C Marabotti
University of Pisa
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Hypertension | 1989
S Giaconi; Sergio Ghione; Carlo Palombo; Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; C Marabotti; Enza Fommei; Luigi Donato
To investigate the seasonal influences on various arterial blood pressure measurements, 22 subjects in the high normal to mild hypertensive range were examined twice following the same protocol. In one group (13 subjects), measurements were first done in warm conditions and repeated 5-7 months later in cold conditions; in the second group (nine subjects) a reverse sequence was followed. Blood pressure was measured under casual conditions during a hand grip exercise test, mental arithmetic test, and submaximal multistage bicycle exercise test; during the following 24 hours, blood pressure was measured serially with a noninvasive ambulatory blood pressure recorder. Daily outdoor maximum and indoor laboratory temperatures were also obtained. In the cold season, significantly higher values (on the average by 5-10 mm Hg, p less than 0.01) were obtained in both groups for mean diastolic daytime blood pressure. For other measurements, a trend toward higher values in the cold season was observed in both groups, although statistical significance was not obtained in all instances. For nighttime measurements, irrespective of the seasonal sequence, lower values were observed in the second session. Significant correlations were found between the differences in the average daytime ambulatory blood pressures and the corresponding changes of daily maximum outdoor temperatures after 5-7 months. These observations indicate that arterial blood pressure may be strongly influenced by environmental temperature. This phenomenon should be taken into account both in the evaluation of the individual hypertensive patients and in the design and analysis of studies on arterial hypertension, especially when ambulatory blood pressure techniques are employed.
Journal of Hypertension | 1988
S Giaconi; Carlo Palombo; Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; C Marabotti; Duccio Volterrani; Sergio Ghione
The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term reproducibility and the possible seasonal influences on casual blood pressure and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in patients with borderline or mild arterial hypertension. Two sets of measurements were performed at 6-month intervals, one set in the warm and one in the cold season, using the same protocol, consisting of measurements of casual and ambulatory blood pressures, together with the recording of outdoor temperatures. Casual blood pressure was measured by an automatic recorder and 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was performed by a non-invasive device. For the selected intervals, the reproducibility of most pressure measurements was low; in addition, casual diastolic pressure and 24-h systolic and diastolic pressures were significantly higher in the cold than in the warm season. Taken together, these findings confirm and extend the results obtained in several large-scale studies and support the importance of taking environmental temperature into account, not only in epidemiological studies but also in small-scale studies and probably even in the individual patients, especially when using integrated evaluations by ambulatory monitoring.
International Journal of Cardiology | 1994
Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; C Marabotti; Carlo Palombo; S Giaconi; Giuseppe Rossi; Sergio Ghione
OBJECTIVE To investigate the possible association between Doppler left ventricular filling pattern and exercise capacity in a group of normotensives to severe hypertensive patients. BACKGROUND Invasive left ventricular filling indexes evaluated at rest are reported to be related to exercise capacity in heart failure. Whether exercise capacity is limited by abnormalities of left ventricular filling also in other less severe conditions is however unclear. METHODS Fifty-one subjects with normal to severely elevated blood pressure underwent a standard exercise test on cycle ergometer, negative for myocardial ischemia, and a complete echo Doppler evaluation showing a basal systolic function within normal limits. RESULTS Basal systolic function indexes were not significantly related to exercise duration. On the contrary, exercise duration was highly significantly correlated to the relative atrial contribution to left ventricular filling (0.001 < P < 0.05), in both the overall group and the two subgroups in whom exercise was interrupted because of fatigue (n = 30) or because of attaining target heart rate (n = 21). Significant correlations were also observed between exercise time and resting blood pressure, whereas no association with resting heart rate, age and body surface area was found. Exercise time also correlated to left ventricular mass and mass index but not to left ventricular volume. Multiple regression analysis showed that exercise tolerance was significantly related to diastolic blood pressure and left ventricular filling. Echo Doppler indexes of left ventricular filling are associated with exercise duration; left ventricular diastole could thus influence effort tolerance, not only in patients with cardiac insufficiency, but also in subjects with normal to elevated blood pressure levels and normal systolic function at rest.
