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Featured researches published by Dario Grande.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2017

Right ventriculo-arterial coupling assessed by two-dimensional strain: A new parameter of right ventricular function independently associated with prognosis in chronic heart failure patients

Massimo Iacoviello; Francesco Monitillo; Gaetano Citarelli; Marta Leone; Dario Grande; Valeria Antoncecchi; Caterina Rizzo; Paola Terlizzese; Roberta Romito; Pasquale Caldarola; Marco Matteo Ciccone

AIM OF THE STUDY To evaluate whether right ventriculo-arterial coupling obtained by the estimation of the two-dimensional right ventricular (RV) longitudinal strain and of the pulmonary arterial systolic pressure (PASP) could improve prognostic stratification of chronic heart failure (CHF) outpatients. METHODS CHF outpatients in a stable clinical condition and in conventional therapy were enrolled. The global RV longitudinal strain (RV-GLS) and the strain of the RV free wall (RV-fwLS) were evaluated. PASP was estimated on the basis of tricuspid regurgitation velocity and the estimated central venous pressure. Both RV-GLS and RV-fwLS were then indexed for PASP. RESULTS Of the 315 patients evaluated, 69 died during follow-up. Both RV-GLS/PASP and RV-fwLS/PASP were significantly associated with an increased risk of death at univariate (HR: 0.43; 95%CI: 0.34-0.56; p<0.001 and HR: 0.44; 95% CI: 0.34-0.57; p<0.001, respectively) and multivariate analysis (HR: 0.66; 95% CI: 0.49-0.89; p: 0.008 and HR: 0.65; 95% CI: 0.49-0.85; p: 0.002, respectively) after correction for age, NYHA class, mean arterial pressure, left ventricular ejection fraction, natremia, glomerular filtration rate and NT-proBNP. CONCLUSIONS Indexing RV function, assessed by speckle-tracking analysis, with an estimation of pulmonary systolic arterial pressure provides a parameter of ventricular arterial coupling that is independently associated with an increased risk of mortality.


Archive | 2017

Heart Failure and Kidney Disease

Dario Grande; Margherita Ilaria Gioia; Paola Terlizzese; Massimo Iacoviello

Kidney disease is commonly found in heart failure (HF) patients. They share many risk factors and common pathophysiological pathways which often lead to mutual dysfunction. Both haemodynamic and non-haemodynamic mechanisms are involved in the development of renal impairment in heart failure patients. Moreover, the presence of a chronic kidney disease is a significant independent predictor of worse outcome in chronic as well as in acute decompensated HF. As a consequence, an accurate evaluation of renal function plays a key role in the management of HF patients. Serum creatinine levels and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) estimates are the corner stones of renal function evaluation in clinical practice. However, to overcome their limits, several emerging glomerular and tubular biomarkers have been proposed over the last years. Alongside the renal biomarkers, imaging techniques could complement the laboratory data exploring different pathophysiological pathways. In particular, Doppler evaluation of renal circulation is a highly feasible technique that can effectively identify HF patients prone to develop renal dysfunction and with a worse outcome. Finally, some classes of drugs currently used in heart failure treatment can affect renal function and their use can be influenced by the presence of chronic kidney disease.


Heart Failure Reviews | 2018

The effects of heart rate control in chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction

Dario Grande; Massimo Iacoviello; Nadia Aspromonte

Elevated heart rate has been associated with worse prognosis both in the general population and in patients with heart failure. Heart rate is finely modulated by neurohormonal signals and it reflects the balance between the sympathetic and the parasympathetic limbs of the autonomic nervous system. For this reason, elevated heart rate in heart failure has been considered an epiphenomenon of the sympathetic hyperactivation during heart failure. However, experimental and clinical evidence suggests that high heart rate could have a direct pathogenetic role. Consequently, heart rate might act as a pathophysiological mediator of heart failure as well as a marker of adverse outcome. This hypothesis has been supported by the observation that the positive effect of beta-blockade could be linked to the degree of heart rate reduction. In addition, the selective heart rate control with ivabradine has recently been demonstrated to be beneficial in patients with heart failure and left ventricular systolic dysfunction. The objective of this review is to examine the pathophysiological implications of elevated heart rate in chronic heart failure and explore the mechanisms underlying the effects of pharmacological heart rate control.


World journal of nephrology | 2017

Role of imaging in the evaluation of renal dysfunction in heart failure patients

Dario Grande; Paola Terlizzese; Massimo Iacoviello

Heart failure and kidney disease share common pathophysiological pathways which can lead to mutual dysfunction, known as cardiorenal syndrome. In heart failure patients, renal impairment is related to hemodynamic and non-hemodynamic factors. Both decreased renal blood flow and renal venous congestion due to heart failure could lead to impaired renal function. Kidney disease and worsening renal function are independently associated with poor prognosis in heart failure patients, both in acute and chronic clinical settings. The aim of this review is to assess the role of renal imaging modalities in the evaluation and management of heart failure patients. Renal imaging techniques could complete laboratory data, as estimated glomerular filtration rate, exploring different pathophysiological factors involved in kidney disease and adding valuable information about renal structure and function. In particular, Doppler examination of arterial and venous hemodynamics is a feasible and non invasive technique, which has proven to be a reliable method for prognostic stratification in patients with cardiorenal syndrome. The renal resistance index, a measure related to renal hemodynamics, can be calculated from the Doppler evaluation of arterial flow. Moreover, the analysis of Doppler venous flow patterns can integrate information from the arterial study and evaluate renal congestion. Other imaging modalities are promising, but still confined to research purposes.


Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease | 2017

A Multiparametric Approach Based on NT-proBNP, ST2, and Galectin3 for Stratifying One Year Prognosis of Chronic Heart Failure Outpatients

Dario Grande; Marta Leone; Caterina Rizzo; Paola Terlizzese; Giuseppe Parisi; Margherita Ilaria Gioia; Tiziana Leopizzi; Antonio Segreto; Piero Guida; Roberta Romito; Marco Matteo Ciccone; Francesca Di Serio; Massimo Iacoviello

Galectin-3 and ST2 are emerging biomarkers involved in myocardial fibrosis. We evaluate the relevance of a multiparametric biomarker approach based on increased serum levels of NT-proBNP, galectin-3, and ST2 in stratifying the prognosis of chronic heart failure (CHF) outpatients. In 315 CHF outpatients in stable clinical condition clinical and echocardiographic evaluations were performed. Routine chemistry and serum levels of NT-proBNP, galectin-3, and ST2 were also assessed. During a 12 month follow-up, cardiovascular death, and/or heart failure (HF) occurred in 64 patients. The presence of NT-proBNP, galectin-3, and ST2 were higher than the recommended cutoffs and were all associated with events at univariate Cox regression analysis, as well as in a multivariate analysis including the three biomarkers. When a score based on the number of biomarkers above the recommended cut-offs was used (in a range of 0–3), it was associated with events both with respect to the univariate (HR 2.96, 95% CI 2.21–3.95, p < 0.001, C-index 0.78) and the multivariate (HR 1.52, 95% CI 1.06–2.17, p: 0.023, C-index 0.87) analyses, after correction for the variables of a reference model. Our results suggest that an easy prognostic approach based on the combination of three biomarkers, although with partially-overlapping pathophysiological mechanisms, is able to identify patients with the highest risk of heart failure progression.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

DISTINGUISHING ISCHEMIC FROM NONISCHEMIC LEFT BUNDLE BRANCH BLOCK BY TRANSTHORACIC ENHANCED CORONARY ECHO DOPPLER IN CONVERGENT COLOR DOPPLER MODE

Carlo Caiati; Mario Lepera; Daniela Santoro; Fortunato Iacovelli; Dario Grande; Antonio Tito; Nicola Tarantino; Alessandro De Santis; Filippo Masi; Stefano Favale

Thanks to new technological advances (convergent color Doppler mode) and new tomographic planes, transthoracic enhanced echo Doppler of coronaries (CED) has the potential to detect both mild and critical coronary stenoses over the entire left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), by detecting


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

TRANSTHORACIC ENHANCED DOPPLER ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY-ASSESSED ABSENCE OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS IN THE LEFT ANTERIOR DESCENDING CORONARY ARTERY RULES OUT CRITICAL RIGHT AND/OR CIRCUMFLEX CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE

Carlo Caiati; Mario Lepera; Daniela Santoro; Dario Grande; Antonio Tito; Nicola Tarantino; Stefano Favale

Background: The left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) is the coronary most frequently affected by atherosclerosis (CAD) and it is reasonable to expect that advanced CAD already causing a significant obstructing plaque of the right (RCA) and/or circumflex (LCX) coronary arteries will, at least minimally, involve the LAD. LAD CAD, both critical and subcritical, can be reliably assessed by transthoracic enhanced echo Doppler of the coronaries (CED) in convergent color Doppler mode. This approach consists of recording LAD blood flow velocity in order to detect any acceleration at the stenosis site over the entire LAD. We aimed at verifying the value of atherosclerotic plaques (either mild or critical) in predicting significant CAD (>50% diameter lumen narrowing) of the LCX and/or RCA, as assessed by CED over the entire LAD.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

ASSESSMENT OF THE SEVERITY OF LEFT ANTERIOR DESCENDING CORONARY ARTERY STENOSES USING TRANSTHORACIC ENHANCED DOPPLER ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY IN CONVERGENT COLOR DOPPLER MODE: VALIDATION OF A METHOD BASED ON THE CONTINUITY EQUATION

Carlo Caiati; Mario Lepera; Daniela Santoro; Dario Grande; Fortunato Iacovelli; Nicola Tarantino; Antonio Tito; Isabella Lacitignola; Marco Basile; Filippo Masi; Stefano Favale


International Journal of Cardiology | 2018

Right ventriculo-arterial coupling in heart failure: The role of the interventricular septum

Massimo Iacoviello; Francesco Monitillo; Gaetano Citarelli; Dario Grande; Roberta Romito; Pasquale Caldarola; Marco Matteo Ciccone


Giornale italiano di cardiologia | 2017

Studio multicentrico APULIA HF: efficacia di un protocollo di gestione condiviso fra ospedale e territorio dei pazienti ospedalizzati per scompenso cardiaco acuto

Massimo Iacoviello; Sergio Pede; Nadia Aspromonte; Francesca Bux; Mariligia Panunzio; Vittorio Donadeo; Alessandra De Castro; Ettore Antoncecchi; Nicola D'Amato; Elisabetta Squiccimarro; Bartolomeo Silvestri; Lucia Malerba; Luisa De Gennaro; Giuseppe Modugno; Elena Serafini; Biagio Curci; Dario Grande; Furio Colivicchi; Giovanni De Luca; Gianfranco Ignone; Carlo D'Agostino; Pasquale Caldarola

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Caterina Rizzo

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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