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Dive into the research topics where Federica Ramani is active.

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Featured researches published by Federica Ramani.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2015

Persistent Recovery of Normal Left Ventricular Function and Dimension in Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy During Long‐Term Follow‐up: Does Real Healing Exist?

Marco Merlo; Davide Stolfo; Marco Anzini; Francesco Negri; Bruno Pinamonti; Federica Ramani; Andrea Di Lenarda; Gianfranco Sinagra

Background An important number of patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy have dramatically improved left ventricular function with optimal treatment; however, little is known about the evolution and long‐term outcome of this subgroup, which shows apparent healing. This study assesses whether real healing actually exists in dilated cardiomyopathy . Methods and Results Persistent apparent healing was evaluated among 408 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy receiving tailored medical treatment and followed over the very long‐term. Persistent apparent healing was defined as left ventricular ejection fraction ≥50% and indexed left ventricular end‐diastolic diameter ≤33 mm/m2 at both mid‐term (19±4 months) and long‐term (103±9 months) follow‐up. At mid‐term, 63 of 408 patients (15%) were apparently healed; 38 (60%; 9% of the whole population) showed persistent apparent healing at long‐term evaluation. No predictors of persistent apparent healing were found. Patients with persistent apparent healing showed better heart transplant–free survival at very long‐term follow‐up (95% versus 71%; P=0.014) compared with nonpersistently normalized patients. Nevertheless, in the very long term, 37% of this subgroup experienced deterioration of left ventricular systolic function, and 5% died or had heart transplantation. Conclusions Persistent long‐term apparent healing was evident in a remarkable proportion of dilated cardiomyopathy patients receiving optimal medical treatment and was associated with stable normalization of main clinical and laboratory features. This condition can be characterized by a decline of left ventricular function over the very long term, highlighting the relevance of serial and individualized follow‐up in all patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, especially considering the absence of predictors for long‐term apparent healing.


Clinical and Translational Science | 2013

Poor prognosis of rare sarcomeric gene variants in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy.

Marco Merlo; Gianfranco Sinagra; E. Carniel; Dobromir Slavov; Xiao Zhu; Anita Spezzacatene; Federica Ramani; Ernesto Salcedo; Andrea Di Lenarda; Luisa Mestroni; Matthew R.G. Taylor

In dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), the clinical and prognostic implications of rare variants in sarcomeric genes remain poorly understood. To address this question, we analyzed the outcome of rare sarcomeric gene variants in patients enrolled in our Familial Cardiomyopathy Registry.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2016

Natural History of Dilated Cardiomyopathy in Children

Ilaria Puggia; Marco Merlo; Teisha J. Rowland; Davide Stolfo; Marta Gigli; Federica Ramani; Andrea Di Lenarda; Luisa Mestroni; Gianfranco Sinagra

Background The long‐term progression of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in pediatric patients compared with adult patients has not been previously characterized. In this study, we compared outcome and long‐term progression of pediatric and adult DCM populations. Methods and Results Between 1988 and 2014, 927 DCM patients were consecutively enrolled. The pediatric population (aged <18 years at enrollment) included 47 participants (5.1%). At presentation, the pediatric population compared with adult patients had a significantly increased occurrence of familial forms (P=0.03), shorter duration of heart failure (P=0.04), lower systolic blood pressure (P=0.01), decreased presence of left bundle‐branch block (P=0.001), and increased left ventricular ejection fraction (P=0.03). Despite these baseline differences, long‐term longitudinal trends of New York Heart Association class III to IV, left ventricular dimensions, left ventricular ejection fraction, and restrictive filling pattern were similar between the 2 populations. Regarding survival analysis, because of the size difference between the 2 populations, we compared the pediatric population with a sample of adult patients randomly matched using the above‐mentioned baseline differences in a 3:1 ratio (141 adult versus 47 pediatric patients). During a median follow‐up of 110 months, survival free from heart transplantation was significantly lower among pediatric patients compared with adults (P<0.001). Furthermore, pediatric age (ie, <18 years) was found to be associated with an increasing risk of both death from pump failure and life‐threatening arrhythmias. Conclusions Despite the pediatric DCM population having higher baseline left ventricular ejection fraction and similar long‐term echocardiographic progression compared with the adult DCM population, the pediatric DCM patients had worse cardiovascular prognosis.


Heart | 2017

Association between mutation status and left ventricular reverse remodelling in dilated cardiomyopathy

Matteo Dal Ferro; Davide Stolfo; Alessandro Altinier; Marta Gigli; Martina Perrieri; Federica Ramani; Alberto Pivetta; Francesca Brun; Lorenzo Monserrat; Mauro Giacca; Luisa Mestroni; Marco Merlo; Gianfranco Sinagra

Objective To explore the genetic landscape of a well selected dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) cohort, assessing the possible relation between different genotypes and left ventricular reverse remodelling (LVRR). Methods A cohort of 152 patients with DCM from the Heart Muscle Disease Registry of Trieste has been studied by next-generation sequencing (NGS). Patients were grouped into different ‘gene-clusters’ with functionally homogeneous genetic backgrounds. LVRR was defined by left ventricular ejection fraction normalisation or increase ≥10% associated with normalisation in indexed left ventricular end-diastolic diameter or relative decrease ≥10% at 24 months follow-up. Results A pathogenic disease-related gene variant was identified in 57% of patients: 28 (18%) TTN; 7 (5%) LMNA; 16 (11%) structural cytoskeleton Z-disk genes; 9 (6%) desmosomal genes; 18 (12%) motor sarcomeric genes and 9 (6%) other genes. Baseline clinical features were similar throughout the different genotypes. A significant relationship was found between gene cluster subgroups and LVRR, with a lower rate of LVRR in structural cytoskeleton Z-disk gene mutation carriers (1/16 patients, 6%, p<0.05 vs the other subgroups). Of note, structural cytoskeleton Z-disk gene rare variants were independently and inversely associated with LVRR when adjusted for clinical predictors of LVRR (OR 0.065; 95% CI 0.008 to 0.535, p=0.011). Conclusions NGS confirmed a high genetic diagnostic yield in DCM. A specific ‘gene-clusters’ classification based on functional similarities in different genes might be helpful in the clinical management of genetically determined DCM. In this study, structural cytoskeleton Z-disk gene rare variants were independently associated with a lower rate of LVRR at follow-up.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2016

