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Dive into the research topics where Giancarlo Longobardi is active.

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Featured researches published by Giancarlo Longobardi.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1997

Angina-induced protection against myocardial infarction in adult and elderly patients : A loss of preconditioning mechanism in the aging heart?

Pasquale Abete; Nicola Ferrara; Francesco Cacciatore; Alfredo Madrid; Sabatino Bianco; Claudio Calabrese; Claudio Napoli; Paola Scognamiglio; Ornella Bollella; Angelo Cioppa; Giancarlo Longobardi; Franco Rengo

OBJECTIVES The present study examined whether angina 48 h before myocardial infarction provides protection in adult and elderly patients. BACKGROUND The mortality rate for coronary artery disease is greater in elderly than in young patients. In experimental studies, ischemic preconditioning affords an endogenous form of protection against ischemia-reperfusion injury in adult but not in senescent hearts. Angina before myocardial infarction, a clinical equivalent of experimental ischemic preconditioning, has a protective effect in adult patients. It is not known whether angina before myocardial infarction is also protective in aged patients. METHODS We retrospectively verified whether antecedent angina within 48 h of myocardial infarction exerts a beneficial effect on in-hospital outcomes in adult (< 65 years old, n = 293) and elderly (> or = 65 years old, n = 210) patients. RESULTS In-hospital death was more frequent in adult patients without than in those with previous angina (10% vs. 2.6%, p < 0.01), as were congestive heart failure or shock (10.7% vs. 3.3%, p < 0.02) and the combined end points (in-hospital death and congestive heart failure or shock) (20.7% vs. 5.9%, p < 0.0003). In contrast, the presence or absence of previous angina before acute myocardial infarction in elderly patients seems not to influence the incidence of in-hospital death (14.4% vs. 15.2%, p = 0.97), congestive heart failure or shock (11.0% vs. 11.9%, p = 0.99) and the combined end points (25.4% vs. 27.1%, p = 0.89). Logistic regression analysis models for in-hospital end points show that previous angina is a positive predictor in adult but not in elderly patients. CONCLUSIONS The presence of angina before acute myocardial infarction seems to confer protection against in-hospital outcomes in adults; this effect seemed to be less obvious in elderly patients. This study suggests that the protection afforded by angina in adult patients may involve the occurrence of ischemic preconditioning, which seems to be lost in senescent patients.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996

Preconditioning does not prevent postischemic dysfunction in aging heart

Pasquale Abete; Nicola Ferrara; Angelo Cioppa; Pietro Ferrara; Sabatino Bianco; Claudio Calabrese; Francesco Cacciatore; Giancarlo Longobardi; Franco Rengo

OBJECTIVES This study was performed to investigate the effect of single or multiple brief periods of ischemia and the administration of exogenous norepinephrine before a more prolonged ischemic period and after reperfusion in adult and senescent isolated and perfused rat hearts. BACKGROUND The mortality rate for coronary artery disease is greater in the elderly. Ischemic preconditioning has been proposed as an endogenous form of protection against ischemia-reperfusion injury. However, the role of preconditioning in aging heart is unknown. METHODS We compared the protective effect of preconditioning transient ischemic and norepinephrine stimuli against 20 min of global normothermic ischemia and 40 min of reperfusion in isolated perfused hearts of adult (6 months old) and senescent (24 months old) rats. Norepinephrine release in coronary effluent was determined by high performance liquid chromatography. RESULTS Final recovery of percent developed pressure was improved after single preconditioning transient ischemic and norepinephrine stimuli in adult hearts (87.7 +/- 9% and 82.3 +/- 8.7%) versus unconditioned control hearts (50.6 +/- 4.8%, p < 0.01 [mean +/-SD]). The effect of preconditioning on developed pressure recovery was not present in senescent hearts after transient ischemic stimulus (39.8 +/- 4.9% vs. 41.6 +/- 5.8%, p = NS) but was present after norepinephrine stimulus (74.3 +/- 10.5, p < 0.01). Norepinephrine release significantly increased after preconditioning transient ischemic stimulus in adult but not in senescent hearts (p < 0.01 vs. adult). Transient ischemic- and norepinephrine-induced preconditioning was blocked by alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonists in both adult and senescent hearts. Multiple transient ischemic stimuli were able to reduce postischemic dysfunction in adult but not in senescent hearts. CONCLUSIONS Preconditioning transient ischemic stimulus significantly reduces postischemic dysfunction in adult but not in senescent hearts, whereas exogenous norepinephrine is able to mimic preconditioning in both adult and senescent hearts. Ischemic preconditioning induces an increase in norepinephrine release in adult but not in senescent hearts. Preconditioning induced by transient ischemic stimulus and norepinephrine was abolished by alpha-adrenergic receptor blockade in both adult and senescent hearts. Thus, our data demonstrate that preconditioning is absent in aging heart and is probably related to the reduction of norepinephrine release and alpha-adrenergic receptor stimulation in response to ischemic preconditioning.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2001

