Giorgio Faganello
Bristol Royal Infirmary
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Featured researches published by Giorgio Faganello.
Heart | 2011
Rajesh Thaman; Giorgio Faganello; J R Gimeno; G V Szantho; M Nelson; Stephanie L. Curtis; R P Martin; Mark Turner
Background Percutaneous closure of patent foramen ovale (PFO) is standard treatment for patients with paradoxical embolism but studies examining the efficacy of the various occluders are lacking. Objective To evaluate short- and medium-term closure rates of three common occluders. Methods One hundred and sixty-six adults (47±12 (18–81 years)) were evaluated with transthoracic bubble echocardiography before and after PFO closure. Only patients with large PFOs were included (>30 bubbles in the left heart after Valsalva). Results Three occluders were used: Amplatzer (AGA Medical Corporation) (n=80, 48%), Gore Helex (n=48, 29%) and Premere TM (St Jude Medical) (n=38, 23%). One (0.6%) neurological event occurred during follow-up. At 6 months significant residual shunting after Valsalva was highest in the group that received the Helex (58.3%), and lower for Premere (39.5%) and Amplatzer (32.5%). At final follow-up residual shunting remained higher in patients with the Helex (33.3%) than in Premere (18.5%) and Amplatzer (11%). Amplatzer had a significantly lower residual shunt rate than Helex (p<0.05 at 6 months and final follow-up). The Premere had an intermediate residual shunt rate. Septal aneurysm also predicted residual shunting (RR=24.7, 95% CI: 8.2 to 74.4, p<0.0001). Conclusions Percutaneous PFO closure is an efficacious progressive treatment but closure rates also depend on the presence of aneurysm and differ between occluders.
Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2007
Giorgio Faganello; Mark Belham; Rajesh Thaman; Julie Blundell; Timothy Eller; Peter Wilde
Primary Cardiac Lymphoma (PCL) is defined as a non‐Hodgkins lymphoma involving only the heart and/or pericardium. Diagnosis of this rare disease is particularly difficult due to its nonspecific clinical manifestations. In this review the role of echocardiography in the early diagnosis of PCL is assessed, moreover we report an improvement in the outcome of PCL related to increased availability and utilization of echocardiography.
Europace | 2011
Rajesh Thaman; Stephanie L. Curtis; Giorgio Faganello; Greg V. Szantho; Mark Turner; Johanna Trinder; Susan Sellers; Graham Stuart
AIMS The natural history and outcome of pregnancy in patients with a pacemaker or those presenting with atrioventricular conduction block in pregnancy are unknown with only a limited number of case reports published. METHODS AND RESULTS This study examines the progress and outcome of 25 pregnancies in 18 women who were either paced or presented with untreated atrioventricular conduction block during pregnancy. All patients were seen in a single referral centre between 1998 and 2008 and were evaluated at regular intervals with ECG, echocardiography, and 24 h Holter. Four women (4 pregnancies) had new-onset atrioventricular block, 3 women (5 pregnancies) had previously diagnosed atrioventricular block who had not undergone pacing, and 11 women (16 pregnancies) had known atrioventricular block with a pacemaker prior to pregnancy. Of the four patients presenting for the first time in pregnancy, the frequency or severity of atrioventricular conduction block increased during pregnancy. One required pacing during and one after pregnancy. In two patients the conduction disturbance resolved postpartum. In the three patients who had known but untreated atrioventricular block before pregnancy, this progressed during each pregnancy but did not require pacing. In patients paced before pregnancy, there were no complications as a result of the pacemaker, but maternal complications were seen in patients with underlying structural heart disease. CONCLUSIONS Atrioventricular block in pregnancy is progressive; pacing is not always required but all patients should be closely monitored during and after pregnancy. In patients paced before pregnancy, pacing is well tolerated.
