Carlo Vecchio
National Institutes of Health
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American Journal of Cardiology | 1994
Paolo Spirito; Antonio Pelliccia; Michael A. Proschan; Maristella Granata; Antonio Spataro; Pietro Bellone; G. Caselli; Alessandro Biffi; Carlo Vecchio; Barry J. Maron
In the present study, we used echocardiography to investigate the morphologic adaptations of the heart to athletic training in 947 elite athletes representing 27 sports who achieved national or international levels of competition. Cardiac morphology was compared for these sports, using multivariate statistical models. Left ventricular (LV) diastolic cavity dimension above normal (> 54 mm, ranging up to 66 mm) was identified in 362 (38%) of the 947 athletes. LV wall thickness above normal (> 12 mm, ranging up to 16 mm) was identified in only 16 (1.7%) of the athletes. Athletes training in the sports examined showed considerable differences with regard to cardiac dimensions. Endurance cyclists, rowers, and swimmers had the largest LV diastolic cavity dimensions and wall thickness. Athletes training in sports such as track sprinting, field weight events, and diving were at the lower end of the spectrum of cardiac adaptations to athletic training. Athletes training in sports associated with larger LV diastolic cavity dimensions also had higher values for wall thickness. Athletes training in isometric sports, such as weightlifting and wrestling, had high values for wall thickness relative to cavity dimension, but their absolute wall thickness remained within normal limits. Analysis of gender-related differences in cardiac dimensions showed that female athletes had smaller LV diastolic cavity dimension (average 2 mm) and smaller wall thickness (average 0.9 mm) than males of the same age and body size who were training in the same sport.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989
Paolo Spirito; Francesco Chiarella; Lorenzo Carratino; Massimo Zoni Berisso; Paolo Bellotti; Carlo Vecchio
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy has been investigated mainly at referral institutions. Thus, the clinical history of the disease that emerges from published studies could be influenced by a bias in patient selection. In the present study, we compared the clinical features of an outpatient population of 25 patients who had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with those reported in 78 studies published during the past five years. In the 25 study patients, age, sex, and the extent of left ventricular hypertrophy, as well as the prevalence of diastolic filling abnormalities, subaortic obstruction, and ventricular arrhythmias, were similar to those in patients described in the literature. Cardiac symptoms, however, were much less severe in the study patients. Eighteen patients (72 percent) were asymptomatic, six (24 percent) had mild symptoms, and only one (4 percent) had moderate-to-severe symptoms. Of 24 patients followed for a mean period of 4.4 years (range, 2.9 to 5.7), none died or had clinical deterioration. Of 3404 patients described in the 78 studies we reviewed, 2483 (73 percent) came from only two referral institutions. Of the 1721 patients in whom severity of symptoms was reported, 757 (44 percent) had moderate-to-severe symptoms. However, 727 (96 percent) of these patients were studied at one of the same two referral institutions. We conclude that the natural history of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may be more benign than can be inferred from published reports.
Circulation | 1985
Paolo Spirito; Barry J. Maron; Francesco Chiarella; Paolo Bellotti; R Tramarin; M Pozzoli; Carlo Vecchio
To investigate the relationship between diastolic abnormalities and left ventricular hypertrophy, 52 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and 22 normal subjects were studied with digitized M mode echocardiography and two-dimensional echocardiography. Echocardiographic indexes of diastolic function were compared in patients with different extent of left ventricular hypertrophy. Time interval from minimum left ventricular internal dimension to mitral valve opening and time to peak rate of increase in left ventricular internal dimension were significantly prolonged (80 +/- 31 and 100 +/- 37 msec, respectively) in patients with HCM and the most extensive left ventricular hypertrophy compared with those in patients with mild left ventricular hypertrophy (59 +/- 25 and 74 +/- 34 msec, respectively; p less than .01). Furthermore, peak rate of posterior wall diastolic excursion was significantly reduced in those patients with HCM and posterior wall hypertrophy (8.3 +/- 4.0 cm/sec) compared with that in patients with HCM but normal posterior wall thickness (11.2 +/- 3.4 cm/sec; p less than .002). However, abnormal M mode echocardiographic indexes of diastolic function were also identified in a substantial proportion of patients (i.e., 73%) with HCM and only mild left ventricular hypertrophy. In these patients, time interval from minimum left ventricular internal dimension to mitral valve opening (59 +/- 25 msec), peak rate (12 +/- 4 cm/sec), and time to peak rate of increase in left ventricular internal dimension (74 +/- 34 msec) were significantly different from normal (25 +/- 12 msec, 21 +/- 3 cm/sec, and 49 +/- 12 msec, respectively; p less than .01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Circulation | 1985
