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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Stea is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Stea.


Cardiovascular Diabetology | 2012

Adipocytokine levels mark endothelial function in normotensive individuals

Anna Solini; Francesco Stea; Eleonora Santini; Rosa Maria Bruno; Emiliano Duranti; Stefano Taddei; Lorenzo Ghiadoni

BackgroundEndothelial dysfunction is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular events. Inflammatory mediators released by the adipose tissue can lead to local insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction. This study addressed the relationship of adipocytokines with endothelial function and blood pressure.MethodsIn 92 newly diagnosed, drug-naïve essential hypertensive patients (HT, mean age 49 yrs) without organ damage and 66 normotensive subjects (NT, mean age 47 yrs), by an automated system, we measured endothelium-dependent and -independent vasodilation as brachial artery flow-mediated dilation before and after administration of glyceryl-trinitrate. Retinol binding protein-4 (RBP4) and resistin levels were determined by ELISA and RIA, respectively. Oxidative stress was evaluated by measuring serum malondyaldehyde (MDA).ResultsFlow-mediated dilation was significantly (p = 0.03) lower in HT (5.3 ± 2.6%) than NT (6.1 ± 3.1%), while response to glyceryl-trinitrate (7.5 ± 3.7% vs 7.9 ± 3.4%) was similar. RBP4 (60.6 ± 25.1 vs 61.3 ± 25.9 μg/ml), resistin (18.8 ± 5.3 vs 19.9 ± 6.1 ng/ml) and MDA levels (2.39 ± 1.26 vs 2.08 ± 1.17 nmol/ml) were not different in HT and NT. RBP4 (r = −0.25; p = 0.04) and resistin levels (r = −0.29; p = 0.03) were related to flow-mediated dilation in NT, but not in HT (r = −0.03 and r = −0.10, respectively). In NT, multivariate analysis including RBP4 and confounders showed that only BMI or waist circumference remained related to flow- mediated dilation. In the multivariate model including resistin and confounders, BMI, age and resistin were significantly related to flow-mediated dilation, while only age significant correlated with this parameter when BMI was replaced by waist circumference.ConclusionsAdipocytokine levels may be independent predictors of endothelial dysfunction in the peripheral circulation of healthy subjects, providing a pathophysiological link between inflammation from adipose tissue and early vascular alterations.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2009

Coronary Flow Reserve in Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy: Relation with Left Ventricular Wall Stress, Natriuretic Peptides, and Endothelial Dysfunction

Frank Lloyd Dini; Lorenzo Ghiadoni; Umberto Conti; Francesco Stea; Simona Buralli; Stefano Taddei; Salvatore Mario De Tommasi

Studies have demonstrated impaired coronary blood flow reserve (CBFR) in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDCM). It was the aim of this study to examine the potential underlying mechanisms for CBFR reduction in patients with IDCM by Doppler ultrasound techniques. Forty-eight clinically stable patients with heart failure caused by IDCM (New York Heart Association classes 1-3) were evaluated by echocardiographic and Doppler techniques with the assessments of CBFR and brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD). CBFR was estimated as the hyperemic (dipyridamole: 0.84 mg/kg in 10 minutes, intravenously) to resting coronary diastolic peak velocities ratio. N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (Nt-pro-BNP) plasma levels were measured at the time of the index echocardiogram. Left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction was 30% +/- 8%, and wall motion score index was 2.0 +/- 0.25. The best correlation with CBFR was found with LV wall thickness-to-cavity radius (r = 0.77, P < .0001). A strong correlation of log-transformed Nt-pro-BNP levels was observed with CBFR (r = -0.64; P < .0001). No significant correlation was documented between CBFR and FMD. The stepwise regression model showed that LV wall thickness-to-cavity radius was the strongest independent predictor of CBFR followed by New York Heart Association class and log-transformed Nt-pro-BNP leading to a cumulative R value of 0.82 (P < .0001). The results of the study indicate that by measuring variables related to LV end-diastolic wall stress, such as LV wall thickness-to-cavity radius and plasma Nt-proBNP, it is possible to have information about CBFR in patients with heart failure secondary to IDCM.