High level of physical activity preserves the cardioprotective effect of preinfarction angina in elderly patients.

Pasquale Abete; Nicola Ferrara; Francesco Cacciatore; Elio Sagnelli; Maria Manzi; Vincenzo Carnovale; Claudio Calabrese; Domenico de Santis; Gianluca Testa; Giancarlo Longobardi; Claudio Napoli; Franco Rengo

OBJECTIVES The study investigated the effects of physical activity on preinfarction angina, a clinical equivalent of ischemic preconditioning (PC), in adult and elderly patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). BACKGROUND Preinfarction angina seems to confer protection against in-hospital mortality in adult but not in elderly patients. However, it has been experimentally demonstrated that exercise training restores the protective effect of PC in the aging heart. METHODS We retrospectively verified whether physical activity preserved the protective effect of preinfarction angina against in-hospital mortality in 557 elderly patients with AMI. Physical activity was quantified according to the Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly (PASE). RESULTS In-hospital mortality was 22.2% in elderly patients with preinfarction angina and 27.2% in those without (p = 0.20). When the PASE score was stratified in quartiles (0 to 40, 41 to 56, 57 to 90, >90), a high score was strongly associated with reduced in-hospital mortality (30.8%, 32.2%, 17.2% and 15.3%, respectively, p < 0.001 for trend). Interestingly, a high level of physical activity reduced in-hospital mortality in elderly patients with preinfarction angina (35.7%, 35.4%, 12.3% and 4.23%, respectively, p < 0.001 for trend) but not in those without (23.0%, 27.2%, 26.0% and 35.0%, respectively, p = 0.35 for trend). Accordingly, the protective role of preinfarction angina on in-hospital mortality was present only in elderly patients showing a high level of physical activity (adjusted odds ratio, 0.09; 95% confidence interval, 0.01 to 0.57; p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Physical activity and not preinfarction angina protects against in-hospital mortality in elderly patients with myocardial infarction. Nevertheless, the protective effect of preinfarction angina is preserved in elderly patients with a high level of physical activity.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2000

Exercise training restores ischemic preconditioning in the aging heart

Pasquale Abete; Claudio Calabrese; Nicola Ferrara; Angelo Cioppa; Paolo Pisanelli; Francesco Cacciatore; Giancarlo Longobardi; Claudio Napoli; Franco Rengo

