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Featured researches published by Gergely Agoston.


American Heart Journal | 2013

Clinical and echocardiographic correlations of exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension in systemic sclerosis: A multicenter study

Luna Gargani; Gergely Agoston; Antonella Moreo; Eugenia Capati; Luigi P. Badano; M. Doveri; Laura Bazzichi; Marco Fabio Costantino; Andrea Pavellini; Francesco Pieri; Francesco Musca; Denisa Muraru; Oscar Epis; Eleonora Bruschi; Benedetta De Chiara; Federico Perfetto; Fabio Mori; Oberdan Parodi; Rosa Sicari; Stefano Bombardieri; Albert Varga; Marco Matucci Cerinic; Eduardo Bossone; Eugenio Picano

BACKGROUND Patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) are at risk for developing pulmonary hypertension, which is associated with a poor prognosis. Exercise Doppler echocardiography enables the identification of exercise-induced increase in pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) and may provide a thorough noninvasive hemodynamic evaluation. AIM The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical and echocardiographic determinants of exercise-induced increase in PASP in a large population of patients with SSc. METHODS We selected 164 patients with SSc (age 58 ± 13 years, 91% female) with normal resting PASP (<40 mm Hg) who underwent a comprehensive 2-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography and graded bicycle semisupine exercise Doppler echocardiography. Pulmonary artery systolic pressure, cardiac output, and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) were estimated noninvasively. Cutoff values of PASP ≥50 mm Hg and PVR ≥3.0 Wood Units at peak exercise were considered a significant exercise-induced increase in PASP and PVR, respectively. RESULTS Sixty-nine (42%) patients showed a significant exercise-induced increase in PASP. Among them, peak PVR ≥3 Wood Units was present only in 11% of patients, about 5% of the total population. Univariate analysis showed that age, presence of interstitial lung disease, and both right and left diastolic dysfunction are predictors of peak PASP ≥50 mm Hg, but none of these parameters predict elevated peak PVR. CONCLUSIONS Exercise-induced increase in PASP occurs in almost one-half of patients with SSc with normal resting PASP. Peak exercise PASP is affected by age, interstitial lung disease, and right and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction and, only in 5% of the patients, is associated with an increase in PVR during exercise, suggesting heterogeneity of the mechanisms underlying exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension in SSc.


Cardiovascular Ultrasound | 2017

Stress echo 2020: the international stress echo study in ischemic and non-ischemic heart disease

Eugenio Picano; Quirino Ciampi; Rodolfo Citro; Antonello D’Andrea; Maria Chiara Scali; Lauro Cortigiani; Iacopo Olivotto; Fabio Mori; Maurizio Galderisi; Marco Fabio Costantino; Lorenza Pratali; Giovanni Di Salvo; Eduardo Bossone; Francesco Ferrara; Luna Gargani; Fausto Rigo; Nicola Gaibazzi; Giuseppe Limongelli; Giuseppe Pacileo; Maria Grazia Andreassi; Bruno Pinamonti; Laura Massa; Marco Antonio Rodrigues Torres; Marcelo Haertel Miglioranza; Clarissa Borguezan Daros; José Luis de Castro e Silva Pretto; Branko Beleslin; Ana Djordjevic-Dikic; Albert Varga; Attila Pálinkás

BackgroundStress echocardiography (SE) has an established role in evidence-based guidelines, but recently its breadth and variety of applications have extended well beyond coronary artery disease (CAD). We lack a prospective research study of SE applications, in and beyond CAD, also considering a variety of signs in addition to regional wall motion abnormalities.MethodsIn a prospective, multicenter, international, observational study design, > 100 certified high-volume SE labs (initially from Italy, Brazil, Hungary, and Serbia) will be networked with an organized system of clinical, laboratory and imaging data collection at the time of physical or pharmacological SE, with structured follow-up information. The study is endorsed by the Italian Society of Cardiovascular Echography and organized in 10 subprojects focusing on: contractile reserve for prediction of cardiac resynchronization or medical therapy response; stress B-lines in heart failure; hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; mitral regurgitation after either transcatheter or surgical aortic valve replacement; outdoor SE in extreme physiology; right ventricular contractile reserve in repaired Tetralogy of Fallot; suspected or initial pulmonary arterial hypertension; coronary flow velocity, left ventricular elastance reserve and B-lines in known or suspected CAD; identification of subclinical familial disease in genotype-positive, phenotype- negative healthy relatives of inherited disease (such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy).ResultsWe expect to recruit about 10,000 patients over a 5-year period (2016-2020), with sample sizes ranging from 5,000 for coronary flow velocity/ left ventricular elastance/ B-lines in CAD to around 250 for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or repaired Tetralogy of Fallot. This data-base will allow to investigate technical questions such as feasibility and reproducibility of various SE parameters and to assess their prognostic value in different clinical scenarios.ConclusionsThe study will create the cultural, informatic and scientific infrastructure connecting high-volume, accredited SE labs, sharing common criteria of indication, execution, reporting and image storage of SE to obtain original safety, feasibility, and outcome data in evidence-poor diagnostic fields, also outside the established core application of SE in CAD based on regional wall motion abnormalities. The study will standardize procedures, validate emerging signs, and integrate the new information with established knowledge, helping to build a next-generation SE lab without inner walls.