Journal of Hypertension | 2013

Relationship between wave reflection and renal damage in hypertensive patients: a retrospective analysis

Francesco Stea; M Sgro; Francesco Faita; Rosa Maria Bruno; Giulia Cartoni; Sabina Armenia; Stefano Taddei; Lorenzo Ghiadoni

Objective: Arterial stiffening has harmful effects; peripheral pulse wave reflections deleteriously increase central pressure, but on the contrary they could also possibly be protective, as the pulse is transmitted to the microcirculation to a lesser extent. The aim of this study was, therefore, to explore the relationship between wave reflection and small vessel damage in the kidney. Methods: In 216 hypertensive patients, data on renal resistive index, obtained by Doppler ultrasound sampling of the interlobar arteries, as well as augmentation index (AIx) and carotid-to-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV), were retrospectively analyzed. Reflection magnitude was computed through a triangular flow estimate. Results: AIx and reflection magnitude were positively correlated with resistive index; age, BMI, central pulse pressure, and cholesterol, but not AIx or reflection magnitude, were predictors of resistive index in multivariate analyses. Crossing tertiles of PWV and AIx, resistive index did not differ between patients with high AIx and low PWV (n = 25; 0.632 (0.064)) and those with low AIx and high PWV (n = 17; 0.645 (0.053)), despite a difference in reflection magnitude (74.9 (6.7) vs. 51.2 (7.3)%; P < 0.001). Conclusion: Pressure wave reflection is positively correlated with resistive index in a hypertensive population. No negative relationship was found even adjusting for confounders or when it was examined separately from the influence of arterial stiffness. These findings do not support the hypothesis of peripheral wave reflections having a significant protective role for the microcirculation of a low resistance vascular bed such as the kidney.


Journal of Hypertension | 2014

Comparison of the Complior Analyse device with Sphygmocor and Complior SP for pulse wave velocity and central pressure assessment

Francesco Stea; Erwan Bozec; Sandrine Millasseau; Hakim Khettab; Pierre Boutouyrie; Stéphane Laurent

Background: The Complior device (Alam Medical, France) was used in epidemiological studies which established pulse wave velocity (PWV) as a cardiovascular risk marker. Central pressure is related, but complementary to PWV and also associated to cardiovascular outcomes. The new Complior Analyse measures both PWV and central blood pressure during the same acquisition. The aim of this study was to compare PWV values from Complior Analyse with the previous Complior SP (PWVcs) and with Sphygmocor (PWVscr; AtCor, Australia), and to compare central systolic pressure from Complior Analyse and Sphygmocor. Method: Peripheral and central pressures and PWV were measured with the three devices in 112 patients. PWV measurements from Complior Analyse were analysed using two foot-detection algorithms (PWVca_it and PWVca_cs). Both radial (ao-SBPscr) and carotid (car-SBPscr) approaches from Sphygmocor were compared to carotid Complior Analyse measurements (car-SBPca). The same distance and same calibrating pressures were used for all devices. Results: PWVca_it was strongly correlated to PWVscr (R2 = 0.93, P < 0.001) with a difference of 0.0 ± 0.7 m/s. PWVca_cs was also correlated to PWVcs (R2 = 0.90, P < 0.001) with a difference of 0.1 ± 0.7 m/s. Central systolic pressures were strongly correlated. The difference between car-SBPca and ao-SBPscr was 3.1 ± 4.2 mmHg (P < 0.001), statistically equivalent to the difference between car-SBPscr and ao-SBPscr (3.9 ± 5.8 mmHg, P < 0.001), whilst the difference between car-SBPca and car-SBPscr was negligible (−0.7 ± 5.6 mmHg, P = NS). Conclusion: The new Complior Analyse device provides equivalent results for PWV and central pressure values to the Sphygmocor and Complior SP. It reaches Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation standard for central blood pressure and grades as excellent for PWV on the Artery Society criteria. It can be interchanged with existing devices.


Journal of Hypertension | 2012

Effect of mild hyperisulinemia on conduit vessel endothelial function: role of noradrenergic activation.

