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Dive into the research topics where Enrica Perugini is active.

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Featured researches published by Enrica Perugini.


Circulation | 2005

Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance in Cardiac Amyloidosis

Alicia M. Maceira; Jayshree Joshi; Sanjay Prasad; James C. Moon; Enrica Perugini; Idris Harding; Mary N. Sheppard; Philip A. Poole-Wilson; Philip N. Hawkins; Dudley J. Pennell

Background—Cardiac amyloidosis can be diagnostically challenging. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) can assess abnormal myocardial interstitium. Methods and Results—Late gadolinium enhancement CMR was performed in 30 patients with cardiac amyloidosis. In 22 of these, myocardial gadolinium kinetics with T1 mapping was compared with that in 16 hypertensive controls. One patient had CMR and autopsy only. Subendocardial T1 in amyloid patients was shorter than in controls (at 4 minutes: 427±73 versus 579±75 ms; P<0.01), was shorter than subepicardium T1 for the first 8 minutes (P≤0.01), and was correlated with markers of increased myocardial amyloid load, as follows: left ventricular (LV) mass (r=−0.51, P=0.013); wall thickness (r=−0.54 to −0.63, P<0.04); interatrial septal thickness (r=−0.52, P=0.001); and diastolic function (r=−0.42, P=0.025). Global subendocardial late gadolinium enhancement was found in 20 amyloid patients (69%); these patients had greater LV mass (126±30 versus 93±25 g/m2; P=0.009) than unenhanced patients. Histological quantification showed substantial interstitial expansion with amyloid (30.5%) but only minor fibrosis (1.3%). Amyloid was dominantly subendocardial (42%) compared with midwall (29%) and subepicardium (18%). There was 97% concordance in diagnosis of cardiac amyloid by combining the presence of late gadolinium enhancement and an optimized T1 threshold (191 ms at 4 minutes) between myocardium and blood. Conclusions—In cardiac amyloidosis, CMR shows a characteristic pattern of global subendocardial late enhancement coupled with abnormal myocardial and blood-pool gadolinium kinetics. The findings agree with the transmural histological distribution of amyloid protein and the cardiac amyloid load and may prove to have value in diagnosis and treatment follow-up.


Heart | 2007

Wide spectrum of presentation and variable outcomes of isolated left ventricular non-compaction

Carla Lofiego; Elena Biagini; Ferdinando Pasquale; Marinella Ferlito; Guido Rocchi; Enrica Perugini; Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani; Giuseppe Boriani; Ornella Leone; Kadir Caliskan; F J ten Cate; Fernando M. Picchio; Angelo Branzi; Claudio Rapezzi

Objectives: To investigate diagnostic routes, echocardiographic substrates, outcomes and prognostic factors in patients with isolated ventricular non-compaction (IVNC) identified by echocardiographic laboratories with referral from specialists and primary care physicians. Patients and design: Since 1991, all patients with suspected IVNC were flagged and followed up on dedicated databases. Patients were divided into symptom-based and non-symptom-based diagnostic subgroups. Results: 65 eligible patients were followed up for 6–193 months (mean 46 (SD 44). In 53 (82%) patients, IVNC was associated with variable degrees of left ventricular (LV) dilatation and hypokinesia, and in the remaining 12 (18%) LV volumes were normal. Diagnosis was symptom based in 48 (74%) and non-symptom based in 17 (26%) (familial referral in 10). The non-symptom-based subgroup was characterised by younger age, lower prevalence of ECG abnormalities, better systolic function and lower left atrial size, whereas the extent of non-compaction was not different. No major cardiovascular events occurred in the non-symptom-based group, whereas 15 of 48 (31%) symptomatically diagnosed patients experienced cardiovascular death or heart transplantation (p  =  0.01, Kaplan–Meier analysis). Independent predictors of cardiovascular death or heart transplantation were New York Heart Association class III–IV, sustained ventricular arrhythmias and left atrial size. Conclusions: IVNC is associated with a broad spectrum of clinical and pathophysiological findings, and the overall natural history and prognosis may be better than previously thought. Adult patients with incidental or familial discovery of IVNC have an encouraging outlook, whereas those who have symptoms of heart failure, a history of sustained ventricular tachycardia or an enlarged left atrium have an unstable course and more severe prognosis.