European Heart Journal | 2007
Giorgio Faganello; Mark Hamilton; Peter Wilde; Mark Turner
We report a 27-year-old man with Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome and aortitis causing severe aneurysmal dilatation. He underwent a two-stage composite graft replacement of aortic root and ascending aorta in 1998 and replacement of part of the distal aortic arch and descending aorta in 2003. Three years after the previous …
International Journal of Cardiology | 2018
Carmine Mazzone; Gianni Cioffi; Concetta Di Nora; Federica Guidetti; Pompilio Faggiano; Nicola Gaibazzi; Giorgio Faganello; Endria Casanova Borca; Andrea Di Lenarda
BACKGROUND Increasing evidence exists regarding calcium detected in aortic cusps and/or mitral annulus (AOC_MAC) at transthoracic echocardiogram as a predictor of cardiovascular (CV) events and mortality. PURPOSE To verify whether AOC_MAC has a prognostic role in the setting of primary prevention independently of the presence of atrial fibrillation (AF). METHODS All subjects consecutively referred from January 2011 to October 2014 to the Cardiovascular Centre for CV risk assessment in primary prevention were selected. AOC_MAC was assessed by transthoracic echocardiography. Primary study endpoint was a composite of CV hospitalizations/all-cause death. RESULTS The 1389 study patients were 70 years old, 43% males, 24% had diabetes mellitus, 75% arterial hypertension, 56% dyslipidaemia. Of all, 997 (72%) were in sinus rhythm (SR), 392 (28%) in AF. Patients with AF were older and more frequently males, with larger atria than SR subjects. During a median follow-up of 32 months, 165 patients (12%) were hospitalized for CV cause, 68 (5%) died. The primary endpoint occurred more frequently in patients with than without AOC_MAC (18% vs 11%, p < 0.001). AF patients showed higher event-rate compared with patients in SR (20% vs 10%, respectively; p < 0.01). AOC_MAC emerged as an independent prognosticator of primary endpoint in SR patients (HR 1.74 [1.07-2.82], p = 0.02), together with increasing age and left ventricular hypertrophy, while AOC_MAC had no prognostic relevance in AF patients. CONCLUSIONS In subjects with multiple CV risk factors assessed in primary prevention, the presence of AF nullifies the prognostic power of AOC_MAC, on the contrary robustly confirmed in SR patients.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2018
Marco Merlo; Marco Masè; Giancarlo Vitrella; Manuel Belgrano; Giorgio Faganello; Federico Di Giusto; Andrea Boscutti; Marco Gobbo; Marta Gigli; Alessandro Altinier; Pierluigi Lesizza; Federica Ramani; Antonio De Luca; Gaetano Morea; Maria Assunta Cova; Davide Stolfo; Gianfranco Sinagra
Defining short-term prognosis in nonischemic cardiomyopathy (NICM) is challenging in clinical practice. Although left ventricular reverse remodeling (LVRR) is a key prognostic marker in NICM there are few parameters able to predict it. We investigated whether a complete structural and functional cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRI) evaluation was incremental to the classic clinical-echocardiographic approach in predicting LVRR in a large cohort of NICM patients receiving evidence-based treatment. Patients with a recent diagnosis of NICM (<3 months) who underwent complete clinical, echocardiographic and cMRI assessment were consecutively enrolled from 2008 to 2016. LVRR was defined as an increase in ≥10 points or normalization of left ventricular ejection fraction, associated with a ≥10% reduction or normalization of left ventricular end-diastolic diameter at midterm (median time 20 months) echocardiographic follow-up. Among 80 NICM patients included in the study, LVRR was observed in 43 (54%). At multivariate analysis, the clinical-echocardiographic evaluation failed to identify independent predictors of LVRR. However, absence of late gadolinium enhancement (odds ratio [OR] 9.07; confidence interval [CI] 2.7 to 13.1; p value 0.0003), left ventricular mass (OR 1.018; CI 1.001 to 1.036; p value 0.045) and peak circumferential strain (OR 1.213; CI 1.011 to 1.470; p value 0.049) assessed by cMRI were independently associated with LVRR. A model for LVRR prediction based on cMRI and clinical-echocardiographic parameters performed significantly better than the clinical-echocardiographic model alone (area under curve 0.84 vs 0.72; p value 0.023). In conclusion, an integrated imaging approach with the addition of a structural and functional cMRI study to the standard-of-care evaluation improves the prediction of LVRR in a large cohort of patients with recently diagnosed NICM receiving evidence-based treatment.
