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Dive into the research topics where Claudio Passino is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudio Passino.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2000

Effects of controlled breathing, mental activity and mental stress with or without verbalization on heart rate variability

Luciano Bernardi; Joanna Wdowczyk-Szulc; Cinzia Valenti; Stefano Castoldi; Claudio Passino; Giammario Spadacini; Peter Sleight

OBJECTIVES To assess whether talking or reading (silently or aloud) could affect heart rate variability (HRV) and to what extent these changes require a simultaneous recording of respiratory activity to be correctly interpreted. BACKGROUND Sympathetic predominance in the power spectrum obtained from short- and long-term HRV recordings predicts a poor prognosis in a number of cardiac diseases. Heart rate variability is often recorded without measuring respiration; slow breaths might artefactually increase low frequency power in RR interval (RR) and falsely mimic sympathetic activation. METHODS In 12 healthy volunteers we evaluated the effect of free talking and reading, silently and aloud, on respiration, RR and blood pressure (BP). We also compared spontaneous breathing to controlled breathing and mental arithmetic, silent or aloud. The power in the so called low- (LF) and high-frequency (HF) bands in RR and BP was obtained from autoregressive power spectrum analysis. RESULTS Compared with spontaneous breathing, reading silently increased the speed of breathing (p < 0.05), decreased mean RR and RR variability and increased BP. Reading aloud, free talking and mental arithmetic aloud shifted the respiratory frequency into the LF band, thus increasing LF% and decreasing HF% to a similar degree in both RR and respiration, with decrease in mean RR but with minor differences in crude RR variability. CONCLUSIONS Simple mental and verbal activities markedly affect HRV through changes in respiratory frequency. This possibility should be taken into account when analyzing HRV without simultaneous acquisition and analysis of respiration.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 2008

Predictive value of elevated neutrophil–lymphocyte ratio on cardiac mortality in patients with stable coronary artery disease

Angela Papa; Michele Emdin; Claudio Passino; Claudio Michelassi; Debora Battaglia; Franca Cocci

BACKGROUND An association between white blood cell count (WBC), severity of coronary artery disease (CAD) and survival has been described in patients with acute coronary syndrome. Our aim was to analyze the predictive ability for cardiac events of differential WBC, which is still not well characterized, against established risk factors in angiographically proven CAD patients. METHODS We prospectively evaluated complete blood count, biomarkers of inflammation [(C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum iron (SI)], glucose/lipid metabolism [(fasting glucose (FG), total, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol] and established risk factors in 422 consecutive ischemic patients with angiographically documented stable CAD. On a 3-year follow-up, cardiac death and non-fatal myocardial infarction (MI) were considered as end-points. RESULTS At multivariate analysis neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (N/L) emerged as independent predictor of cardiac death (HR 8.13; p=0.02) together with CRP, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), FG, HDL and SI. CRP, LVEF, and HDL showed an independent prognostic value for cardiac death and non-fatal MI. Event-free survival according to N/L tertiles was 99% for the first tertile (1.23+/-0.26), 96.5% for the second (2.05+/-0.29), and 88.8% for the third one (5.19+/-3.81). CONCLUSIONS N/L is an independent predictor of cardiac mortality in stable CAD patients.


Circulation | 2004

Human Atherosclerotic Plaques Contain Gamma-Glutamyl Transpeptidase Enzyme Activity

Aldo Paolicchi; Michele Emdin; Erri Ghliozeni; Eugenio Ciancia; Claudio Passino; George Popoff; Alfonso Pompella

During the last decade, growing evidence has shown that serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) is an independent prognostic marker for cardiac death and reinfarction, both in unselected populations and in patients with coronary artery disease. Clinical and epidemiological evidence indicates that the prognostic value of GGT is largely independent of other risk factors for cardiovascular disease and alcohol consumption. The catalytic activity of GGT, which is present on the surface of cell membranes and in serum, is …


Circulation | 1995

Demonstrable cardiac reinnervation after human heart transplantation by carotid baroreflex modulation of RR interval.