Early right ventricular response to cardiac resynchronization therapy: impact on clinical outcomes

Davide Stolfo; Elisabetta Tonet; Marco Merlo; Marta Gigli; Bruno Pinamonti; Federica Ramani; Massimo Zecchin; Gianfranco Sinagra

Right ventricular (RV) dysfunction has been associated with a worse outcome in heart failure patients undergoing CRT. However, evidence on the RV response to CRT is controversial and there are no data regarding the early effects of CRT on RV function (RVF). We sought to investigate whether a CRT device favourably influences the RVF acutely after implantation, impacting on long‐term outcomes.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2015

Acute Hemodynamic Response to Cardiac Resynchronization in Dilated Cardiomyopathy: Effect on Late Mitral Regurgitation.

Davide Stolfo; Elisabetta Tonet; Marta Gigli; Bruno Pinamonti; Massimo Zecchin; Federica Ramani; Marco Merlo; Gianfranco Sinagra

Functional mitral regurgitation (FMR) is associated with reduced survival in dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) can improve FMR. We sought to identify the predictors of FMR improvement after CRT in DCM.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2017

Insights into mildly dilated cardiomyopathy: temporal evolution and long-term prognosis.

Marta Gigli; Davide Stolfo; Marco Merlo; Federica Ramani; Francesca Brun; Bruno Pinamonti; Gianfranco Sinagra

Mildly dilated cardiomyopathy (MDCM) has been proposed as a subtype of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) characterized by systolic dysfunction in the absence of significant LV dilatation. Few data on the characteristics and outcomes of MDCM patients are available. We sought to assess the main features and the long‐term natural history of MDCM.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2018

Usefulness of Addition of Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Echocardiographic Imaging to Predict Left Ventricular Reverse Remodeling in Patients With Nonischemic Cardiomyopathy

Marco Merlo; Marco Masè; Giancarlo Vitrella; Manuel Belgrano; Giorgio Faganello; Federico Di Giusto; Andrea Boscutti; Marco Gobbo; Marta Gigli; Alessandro Altinier; Pierluigi Lesizza; Federica Ramani; Antonio De Luca; Gaetano Morea; Maria Assunta Cova; Davide Stolfo; Gianfranco Sinagra

Defining short-term prognosis in nonischemic cardiomyopathy (NICM) is challenging in clinical practice. Although left ventricular reverse remodeling (LVRR) is a key prognostic marker in NICM there are few parameters able to predict it. We investigated whether a complete structural and functional cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRI) evaluation was incremental to the classic clinical-echocardiographic approach in predicting LVRR in a large cohort of NICM patients receiving evidence-based treatment. Patients with a recent diagnosis of NICM (<3 months) who underwent complete clinical, echocardiographic and cMRI assessment were consecutively enrolled from 2008 to 2016. LVRR was defined as an increase in ≥10 points or normalization of left ventricular ejection fraction, associated with a ≥10% reduction or normalization of left ventricular end-diastolic diameter at midterm (median time 20 months) echocardiographic follow-up. Among 80 NICM patients included in the study, LVRR was observed in 43 (54%). At multivariate analysis, the clinical-echocardiographic evaluation failed to identify independent predictors of LVRR. However, absence of late gadolinium enhancement (odds ratio [OR] 9.07; confidence interval [CI] 2.7 to 13.1; p value 0.0003), left ventricular mass (OR 1.018; CI 1.001 to 1.036; p value 0.045) and peak circumferential strain (OR 1.213; CI 1.011 to 1.470; p value 0.049) assessed by cMRI were independently associated with LVRR. A model for LVRR prediction based on cMRI and clinical-echocardiographic parameters performed significantly better than the clinical-echocardiographic model alone (area under curve 0.84 vs 0.72; p value 0.023). In conclusion, an integrated imaging approach with the addition of a structural and functional cMRI study to the standard-of-care evaluation improves the prediction of LVRR in a large cohort of patients with recently diagnosed NICM receiving evidence-based treatment.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2016

The Prognostic Impact of the Evolution of RV Function in Idiopathic DCM

Marco Merlo; Marco Gobbo; Davide Stolfo; Pasquale Losurdo; Federica Ramani; Alberto Pivetta; Andrea Di Lenarda; Marco Anzini; Marta Gigli; Bruno Pinamonti; Gianfranco Sinagra


JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology | 2016

Early Arrhythmic Events in Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Pasquale Losurdo; Davide Stolfo; Marco Merlo; Marco Gobbo; Marta Gigli; Federica Ramani; Bruno Pinamonti; Massimo Zecchin; Gherardo Finocchiaro; Luisa Mestroni; Gianfranco Sinagra

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Marta Gigli

University of Colorado Denver

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Marta Gigli

University of Colorado Denver

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Luisa Mestroni

University of Colorado Denver

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