Heart | 2005

Non-invasive evaluation of the myocardial substrate of cardiac amyloidosis by gadolinium cardiac magnetic resonance

Enrica Perugini; Claudio Rapezzi; Tommaso Piva; Ornella Leone; Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani; Letizia Riva; Fabrizio Salvi; Luigi Lovato; Angelo Branzi; Rossella Fattori

Objective: To investigate the prevalence and distribution of gadolinium (Gd) enhancement at cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging in patients with cardiac amyloidosis (CA) and to look for associations with clinical, morphological, and functional features. Patients and design: 21 patients with definitely diagnosed CA (nine with immunoglobulin light chain amyloidosis and 12 transthyretin related) underwent Gd-CMR. Results: Gd enhancement was detected in 16 of 21 (76%) patients. Sixty six of 357 (18%) segments were enhanced, more often at the mid ventricular level. Transmural extension of enhancement within each patient significantly correlated with left ventricular (LV) end systolic volume (r  =  0.58). The number of enhanced segments correlated with LV end diastolic volume (r  =  0.76), end systolic volume (r  =  0.6), and left atrial size (r  =  0.56). Segments with > 50% extensive transmural enhancement more often were severely hypokinetic or akinetic (p  =  0.001). Patients with > 2 enhanced segments had significantly lower 12 lead QRS voltage and Sokolow-Lyon index. No relation was apparent with any other clinical, morphological, functional, or histological characteristics. Conclusion: Gd enhancement is common but not universally present in CA, probably due to expansion of infiltrated interstitium. The segmental and transmural distribution of the enhancement is highly variable, and mid-ventricular regions are more often involved. Enhancement appears to be associated with impaired segmental and global contractility and a larger atrium.


Amyloid | 2008

Gender-related risk of myocardial involvement in systemic amyloidosis

Claudio Rapezzi; Letizia Riva; C. Cristina Quarta; Enrica Perugini; Fabrizio Salvi; Simone Longhi; Paolo Ciliberti; Francesca Pastorelli; Elena Biagini; Ornella Leone; Robin M. T. Cooke; Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani; Alessandra Ferlini; Michele Cavo; Giampaolo Merlini; Stefano Perlini; Sonia Pasquali; Angelo Branzi

To investigate associations between gender and myocardial involvement in systemic amyloidosis, we reviewed all patients presenting between 1994 and September 2006 in our institutional network (100 AL and 98 familial transthyretin-related amyloidosis (ATTR) patients, plus 12 elderly men with senile systemic amyloidosis). We focused on echocardiographic descriptors of myocardial involvement (height-indexed mean left ventricular (LV) wall thickness, LV mass index), and baseline LV function. Among familial ATTR patients, female prevalence was lower within the highest tertile of either echocardiographic indicator of myocardial involvement. Gender was independently associated with height-indexed mean LV wall thickness (as were gene mutations). Female prevalence appeared rather similar across the different neurological stages. Within the subgroup of familial ATTR patients with amyloidotic cardiomyopathy, women tended to display a considerably less severe morphological and functional echocardiographic profile. We explored the possible role of female sex hormones by considering menopausal status: women in the highest tertile of mean LV wall thickness index were more often postmenopausal than those in the other two tertiles and had a much higher (∼15 years) mean age; analogous age-related associations were not observable for men. In conclusion, these findings raise the hypothesis that some biological characteristic associated with female gender protects against myocardial involvement in familial ATTR.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2008

Usefulness of 99mTc-DPD scintigraphy in cardiac amyloidosis.

Claudio Rapezzi; Pierluigi Guidalotti; Fabrizio Salvi; Letizia Riva; Enrica Perugini

In their useful state-of-the-art paper on the evaluation and management of cardiac amyloidosis, Selvanayagam et al. ([1][1]) rightly dedicate much space to noninvasive evaluation but make no mention of a relevant imaging tool: 99mTc-3,3-diphosphono-1,2-propanodicarboxylic acid (99mTc-DPD)


Amyloid | 2006

Phenotypic and genotypic heterogeneity in transthyretin-related cardiac amyloidosis: Towards tailoring of therapeutic strategies?

Claudio Rapezzi; Enrica Perugini; Fabrizio Salvi; Francesco Grigioni; Letizia Riva; Robin M. T. Cooke; Alessandra Ferlini; Paola Rimessi; Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani; Paolo Ciliberti; Francesca Pastorelli; Ornella Leone; Ilaria Bartolomei; Antonio Daniele Pinna; Giorgio Arpesella; Angelo Branzi