Paolo Spirito; Paolo Bellotti; Francesco Chiarella; Stefano Domenicucci; Angela Sementa; Carlo Vecchio
Fifty-eight patients with transmural anterior myocardial infarction were prospectively studied with serial two-dimensional echocardiography to determine the clinical implications and prognostic significance of detection of left ventricular thrombus during acute myocardial infarction, the incidence of systemic embolization, and the possible occurrence of spontaneous regression of left ventricular thrombi. Patients were not treated with anticoagulants or platelet inhibitors during the acute phase of infarction or during follow-up. Two-dimensional echocardiograms were obtained within 24 hr of myocardial infarction, every 24 hr until day 5, every 48 hr until day 15, and every month for a follow-up of 2 to 11 months (mean 7), in the surviving patients; a total of 774 echocardiograms were obtained. Left ventricular thrombi were identified in 24 (41%) of the 58 study patients, and developed within 48 hr of infarction in 11 of these patients. Ten (91%) of the 11 patients with early thrombus formation died during hospitalization or during follow-up, while only two (15%) of the 13 who developed a thrombus after 48 hr of infarction died (p less than .005). Incidence of Killip class III or IV, total lactic dehydrogenase values, and extent of wall motion abnormalities were significantly higher in patients who developed a thrombus within 48 hr of infarction than in patients without thrombus. On the other hand, in patients who developed a thrombus after 48 hr of infarction, these parameters were not significantly different from those in patients who did not develop a thrombus. Spontaneous regression of thrombi was documented in three (20%) of the 15 patients who survived the acute phase of myocardial infarction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
American Journal of Cardiology | 1998
Francesco Chiarella; Eugenio Santoro; Stefano Domenicucci; Aldo P. Maggioni; Carlo Vecchio
Left ventricular (LV) thrombosis can be found in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). No wide multicenter trial on AMI has provided information about LV thrombosis until now. The protocol of the GISSI-3 study included the search for the presence of LV thrombosis in patients from 200 coronary care units that did not specifically focus on LV thrombosis. We examined the GISSI-3 database results related to 8,326 patients at low to medium risk for LV thrombi in which a predischarge echocardiogram (9 +/- 5 days) was available. LV thrombosis was found in 427 patients (5.1%): 292 of 2,544 patients (11.5%) with anterior AMI and in 135 of 5,782 patients (2.3%) with AMI in other sites (p <0.0001). The incidence of LV thrombosis was higher in patients with ejection fraction < or = 40% (151 of 1,432 [10.5%] vs 276 of 6,894 [4%]; p <0.0001) both in the total population and in the subgroup with anterior AMI (106 of 597 [17.8%] vs 186 of 1,947 [9.6%]; p <0.0001). Multivariate analysis showed that only the Killip class > I and early intravenous beta-blocker administration were independently associated with higher LV thrombosis risk in the subgroup of patients with anterior AMI (odds ratio 1.75, 95% confidence interval 1.28 to 2.39; odds ratio 1.32, 95% confidence interval 1.02 to 1.72, respectively). In patients with anterior AMI, oral beta-blocker therapy given or not given after early intravenous beta-blocker administration does not influence the occurrence of LV thrombosis. The rate of LV thrombosis was similar in patients treated or not treated with nitrates and lisinopril both in the total population and in patients with anterior and nonanterior AMI. In conclusion, in the GISSI-3 population at low to medium risk for LV thrombi, the highest rate of occurrence of LV thrombosis was found among patients with anterior AMI and an ejection fraction < 40%. Killip class > I and the early intravenous beta-blocker administration were the only variables independently associated with a higher predischarge incidence of LV thrombosis after anterior AMI.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1986
Paolo Spirito; Barry J. Maron; Paolo Bellotti; Francesco Chiarella; Carlo Vecchio
The relation between Doppler and digitized M-mode echocardiographic indexes of left ventricular (LV) diastolic function was analyzed. Diastolic variables obtained with these 2 techniques were compared in 19 normal volunteers and in 25 patients with a variety of cardiac diseases. The 2 techniques were in agreement in distinguishing normal from abnormal diastolic function in 20 of the 25 patients (80%) with cardiac disease. Furthermore, a close linear relation with a high correlation coefficient and a small standard error of the estimate was identified between measurements of isovolumic relaxation determined by Doppler and by M-mode echocardiography (r = 0.82, standard error of the estimate = 18 ms). Doppler indexes of diastolic filling such as the slope (descent) and the duration of the early diastolic flow-velocity peak did not show a close correlation with the peak rate and the time to peak rate of increase in LV internal dimension determined by digitized echocardiography. Thus, Doppler and digitized echocardiography were consistent in distinguishing normal from abnormal diastolic function in most of the study patients, although specific variables of LV ventricular filling determined by the 2 techniques were not closely related. In addition, Doppler and M-mode echocardiographic measurements of isovolumic relaxation showed an excellent correlation.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2000
