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Dive into the research topics where Giorgio Meneghetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Giorgio Meneghetti.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2006

Low ankle–brachial index predicts an adverse 1‐year outcome after acute coronary and cerebrovascular events

Giancarlo Agnelli; C. Cimminiello; Giorgio Meneghetti; S. Urbinati

Summary.  Background: Low ankle–brachial Index (ABI) identifies patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic peripheral arterial disease. The aim of this study was to correlate ABI value (normal or low) with 1‐year clinical outcome in patients hospitalized for acute coronary syndromes or cerebrovascular diseases (CVD). Methods: ABI was measured in consecutive patients hospitalized because of acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina, stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA). An ABI lower than or equal to 0.90 was considered abnormal. The primary outcome of the study was the composite of non‐fatal acute myocardial infarction, non‐fatal ischemic stroke, and death from any cause during the year following the index event. Results: An abnormal ABI was found in 27.2% of 1003 patients with acute coronary syndromes, and in 33.5% of 755 patients with acute CVD. After a median follow‐up of 372 days, the frequency of the primary outcome was 10.8% (57/526) in patients with abnormal ABI and 5.9% (73/1232) in patients with normal ABI [odds ratio (OR) 1.96; 95% CI 1.36–2.81]. Death was more common in patients with abnormal ABI (OR 2.05; 95% CI 1.31–3.22). Cardiovascular mortality accounted for 81.7% of overall mortality. ABI was predictive of adverse outcome after adjustment for vascular risk factors in the logistic regression analysis (OR 1.93; 95% CI 1.24–3.01). The predictive value of ABI was mainly accounted for by patients hospitalized for acute coronary syndromes (adverse outcome: 12.8% in patients with abnormal ABI and 5.9% in patients with normal ABI, OR 2.35; 95% CI 1.47–3.76). Conclusions: An abnormal ABI can be found in one‐third of patients hospitalized for acute coronary or cerebrovascular events and is a predictor of an adverse 1‐year outcome.


Stroke | 2000

The Quest for Early Predictors of Stroke Evolution Can TCD Be a Guiding Light

Claudio Baracchini; Renzo Manara; Mario Ermani; Giorgio Meneghetti

Background and Purpose The present study aimed at evaluating the prognostic value of transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) in the acute phase of ischemic stroke, when major therapeutic decisions must be made. Methods Seventy-three patients with a first-ever ischemic hemispheric stroke underwent neurological assessment according to the Unified Neurological Stroke Scale, clinical subgrouping according to the criteria of Bamford, CT scan, cervical duplex sonography, and TCD, all within 12 hours from stroke onset. TCD was repeated on days 2 and 7. Patients were followed for 90 days, during which we calculated the fatality rate and then assessed clinical outcome. Results Emergency TCD revealed middle cerebral artery (MCA) no-flow in 24 cases and MCA asymmetry in 30 subjects. Serial TCD showed early (<24 hours) MCA recanalization in 6 patients. After 90 days, no patient with MCA occlusion at admission was autonomous, while 17 of 19 patients (89.5%) with a normal baseline TCD were independent. The fatality rate at 3 months was 21% but was 46% in patients with MCA occlusion and 61% in patients without signs of early MCA recanalization. Total anterior circulation infarct and abnormal TCD were significantly correlated (P <0.001) with higher mortality rate and worse outcome (Barthel Index score ≤60), whereas early CT ischemic signs and severe carotid disease were not. Furthermore, TCD identified within the total anterior circulation infarct subgroup 2 prognostic clusters according to MCA patency at admission (P <0.001). Logistic regression selected normal baseline TCD as an independent predictor of good long-term outcome and MCA no-flow as an independent predictor of disability or death. Conclusions TCD findings play an important role in the early prognosis of anterior circulation stroke, providing possible guidance for therapeutic interventions.


