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Dive into the research topics where Gianfranco Fonte is active.

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Featured researches published by Gianfranco Fonte.


Stroke | 1994

Carotid plaque, aging, and risk factors. A study of 457 subjects.

Fabrizio Fabris; Mauro Zanocchi; Mario Bo; Gianfranco Fonte; Leone Poli; Isa Bergoglio; E. Ferrario; Luigi Pernigotti

Background and Purpose The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of extracranial carotid artery atherosclerosis and its relation to principal cardiovascular risk factors at different ages in a sample of the general population. Methods B-mode ultrasonography was used to investigate the carotid district in 457 subjects (231 men and 226 women; mean age, 55.4±18.7 years; range, 18 to 97 years) in the metropolitan area. The ultrasonographic findings were then related to risk factors. Results Carotid plaques were found in 178 subjects (38.9%). The prevalence of atherosclerosis, number of plaques, and severity of stenosis were observed to increase with age. Age (P<.0001), cigarette smoking (P<.0001), male sex (P<.001), total cholesterol (P<.05), and, inversely, the ratio of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol to total cholesterol (P<.05) were found to be independently associated with carotid atherosclerosis. Stratified analysis by sex and age showed effect modifications by age on cigarette smoking, total cholesterol, and the ratio of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol to total cholesterol. After multivariate analysis including interaction terms, cigarette smoking and cholesterol levels were no longer found to be associated with carotid atherosclerosis in elderly subjects. Age (P<.01), total cholesterol (P<.05), and diabetes (P<.05) were positively related to the severity of vascular narrowing. Conclusions There is a high prevalence of asymptomatic carotid atherosclerosis in the general population, particularly among the very old. The association between risk factors and carotid atherosclerosis is less pronounced in the elderly than in younger subjects.


Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2009

Efficacy of oxycodone/acetaminophen and codeine/acetaminophen vs. conventional therapy in elderly women with persistent, moderate to severe osteoarthritis-related pain

Laura Corsinovi; Elisa Martinelli; Gianfranco Fonte; Marco Astengo; Alessandro Sona; Antonia Gatti; Massimiliano Massaia; Mario Bo; Mauro Zanocchi; Gianluca Isaia; Mario Molaschi

We aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of oxycodone/acetaminophen (O/A) and codeine/acetaminophen (C/A) vs. conventional therapy (CT) without opioids in older women suffering from osteoarthritis (OA)-related pain, sub-optimally responsive to prior conventional treatments. We performed a 6 week, randomized, single blind, controlled study in three nursing homes. We enrolled 154 women with painful OA. They were assigned to treatment with O/A (n=52) and C/A (n=52) vs. CT (n=50). We evaluated at baseline and at week 6: average pain in the last week (mean pain, MeP), pain at rest (RP), pain in movement (MP) (numeric rating scale, NRS); depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory-II, BDI-II); functional status (activities of daily living, ADL) and cognitive status (mini mental state evaluation, MMSE). We considered the adverse events (AEs) in the study period. At week 6, MeP, RP and MP were significantly reduced in all three groups (p<0.001); compared to CT, O/A and C/A were associated with greater reductions in MeP (p<0.001 and p=0.004, respectively), in RP (p=0.028 and p=0.032, respectively) in MP (p<0.001 and p=0.002, respectively) and with significant improvement in BDI-II score (p=0.05 and p=0.04, respectively) and ADL value (p=0.04 and p=0.05, respectively). AE rates did not differ between groups.


European Journal of Public Health | 2012

Determinants of recourse to hospital treatment in the elderly

Alessandro Sona; Guido Maggiani; Marco Astengo; Monica Comba; Valentina Chiusano; Gianluca Isaia; Chiara Merlo; Larisa Pricop; Eleonora Quagliotti; Corrado Moiraghi; Gianfranco Fonte; Mario Bo

BACKGROUND All over Europe, an increased use of public health services has been noticed, particularly referring to access and hospitalization among elderly in the emergency department (ED). METHODS Prospective study at a university teaching hospital in Turin, northern Italy, recruiting subjects aged >65 years consecutively attending the medical ED during 1 month. Demography, functional and cognitive status, comorbidity, severity of acute critical illness, previous ED accesses and hospitalization, diagnosis and other relevant data for ED admission and hospitalization were considered. RESULTS Data were collected for 1632 patients (average age 77.6 years), 89% of the 1834 older subjects who attended the ED during the study period (29.3% of the patients attending the ED). Six hundred and fifty older subjects were admitted to the hospital (62.2% of the hospital admissions). Severity of acute critical illness, presence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and heart failure, a high number of drugs being taken, functional dependence and advanced age were independently associated with hospital admission. One-third of the patients appeared to be frequent users of health services with more than two visits/admissions. Higher comorbidity, partial or complete functional dependence, chronic diseases (arrhythmia, pulmonary neoplasm, diseases of the large intestine) and politherapy were associated either with frequent use of the ED and multiple admissions. CONCLUSIONS Elderly account for a high proportion of hospitalizations, mainly determined by critical health conditions, advanced age and functional dependence. Poor health conditions (high comorbidity and presence of chronic multi-organ diseases), functional dependence but not critical social factors were the main determinants of multiple hospital admissions.


