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Dive into the research topics where Francesca De Chiara is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesca De Chiara.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996

Measurement of mitral valve area in mitral stenosis: Four echocardiographic methods compared with direct measurement of anatomic orifices

Francesco Faletra; Antonio Pezzano; Rossana Fusco; Antonio Mantero; Roberto Corno; Wilma Crivellaro; Francesca De Chiara; Ettore Vitali; Veliano Gordini; Paola Magnani

OBJECTIVES This study sought to compare the mitral valve areas of patients with rheumatic mitral valve stenoses as determined by means of four echocardiographic and Doppler methods with those obtained by direct anatomic measurements. BACKGROUND There has been no systemic comparison between Doppler-determined valve areas and the true anatomic orifice in a single cohort. METHODS In 30 patients with mitral stenosis, the mitral valve areas determined by two-dimensional echocardiographic planimetry, pressure half-time, flow convergence region and flow area were compared with the values directly measured on the corresponding excised specimen by means of a custom-built sizer. RESULTS The correlation coefficient was r = 0.95 (SE 0.06, p < 0.0001) for two-dimensional planimetry; r = 0.80 (SE 0.09, p < 0.0001) for pressure half-time; r = 0.87 (SE 0.09, p < 0.0001) for flow convergence region; and r = 0.54 (SD 0.1, p < 0.002) for flow area. Two-dimensional echocardiographic planimetry, pressure half-time, flow convergence region and flow area overestimated the actual anatomic orifice by > 0.3 cm2 in 2, 1, 6 and 0 patients, respectively, and underestimated it by > 0.3 cm2 in 0, 4, 1 and 8 patients, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Mitral valve areas determined by two-dimensional planimetry, pressure half-time and proximal flow convergence region reliably correlated with size of the anatomic orifice. The flow area method provided a less reliable correlation.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1995

Value of transthoracic two-dimensional echocardiography in predicting viability in patients with healed Q-wave anterior wall myocardial infarction

Francesco Faletra; Wilma Crivellaro; Salvatore Pirelli; Oberdan Parodi; Francesca De Chiara; Manlio Cipriani; Roberto Corno; Antonio Pezzano

The role of transthoracic echocardiography as a predictor of recovery after revascularization has not yet been established. Two-dimensional echocardiography was performed in 15 patients with a healed anterior wall myocardial infarction and severe, isolated stenosis of the left anterior descending coronary artery before, and 3 to 6 months after angiographically confirmed successful revascularization. The asynergic segments were classified into 2 groups according to 2 different echocardiographic patterns: those showing a normal acoustic reflectance with normal end-diastolic thickness (pattern A segments) and those showing an increase in acoustic reflectance and reduced end-diastolic thickness (pattern B segments). We hypothesized that pattern A segments were more likely to recover (viable myocardium) and that pattern B segments were consistent with irreversibility. A total of 240 segments in the 15 patients were evaluated before and after revascularization. Sixty-seven segments were asynergic; of these, 52 were judged to have pattern A and 15 pattern B. Of the 52 pattern A segments, 27 were hypokinetic and 25 akinetic. All of the pattern B segments were akinetic (n = 9) or dyskinetic (n = 6). Pattern A was predictive of postoperative recovery in 39 of 52 segments (75%) (p < 0.0001); pattern B was predictive of irreversibly damaged tissue in 13 of 15 segments (87%) (p < 0.0001). Thus, in patients with healed anterior wall myocardial infarction, resting transthoracic echocardiography is a simple and reliable predictor of the behavior of asynergic segments after revascularization.


The American Journal of Medicine | 2000

Incorrect echocardiographic diagnosis in patients with mechanical prosthetic valve dysfunction : Correlation with surgical findings

Francesco Faletra; Cristina Constantin; Francesca De Chiara; Gabriella Masciocco; Gloria Santambrogio; Antonella Moreo; Antonella Alberti; Ettore Vitali; Alessandro Pellegrini