Giuseppe Canavese; Marco Gipponi; Alessandra Catturich; Carmine Di Somma; Carlo Vecchio; Francesco Rosato; Pierluigi Percivale; Luciano Moresco; Guido Nicolò; Bruno Spina; Giuseppe Villa; Pietro Bianchi; Fausto Badellino
Axillary lymph node status is the most important prognostic factor in patients with operable breast cancer. Recent studies have demonstrated the possibility of identifying the sentinel lymph node (sN) as a reliable predictor of axillary lymph node status in both cutaneous melanoma and breast cancer. Sentinel lymph node identification proved feasible by either peritumoral dye injection (Patent Blue‐V) or radiodetection, with identification rates of 65–97% and 92–98%, respectively. However, some important issues need further definition, namely (a) optimization of the technique for intraoperative detection of the sN, (b) predictive value of the sN with regard to axillary lymph node status, and (c) reliability of intraoperative histology of the sN. We reviewed our experience in sN detection in patients with stage I–II breast cancer to assess the feasibility and accuracy of lymphatic mapping, by vital blue dye or radioguided surgery, and sN histology as a predictor of axillary lymph node status.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1998
Paolo Bellotti; Paolo Spirito; Gabriele Lupi; Carlo Vecchio
We investigated left atrial appendage function by transesophageal echocardiography, on the day after external electrical cardioversion to sinus rhythm, in 41 patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. After cardioversion, appendage contraction synchronized with the electrical and mechanical activity of the atrium, which was restored in about 70% of the patients.
Circulation | 1993
Fabio Lattanzi; Paolo Bellotti; Eugenio Picano; Francesco Chiarella; A Mazzarisi; C Melevendi; Gianluca Forni; L Landini; Alessandro Distante; Carlo Vecchio
BackgroundPatients with f-thalassemia major present with severe anemia and need continuous transfusion therapy. The consequent iron overload leads to hemochromatosis. Initial cardiac dysfunction has been documented even in thalassemics without clinical manifestations of heart failure as well as by conventional echocardiographic-Doppler techniques. The purpose of this study was to assess the acoustic quantitative properties of myocardium in patients with iron overload. Methods and ResultsThirty-eight patients with (3-thalassemia major, without clinical signs of cardiac failure, and 20 age- and sex-matched young controls were studied by echocardiography. An on-line analysis of the ultrasonic radiofrequency signal was performed to obtain quantitative operator-independent measurements of the integrated backscatter (IB) signal of the ventricular septum and the posterior wall. The integrated values of the radiofrequency signal were normalized for the pericardial interface and expressed in percent (IB%). Thalassemic patients had been receiving transfusion therapy for 16±5 years and had received 313±+138 transfusion units; they all had received chelation treatment (desferroxiamine) for 9±2 years. Patients and controls showed comparable values of echocardiographically assessed percent fractional shortening (32±3% versus 36±4%, p=NS), whereas thalassemics showed higher values of left ventricular mass index (118±30 versus 98 ± 15 g/m2, p<0.05). The IB% values were higher in patients with thalassemia major than in controls for both septum (35±14% versus 21+6%, p<0.001) and posterior wall (16±6% versus 11±3%, p<0.001). In thalassemic patients, no significant correlation was found between the septum IB% value and hematological parameters, such as the total number of transfusions (r=0.2, p=NS) or the mean ferritin value (r=0.1, p=NS). No significant correlation was also found between the septum IB% value and the echocardiographically assessed left ventricular mass index (r=0.2, p=NS). ConclusionThese data demonstrate that myocardial reflectivity is abnormally increased in patients with thalassemia major under transfusion treatment, probably due to myocardial iron deposits and/or secondary structural changes. These quantitatively assessed abnormalities in regional reflectivity can be detected when conventional echocardiographic parameters of systolic left ventricular function are undistinguishable from normal controls.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2000
Giuseppe Canavese; Marco Gipponi; Alessandra Catturich; Carmine Di Somma; Carlo Vecchio; Francesco Rosato; Daniela Tomei; Guido Nicolò; Franca Carli; Giuseppe Villa; Giuseppe Agnese; Pietro Bianchi; Ferdinando Buffoni; Giuliano Mariani; Fausto Badellino
We performed a pilot study on 30 consecutive patients undergoing sentinel node (sN) biopsy by radioguided surgery and vital blue dye mapping to determine whether there is a single sN for each breast independent of tumor site or an sN specifically related to the site of the breast neoplasm.