Transthyretin-related hereditary amyloidosis (ATTR) is genotypically/phenotypically heterogeneous. We investigated myocardial involvement in ATTR in a cohort of patients with a wide range of mutations. Clinical/echocardiographic follow-up of 41 consecutive symptomatic ATTR patients from a single referral center was analyzed according to TTR mutation. Diagnosis was based on histology, immunohistochemistry and genotyping. Median follow up was 40 months (range 8–120). Among the 12 different mutations identified, Val30Met was found in 10 patients and Glu89Gln in seven. Compared with Val30Met, Glu89Gln was associated with higher LV mass index, lower left ventricular ejection fraction and shorter E-wave deceleration time. All Glu89Gln carriers had cardiomyopathy, which was more severe (for left ventricular thickness, left ventricular mass and restrictive pathophysiology) than in the six affected Val30Met patients. Glu89Gln was independently associated with higher risk of major cardiovascular events among cardiomyopathy patients. This follow-up study of ATTR patients carrying a wide range of mutations indicates that (1) cardiac involvement is a very important component of phenotypic expression; and (2) genotype is an important source of heterogeneity in myocardial involvement, with Glu89Gln being associated with a severe, heart-driven prognosis. We think that combined heart–liver transplantation could be considered for Glu89Gln carriers with established, morphologically severe cardiomyopathy.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2005

Ventricular remodeling in Loeffler endocarditis: Implications for therapeutic decision making.

Carla Lofiego; Marinella Ferlito; Guido Rocchi; Elena Biagini; Enrica Perugini; Angelo Branzi; Claudio Rapezzi

Little is known about the morphological and functional evolution of ventricular abnormalities in Loeffler endocarditis.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2012

What is the acceptable rate of false positives for STEMI within a primary PCI network? Insights from a metropolitan system with direct ambulance-based access

Enrica Perugini; Giuseppe Di Pasquale; Lara Di Diodoro; Paolo Ortolani; Gianni Casella; Nevio Taglieri; M. Letizia Bacchi Reggiani; Antonio Marzocchi; Massimiliano Lorenzini; Angelo Branzi; Claudio Rapezzi

marrow cells in patients with acute myocardial infarction: the effect of the dose of transplanted cells on myocardial function. Am Heart J Nov 2006;152(5) [975.e9975.15]. [5] Huikuri HV, Kervinen K, Niemelä M, et al. Effects of intracoronary injection of mononuclear bone marrow cells on left ventricular function, arrhythmia risk profile, and restenosis after thrombolytic therapy of acute myocardial infarction. Eur Heart J Nov 2008;29(22):2723–32. [6] Huikuri HV, Tapanainen JM, Lindgren K, et al. Prediction of sudden cardiac death after myocardial infarction in the beta-blocking era. J Am Coll Cardiol Aug 2


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2008

Myocardial rupture with left ventricle to coronary sinus communication: an unusual post-infarction mechanical complication.

Enrica Perugini; Paolo Sbarzaglia; M Giovanna Pallotti; Pier Camillo Pavesi; Rossella Fattori; Giuseppe Di Pasquale

We describe a rare case of post-infarction myocardial rupture leading to communication between the left ventricle and coronary sinus, which eventually led to a left-to-right shunt. The observation was made in an elderly woman with subacute infero-posterior myocardial infarction. Diagnosis was initially made by transthoracic echocardiography (elicited by the finding of high-velocity flow within a dilated coronary sinus), and was confirmed in greater detail at cardiac magnetic resonance. This description adds to the list of known post-infarction mechanical complications. The finding of high-velocity flow within the coronary sinus after myocardial infarction suggests the possibility of myocardial rupture leading to left ventricle to coronary sinus communication; an unusual but potentially treatable complication.


Current Treatment Options in Neurology | 2012

Interactions Between Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease

Giuseppe Di Pasquale; Stefano Urbinati; Enrica Perugini; Simona Gambetti

Opininion statementAll patients with ischemic stroke should undergo a comprehensive assessment of cardiovascular risk. Patients with carotid artery disease, symptoms of cerebral ischemia and high cardiovascular risk profiles should be considered for noninvasive testing for coronary artery disease (CAD). Routine testing for CAD before carotid endarterctomy is not recommended. Patients with coexisting coronary and carotid artery disease should be more aggressively treated for reducing their “very high” risk of cardiovascular events. In patients candidates to carotid revascularization, a preoperative coronary angiography and coronary revascularization are not recommended. Warfarin is recommended in all patients with moderate to high risk of stroke. Novel oral anticoagulants represent an attractive alternative to warfarin. However, their place in therapy in clinical practice is not yet established. Percutaneous closure of the left atrial appendage for stroke prophylaxis may be considered in selected patients with atrial fibrillation and contraindications for oral anticoagulant therapy. Warfarin is not indicated in patients with heart failure who are in sinus rhythm. Percutaneous closure of patent foramen does not seem to be superior to medical therapy for the prevention of recurrences in patients with cryptogenic stroke.

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Giuseppe Di Pasquale

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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