Neurology | 2008

Right-to-left shunt does not increase white matter lesion load in migraine with aura patients

Alessandro Adami; G Rossato; R Cerini; Vincent Thijs; R Pozzi-Mucelli; Gian Paolo Anzola; M Del Sette; Cinzia Finocchi; Giorgio Meneghetti; Carla Zanferrari

Background: White matter lesions (WMLs) are commonly found on brain MRI of migraine patients. Migraine with aura (MA+) is associated with an increased frequency of right-to-left shunt (RLS) mostly due to patent foramen ovale. The relationship between WML load and RLS in MA+ is currently unknown. Methods: MA+ patients were consecutively enrolled as part of the Shunt Associated Migraine (SAM) study. Patients underwent a standardized headache and vascular risk factors questionnaire, contrast-enhanced transcranial Doppler, blood coagulation tests, and brain MRI. RLS was categorized into four grades: no shunt, <10 microbubbles (mb), >10 mb single spikes pattern, and >10 mb shower/curtain pattern. Standard and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery T2-weighted MRI sequences were inspected for WMLs by three independent raters blinded to RLS grade. WML load was scored in the periventricular areas (PV-WMLs) with the Fazekas scale and in the deep white matter (D-WMLs) with the Scheltens scale. Interobserver agreement was good to excellent (κ = 0.64 to 0.96, p < 0.0001). WML load was then correlated between patients with and without RLS. Results: One hundred eighty-five patients (77% women) were included. PV-WML load was similar between patients with and without RLS. D-WML load decreased in patients with RLS (p = 0.045). On logistic regression analysis, only age was associated with WMLs (p < 0.001). Conclusions: The presence of right-to-left shunt does not increase white matter lesion load in patients who have migraine with aura.


Neurology | 2010

Neurosonographic monitoring of 105 spontaneous cervical artery dissections A prospective study

Claudio Baracchini; Simone Tonello; Giorgio Meneghetti; Enzo Ballotta

Objective: To monitor the sonographic course of spontaneous cervical artery dissections (sCADs) and investigate their recanalization and recurrence rates. Methods: All consecutive patients with an MRI-proven sCAD were prospectively evaluated by neurovascular ultrasound (nUS) daily while in hospital, then monthly for the first 6 months after discharge and every 6 months thereafter, for a mean follow-up period of 58 months (range, 28–96 months). Results: A total of 105 sCADs were detected in 76 patients: 61 (58.1%) involved the internal carotid artery and 44 (41.9%) the vertebral artery, while multiple sCADs were found in 4 patients (5.3%). Follow-up was obtained in 74 patients (97.3%, 103 vessels). The complete and hemodynamically significant (<50% stenosis) recanalization rates were 51.4% (53/103) and 20.4% (21/103). All but one complete recanalization occurred within the first 9 months. There were early recurrences (while in hospital) in 20 previously unaffected arteries (26.3%) and late recurrences in 2 arteries (2.7%), site of a previous sCAD. All patients (n = 6) with a family history of arterial dissection had a sCAD recurrence (4 early and 2 late) as opposed to 16 (22.8%) among those with no known familial disease (p < 0.001). Conclusions: These results suggest that most lumen changes occur within the first few months after the initial event, but recanalization may occur even after 1 year. Early recurrence is not uncommon and usually involves arteries previously unaffected by dissection, while the risk of late recurrence is low. A family history of arterial dissection is strongly associated with sCAD recurrence.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2008

Carotid Endarterectomy within 2 weeks of minor ischemic stroke: A prospective study

Enzo Ballotta; Giorgio Meneghetti; Giuseppe Da Giau; Renzo Manara; Marina Saladini; Claudio Baracchini

OBJECTIVE Data from multicenter symptomatic trials have shown that benefit from carotid endarterectomy (CEA) was greatest in patients with carotid disease operated within 2 weeks of their last ischemic event. We prospectively analyzed the safety and benefit of CEA performed within 2 weeks of a stroke. METHODS The study involved patients with acute minor stroke admitted to two stroke units who underwent CEA within 2 weeks of their last ischemic event, once they were considered neurologically stable. Preoperative workup included scoring ischemia-related symptoms according to a modified ranking scale (mRS), carotid duplex scan, transcranial Doppler ultrasound, and head computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. All patients underwent neurological assessment on admission, 1 day before and 2 days after CEA, and at discharge. A complete neurological and ultrasound follow-up was performed at 1, 6, and 12 months after CEA, then yearly. All procedures were eversion CEA under deep general anesthesia, with selective shunting. Endpoints were perioperative (30-day) stroke/mortality rate or cerebral bleeding and long-term stroke recurrence or cerebral hemorrhage. RESULTS Between 2000 and 2005, 102 patients with a mRS </= 2 underwent CEA within a median 8 days of acute ischemic stroke. Shunting and contralateral carotid occlusion were found significantly correlated. There were no perioperative strokes or deaths, or cerebral hemorrhage. All patients were followed up for a mean 34 months (range 1-66) with no recurrent stroke or cerebral bleeding. CONCLUSIONS CEA can be performed within 2 weeks of carotid-related ischemic stroke with no perioperative stroke or cerebral bleeding, preventing the risk of stroke recurrence.