OBJECTIVES To investigate the effects of ischemic preconditioning in hearts from adult and both sedentary and trained senescent rats. BACKGROUND Ischemic preconditioning does not prevent postischemic dysfunction in the aging heart, probably because of reduction of cardiac norepinephrine release. Exercise training can reverse the age-related decrease of norepinephrine production. METHODS We investigated the effects on mechanical parameters of ischemic preconditioning against 20 min of global ischemia followed by 40 min of reperfusion in isolated perfused hearts from adult (six months) and sedentary or trained (six weeks of graduated swim training) senescent (24 months) rats. Norepinephrine release in coronary effluent was determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. RESULTS Final recovery of percent-developed pressure was significantly improved after preconditioning in adult hearts (91.6+/-9.6%) versus unconditioned controls (54.2+/-5.1%, p<0.01). The effect of preconditioning on developed pressure recovery was absent in sedentary but present in trained senescent hearts (39.6+/-4.1% vs. 64.3+/-7.1%, p<0.05). Norepinephrine release significantly increased after preconditioning in adult and in trained but not in sedentary senescent hearts. The depletion of myocardial norepinephrine stores by reserpine abolished preconditioning effects in adult and trained senescent hearts. CONCLUSIONS In adult and trained but not in sedentary senescent hearts, preconditioning reduces postischemic dysfunction and is associated with an increase in norepinephrine release. Preconditioning was blocked by reserpine in both adult and trained senescent hearts. Thus, exercise training may restore preconditioning in the senescent heart through an increase of norepinephrine release.


American Journal of Hypertension | 1995

Left ventricular diastolic filling in diabetes mellitus with and without hypertension

Antonio Nicolino; Giancarlo Longobardi; Giuseppe Furgi; Michele Rossi; Nicoletta Zoccolillo; Nicola Ferrara; Franco Rengo

Left ventricular diastolic filling by Doppler echocardiography was investigated in 84 diabetic patients without evidence of heart disease and in 84 normotensive nondiabetic age- and sex-matched control subjects. Diabetic patients were subdivided into two groups on the basis of the presence of arterial hypertension. Group 1 comprised 41 normotensive diabetic patients (19 men, 22 women, mean age 63.7 +/- 9.1 years); Group 2 comprised 43 hypertensive diabetics (15 men, 28 women, mean age 65.6 +/- 9.6 years). Doppler measures of diastolic filling were significantly altered in the two groups as compared with control subjects. Peak atrial flow velocity, velocity integral for the atrial filling period, and atrial filling fraction were increased, whereas the ratio of peak early to peak atrial flow velocity and the ratio of flow velocity integrals were decreased, especially in Group 2 patients. Thirteen patients in Group 1 (32%) and 17 in Group 2 (40%) had evidence of diastolic dysfunction, as assessed by the presence of at least two independent abnormal indices (outside age-corrected 95% confidence interval). In each group, patients with altered diastolic filling differed slightly from diabetic patients with normal Doppler indices, tending to increased wall thickness and left ventricular mass. In conclusion, diastolic filling of the left ventricle is frequently altered in diabetic patients and is adversely affected by arterial hypertension whose coexistence further impairs left ventricular relaxation.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Intracoronary serotonin release after high-pressure coronary stenting

Dario Leosco; Massimo Fineschi; C Pierli; Anna Ida Fiaschi; Nicola Ferrara; Sabatino Bianco; Giancarlo Longobardi; Eliana Pisani; Achille Bravi; Franco Rengo

It is known that platelet-derived serotonin at the site of coronary angioplasty induces an increase in coronary tone and plays a role in vasoconstriction after balloon angioplasty. The goal of the present investigation was to compare local release of serotonin with changes in coronary tone after coronary stenting and coronary angioplasty. Twenty patients with significant stenosis (> or =50% diameter narrowing) of the left anterior descending coronary artery were referred to traditional coronary angioplasty (10 patients; group 1) or high-pressure coronary stenting (10 patients; group 2). An additional 16 patients with similar angiographic characteristics were referred to the coronary angioplasty group (8 patients; group 1a) or stenting group (8 patients; group 2a) after pretreatment with ketanserin. Serotonin plasma levels in coronary sinus and coronary cross-sectional area distal to the site of dilatation were measured before and after bath revascularization procedures. In groups 1 and 1a, plasma serotonin levels in coronary sinus increased from basal values of 3.2+/-0.8 and 3.2+/-0.5 ng/ml to 29.5+/-13 and 25.6+/-9 ng/ml after ballooning (p <0.001 vs baseline). In groups 2 and 2a, plasma serotonin levels in coronary sinus increased from basal values of 3.5+/-0.3 and 3.5+/-0.7 ng/ml to 114.6+/-34 and 113+/-29 ng/ml after stenting (p <0.001 vs baseline and vs postangioplasty values in groups 1 and 1a). Coronary cross-sectional area distal to the site of dilatation significantly decreased after angioplasty in group 1 (from 4.33+/-0.4 to 3.32+/-0.3 mm2; p <0.001), and after stenting in group 2 (from 4.27+/-0.3 to 2.86+/-0.2 mm2; p <0.001 vs baseline, and p <0.02 vs values after coronary angioplasty in group 1). Pretreatment with ketanserin significantly reduced distal coronary vasoconstriction after angioplasty and stenting. It is concluded that the higher local serotonin release after coronary stenting may explain the more marked coronary constriction observed after prosthesis deployment with respect to traditional coronary angioplasty. Ketanserin is able to significantly attenuate the increase in distal coronary tone induced by both revascularization procedures.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2013