Cecilia Morgantini; Francesco Stea; Beatrice Boldrini; Emiliano Duranti; Lorenzo Ghiadoni; Andrea Natali

Objective: The evidence that an exogenously induced modest hyperinsulinemia deteriorates conductance artery endothelial function – flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) – in healthy individuals is in contrast with in-vitro and in-vivo studies that consistently found that insulin facilitates both nitric oxide release and the endothelium-dependent dilatation. The aim of this study was to verify whether this effect is caused by the enhancement of insulin-induced adrenergic tone. Method: In 10 healthy male volunteers, endothelium-dependent (FMD) and endothelium-independent (glyceryl trinitrate, GTN) dilatation were evaluated by high-resolution ultrasound of the brachial artery, combined with a computerized edge detection system, at baseline (−60 and 0 min) and after 120 and 240 min during insulin infusion (INS study). In five participants, randomly selected from the initial group, the study was repeated during an isotonic saline (0.9% sodium chloride) intravenous infusion (SAL study). In an additional five participants, insulin infusion was preceded by an intravenous infusion of clonidine started 40 min before insulin and continued throughout the study (INS + CLN study). Results: Plasma norepinephrine concentration increased in the INS study from 260 ± 40 to 333 ± 62 pg/ml (P < 0.05), whereas it remained stable throughout the INS + CLN study. In the INS study, no change in FMD was observed, whereas the response to GTN tended to decrease (P = 0.09). In the INS + CLN study, no significant changes in FMD response were observed, whereas GTN response was completely restored. Conclusion: Physiological hyperinsulinemia has no effect on endothelium-dependent vasodilatation in conduit vessels of healthy individuals, but it induces a slight decline in endothelium-independent vasodilatation, which is entirely explained by the insulin-induced noradrenergic activation.


Journal of Hypertension | 2017

Carotid and aortic stiffness in essential hypertension and their relation with target organ damage: the CATOD study

Rosa Maria Bruno; Giulia Cartoni; Francesco Stea; Sabina Armenia; Elisabetta Bianchini; Simona Buralli; Chiara Giannarelli; Stefano Taddei; Lorenzo Ghiadoni

Objective: The objective of the study is to investigate in the hypertensive population the possible differential association between increased aortic and/or carotid stiffness and organ damage in multiple districts, such as the kidney, the vessels, and the heart. Methods: In 314 essential hypertensive patients, carotid–femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV, by applanation tonometry) and carotid stiffness (from ultrasound images analysis), together with left ventricular hypertrophy, carotid intima–media thickness, urinary albumin–creatinin ratio, and glomerular filtration rate were measured. Increased cfPWV and carotid stiffness were defined according to either international reference values or the 90th percentile of a local control group (110 age and sex-matched healthy individuals). Results: When considering the 90th percentile of a local control group, increased cfPWV was associated with reduced glomerular filtration rate, either when carotid stiffness was increased [odds ratio (OR) 13.27 (confidence limits (CL) 95% 3.86–45.58)] or not [OR 7.39 (CL95% 2.25–24.28)], whereas increased carotid stiffness was associated with left ventricular hypertrophy, either when cfPWV was increased [OR 2.86 (CL95% 1.15–7.09)] or not [OR 2.81 (CL95% 1.13–6.97)]. No association between increased cfPWV or carotid stiffness and target organ damage was found when cutoffs obtained by international reference values were used. The concomitance of both increased cfPWV and carotid stiffness did not have an additive effect on organ damage. Conclusion: Aortic and carotid stiffness are differentially associated with target organ damage in hypertensive patients. Regional arterial stiffness as assessed by cfPWV is associated with renal organ damage and local carotid stiffness with cardiac organ damage.


Vascular Pharmacology | 2017

Combination therapy with lercanidipine and enalapril reduced central blood pressure augmentation in hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome

Lorenzo Ghiadoni; Rosa Maria Bruno; Giulia Cartoni; Francesco Stea; Armando Magagna; Agostino Virdis; Davide Grassi; Claudio Ferri; Stefano Taddei

