12 to 5.44) and a hypertrophized ventricle (left ventricular mass >130 g; odds ratio: 2.52; 95% CI: 1.12 to 5.64) were also independent predictors (P<0.05). Echocardiography might identify at 24 weeks’ gestation patients who subsequently develop maternal and fetal complications through the assessment of maternal hemodynamics and left ventricular geometry.


Hypertension | 2001

Maternal Diastolic Dysfunction and Left Ventricular Geometry in Gestational Hypertension

Herbert Valensise; Gian Paolo Novelli; B. Vasapollo; Giancarlo Di Ruzza; M. E. Romanini; Massimo Marchei; Giovanni Larciprete; Dario Manfellotto; Carlo Romanini; Alberto Galante

Abstract—The objective of this study was to evaluate diastolic parameters and left ventricular geometry in gestational hypertension. Twenty-one consecutive pregnant women with gestational hypertension and 21 normotensive women matched for age and gestational age were enrolled in the third trimester of gestation. Echocardiographic and uterine color Doppler evaluations were performed. Systolic, diastolic, and mean blood pressure, total vascular resistance (TVR), and uterine resistance index were higher in hypertensive women than in control subjects (P <0.01). Left atrial function and cardiac output were significantly lower in gestational hypertension (P <0.01). Patients with gestational hypertension had longer left ventricular isovolumetric relaxation time (IVRT) (P <0.0001); lower velocity-time integral of the A wave (P <0.05) and of the diastolic pulmonary vein flow (P <0.05); and higher velocity-time integral of the reverse pulmonary vein flow (P <0.05). Systolic fraction of the pulmonary vein flow was higher in women with gestational hypertension than in control subjects (P <0.01); the difference in duration of pulmonary vein flow and A wave was closer to 0 in gestational hypertension (P <0.0001). Altered left ventricular geometry was found in 100% of hypertensive patients and in 19.05% of normotensive patients (P <0.001). IVRT, left ventricular end-systolic volume, atrial function, and uterine resistance index were directly related to TVR (P <0.01); deceleration time of the E wave showed a quadratic correlation with TVR (P <0.01). Gestational hypertension is characterized by an altered cardiac geometric pattern of concentric hypertrophy. The altered geometric pattern assessed during gestational hypertension is associated, in our study, with depressed systolic function, high TVR, altered diastolic function, and left atrial dysfunction. Deceleration time of the E wave, IVRT, and left atrial fractional area change, found in concomitance with the highest TVR, may be useful in the evaluation of cardiac function and hemodynamics present in pregnancy-induced hypertension.


Acta Diabetologica | 2003

Body composition during normal pregnancy: reference ranges

Giovanni Larciprete; Herbert Valensise; B. Vasapollo; F. Altomare; Roberto Sorge; B. Casalino; A. De Lorenzo; Domenico Arduini

Abstract.Maternal body composition undergoes a deep adaptative change during the course of pregnancy. Fat mass, fat-free mass, and total body water (TBW) increase in different ways and their effects on pregnancy outcome represent a field of major interest in perinatal medicine. The aim of this study was to evaluate the changes in maternal body composition [maternal weight, TBW, intracellular water (ICW) and extracellular water (ECW)] during healthy pregnancy by using bioimpedance analysis (BIA). A total of 170 healthy pregnant women, aged 22–44 years, volunteered to participate in our study. The BIA measurements were carried out with a Tefal BIA scale determining resistance and reactance. Lukaski’s multiple-regression equation was used to estimate TBW and ICW and ECW were computed using the prediction formula of Segal. The evaluations were performed at 10–38 weeks’ gestation, every 3–4 weeks, and hematocrit was determined at every time interval. Analysis of variance and multiple comparisons of Bonferroni were performed to compare variables among the different study intervals. Second-order polynomial interpolation was used to obtain percentile values for each bioimpedance parameter. Percentile bioimpedance values of the healthy population are provided at each study time, by showing the mean value and the 5th, 25th, 75th, 95th percentiles. Moreover, normal reference ranges for TBW are provided for each gestational age, in relation to maternal weight gain. Reactance, TBW, and ICW enhance slightly during the course of gestation. Tetrapolar BIA could be an easy and practical tool for evaluating changes of maternal body components during pregnancy. It could also provide indirect proof of the normal hemodilution occurring in normal pregnancies. Moreover, fat mass deposition, and not only fluid retention, seems to be responsible for the mother’s gestational weight gain, since reactance is an indirect parameter in estimating fat mass amount.


Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2004

Abnormal maternal cardiac function precedes the clinical manifestation of fetal growth restriction

B. Vasapollo; Herbert Valensise; G. P. Novelli; F. Altomare; Alberto Galante; Domenico Arduini

To compare maternal hemodynamics in women whose fetuses are small‐for‐gestational age (SGA) with those in women with fetal growth restriction (FGR) before manifestation of the clinical disease.


Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2008

Maternal and fetal hemodynamic effects induced by nitric oxide donors and plasma volume expansion in pregnancies with gestational hypertension complicated by intrauterine growth restriction with absent end-diastolic flow in the umbilical artery

Herbert Valensise; B. Vasapollo; G. P. Novelli; G. Giorgi; P. Verallo; Alberto Galante; Domenico Arduini

To evaluate the effect of plasma volume expansion (PVE) and nitric oxide (NO) donors, in addition to antihypertensive therapy for gestational hypertensive pregnancies complicated by intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) with absent end‐diastolic flow (AEDF) in the umbilical artery (UA).


Hypertension | 2003

Left ventricular concentric geometry as a risk factor in gestational hypertension.

Gian Paolo Novelli; Herbert Valensise; B. Vasapollo; Giovanni Larciprete; F. Altomare; Giuseppe Di Pierro; B. Casalino; Alberto Galante; Domenico Arduini

Abstract—In the past, an adverse prognostic significance of an altered left ventricular geometry in essential hypertension has been demonstrated. There are no data on the prognostic significance of an altered cardiac structure during pregnancy. The present study was designed to evaluate the prognostic impact on the outcome of pregnancy of an altered geometry of the left ventricle in mild gestational hypertension. One hundred forty-eight consecutive, pregnant, mild gestational hypertensive women (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 140 to 150 mm Hg and 90 to 99 mm Hg, respectively) were included in the study. Patients were monitored until term to detect subsequent fetal and/or maternal adverse outcomes (preeclampsia, preterm delivery, abruptio placentae, other maternal medical problems, fetal distress, neonatal low birth weight, admittance to neonatal intensive care unit). One hundred one gestational hypertensive patients (68.2%) had an uneventful pregnancy; 47 patients (31.8%) showed a subsequent development of maternal and/or fetal complications. Concentric geometry was prevalent among patients with the subsequent development of complicated gestational hypertension (37 out of 47 patients) compared with the uneventful gestational hypertensive patients (31 out of 101 patients; 78.7% versus 30.1%;P =0.0001). The multivariate analysis showed concentric geometry as an independent predictor of adverse outcomes (odds ratio, 3.65; 95% confidence interval, 1.30 to 10.27;P =0.014). In patients with gestational hypertension, blood pressure values alone appear to be insufficient to identify the effective risk of adverse events. Ventricular geometry gives additional prognostic information, possibly improving our clinical ability to follow and eventually treat these patients.


Acta Diabetologica | 2003

Maternal body composition at term gestation and birth weight: is there a link?

Giovanni Larciprete; Herbert Valensise; B. Vasapollo; G. Di Pierro; Simona Menghini; Francesca Magnani; A. De Lorenzo; Domenico Arduini

Abstract.To assess the relative influence of maternal body composition at late gestation on birth weight, we examined maternal body composition near term (36.50±2.67 weeks gestation) in a group of 29 women, aged 20–39 years. The women came to the laboratory after an overnight fast. After anthropometric measurements, bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) was performed, determining resistance (R) and reactance (Xc), with a Tefal scale at 50 kHz. Fat mass (FM, kg) and fat-free mass (FFM, kg) were determined with the total body water (TBW) equation of Siri. The correlation between BIA parameters and birth weights was examined by linear regression analysis. All subjects delivered between 37 and 41 weeks’ gestation. The mean±SD values of the studied parameters were: Xc=490.00±77.34 Ω, R=55.71±8.71 Ω, FM=24.18±6.51 kg, FFM=45.82±2.65 kg, maternal weight gain=9.51±6.43 kg, birth weight=3.43±0.36 kg. A direct significant correlation was found between FFM, maternal weight gain, and birth weight. It is known that in late pregnancy, maternal weight gain over gestation is linked to birth weight. We observed that FFM was the most important maternal body component associated with the newborn weight at term gestation, and we believe that this finding might be elucidated by fluid retention. In fact, resistance seemed to be inversely related to birth weight and we do not overlook the link between resistance and TBW. The implementation of our study could shed more light on the influence of maternal body composition on birth weight.

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Herbert Valensise

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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G. P. Novelli

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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G. Gagliardi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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I. Pisani

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Domenico Arduini

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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G. M. Tiralongo

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Gian Paolo Novelli

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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D. Farsetti

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Alberto Galante

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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