Gerontology | 1993

Autopsy and Multiple Pathology in the Elderly

Leone Poli; Achille Pich; Mauro Zanocchi; Gianfranco Fonte; Mario Bo; Fabrizio Fabris

We examined autopsy reports and the clinical diagnoses of 600 patients (200 in 1967 and 400 in 1987). For each patient we considered age, diagnostic error, main diseases and presence of multiple pathology. The number of diagnostic errors increased from 1967 to 1987. The diagnostic error was particularly high for pulmonary embolism and septic shock and significantly higher in patients > 65 than < or = 65 years old. Multiple pathology was higher in old patients: we found 4 or more diseases in 195/270 (72.2%) patients > 65 years and in only 135/330 (40.9%) patients < or = 65 years. The average period of hospitalization was directly proportional to the number of diseases present in the same patient.


Geriatrics & Gerontology International | 2016

Prevalence of and factors associated with prolonged length of stay in older hospitalized medical patients.

Mario Bo; Gianfranco Fonte; Federica Pivaro; Martina Bonetto; Chiara Comi; Veronica Giorgis; Lorenzo Marchese; Gianluca Isaia; Guido Maggiani; Elisabetta Furno; Yolanda Falcone; Giovanni Carlo Isaia

To characterize elderly medical patients and identify factors associated with prolonged length of stay.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2009

White-coat effect among older patients with suspected cognitive impairment: prevalence and clinical implications

Mario Bo; Massimiliano Massaia; Chiara Merlo; Alessandro Sona; Antonella Canadè; Gianfranco Fonte

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the prevalence of white-coat effect (WCE), and its association with individual anxiety and insight of disease, among older patients evaluated for suspected cognitive impairment. METHODS This prospective cohort study, conducted in an Alzheimer Evaluation Unit, involved patients aged 55 years or older with suspected cognitive impairment. WCE was defined as a difference of at least 20 mmHg in systolic or 10 mmHg in diastolic blood pressure (BP) measured either by a physician during the visit or by a nurse (before and after the visit), compared with home self-blood pressure measurement (SBPM). Severity of cognitive impairment was evaluated through the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE); the Clinical Insight Rating Scale (CIR) and the Guidelines for the Rating for Awareness Deficits (GRAD) were used to evaluate the subjects insight; anxiety disorder was evaluated using the seven-question Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7). RESULTS Among 273 subjects, prevalence of WCE was 52%, 32.6% and 30.4%, according to physician and nurse BP measurements, respectively (p = 0.000). Prevalence of WCE did not differ between patients diagnosed with and without dementia, but was higher among patients with than in those without anxiety disorder (70.7% vs 38.2%, p = 0.000). Positive relations were observed between severity of anxiety and insight of disease, which were both inversely related with severity of cognitive impairment. CONCLUSIONS WCE is extremely common and is correlated to individual anxiety and insight of disease among older outpatients with suspected cognitive impairment; overestimation of hypertension severity might lead to unnecessary drug treatment and greater health costs in this setting.To evaluate the prevalence of white‐coat effect (WCE), and its association with individual anxiety and insight of disease, among older patients evaluated for suspected cognitive impairment.


Angiology | 2009

High-Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein Is Not Independently Associated With Peripheral Subclinical Atherosclerosis

Mario Bo; Laura Corsinovi; Alessia Brescianini; Alessandro Sona; Marco Astengo; Ralucha Dumitrache; Maria Federica Ferrio; Larisa Pricop; Gianfranco Fonte

Objective. This study investigated whether high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) levels are independently associated with subclinical peripheral atherosclerosis. Methods. Clinical variables, cardiovascular (CV) risk factors, 10-year CV risk, the ankle-brachial Index (ABI), and the carotid intima—media thickness (cIMT) were determined in a sample of consecutive subjects free from previous CV disease, admitted for a first visit at a lipid clinic. Results. In the overall sample (320 subjects, mean age 63 years, 35.8% men), hs-CRP levels were associated with major CV risk factors, 10-year CV risk, lower ABI, and higher cIMT values. In a logistic model, after adjustment for significant covariates, the associations of hs-CRP levels with ABI and cIMT were no longer statistically significant. Conclusions. Among asymptomatic, moderate- to-high CV risk subjects, hs-CRP levels were associated with severity of peripheral atherosclerosis, but these associations were not independent of traditional CV risk factors, suggesting a limited predictive role of hs-CRP for subclinical atherosclerosis.


Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 1998

MINI-MENTAL STATE EXAMINATION AND WECHSLER MEMORY SCALE SUBTEST OF LOGICAL MEMORY: CORRELATION IN AN OVER 70-YEAR-OLD POPULATION

E. Ferrario; L. Seccia; Massimiliano Massaia; Gianfranco Fonte; Mario Molaschi

Summary The correlation between the mini-mental state examination (MMSE) and the logical memory (LM) subtest of the Wechsler memory scale (WMS) was evaluated in a group of healthy Italians, aged seventy and over, with no significant cognitive impairment. A horizontal study was carried out using 146 subjects (126 women and 20 men; mean age 72.7 ±3.7 years) who enrolled consecutively in the exercise courses for the elderly organized by the Municipality of Torino. A statistically significant correlation was found between the average total MMSE score and the LM score (r = 0.4315, p


Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2009

Metabolic syndrome in older subjects: Coincidence or clustering?

Mario Bo; Alessandro Sona; Marco Astengo; U. Fiandra; Eleonora Quagliotti; Alessia Brescianini; Gianfranco Fonte

The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome (MS) increases with advancing age. However, aging per se is associated with increased prevalence of most of the abnormalities contributing to the MS. Whether MS in older people consistently identifies a true pathophysiological entity or a casual aggregation of aging-associated metabolic abnormalities, remains to be fully elucidated. In the present study, we aimed to evaluate whether in older subjects the aggregation of metabolic components of the MS, as defined by the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III (NCEP-ATP III), is consistent with a single latent variable. Age, waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, metabolic variables were determined in 152 older (>70 years), non-diabetic, healthy men. Cronbach alpha was used to assess the internal consistency of the components contributing to the MS. Structural equation modeling, using the Normed Fit Index (NFI), the Root Mean Square Error of Approximation (RMSEA), the Comparative Fit Index (CFI), and the Tucker-Lewis Index (TLI) was used to assess the fit to a model with a single latent variable. The Cronbach alpha test showed low internal consistency among the metabolic variables (alpha=0.31). The calculated chi(2) values were 28.31 and 32.52 for model entering hypertension as dichotomous variable and for model entering blood pressure values, respectively, both expressing low fit to a model with a single latent variable. In both models, CFI (0.41 and 0.55), NFI (0.59 and 0.55), RMSEA (0.25 and 0.22) and TLI (-0.31 and -0.12) scores showed a low fit of the metabolic alterations to a single latent variable. These findings suggest caution in making diagnosis of MS at older ages, since metabolic and cardiovascular abnormalities being per se extremely common in elderly people, do not appear to cluster together under a single common factor.


Angiology | 1992

A four year clinical and echographic follow-up of asymptomatic carotid plaque.

Fabrizio Fabris; Leone Poli; Mauro Zanocchi; Mario Bo; U. Fiandra; Gianfranco Fonte

Eighty-five patients with asymptomatic carotid plaque—a diagnosis revealed by B-mode high-resolution echotomography—were followed up for four years; the echoplaque changes were compared with the clinical history. Eight patients died (2 from stroke, 4 from myocardial infarction, and 2 from lung tumor) and were excluded from the follow-up. Three patients underwent carotid thromboen darterectomy (TEA) (1 bilateral), and these 4 carotids were not considered in the total series. At the first echo Doppler evaluation of 150 carotids, plaques were observed in 112; 38 vessels were free of lesions. Of the 150 carotids, 8 revealed a new plaques. In regard to the echogenic pattern, 95 of the 112 plaques (84.8%) remained unchanged, 16 (14.3%) progressed, and regression of a small homogeneous plaque was observed in 1 patient (0.9%). An increase of the degree of vascular stenosis, was observed in 23 of the 150 carotids (15.3%). Cerebral ischemic symptoms occurred in 5 patients. In 1 patient who suffered from stroke, a new, soft, dyshomogeneous plaque in the carotid of the side of the lesion was observed. In 3 patients (2 with strokes, 1 with transient ischemic attack) the occlusion of a previous severe stenosis was observed. The fifth pa tient had a stroke on the side of an unchanged, ulcerated hemodynamic lesion. A valid criterion for identifying a risky plaque should be the joint evaluation of the echostructural characteristics and the degree of stenosis.

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