C Di Muro
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by C Di Muro.
Circulation | 1992
Fabio Lattanzi; V. Di Bello; Eugenio Picano; Mt Caputo; L Talarico; C Di Muro; L Landini; Gino Santoro; C. Giusti; Alessandro Distante
BackgroundUltrasonic integrated backscatter of myocardial walls is directly related to the morphometrically evaluated collagen content. The integrated backscatter is also increased in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, probably because of fiber disarray. The purpose of this study was to investigate myocardial tissue reflectivity in subjects with physiological hypertrophy caused by intense physical training and to assess the relation between the acoustic properties of myocardial tissue and left ventricular wall thickness assessed by conventional two-dimensional echocardiography. Methods and ResultsTwenty-four young male athletes (14 professional cyclists and 10 weight lifters, all in full agonistic activity) were studied together with 10 normal age-matched controls with sedentary life. By means of a commercially available two-dimensional echocardiograph, standard measurements were obtained according to the recommendations of the American Society of Echocardiography. With a prototype implemented in our Institute, an on-line radiofrequency analysis of ultrasound signals was also performed to obtain quantitative operator-independent measurements of the integrated backscatter of the myocardial walls. The integrated values of the radiofrequency signal were normalized for the pericardial interface and expressed in percent integrated backscatter (%IB). Compared with control subjects, athletes showed greater thickness values of septum (controls, 9±1; cyclists, 14±2; weight lifters, 15±1 mm, mean± SD; p < 0.01) and posterior wall (9±1, 12±2, and 12+1 mm, respectively; p < 0.01) but similar values of %IB for both septum (23±4%, 21±7%, and 23±8%, p = NS) and posterior wall (10±2%, 9±2%, and 11±2%, p = NS). In athletes, no correlation was found between septal and posterior wall thickness and the corresponding regional myocardial reflectivity (r = 0.23, p = NS and r = 0.01, p = NS, respectively). Furthermore, we compared the quantitative ultrasonic data between two subsets of 10 athletes and 10 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and similar degrees of septal thickness (16±1 versus 17±1 mm, respectively, p = NS). Septal and posterior wall %IB results were significantly higher in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (53±13% and 36±9%o, respectively) than in athletes (21±7% and 10±3%, respectively; p < 0.01 for both). ConclusionsWe conclude that 1) endurance athletes show a normal pattern of quantitatively assessed ultrasonic backscatter despite of a marked left ventricular hypertrophy and 2) athletes and patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and similar degrees of myocardial wall thickness can be differentiated on the basis of quantitative analysis of backscattered signal.
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1996
V. Di Bello; Gino Santoro; L Talarico; C Di Muro; Mt Caputo; D Giorgi; A Bertini; M. Bianchi; C. Giusti
Aim of this study was to evaluate left ventricular function during exercise in 10 male elite runners and in 10 sedentary males. End-diastolic (EDV) and end-systolic volume (ESV), left ventricular ejection fraction (EF), early peak transmitral flow velocity (peak E), time-velocity integral of mitral inflow (m-TVI); mitral cross sectional area (m-CSA); mitral stroke volume (SV), and cardiac output (CO) were measured by echo-Doppler. We simultaneously analyzed: VO2max by spirometric method, mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) by sphygmomanometer, and heart rate (HR) by ECG. The parameters were measured under basal conditions (level 1), at 50% of maximal aerobic capacity (level 2), at peak of exercise (level 3) and during recovery. Ejection fraction in athletes increased significantly at peak of exercise through Frank-Starling mechanism. Stroke volume and cardiac output increased significantly in athletes at peak of exercise. Left ventricular diastolic function was superior in athletes versus controls: in fact, higher peak E in athletes enhanced early diastolic ventricular filling. Therefore, the athletes showed complex cardiovascular adjustments induced by training, which allowed an higher peak working power, a greater cardiac output, and VO2max when compared with an untrained control population.