Luciano Bernardi; Beatrice Bianchini; Giammario Spadacini; Stefano Leuzzi; Felice Valle; Eugenia Marchesi; Claudio Passino; Alessandro Calciati; Mario Viganò; Mauro Rinaldi; Luigi Martinelli; Giorgio Finardi; Peter Sleight

BACKGROUND After heart transplantation, respiration-synchronous fluctuations (0.18 to 0.35 Hz, high frequency [HF]) in RR interval may result from atrial stretch caused by changes in venous return, but slower fluctuations (0.03 to 0.15 Hz, low frequency [LF]) not due to respiration suggest reinnervation. In normal subjects, sinusoidal neck suction selectively stimulates carotid baroreceptors and causes reflex oscillations of RR interval. METHODS AND RESULTS To evaluate the presence of reinnervation, we measured the power of RR-LF and RR-HF in 26 heart transplant recipients and 16 control subjects before and during sinusoidal neck suction at 0.1 Hz and 0.20 Hz (similar to but distinct from that of controlled respiration, 0.25 Hz) and before and during administration of atropine or beta-blocker (esmolol hydrochloride) by spectral analysis. All transplant recipients showed small respiratory HF fluctuations. Nonrespiratory LF fluctuations were present in 13 of 26 transplant recipients and increased with months since transplantation (r = .53, P < .01). HF neck suction induced a 0.20-Hz component in all 16 control subjects and none of the 26 transplant subjects. LF neck suction increased RR-LF (from 0.73 +/- 0.20 to 1.30 +/- 0.26 ln ms2, P < .001), similar to but less than in control subjects (from 6.12 +/- 0.21 to 8.27 +/- 0.21 ln ms2, P < .001). Atropine reduced all fluctuations in control subjects and blocked the HF increase caused by 0.20-Hz neck suction but not the LF increase during 0.10-Hz stimulation. Neck suction-induced changes in LF fluctuations persisted after administration of atropine in transplant recipients but were attenuated by esmolol hydrochloride, suggesting sympathetic rather than vagal reinnervation. CONCLUSIONS The presence of baroreceptor-induced RR oscillations is evidence of functional, although incomplete, autonomic reinnervation.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

Thirty years of the heart as an endocrine organ: physiological role and clinical utility of cardiac natriuretic hormones

A. Clerico; Alberto Giannoni; Simona Vittorini; Claudio Passino

Thirty years ago, De Bold et al. (20) reported that atrial extracts contain some biologically active peptides, which promote a rapid and massive diuresis and natriuresis when injected in rats. It is now clear that the heart also exerts an endocrine function and in this way plays a key role in the regulation of cardiovascular and renal systems. The aim of this review is to discuss some recent insights and still-debated findings regarding the cardiac natriuretic hormones (CNHs) produced and secreted by cardiomyocytes (i.e., atrial natriuretic peptide and B-type natriuretic peptide). The functional status of the CNH system depends not only on the production/secretion of CNHs by cardiomyocytes but also on both the peripheral activation of circulating inactive precursor of natriuretic hormones and the transduction of the hormone signal by specific receptors. In this review, we will discuss the data supporting the hypothesis that the production and secretion of CNHs is the result of a complex integration among mechanical, chemical, hemodynamic, humoral, ischemic, and inflammatory inputs. The cross talk among endocrine function, adipose tissue, and sex steroid hormones will be discussed more in detail, considering the clinically relevant relationships linking together cardiovascular risk, sex, and body fat development and distribution. Finally, we will review the pathophysiological role and the clinical relevance of both peripheral maturation of the precursor of B-type natriuretic peptides and hormone signal transduction.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

Metabolic exercise test data combined with cardiac and kidney indexes, the MECKI score: A multiparametric approach to heart failure prognosis