PURPOSE To identify the rate of occurrence and type of incorrect echocardiographic diagnoses in patients with mechanical valve prostheses. PATIENTS AND METHODS We studied 170 consecutive patients (73 women and 97 men) with a total of 208 prostheses who underwent surgery for mitral (n = 136) or aortic (n = 72) valve dysfunction between January 1991 and December 1997. Preoperative echocardiographic data were compared with surgical findings. Any major discrepancy between the echocardiographic reports and surgery was judged to be unconfirmed when the preoperative echocardiographic diagnosis was not confirmed at surgery, but the prosthesis was found to be dysfunctioning; and was judged to be erroneous when the preoperative echocardiographic diagnosis was not confirmed, and surgical inspection failed to reveal any other prosthetic abnormality. RESULTS There were 25 (12%) diagnostic errors. Of the 136 mitral prostheses, there were 9 unconfirmed diagnoses of paravalvular regurgitation (6 had a fibrous tissue overgrowth, 1 had a thrombus with fibrous tissue overgrowth, 1 had endocarditis vegetations, and 1 had a ball variance) and 5 erroneous diagnoses. Eleven diagnostic errors were made in the 72 aortic prostheses: there were 9 unconfirmed diagnoses (paravalvular regurgitation was diagnosed as transvalvular in 7, and transvalvular regurgitation as paravalvular in 2 cases), and 2 erroneous diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS Although echocardiography has gained great credibility among clinicians, special care should be taken when assessing patients in whom prosthetic valve dysfunction is suspected.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001

Aorto-atrial fistula through the septum in recurrent aortic dissection.

Claudio Russo; Francesca De Chiara; Giuseppe Bruschi; Guglielma Rita Ciliberto; Ettore Vitali

A case of aortic dissection (De Bakey type I) with a fistula to the right atrium through the interatrial septum, diagnosed by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography is reported. The patient presented with cardiac failure and a continuous murmur in the right second and third intercostal spaces. The patient underwent successful operative repair.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1996

Echocardiographic follow-up in patients with mild to moderate mitral stenosis: Is a yearly examination justified?

Francesco Faletra; Francesca De Chiara; Wilma Crivellaro; Antonio Mantero; Roberto Corno; Bruno Brusoni

The result of this study showed that echocardiographic and Doppler parameters in patients with mild to moderate mitral stenosis did not undergo any major changes over a relatively long observation period, reflecting the substantial stability of the valve disease process. Thus, unless such patients experience clinical deterioration, a yearly echocardiographic examination appears to be unjustified.


Archive | 2013

The Left Atrium

Francesco Faletra; Francesca De Chiara; Elena Pasotti

The left atrium is of considerable importance in the natural and surgical story of mitral valve stenosis. It is the first chamber to be affected when the ventricle is being filled; inside it, blood stasis and the pro-coagulant effect that stenosis causes can promote the formation of thrombi that are a considerable factor in the patient’s morbidity and mortality, regardless of the severity of stenosis. Atrial dilatation is the morpho-pathological substrate that triggers atrial fibrillation, which itself is an independent factor of morbidity and mortality. For these reasons the left atrium deserves its own chapter.


Archive | 2013

Rheumatic Mitral Stenosis

Francesco Faletra; Francesca De Chiara; Tiziano Moccetti

For many years, until the sequelae of rheumatic disease were attenuated and then eliminated (at least in the West), echocardiography and mitral stenosis had a privileged relationship.


American Heart Journal | 2006

Clinical predictors of marked improvement in left ventricular performance after cardiac resynchronization therapy in patients with chronic heart failure

Maurizio Mangiavacchi; Maurizio Gasparini; Francesco Faletra; Catherine Klersy; Emanuela Morenghi; Paola Galimberti; Luca Genovese; François Regoli; Francesca De Chiara; Renato Bragato; Bruno Andreuzzi; Daniela Pini; Edoardo Gronda


Journal of the American College of Cardiology 33(2 SUPPL A) | 1999

Erroneous echocardiographic diagnoses in patients with mechanical prosthetic valve dysfunction Correlation with surgical findings

Francesco Faletra; Cristina Constantin; Antonia Alberti; Francesca De Chiara; Gabriella Masciocco; Gloria Santambrogio; Antonella Moreo; Alessandro Pellegrini; Ettore Vitali


Archive | 1995

Value of l'ransthoracic Two-Dimensional Echocardiogra hy in Predi.cting Viability in Patients Wit Healed Q-Wave Anterior R Wall Myocardial Infarction

Francesco Faletra; Wilma Crivellaro; Salvatore Pirelli; Oberdan Parodi; Francesca De Chiara; Manlio Cipriani; Roberto Corno; Antonio Pezzano

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Francesco Faletra

Sapienza University of Rome

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Antonella Moreo

National Research Council

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Oberdan Parodi

National Research Council

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Gian Battista Danzi

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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