Adrenergic signaling and oxidative stress: a role for sirtuins?

Graziamaria Corbi; Valeria Conti; Giusy Russomanno; Giancarlo Longobardi; Giuseppe Furgi; Amelia Filippelli; Nicola Ferrara

The adrenergic system plays a central role in stress signaling and stress is often associated with increased production of ROS. However, ROS overproduction generates oxidative stress, that occurs in response to several stressors. β-adrenergic signaling is markedly attenuated in conditions such as heart failure, with downregulation and desensitization of the receptors and their uncoupling from adenylyl cyclase. Transgenic activation of β2-adrenoceptor leads to elevation of NADPH oxidase activity, with greater ROS production and p38MAPK phosphorylation. Inhibition of NADPH oxidase or ROS significantly reduced the p38MAPK signaling cascade. Chronic β2-adrenoceptor activation is associated with greater cardiac dilatation and dysfunction, augmented pro-inflammatory and profibrotic signaling, while antioxidant treatment protected hearts against these abnormalities, indicating ROS production to be central to the detrimental signaling of β2-adrenoceptors. It has been demonstrated that sirtuins are involved in modulating the cellular stress response directly by deacetylation of some factors. Sirt1 increases cellular stress resistance, by an increased insulin sensitivity, a decreased circulating free fatty acids and insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1), an increased activity of AMPK, increased activity of PGC-1a, and increased mitochondrial number. Sirt1 acts by involving signaling molecules such P-I-3-kinase-Akt, MAPK and p38-MAPK-β. βAR stimulation antagonizes the protective effect of the AKT pathway through inhibiting induction of Hif-1α and Sirt1 genes, key elements in cell survival. More studies are needed to better clarify the involvement of sirtuins in the β-adrenergic response and, overall, to better define the mechanisms by which tools such as exercise training are able to counteract the oxidative stress, by both activation of sirtuins and inhibition of GRK2 in many cardiovascular conditions and can be used to prevent or treat diseases such as heart failure.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Effect of beta-adrenoceptor blockade on dipyridamole-induced myocardial asynergies in coronary artery disease.

Nicola Ferrara; Giancarlo Longobardi; Antonio Nicolino; Domenico Acanfora; Luigi Odierna; Giuseppe Furgi; Michele Rossi; Dario Leosco; Franco Rengo

Twenty-one patients with angiographic evidence of significant coronary artery disease, and positive dipyridamole echocardiographic test results at basal condition and after 7 days of placebo treatment were prospectively studied to see whether beta blockade modifies the effects of dipyridamole echocardiographic testing on regional myocardial contractility. Patients were randomized to propranolol (120 mg/day) or placebo treatment in 3 divided doses for 7 days, after which each patient crossed over to the alternate regimen. Dipyridamole-echocardiographic testing was repeated at the end of each treatment. Propranolol abolished new mechanical signs of transient dipyridamole-induced ischemia (new wall motion abnormalities or an increase in degree of basal asynergies, or both) in 13 of 21 patients. The remaining 8 patients had positive results on dipyridamole echocardiographic testing after the propranolol treatment period. At basal conditions both heart rate and rate-pressure product were significantly reduced with propranolol; there was also a significant decrease in these parameters at peak dipyridamole infusion. At peak dipyridamole infusion heart rate and rate-pressure product were significantly lower in patients with negative than in those with positive echocardiographic test results after propranolol. Our data show that administration of beta blockade significantly reduces the development of transient dipyridamole-induced myocardial asynergies, the earliest markers of acute myocardial ischemia, detected with 2-dimensional echocardiography.


