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Featured researches published by Enza Fommei.


Contributions To Nephrology | 1990

Captopril radionuclide test in renovascular hypertension : a european multicenter study

Enza Fommei; L. Mezzasalma; Sergio Ghione

The diagnostic work-up of renovascular hypertension is still controversial. The efficacy of renal scintigraphy with technetium-99m diethylene triamine penta-acetate (DTPA) before and after captopril (scintigraphic captopril test) was evaluated in a multicentre study. All 380 hypertensive patients in the study underwent renal arteriography; 125 had renal arterial stenosis ≥ 70%, and 54 had a technically successful intervention to correct the stenosis. The post-captopril study had a sensitivity of 93% and a specificity of 100% for predicting blood pressure response to intervention, if renal function was normal and a combination of quantitative parameters was applied (individual kidney uptake index < 40%, time to peak activity < 2 min or > 10 min). In the entire population renal artery stenosis ≥ 70% was detected with a sensitivity of 83% and a specificity of 93% if renal function was normal. In patients with abnormal renal function the performance of the test was worse, owing to a lower specificity which could be increased by using only time parameters. The performance of the test was optimal when the post-captopril findings were examined; no improvement was achieved by evaluation of the changes induced by captopril from the baseline. The test can thus be simplified by performing only a post-captopril study for routine use: a negative test would exclude a curable form of renovascular hypertension in > 80% and a positive test would predict it in > 90% of the patients selected for suspicion of the disease. Usefulness of the scintigraphic test for monitoring the clinical results of intervention is suggested by correlating post-intervention outcome with pre- and post-intervention scintigraphic results.


Hypertension | 1989

Seasonal influences on blood pressure in high normal to mild hypertensive range.

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.


Hypertension | 1987

Renal scintigraphic captopril test in the diagnosis of renovascular hypertension.

Enza Fommei; Sergio Ghione; L Palla; F Mosca; M Ferrari; Carlo Palombo; S Giaconi; P Gazzetti; L Donato

Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor-induced renal failure has been reported in bilateral renal artery stenosis and in stenosis in solitary kidneys, but not in unilateral renal artery stenosis. In these patients, however, a functional impairment of the kidney ipsilateral to the stenosis can often be detected after ACE inhibition by scintigraphic techniques employing glomerular radionuclide tracers like 99mTc-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA). Dynamic renal scintigraphy with 99mTc-DTPA before and 1 hour after administration of captopril, 25 mg (renal scintigraphic captopril test; RSCT), was performed in a selected series of 39 hypertensive subjects with suspected renovascular hypertension. Changes in glomerular filtration rate induced by captopril on the individual kidney were estimated by assessing the early (120-180 seconds) DTPA uptake by the kidney. Values were expressed as the ratio between the kidney with the lower uptake and the contralateral one in 34 patients and as the ratio of the kidney counts to the injected dose in five patients with solitary kidneys, aortic coarctation, or both. Compared with precaptopril values, postcaptopril uptake decreased markedly in 14 subjects (-62.42 +/- 30.94 [SD]%; range, -25 to -100%) and decreased modestly or even increased in the other 25 (+0.57 +/- 9.83%; range, +28 to -13%). Of the 14 subjects considered to be RSCT-positive diagnostic workup revealed either established (10) or strongly suspected (2) renal artery stenosis in 12 and aortic coarctation in 2 subjects. In another patient with established renovascular hypertension, results of the RSCT were negative when performed in the supine position but became positive when repeated in the sitting position.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Hypertension | 2011

Perindopril and indapamide reverse coronary microvascular remodelling and improve flow in arterial hypertension

Danilo Neglia; Enza Fommei; Anabel Varela-Carver; Massimiliano Mancini; Sergio Ghione; Massimo Lombardi; Patrizia Pisani; Howard Parker; Giulia d'Amati; L. Donato; Paolo G. Camici