Drugs | 1992
Oberdan Parodi; Danilo Neglia; Gianmario Sambuceti; C Marabotti; Carlo Palombo; L. Donato
SummaryPatients with essential arterial hypertension demonstrate abnormal vasodilator capacity either during increased cardiac metabolic demand or during pharmacological vasodilation. Structural and functional damage to the coronary microcirculation has been proposed as one of the major causes of impaired coronary reserve in this disease.To assess the role of microvascular impairment in regional myocardial blood flow (MBF), 27 patients with essential hypertension were evaluated by dynamic positron emission tomography (PET) at rest, during atrial pacing and after dipyridamole infusion and compared with 13 healthy subjects. All patients had normal coronary arteries, 17 had moderate to severe hypertension and 10 had mild hypertension. Baseline mean MBF of 0.97 ± 0.25 ml/min/g was significantly increased to 1.60 ± 0.38 during atrial pacing and 2.35 ± 0.95 after dipyridamole infusion (p < 0.01); however, mean flow during atrial pacing and after dipyridamole infusion was significantly lower than in healthy subjects (2.15 ± 0.73 and 3.71 ± 0.86 ml/min/g, p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively). The MBF response to atrial pacing and dipyridamole infusion was similarly depressed in patients with mild and severe hypertension.The study was repeated after 6 months of antihypertensive treatment with the calcium antagonist verapamil or the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor enalapril in a subgroup of 20 patients as part of a randomised, single-blind clinical trial. This study is still in progress; the initial 16 patients treated with verapamil or enalapril showed an obvious improvement in MBF values during atrial pacing and after dipyridamole infusion after 6 months of therapy (mean MBF: 2.10 ± 0.64 and 2.99 ± 1.63 ml/min/g. respectively, p < 0.05 vs pretreatment values).In conclusion, obvious impairment of MBF during atrial pacing and after dipyridamole infusion was observed in hypertensive patients with normal coronary arteries and this appeared unrelated to the severity of hypertension. Therapy with verapamil or enalapril improved coronary reserve and MBF response to an increase in myocardial oxygen demand.
Journal of Hypertension | 1991
Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; C Marabotti; Carlo Palombo; S Giaconi; Sergio Ghione
The relationships of age, heart rate, body build and, in particular, of arterial blood pressure and left ventricular mass to several Doppler indexes of diastolic function were evaluated in a series of 80 subjects with a wide range of blood pressure levels (106-217/68-144 mmHg). Body build and age results were inversely correlated to the indexes, reflecting the early contribution to left ventricular filling, whereas the increase in heart rate was associated with an increase in late diastolic contribution. Strong correlations (in most instances, P less than 0.0001) were observed with arterial blood pressure and left ventricular mass: the increase of these parameters was associated with a decrease of early transmitral peak velocity (E peak) and of early filling fraction, with an increase of late diastolic transmitral peak velocity (A peak) and of A:E ratio and, finally, with an increase of both deceleration time of E peak and acceleration time to A peak. Blood pressure or left ventricular mass were also confirmed as strong predictors of nearly all the Doppler-derived diastolic indexes by stepwise multiple regression analysis. When the subjects were subdivided into quintiles according to diastolic blood pressure and the average values of the five subgroups were compared, age, heart rate and body build results were similar in the quintiles while diastolic blood pressure increased stepwise by 10 mmHg. Analysis of variance showed significant differences for all the indexes of left ventricular filling except deceleration time of and acceleration time to E peak (P less than 0.05 to P less than 0.0001) and almost all the echo-Doppler indexes showed a linear trend with diastolic blood pressure and left ventricular mass.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
American Heart Journal | 1991
Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; C Marabotti; Carlo Palombo; Sergio Ghione
Left atrial electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities have been reported as common findings in hypertension; however, their relationships with atrial anatomy are still uncertain. In addition, in arterial hypertension several studies demonstrated an abnormal left ventricular filling. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships of the ECG signs of left atrial abnormality to atrial anatomy and left ventricular filling as evaluated by pulsed-wave (PW) Doppler in a group of patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension. To this end, 53 untreated essential hypertensive patients (age 44 +/- 8 years; blood pressure 160.5 +/- 21.5/104.7 +/- 13.5 mm Hg) underwent a complete 12-lead ECG and a PW Doppler study of the transmitral flow velocities. The ECG criteria of left atrial abnormality were: P wave wider than 0.12 (or 0.10) second or higher than 0.25 mV in lead II; P wave/PR segment ratio (Macruz index) greater than 1.6 in lead II; and P wave terminal forces in lead V1 equal to or more negative than 0.04. Echocardiographic measurements were made according to American Society of Echocardiography (ASE) convention. Doppler parameters of left ventricular filling were measured as E and A peak velocity, A/E ratio, and the ratio between the velocity-time integral under the E peak and that of the whole diastolic flow, which represents the rapid filling fraction (RFF). At least one ECG sign of atrial abnormality was present in 34 patients (64%); the Macruz index gave the most common ECG index of atrial abnormality (31 patients).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