European Journal of Preventive Cardiology | 2012

Six-minute walking test but not ejection fraction predicts mortality in elderly patients undergoing cardiac rehabilitation following coronary artery bypass grafting

Francesco Cacciatore; Pasquale Abete; Francesca Mazzella; Giuseppe Furgi; Antonio Nicolino; Giancarlo Longobardi; Gianluca Testa; Assunta Langellotto; Teresa Infante; Claudio Napoli; Nicola Ferrara; Franco Rengo

Background: Age-related effects on the ability of 6-min walking test (6MWT) and ejection fraction (EF) to predict mortality in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) patients undergoing cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is still debated. Design and methods: In order to verify the role of 6MWT and EF on all-cause mortality in patients undergoing CR following CABG, 882 CABG patients undergoing CR stratified in adults (<65 years) and elderly (≥65 years) were studied. Results: At the admission, EF was 52.6 ± 9.1% in adults and 51.3 ± 8.9% in elderly (p = 0.234, NS) while 6MWT was 343.8 ± 93.5 m in adults and 258.9 ± 95.7 m in elderly (p < 0.001). After 42.9 ± 14.1 months follow up, mortality was 8.2% in adults and 10.9% in elderly (p = 0.176, NS). Cox regression analysis shows that EF ≥ 50% and 6MWT ≥300 m are protective on mortality in all CABG patients before CR. However, EF ≥50% in adults (HR 0.18, 95% CI 0.06–0.49, p < 0.005) but not in elderly (HR 1.16, 95% CI 0.45–3.42, p = 0.354, NS) and 6MWT ≥300 m in elderly (HR 0.34, 95% CI 0.10–0.79, p = 0.033) but not in adults (HR 0.76, 95% CI 0.31–2.12, p = 0.654, NS) exert a protective role on mortality. Conclusions: Our results indicate that both EF ≥ 50% and 6MWT ≥ 300 m independently protect against mortality in CABG patients before CR. However, their protective role is age dependent. In fact, EF ≥ 50% is protective in adults but not in elderly while 6MWT ≥ 300 m is protective in elderly but not in adult patients.


Gerontology | 2005

Mortality and Blood Pressure in Elderly People with and without Cognitive Impairment

Francesco Cacciatore; Pasquale Abete; Domenico de Santis; Giancarlo Longobardi; Nicola Ferrara; Franco Rengo

Background: Controversial data are available on the association between mortality, blood pressure and cognitive impairment in the elderly. Objective: To verify the role of blood pressure on mortality in an elderly population with and without cognitive impairment. Methods: A cross-sectional survey with a 6-year mortality evaluation was conducted in a region of southern Italy in elderly subjects with and without cognitive impairment. Subjects were divided into 4 groups on the basis of systolic, diastolic, mean and pulse blood pressure values. Results: Mortality shows a linear relationship with pulse blood pressure and a U-curve shape for diastolic blood pressure. This phenomenon was more evident in subjects with cognitive impairment showing the greatest risk of mortality at the lowest and highest levels of diastolic blood pressure. Conclusion: The study shows that mortality increases linearly with increasing blood pressure in the elderly. In contrast, mortality shows a U-shape curve for diastolic blood pressure; cognitively impaired patients with the lowest and highest diastolic blood pressures show the greatest relative risk of mortality.

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Nicola Ferrara

University of Naples Federico II

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Franco Rengo

University of Naples Federico II

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Pasquale Abete

University of Naples Federico II

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Francesco Cacciatore

University of Naples Federico II

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Dario Leosco

University of Naples Federico II

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Claudio Calabrese

University of Naples Federico II

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Claudio Napoli

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Domenico Acanfora

University of Naples Federico II

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