Piergiuseppe Agostoni; Ugo Corrà; Gaia Cattadori; Fabrizio Veglia; Rocco La Gioia; Angela Beatrice Scardovi; Michele Emdin; Marco Metra; Gianfranco Sinagra; Giuseppe Limongelli; Rossella Raimondo; Federica Re; Marco Guazzi; Romualdo Belardinelli; Gianfranco Parati; Damiano Magrì; Cesare Fiorentini; Alessandro Mezzani; Elisabetta Salvioni; Domenico Scrutinio; Renato Ricci; Luca Bettari; Andrea Di Lenarda; Luigi Emilio Pastormerlo; Giuseppe Pacileo; Raffaella Vaninetti; Anna Apostolo; Annamaria Iorio; Stefania Paolillo; Pietro Palermo

OBJECTIVES We built and validated a new heart failure (HF) prognostic model which integrates cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) parameters with easy-to-obtain clinical, laboratory, and echocardiographic variables. BACKGROUND HF prognostication is a challenging medical judgment, constrained by a magnitude of uncertainty. METHODS Our risk model was derived from a cohort of 2716 systolic HF patients followed in 13 Italian centers. Median follow up was 1041days (range 4-5185). Cox proportional hazard regression analysis with stepwise selection of variables was used, followed by cross-validation procedure. The study end-point was a composite of cardiovascular death and urgent heart transplant. RESULTS Six variables (hemoglobin, Na(+), kidney function by means of MDRD, left ventricle ejection fraction [echocardiography], peak oxygen consumption [% pred] and VE/VCO2 slope) out of the several evaluated resulted independently related to prognosis. A score was built from Metabolic Exercise Cardiac Kidney Indexes, the MECKI score, which identified the risk of study end-point with AUC values of 0.804 (0.754-0.852) at 1year, 0.789 (0.750-0.828) at 2years, 0.762 (0.726-0.799) at 3years and 0.760 (0.724-0.796) at 4years. CONCLUSIONS This is the first large-scale multicenter study where a prognostic score, the MECKI score, has been built for systolic HF patients considering CPET data combined with clinical, laboratory and echocardiographic measurements. In the present population, the MECKI score has been successfully validated, performing very high AUC.


Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine | 2004

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SERUM GAMMA-GLUTAMYLTRANSFERASE IN CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES

Alfonso Pompella; Michele Emdin; Claudio Passino; Aldo Paolicchi

Abstract Since early after the introduction of serum γ-glutamyltransferase (GGT) in clinical practice as a reliable and widely employed laboratory test, epidemiological and prospective studies have repeatedly shown that this activity possesses a prognostic value for morbidity and mortality. The association is independent of possibly concomitant conditions of liver disease, and notably, a significant independent correlation of serum GGT exists with the occurrence of cardiovascular diseases (myocardial infarction, stroke). Experimental work has documented that active GGT is present in atherosclerotic plaques of coronary as well as in cerebral arteries. These findings, and the recently recognized functions of GGT in the generation of reactive oxygen species, indicate that serum GGT represents a true marker of cardiovascular diseases and underlying atherosclerosis. Further insights into potential therapeutic interest will probably be derived from studies investigating the origin of GGT activity in plaque tissue.


Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine | 2004

Analytical performance and diagnostic accuracy of a fully-automated electrochemiluminescent assay for the N-terminal fragment of the pro-peptide of brain natriuretic peptide in patients with cardiomyopathy: comparison with immunoradiometric assay methods for brain natriuretic peptide and atrial natriuretic peptide

Concetta Prontera; Michele Emdin; Gian Carlo Zucchelli; Andrea Ripoli; Claudio Passino; A. Clerico