Objectives Patients and animal models of arterial hypertension are characterized by structural and functional abnormalities of the coronary microcirculation. Using a translational approach, we ascertained whether antihypertensive treatment can reverse microvascular remodelling and improve myocardial perfusion. Methods In 20 hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy, blood pressure, left ventricular mass index and myocardial blood flow were measured at baseline and after 6 months of treatment with perindopril + indapamide. In spontaneously hypertensive rats, blood pressure, coronary flow and histomorphometry of intramural coronary arterioles were measured after 8 weeks of treatment with placebo or perindopril + indapamide. Results In patients, treatment decreased blood pressure (161 ± 10/96 ± 5 to 136 ± 12/81 ± 6 mmHg; P < 0.0001) and left ventricular mass index (93 ± 16 to 85 ± 17 g/m2; P < 0.01) while increasing baseline (0.69 ± 0.13 to 0.88 ± 0.36 ml/min per g; P < 0.05) and hyperaemic myocardial blood flow (1.42 ± 0.32 to 1.94 ± 0.99 ml/min per g; P < 0.05). In rats treated with perindopril + indapamide (n = 11), blood pressure was 93 ± 18/55 ± 18 mmHg compared to 215 ± 18/161 ± 17 mmHg in placebo (n = 6; P < 0.001), baseline flow was unchanged whilst hyperaemic coronary flow was 19.89 ± 3.50 vs. 12.15 ± 0.99 ml/min per g, respectively (P < 0.01). The medial area of intramural arterioles was 1613 ± 409 with perindopril + indapamide and 8118 ± 901 μm2 with placebo (P < 0.001). Conclusion In patients with arterial hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy, perindopril + indapamide reduced blood pressure and left ventricular mass index and improved resting and hyperaemic myocardial blood flow. Data in rats provide evidence that the improvement in coronary flow observed after treatment is due to reverse remodelling of intramural coronary arterioles and improved microvascular function.


Seminars in Nuclear Medicine | 1995

Renal nuclear medicine

Enza Fommei; Duccio Volterrani

The measurement of renal function has been a major field of interest in nuclear medicine. Many studies in the literature are still dedicated to this subject, with the aim of replacing the traditional urinary clearance methods with simpler and easier techniques. Simplified plasma clearance methods appear of sufficient accuracy to estimate global kidney function, except in very low function in which urinary clearance is still indicated. Gamma-camera methods have also been developed that, although of a lesser accuracy than the in vitro techniques, offer the important advantage of allowing renal imaging with the estimation of separate kidney function. Because of the intimate link between kidney function and structure, the diagnosis of nephrourological diseases has represented an important goal of nuclear medicine research. The functional information attainable with radionuclides is a valuable complement to the morphological information of imaging techniques such as x-ray computed tomography, ultrasonography, and magnetic resonance imaging. Recent contributions of nuclear medicine to the progress of clinical nephrology include the evaluation of renal function and the diagnostic work-up of renovascular hypertension, obstructive nephropathy, urinary tract infection, and renal transplantation.


Journal of Human Hypertension | 2009

The ovarian cycle as a factor of variability in the laboratory screening for primary aldosteronism in women

Enza Fommei; S Ghione; A Ripoli; Silvia Maffei; P Di Cecco; Annalisa Iervasi; S Turchi

Primary aldosteronism is increasingly investigated in hypertension being associated with an elevated cardiovascular risk. Aldosterone has been reported to increase in the luteal phase in normal women but to our knowledge the influence of the ovarian cycle on the first screening for primary aldosteronism (that is, on the levels of plasma aldosterone and its relationship to PRA levels) was never investigated. We measured hormonal levels during one cycle in 26 low-renin mild hypertensive outpatients. LH, FSH, 17 β-estradiol, progesterone, aldosterone and PRA were assayed at the seventh, fourteenth, twenty-first and twenty-eighth days of the cycle after 30 min of recumbency. Aldosterone and PRA increased from the seventh (follicular phase) to twenty-first day (luteal phase) from 11.2 to 17.8 ng 100 ml−1 and from 0.23 to 0.35 ng ml−1 h−1, respectively (both P=0.004) The proportion of patients with aldosterone >15 ng 100 ml−1 significantly increased from the follicular to the luteal phase, (8/26 vs 19/25, P=0.018); a similar increase was found for Aldosterone-PRA Ratio >30 combined with either a minimum PRA value of 0.5 ng ml−1 h−1 or aldosterone >15 ng 100 ml−1 (7/26 vs 16/25 and 7/26 vs 17/25 respectively, P<0.05). Aldosterone was positively related to PRA and progesterone. Higher aldosterone levels may be frequently encountered in the second part of the ovarian cycle in low-renin hypertensive women. This variability appears to be an important factor to be taken into account in the first-step laboratory screening for primary aldosteronism and should be considered in the process of standardization of the diagnostic work-up for this disease.