Hypertension | 1995
Ottavio Giampietro; Elena Matteucci; G Catapano; G Dell'Omo; L Talarico; C Di Muro; V. Di Bello; Roberto Pedrinelli
Microalbuminuria (urinary albumin excretion between 20 and 200 micrograms/min) and abnormalities of red blood cell sodium-hydrogen exchange coexist in essential hypertensive patients. To evaluate how the two phenomena relate, we recruited 10 untreated microalbuminuric male essential hypertensive patients without diabetes to be compared with an equal number of matched essential hypertensive patients excreting albumin in normal amounts as well as 10 healthy control subjects. Sodium-hydrogen exchange values were increased to a comparable extent in microalbuminuric and normoalbuminuric hypertensive patients. Systolic and mean blood pressures were higher in microalbuminuric patients. Fasting insulin was greater and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol lower in patients than control subjects. Urinary albumin excretion correlated positively with both mean blood pressure and left ventricular mass values in the absence of a relationship with circulating lipid and insulin levels. In contrast with microalbuminuria, sodium-hydrogen exchange covaried only with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and insulin levels. Thus, microalbuminuria and an abnormal sodium-hydrogen exchange are unrelated phenomena in essential hypertensive patients. Microalbuminuria appears to be a hemodynamically driven biological variable, while an accelerated sodium-hydrogen exchange seems primarily conditioned by the metabolic abnormalities of hypertension, possibly in the context of an insulin-resistant syndrome.
Hypertension | 1994
Roberto Pedrinelli; G Catapano; G Dell'Omo; Elio Melillo; L Talarico; C Di Muro; Ottavio Giampietro; Franco Carmassi; C. Giusti; V. Di Bello
In response to hypertension, arterioles remodel their structure, the heart develops myocardial hypertrophy, and the kidney reduces creatinine clearance and increases albuminuria. To better understand the interrelations among the target organs involved in hypertension, we evaluated minimal forearm vascular resistances--a hemodynamic index of arteriolar structure derived from mean blood pressure and maximal postischemic forearm blood flow--the echocardiographic indexes of cardiac structure, and urinary albumin excretion and creatinine clearance in 29 male mild to moderate non-macroalbuminuric essential hypertensive patients on no drugs and 11 age- and sex-matched normotensive control subjects. Minimal forearm resistances were elevated in hypertensive patients and correlated with left ventricular mass, wall thickness, and mean arterial pressure. Patients with abnormal minimal forearm resistances (2 SD above normal) were characterized by higher pressure, greater wall thickness, lower creatinine clearance, and higher albumin excretion, suggesting that maximal forearm flow capacity does relate to the hemodynamic load exerted on both the kidney and heart. However, the correlation with cardiac structure and mean arterial pressure explained only part of the variability of minimal forearm resistances. Furthermore, no correlation among these parameters was found when hypertensive patients were evaluated separately from normotensive subjects, possibly because of heterogeneous factors active on arteriolar structure and unrelated to the pressor load. Overall, the data suggest that the development of abnormal minimal forearm resistances in the course of the hypertensive process is related to the pressor load, but its details need further understanding.
European Heart Journal | 1993
V. Di Bello; Fabio Lattanzi; E. Picano; L Talarico; Mt Caputo; C Di Muro; Gino Santoro; M Lunardi; Alessandro Distante; C. Giusti
Haematologica | 2004
F Franzoni; F Galetta; C Di Muro; G Buti; F Pentimone; Gino Santoro
International Journal of Sports Medicine | 1995
V. Di Bello; L Talarico; C Di Muro; Gino Santoro; A Bertini; D Giorgi; Mt Caputo; M. Bianchi; L. Cecchini; C. Giusti
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | 1995
V. Di Bello; Cr Bellina; Enrico Gori; L Talarico; G Boni; Nicola Molea; C Di Muro; Enrico Magagnini; F Matteucci; Mt Caputo; Elena Lazzeri; D Giorgi; Gino Santoro; R. Bianchi; C. Giusti
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | 1995
Vitantonio Di Bello; Cr Bellina; Enrico Gori; L Talarico; G Boni; Nicola Molea; C Di Muro; Enrico Magagnini; F Matteucci; Mt Caputo; Elena Lazzeri; D Giorgi; Gino Santoro; R. Bianchi; C. Giusti
8TH MEETING OF THE EUROPEAN DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY STUDY GROUP (EDNSG, HEIDELBERG, GERMANY, MAY 18-20, 1995. | 1995
Elena Matteucci; Vitantonio Di Bello; L Talarico; F Rubeeti; C Di Muro; Ottavio Giampietro