Abstract We evaluated the analytical performance of a fully-automated electrochemiluminescence “sandwich” immunoassay method for the N-terminal fragment of the pro-peptide of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP). We then compared the diagnostic accuracy of this method in discriminating between normal subjects and patients with cardiomyopathy with that found with two previously described immunoradiometric assay methods for the assay of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and BNP. We studied 193 consecutive patients (mean age 64.4±12.3 years, range 20–89 years, including 56 women and 137 men) with chronic cardiomyopathy and a group of 85 healthy subjects (mean age 52.3±12.0 years, 42 women and 43 men, range 20–79 years). N-terminal fragment of proBNP1–76 (NT-proBNP) was measured with a fully-automated “sandwich” electrochemiluminescence method using an Elecsys® 2010 analyzer, while ANP and BNP were measured with immunoradiometric assay methods. The low detection limit of the NTproBNP assay was 4.2 pg/ml (0.50 pmol/l), while the functional sensitivity was 22 pg/ml (2.60 pmol/l) with a working range (imprecision profile ≤ 10% coefficient of variation) extended up to about 30 000 pg/ml (3540 pmol/l). Healthy women (64.3±41.6 pg/ml, 7.59±4.91 pmol/l) showed significantly higher values than men (46.9±30.9 pg/ml, 5.53±3.64 pmol/l, p=0.0118). Moreover, age and sex were significantly and independently related to the NT-proBNP values in healthy subjects, as assessed by a multiple linear regression analysis (R=0.389, F-value=7.316, P-value=0.0012). As expected, the NT-proBNP values of patients with cardiomyopathy were significantly higher than those of normal subjects and progressively increased with the severity of heart failure. The respective diagnostic accuracy of the ANP, BNP and NT-proBNP assays in discriminating between the group of normal subjects and that of patients with cardiomyopathy was tested by the response operating characteristic curve analysis. Our data indicated that the NT-proBNP assay is significantly better than either of the ANP or BNP immunoradiometric assays in discriminating affected patients from healthy subjects, especially when only patients with mild disease severity (New York Heart Association class I and II) are considered.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2005

C‐type natriuretic peptide plasma levels increase in patients with chronic heart failure as a function of clinical severity

Silvia Del Ry; Claudio Passino; Maristella Maltinti; Michele Emdin; Daniela Giannessi

C‐type natriuretic peptide (CNP), secreted by the endothelium and the heart, is structurally related to atrial and brain natriuretic peptides, but its clinical significance in chronic heart failure (CHF) is controversial.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2009

Combined Increased Chemosensitivity to Hypoxia and Hypercapnia as a Prognosticator in Heart Failure

Alberto Giannoni; Michele Emdin; Francesca Bramanti; Giovanni Iudice; Darrel P. Francis; Barsotti A; Massimo F. Piepoli; Claudio Passino

OBJECTIVES The aim of the present study was to investigate the prognostic significance of chemosensitivity to hypercapnia in chronic heart failure (HF). BACKGROUND Increased chemosensitivity to hypoxia and hypercapnia has been observed in HF. The potential value of enhanced chemosensitivity to hypercapnia to risk prediction in systolic HF has not been specifically evaluated. METHODS One hundred ten consecutive systolic HF patients (age 62 +/- 15 years, left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF] 31 +/- 7%) underwent assessment of chemosensitivity to hypoxia and hypercapnia (rebreathing technique) and were followed up for a median period of 29 months (range 1 to 54 months). The end point was a composite of cardiac death and aborted cardiac death (ventricular tachyarrhythmia treated by cardioverter-defibrillator). RESULTS At baseline, 31 patients (28%) had enhanced chemosensitivity to both hypoxia and hypercapnia. Although they had the same LVEF as the 43 patients (39%) with normal chemosensitivity, they were more symptomatic (New York Heart Association functional class), had higher plasma brain natriuretic peptide and norepinephrine, steeper regression slope relating minute ventilation to carbon dioxide output (V(E)/V(CO2) slope), more Cheyne-Stokes respiration, and more ventricular arrhythmias (all p < 0.05). Four-year survival was only 49%, in marked contrast to 100% for patients with normal chemosensitivity (p < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, combined elevation in chemosensitivity was the strongest independent prognostic marker, even when adjusted for univariate predictors (V(E)/V(CO2) slope, Cheyne-Stokes respiration, LVEF, and brain natriuretic peptide, p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Increased chemosensitivity to both hypoxia and hypercapnia, eliciting neurohormonal derangement, ventilation instability, and ventricular arrhythmias, is a very serious adverse prognostic marker in HF.

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Michele Emdin

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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A. Clerico

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Alberto Giannoni

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Giuseppe Vergaro

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Roberta Poletti

National Research Council

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Concetta Prontera

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Alberto Aimo

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Andrea Ripoli

National Research Council

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C. Prontera

National Research Council

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