International Journal of Cardiology | 1991
C Marabotti; Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; Carlo Palombo; S Giaconi; Sergio Ghione
In arterial hypertension, casual blood pressure seems to be weakly related to the level of cardiac involvement. The aim of the present study was to assess if blood pressure during ambulatory monitoring, and during different stress tests, is a stronger predictor of anatomical and functional changes observed in hypertensive heart disease. To this aim, 29 untreated patients with borderline-to-moderate essential hypertension underwent an echo-Doppler evaluation to determine left ventricular thickness and mass. From transmitral flow, the ratio between late and early filling velocities (A/E ratio) was used to assess left ventricular diastolic behaviour. On the same day that ultrasonic study was carried out, we also measured a set of casual blood pressures; conducted a mental arithmetic test (standardized series of mental subtractions); a handgrip test (30% of maximum voluntary contraction for 3 minutes); and performed noninvasive ambulatory monitoring of blood pressure (Spacelabs 5200). Significant relationships were observed between left ventricular mass and both night-time systolic blood pressure (r = 0.46, P less than 0.02) and peak systolic blood pressure during mental stress (r = 0.39, P less than 0.05). The A/E ratio was significantly associated with casual systolic and diastolic blood pressure (r = 0.45, P less than 0.02; r = 0.38, P less than 0.05, respectively); day-time diastolic blood pressure (r = 0.47, P less than 0.02); night-time systolic and diastolic blood pressure (r = 0.44, P less than 0.05; r = 0.42, P less than 0.05 respectively); and peak systolic blood pressure during the mental arithmetic test (r = 0.44, P less than 0.05). Our results seem to confirm the presence of a relationship between causal blood pressure and left ventricular filling. Moreover, the transmitral flow seems to be dependent on both mean levels of blood pressure on ambulatory monitoring and systolic blood pressure during mental stress. As concerns left ventricular mass, the correlations observed support the weakness of the links between blood pressure and left ventricular anatomy.
Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy | 1994
Roberto Gistri; Alberto Genovesi Ebert; Carlo Palombo; C Marabotti; Lubna Choudhury; Paolo G. Camici
Dear Sir, Coronary vasodilator reserve is often reduced in patients with arterial hypertension despite angiographically normal coronary arteries [1,2]. Aortic diastolic pressure is a major determinant of coronary blood flow. An abrupt reduction of systemic blood pressure from hypertensive to low-normal values has been demonstrated to induce ischemiclike electrocardiographic (ECG) changes in hypertensives without detectable coronary artery disease [3]. However, chronic reduction of arterial blood pressure by antihypertensive therapy has been shown to result in both normalization of coronary resistance vessel wall hypertrophy and coronary vasodilator reserve in hypertensive patients [4]. However, the effects of blood pressure reduction on coronary vasodilator reserve in the intermediate term, before regression of vascular smooth muscle hypertrophy, are not known. Therefore, we assessed the effect of blood pressure lowering on coronary vasodilator reserve in eight patients (mean age 51 +_ 10 years), with mild to moderate essential hypertension, after 6 weeks of treatment with the calcium antagonist lacidipine. Coronary vasodilator reserve was calculated by measuring myocardial blood flow (MBF), by means of 18N-ammonia and positron emission tomography (PET), at baseline and during pharmacologically induced coronary vasodilatation. This was a singleblind, placebo-controlled study, whereby, following 3 weeks of placebo therapy, the patients were started on lacidipine treatment at a dose of 4 mg (p.o.) once daily for 3 weeks and titrated up to 6 mg once daily for 3 more weeks in patients who did not respond to the 4 mg dosage. Treatment was considered effective when a diastolic blood pressure <91 mmHg or a reduction of at least 15 mmHg compared to the placebo period were attained. Of the eight hypertensives, six had never received previous hypotensive treatment and two had been off treatment for at least 3 months before the study. Blood pressure measurements were obtained after 5 minutes of quiet sitting by an automatic oscillometric device [5], Calculating the average of three consecutive readings. The presence of ischemic or valvular heart disease and cardiomyopathy were ruled out by history, physical examination, baseline ECG, two-dimensional Doppler echocardiography, exercise