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology | 2017
Carmine Mazzone; Giovanni Cioffi; Cosimo Carriere; Giorgio Faganello; Giulia Russo; Antonella Cherubini; Gianfranco Sinagra; Nadia Zeriali; Andrea Di Lenarda
Background The CHA2DS2-VASc score well stratifies the risk for thromboembolic events in non-valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) patients. This score may also predict thromboembolic events in sinus rhythm populations. Purpose The purpose of this study was to assess the prognostic role of CHA2DS2-VASc in a Caucasian community population of patients with arterial hypertension and sinus rhythm. Methods A total of 12,599 arterial hypertension residents not receiving anticoagulation were selected from a community population in Trieste between November 2009 and October 2014: 11,159 sinus rhythm and 1440 NVAF patients. We considered thromboembolic events, cardiovascular hospitalisation and all-cause death in all patients divided according to CHA2DS2-VASc. Results Sinus rhythm patients were 74 (interquartile range 65–81) years old, 50% were women, 32% with CAD, mean CHA2DS2-VASc 3.68 ± 1.47 points, significantly lower than NVAF patients (4.26 ± 1.50, P < 0.001). After 37 months follow-up, an increasing CHA2DS2-VASc corresponded to a higher rate of thromboembolic events in sinus rhythm patients, ranging from 0% in patients with a score of 1 or 2 to 2.6% in those with a score of 6 or greater (P < 0.0001). A similar trend was found in the reference NVAF group. At Cox multivariable analysis, CHA2DS2-VASc predicted thromboembolic events (hazard ratio (HR) 2.12), cardiovascular hospitalisation (HR 1.55) and all-cause death (HR 1.57). The predictive accuracy of CHA2DS2-VASc was similar in sinus rhythm and NVAF patients for thromboembolic events, cardiovascular hospitalisation and all-cause death (area under the curve statistic 0.76 vs. 0.76, 0.68 vs. 0.66, 0.64 vs. 0.64, respectively). Conclusions In a community population of Caucasian arterial hypertension patients in sinus rhythm, CHA2DS2-VASc rather well stratifies for adverse clinical events at mid-term follow-up with a similar accuracy to NVAF patients. These results might be clinically relevant in this setting of sinus rhythm patients.
Cardiology in The Young | 2008
Giorgio Faganello; Martin Nelson; Graham Stuart
Congenitally corrected transposition is a rare cardiac anomaly characterized by the combination of discordant atrioventricular and ventriculoarterial connections. Young patients with this lesion can present with congestive cardiac failure, usually secondary to a large ventricular septal defect or pulmonary stenosis. We report here our experience with a lady aged 79, admitted to our unit because of deterioration of her congestive cardiac failure as a consequence of uncorrected congenitally corrected transposition associated with degenerative severe aortic stenosis.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2016
Giulia Russo; Giovanni Cioffi; Giovanni Pulignano; Luigi Tarantini; Donatella Del Sindaco; Carmine Mazzone; Antonella Cherubini; Giorgio Faganello; Carlo Stefenelli; Michele Senni; Andrea Di Lenarda
BACKGROUND A proper prognostic stratification is crucial for organizing an effective clinical management and treatment decision-making in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF). In this study, we selected and characterized a sub-group of CHF patients at very low risk for death aiming to assess predictors of death in subjects with an expected probability of 1-year mortality near to 5%. METHODS We used the Cardiac and Comorbid Conditions HF (3C-HF) Score to identify CHF patients with the best mid-term prognosis. We selected patients belonging to the lowest quartile of 3C-HF score (≤9 points). RESULTS We recruited 1777 consecutive CHF patients at 3 Italian Cardiology Units (age 76±10years, 43% female, 32% with preserved ejection fraction). Subjects belonging to the lowest quartile of 3C-HF score were 609. During a median follow-up of 21 [12-40] months, 48 of these patients (8%) died, and 561 (92%) survived. The variables that contributed to death prediction by Cox regression multivariate analysis were older age (HR 1.03[CI 1.00-1.07]; p=0.04), male gender (HR 2.93[CI 1.50-5.51]; p=0.002) and a higher degree of renal dysfunction (HR 0.96[CI 0.94-0.98]; p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS The prognostic stratification of CHF patients by 3C-HF score allows one to select patients at different outcome and to identify the factors associated with death in outliers with a very low mortality risk at mid-term follow-up. The reasons why these patients do not outlive the matching part of subjects who expectedly survive are related to a declined renal function and unmodifiable conditions including older age and male gender.
Archive | 2014
Marco Merlo; Davide Stolfo; Giancarlo Vitrella; Elena Abate; Bruno Pinamonti; Francesco Negri; Anita Spezzacatene; Marco Anzini; Enrico Fabris; Francesca Brun; Lorenzo Pagnan; Manuel Belgrano; Giorgio Faganello; Gianfranco Sinagra
In this chapter describes clinical and imaging assessment in diagnosis and patient management of other cardiomyopathies (CMP) not included among the previously defined main groups of CMP. Most of these unclassified CMP are characterized by frequent reversibility of myocardial dysfunction after adequate treatment. The peculiar form called left ventricular noncompaction is also addressed.