Heart | 2011

Right ventricular remodelling in systemic hypertension: a cardiac MRI study

Giancarlo Todiere; Danilo Neglia; Sergio Ghione; Enza Fommei; Paola Capozza; Giacinta Guarini; G Dell'Omo; Giovanni Donato Aquaro; Mario Marzilli; Massimo Lombardi; Paolo G. Camici; Roberto Pedrinelli

Background Consistent evidence shows an impact of systemic haemodynamic overload on the right ventricle, but its functional and structural consequences have received scarce attention for several reasons including the difficult application of conventional imaging techniques due to the complex shape and orientation of that cardiac chamber. Aims To evaluate whether mild to moderate, uncomplicated hypertension associates with abnormal right ventricular structure and function and how those changes relate to homologous changes in the left ventricle. Data were acquired by steady-state free-precession cardiac MRI, the state of the art tool for the morphological and functional evaluation of the right ventricle. Materials and methods Twenty-five (12 women) uncomplicated, untreated, essential hypertensive patients were compared with 24 (13 women) sedentary normotensive controls of comparable age. Wall thickness, indexed ventricular mass, end-diastolic volumes, early peak filling rate, a correlate of diastolic relaxation, and ejection fraction were measured at both ventricles. Remodelling index, the ratio of ventricular mass to end-diastolic volume, was used as an index of concentricity. Results Right ventricular mass index, ventricular wall thickness and remodelling index were greater in hypertensive subjects and associated with reduced peak filling rate, a pattern consistent with concentric right ventricular remodelling. In the hypertensive group, positive, highly significant biventricular correlations existed between indexed mass, early peak filling rate and ejection fraction. Conclusions Systemic hypertension associates with concentric right ventricular remodelling and impaired diastolic function, confirming that the unstressed ventricle is not immune to the effects of systemic hypertension. Structural and functional right ventricular adaptation to systemic hypertension tends to parallel the homologous modifications induced by systemic haemodynamic overload on the left ventricle.


Hormone and Metabolic Research | 2013

LH, Progesterone, and TSH can Stimulate Aldosterone In Vitro: A Study on Normal Adrenal Cortex and Aldosterone Producing Adenoma

Giuseppina Nicolini; Silvana Balzan; Luca Morelli; P. Iacconi; L. Sabatino; Andrea Ripoli; Enza Fommei

Endocrine factors different from ACTH or angiotensin II can stimulate aldosterone secretion and have a role in the pathophysiology of hyperaldosteronism. Aldosterone may increase in luteotropic/progestogenic and in hypothyroid states; LH and, occasionally, TSH receptors have been detected in normal adrenal cortex and aldosterone-producing adenoma. The aim of the study was to compare adrenal contents of LH and TSH receptors between normal cortex and aldosterone-producing adenoma and to evaluate the ability of LH, its product progesterone, and TSH to stimulate aldosterone secretion in vitro from primary adrenocortical cells. Surgical aldosterone-producing adenoma fragments from 19 patients and adrenal cortex fragments from 10 kidney donors were used for Western blotting and cell cultures. LH (n=26), TSH (n=19) and progesterone (n=8) receptor proteins were investigated; LH receptor-mRNA was also tested in 8 samples. Aldosterone responses in vitro to LH, progesterone, and TSH stimulation were assayed. LH and TSH receptors were more expressed in adenoma than normal cortex (p<0.01, p<0.05, respectively); progesterone receptor was observed in 6/8 samples. Aldosterone increased after in vitro stimulation with LH (5/12 adenoma, 1/7 normal cells), progesterone (4/5 adenoma, 5/6 normal cells), and TSH (3/5 adenoma and 3/5 normal cells). LH and TSH receptors were more expressed in aldosterone producing adenoma than normal adrenal cortex. LH, progesterone, and TSH can stimulate aldosterone in vitro. Similar mechanisms could participate in vivo in the aldosterone increase in lutheotropic, progestogenic, or hypothyroid states and may exist in both normal adrenal cortex and adenoma in responsive individuals.


Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | 1988

Cardiovascular reactivity to physical and psychologic stress during long-term treatment with nitrendipine in essential hypertension.

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)


Renal Failure | 1985

Kidney scintigraphy after ACE inhibition in the diagnosis of renovascular hypertension

Sergio Ghione; Enza Fommei; Carlo Palombo; S Giaconi; Adriana Mantovanelli; A Ragazzini; L Palla

Suppression of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) by angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition may induce renal failure in patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis. Recent scintigraphic studies with the glomerular tracer technetium-99m-diethylenetriaminepenta-acetate (99m-Tc DTPA) indicate that in patients with unilateral renal artery stenosis, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) may be markedly reduced in the affected kidney after inhibition of ACE. This finding reflects the important role of the RAS in maintaining GFR (by increasing postglomerular resistance) in states of low renal perfusion pressure. Preliminary observations suggest that this scintigraphic test might be useful in the detection of renovascular hypertension.

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Silvana Balzan

National Research Council

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