test, and high-dose dipyridamole echocardiography [6]. Seven of the eight patients had evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy according to the criteria proposed by Levy et al. [7]. The evaluation of MBF by PET was performed during treatment with placebo and during effective treatment in all patients. Simultaneously we studied a group of normotensive subjects with PET, without treatment, to compare their coronary vasodilator reserve with that of our patients. Regional myocardial blood flow was measured by means of 13N-ammonia and dynamic PET at baseline and following an intravenous infusion of dipyridamole (0.56 mg/kg over 4 minutes) as previously described [8,9]. For each flow measurement, 0.25 mCi/kg of body weight of 13N ammonia, prepared as reported elsewhere [10], was given by slow intravenous injection over a period of 15-20 seconds. Dynamic acquisition was started simultaneously with the beginning of the injection of the tracer and a total of 28 frames (16 × 3, 11 × 12, and 1 x 300 seconds) were acquired over 8 minutes. Blood flow during hyperemic conditions was assessed by injecting I~N ammonia 4 minutes after the end of dipyridamole infusion. PET data were analyzed as previously described [8]. Regional coronary resistance was calculated as mean [(diastolic × 2) + systolic/3] arterial blood pressure (calculated from cuff method measurements made during PET study) divided by MBF. Coronary vasodilator reserve was calculated from the ratio dipyridamole/baseline MBF. The results are expressed
International Journal of Cardiology | 1994
C Marabotti; Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; Sergio Ghione; S Giaconi; Carlo Palombo
Recent reports have shown that four distinct left ventricular anatomical patterns, with different hypertension severity and hemodynamic features, are associated with sustained arterial hypertension (normal anatomy, concentric remodeling, concentric hypertrophy and eccentric hypertrophy). The aim of this study was to evaluate left ventricular diastolic function in these different left ventricular anatomic patterns. To achieve this aim, 94 borderline-to-severe essential hypertensive patients (60 never treated before, 34 off treatment for at least 3 weeks before the study) underwent an echo-Doppler study; left ventricular thickness, dimension and mass index were obtained. Early (E) and late (A) transmitral flow velocity, their ratio (A/E) and the early filling fraction (EFF) were obtained by pulsed-wave Doppler and used as left ventricular diastolic function indexes. Differences between groups were evaluated by one-way ANOVA followed by Scheffe F-test. A normal left ventricular anatomy was found in 41 (44%), concentric remodeling in 17 (18%), concentric hypertrophy in 21 (22%) and eccentric hypertrophy in 15 (16%) patients. Early filling fraction and A/E ratio which resulted were significantly different for the groups (P < 0.001 and P < 0.002, respectively). As compared with the group with normal left ventricle, patients with concentric hypertrophy had significantly EFF and those with eccentric hypertrophy had significantly lower EFF and higher A/E ratio. Our results thus confirm the presence of distinct anatomical left ventricular adaptation patterns in arterial hypertension.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | 1988
Carlo Palombo; C Marabotti; Alberto Genovesi-Ebert; S Giaconi; Claudio Michelassi; Enza Fommei; Sergio Ghione
Nitrendipine is a second-generation dihydropyridine calcium antagonist selective for hypertension. The aim of this study was to assess whether, in addition to reduce resting blood pressure, nitrendipine also affects the cardiovascular reactivity to physical and psychologic stress. Ten essential hypertensive patients, out of treatment for at least 2 weeks, underwent a symptom-limited dynamic maximal exercise and a mental arithmetic stress test (MAT) after placebo (1 week) and 1 and 5 weeks of active treatment with nitrendipine (20 mg q.i.d.). To evaluate the cardiovascular response to exercise and its changes during treatment, the slope of the regression line (if statistically significant) of the blood pressure, heart rate, and rate-pressure product (RPP) values against workload were considered, together with exercise capacity, blood pressure, and pressure-rate product at the peak of maximal exercise. During mental stress, indexes of stroke volume (SVI), cardiac output (COI), and peripheral resistance (TPRI) were obtained by Doppler transcutaneous aortovelography (TAV). Resting systolic and diastolic BP were significantly reduced during treatment. The average length of exercise was 7.3, 7.64, and 8.0 min after, respectively, placebo, 1, and 5 weeks of treatment. Peak systolic and diastolic BP, peak RPP, and RPP slope were consistently decreased after treatment, significantly for peak DBP and RPP. During mental arithmetics, a significant increase of BP and HR and a decrease of SVI were observed on placebo; both BP and SVI responses disappeared after 5 weeks on nitrendipine, whereas the HR increase was unchanged. Peak values of COI and TPRI during MAT were significantly increased and decreased, respectively, after nitrendipine, whereas basal values showed similar changes, but not statistically significant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)