Arterial stiffness and blood pressure (BP) augmentation are independent predictors of cardiovascular events. In a randomized, open, parallel group study we compared the effect on these parameters of combination therapy with an ACE-inhibitor plus calcium channel blocker or thiazide diuretic in 76 hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome uncontrolled by ACE-inhibitor monotherapy. After 4weeks run-in with enalapril (ENA, 20mg), patients were randomized to a combination therapy with lercanidipine (LER, 10-20mg) or hydrochlorothiazide (HCT, 12.5-25mg) for 24weeks. Aortic stiffness (carotid to femoral pulse wave velocity, PWV), central BP values and augmentation (augmentation index, AIx) were measured by applanation tonometry. The two groups showed similar office and central BP after run-in. Office (ENA/LER: from 149.1±4.9/94.5±1.5 to 131.7±8.1/82.2±5.3; ENA/HCT: from 150.3±4.7/94.7±2.1 to 133.1±7.1/82.8±5.3mmHg) and central BP (ENA/LER 127.4±17.1/85.2±12.1 to 120.5±13.5/80.0±9.5mmHg; ENA/HCT 121.6±13.4/79.3±9.5mmHg) were similarly reduced after 24weeks. PWV was comparable after run-in and not differently reduced by the two treatments (ENA/LER from 8.6±1.5 to 8.1±1.3m/s, p<0.05; ENA/HCT from 8.5±1.2 to 8.2±1.0m/s, p<0.05). Finally, both combinations reduced AIx, but its reduction was significantly greater (p<0.05) in ENA/LER (from 26.8±10.9 to 20.6±9.1%) than in ENA/HCT arm (from 28.2±9.0 to 24.7±8.7%). In conclusion, the combination with LER caused a similar PWV reduction as compared to HCT, but a greater reduction in AIx in hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome not controlled by ENA alone. These results indicate a positive effect of the combination of ENA/LER on central BP augmentation, suggesting a potential additive role for cardiovascular protection.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Impact of seasonality and air pollutants on carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity and wave reflection in hypertensive patients

Marina Di Pilla; Rosa Maria Bruno; Francesco Stea; Luciano Massetti; Stefano Taddei; Lorenzo Ghiadoni; Pietro Amedeo Modesti; Giovanni Li Volti

Objective The effects of seasonality on blood pressure (BP) and cardiovascular (CV) events are well established, while the influence of seasonality and other environmental factors on arterial stiffness and wave reflection has never been analyzed. This study evaluated whether seasonality (daily number of hours of light) and acute variations in outdoor temperature and air pollutants may affect carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV) and pressure augmentation. Design and method 731 hypertensive patients (30–88 years, 417 treated) were enrolled in a cross-sectional study during a 5-year period. PWV, central BP, Augmentation Index (AIx) and Augmentation Pressure (AP) were measured in a temperature-controlled (22–24°C) room. Data of the local office of the National Climatic Data Observatory were used to estimate meteorological conditions and air pollutants (PM10, O3, CO, N2O) exposure on the same day. Results PWV (mean value 8.5±1.8 m/s) was related to age (r = 0.467, p<0.001), body mass index (r = 0.132, p<0.001), central systolic (r = 0.414, p<0.001) and diastolic BP (r = 0.093, p = 0.013), daylight hours (r = -0.176, p<0.001), mean outdoor temperature (r = -0.082, p = 0.027), O3 (r = -0.135, p<0.001), CO (r = 0.096, p = 0.012), N2O (r = 0.087, p = 0.022). In multiple linear regression analysis, adjusted for confounders, PWV remained independently associated only with daylight hours (β = -0.170; 95% CI: -0.273 to -0.067, p = 0.001). No significant correlation was found between pressure augmentation and daylight hours, mean temperature or air pollutants. The relationship was stronger in untreated patients and women. Furthermore, a positive, independent association between O3 levels and PWV emerged in untreated patients (β: 0.018; p = 0.029; CI: 0.002 to 0.034) and in women (β: 0.027; p = 0.004; CI: 0.009 to 0.045). Conclusions PWV showed a marked seasonality in hypertensive patients. Environmental O3 levels may acutely reduce arterial stiffness in hypertensive women and in untreated patients.


IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering | 2016

Noninvasive Assessment of Carotid Pulse Pressure Values: An Accelerometric-Based Approach

Nicole Di Lascio; Vincenzo Gemignani; Rosa Maria Bruno; Elisabetta Bianchini; Francesco Stea; Lorenzo Ghiadoni; Francesco Faita

Objective: Central pulse pressure (cPP) is increasingly investigated as possible independent predictor of cardiovascular risk and carotid pulse pressure (carPP) can be used as a surrogate of cPP. Despite its importance, carPP measurement remains challenging in clinical practice. The aim of this study was to introduce a new easier-to-use method for noninvasive carPP evaluation based on the use of a MEMS accelerometer. Methods: carPP values (carPP<sub>acc</sub>) were obtained in 22 subjects (10 males, 47 ± 17 years, hypertension: 50%) postprocessing and double integrating the accelerometric signals. carPP<sub>acc</sub> measurements were compared with tonometric assessments (carPP<sub>ton</sub>), and ultrasound-derived measurements (carPP<sub>US</sub>). Moreover, accelerometric carotid pressure waveforms (P<sub>acc</sub>) were contrasted in terms of shape to those obtained by tonometry (P<sub>ton</sub>) and ultrasound images elaboration (P<sub>US</sub>), calculating the root mean square error (RMSE<sub>ton</sub>, RMSE<sub>US</sub>) and the regression coefficients (r<sub>ton</sub> and r<sub>US</sub>). Moreover, both the repeatability and reproducibility analyses were performed. Results: carPP<sub>acc</sub> values (45.9 ± 10.6 mmHg) were significantly correlated with carPP<sub>ton</sub> (47.5 ± 11.3 mmHg) and carPP<sub>US</sub> (43.3 ± 8.4 mmHg) assessments (R = 0.94, p <; 0.0001 and R = 0.80, p <; 0.0001, respectively). The validity of the accelerometric approach was confirmed by morphological parameters (RMSE<sub>ton</sub> = 5 ± 1.95 mmHg, RMSE<sub>US</sub> = 5.5 ± 2.3 mmHg, r<sub>ton</sub> = 0.94 ± 0.04, r<sub>US</sub> = 0.93 ± 0.04). Coefficient of variation (CV) was equal to 6.2% for the repeatability analysis, while CV values for interoperator and intersession reproducibilities were 8.9% and 9.4%, respectively. Conclusion: The proposed approach, providing an easier and more available measurement, could represent a valid alternative to existing and used technique for carPP assessment.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Phantom studies with gold nanorods as contrast agents for photoacoustic imaging: novel and old approaches

Cinzia Avigo; Nicole Di Lascio; Paolo Armanetti; Francesco Stea; Lucia Cavigli; Fulvio Ratto; Roberto Pini; Sandro Meucci; Marco Cecchini; Claudia Kusmic; Francesco Faita; Luca Menichetti

Photoacoustic imaging is emerging as a bioimaging technique. The development of contrast agents extend the potential towards novel application. The design of stable phantoms is needed to achieve a semi-quantitative evaluation of the performance of contrast agents. The aim of this study was to investigate the PA signal generated from gold nanorods (GNRs) loaded in custom made phantoms. VevoLAZR (VisualSonics Inc., Toronto) was used with custom made agar phantom, with 5 parallel polyethylene tubes (with 0.58mm internal and 0.99mm external diameter), and a PDMS phantom, with six parallel channels with sizes from 50 μm to 500 μm, loaded with two different types of GNRs: PEGGNRs (53nm length and 11nm axial diameter, plasmon resonance at 840nm, 87nM (15mM Au equivalent)); and gold nanorods (NPZ) coated in a dense layer of hydrophilic polymers by Nanopartz Inc., Loveland, CO (41nm length and 10nm axial diameter, plasmon resonance at 808nm, 83 nM (14mM Au equivalent)). The absorption spectra acquired with the PA system and the spectrophotometer were compared. The reproducibility and stability of the PA signal were evaluated at different dilutions. The dynamic variation of the PA signal was evaluated as function of the number of the GNRs. The SNR and the contrast were measured across the range of concentrations studied. The custom made agar phantom demonstrated suitable for the characterization of PA contrast agents such as PEG-GNRs and NPZ. The PDMS phantom is promising in the field of photoacoustics, therefore future works will conducted exploiting its precise and controlled geometry.

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Francesco Faita

National Research Council

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Claudia Kusmic

National Research Council

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