Heart Failure Clinics | 2018

The Right Heart International Network (RIGHT-NET) : Rationale, Objectives, Methodology, and Clinical Implications

Francesco Ferrara; Luna Gargani; William F. Armstrong; Gergely Agoston; Antonio Cittadini; Rodolfo Citro; Michele D’Alto; Antonello D’Andrea; Santo Dellegrottaglie; Nicola De Luca; Giovanni Di Salvo; Stefano Ghio; Marco Guazzi; Jarosław D. Kasprzak; Theodore J. Kolias; Gabor Kovacs; Patrizio Lancellotti; Andrè La Gerche; Giuseppe Limongelli; Alberto M. Marra; Antonella Moreo; Ellen Ostenfeld; Francesco Pieri; Lorenza Pratali; Lawrence G. Rudski; Rajan Saggar; Rajeev Saggar; Christine Selton-Suty; Walter Serra; Anna Agnese Stanziola

The Right Heart International Network is a multicenter international study aiming to prospectively collect exercise Doppler echocardiography tests of the right heart pulmonary circulation unit (RHPCU) in large cohorts of healthy subjects, elite athletes, and individuals at risk of or with overt pulmonary hypertension. It is going to provide standardization of exercise stress echocardiography of RHPCU and explore the full physiopathologic response.


Heart Failure Clinics | 2018

Pulmonary Circulation on the Crossroads Between the Left and Right Heart in Systemic Sclerosis

Luna Gargani; Damien Voilliot; Michele D’Alto; Gergely Agoston; Antonella Moreo; Walter Serra; Francesco Pieri; Fabio Mori; Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik; Marco Matucci-Cerinic; Alberto Moggi-Pignone

Involvement of the right heart-pulmonary circulation system in systemic sclerosis is a typical feature, with critical prognostic implications. Pulmonary hypertension may occur in association with interstitial lung disease or as a result of an isolated pulmonary vascular disease that may affect both the precapillary arterioles and the postcapillary venules, as well as a consequence of left heart involvement. These apparently different phenotypes often underlie a significant pathophysiologic overlap, which makes the diagnosis and management of these patients highly complex and uncertain.


Journal of Medical Microbiology and Diagnosis | 2015

A Rare Case of Acute Myocarditis

Károly Péter Sárvári; Szilard Zolyomi; Gergely Agoston; Gabriella Terhes; Henriette Gavallér; Tamás Forster; Albert Varga; Edit Urbán

Acute myocarditis is an inflammatory disease with a quite broad range of consequences caused mostly by viruses. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) rarely causes acute myocarditis. A 19-year-old healthy man with sudden epigastrial and chest pain was admitted to hospital. Laboratory investigations suspected acute myocardial infarct, but MRI and echocardiography showed myocardial oedema as part of inflammation. In his past medical history, toxic exposition and travelling abroad could not be recorded. PCR investigations of the most common viruses causing acute myocarditis gave negative results, but positive EBV anti-VCA IgM, and later sero conversion could be detected and simultaneously, a typical mononucleosis proved the aetiological role of EBV. After a 3-week-long high dose NSAID therapy on the basis of beta-blocker and ACE-inhibitor therapy, on control MRI oedema disappeared, but electrocardiography was still positive, the patient with satisfying general status was discharged home. On the 6 month control MRI, neither any signs of myocarditis, nor decreased systolic ejection fraction were noted, and also ECG turned negative.


Cardiovascular Ultrasound | 2014

Left atrial dysfunction detected by speckle tracking in patients with systemic sclerosis.

Gergely Agoston; Luna Gargani; Marcelo Haertel Miglioranza; Maria Caputo; Luigi P. Badano; Antonella Moreo; Denisa Muraru; Sergio Mondillo; Marco Matucci Cerinic; Rosa Sicari; Eugenio Picano; Albert Varga


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2017

B-lines with Lung Ultrasound: The Optimal Scan Technique at Rest and During Stress

Maria Chiara Scali; Angela Zagatina; Iana Simova; Nadezhda Zhuravskaya; Quirino Ciampi; Marco Paterni; Mario Marzilli; Eugenio Picano; Rodolfo Citro; Antonello D'Andrea; Lauro Cortigiani; Iacopo Olivotto; Fabio Mori; Maurizio Galderisi; Marco Fabio Costantino; Lorenza Pratali; Giovanni Di Salvo; Eduardo Bossone; Francesco Ferrara; Jaroslaw D. Kasprszak; Fausto Rigo; Nicola Gaibazzi; Giuseppe Limongelli; Giuseppe Pacileo; Sergio Severino; Bruno Pinamonti; Laura Massa; Marco A.R. Torres; Marcelo Haertel Miglioranza; Clarissa Borguezan Daros


Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology | 2015

Impaired adaptation to left atrial pressure increase in patients with atrial fibrillation

Gergely Agoston; Judit Szilágyi; Gábor Bencsik; Cristina Tutuianu; Gergely Klausz; László Sághy; Albert Varga; Tamás Forster; Róbert Pap


Journal of Electrocardiology | 2012

The role of pacing-induced dyssynchrony in left ventricular remodeling associated with long-term right ventricular pacing for atrioventricular block.

Róbert Pap; Rodrigo Gallardo; Dóra Rónaszéki; Gergely Agoston; Vassil Borislavov Traykov; László Sághy; Albert Varga; Tamás Forster


Cardiovascular Research | 2018

P475Investigation of cardiac morphological and electrophysiological changes of dogs after long time intensive exercise

A Polyak; András Farkas; Nikolett Morvay; Gergely Agoston; Albert Varga; István Leprán; István Baczkó; András Varró; A S Farkas

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Luna Gargani

National Research Council

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Antonella Moreo

National Research Council

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Eugenio Picano

National Research Council

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Fabio Mori

University of Florence

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Rosa Sicari

National Research Council

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