Cephalalgia | 2008

Is migraine associated with right-to-left shunt a separate disease? Results of the SAM study

Gian Paolo Anzola; Giorgio Meneghetti; Carla Zanferrari; Alessandro Adami; L. Dinia; M Del Sette

Migraine with aura (MA) is associated with the persistence of patent foramen ovale (PFO) in about 50% of cases, and migraineurs tend to have larger shunts than controls, suggesting that right-to-left shunt (RILES) determined by PFO could play a role in triggering migraine attacks. Moreover, some preliminary reports have suggested that PFO closure may give relief to both migraine and aura attacks. The aim of this study was to clarify if shunt-associated migraine (SAM) has clinical features that allow a distinction from shunt-unrelated migraine (SUM), in a prospective, multicentre, observational study (SAM study). We enrolled consecutive MA patients, who underwent a structured, standardized questionnaire for family and personal history and for detailed migraine features. All were systematically screened for RILES with transcranial Doppler, and for coagulation disorders. Overall, 460 patients were included; the SUM and SAM classes comprised 58% and 42% of patients, respectively. SAM patients were significantly younger (34.1 ± 10 vs. 37.1 ± 11 years), had a more frequent family history of migraine (76% vs. 66%) and a higher frequency of sensory symptoms of aura (51% vs. 41%); by contrast, there was a lesser association of SAM with other cardiac abnormalities and with coagulation disorders. The SAM study suggests that the effect of RILES on migraine features is not relevant. The higher family history of migraine in SAM suggests a possible genetic linkage between migraine and RILES.


European Neurology | 1997

Results of Electroencephalographic Monitoring during 369 Consecutive Carotid Artery Revascularizations

Enzo Ballotta; Giuseppe Dagiau; Marina Saladini; Tomaso Bottio; Elvira Abbruzzese; Giorgio Meneghetti; Marco Guerra

A continuous intraoperative EEG monitoring was performed in 369 consecutive carotid artery revascularizations (CARs) (321 patients) to minimize the intraoperative neurological morbidity. There were 227 carotid endarterectomies and patch graft angioplasty (198 patients), 79 carotid eversion endarterectomies (70 patients) and 58 internal carotid artery reimplantations into the common carotid artery (48 patients). Indications for CARs were TIAs (141, 43.9%), amaurosis fugax (60, 18.6%) and fixed or partial nonprogressing stroke (14, 4.3%). One hundred and six patients (33.1%) were asymptomatic. EEG abnormalities consistent with cerebral ischemia occurred in 97 (26.3%) operations. The indwelling shunt (IS) was used in 73 cases; in the remaining 24 (24.7%), IS was not used on purpose because the surgical procedure was carried out successfully within 5-6 min after the appearance of EEG changes. All patients awoke from the anesthesia without any neurological deficit. Five patients presented with a major stroke within postoperative day 1 and 2, and 1 patient died on postoperative day 10. In 2 of these cases, the intraoperative EEG monitoring was absolutely normal and the IS was not used: the carotid occlusion was due to technical errors. The most striking finding of this series is the absence of false-negative results in continuous EEG monitoring. EEG monitoring appears an available and useful method for the detection of cerebral ischemia secondary to carotid cross-clamping and contributes to put at zero the intraoperative complications of the surgical procedure.


Journal of Hypertension | 2012

Heritability of central blood pressure and arterial stiffness: a twin study.

David Laszlo Tarnoki; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Emanuela Medda; Rodolfo Cotichini; Lorenza Nisticò; Corrado Fagnani; Pierleone Lucatelli; Emanuele Boatta; Chiara Zini; Fabrizio Fanelli; Claudio Baracchini; Giorgio Meneghetti; Janos Osztovits; György Jermendy; István Préda; Róbert Gábor Kiss; Júlia Métneki; Tamás Horváth; Kinga Karlinger; Adel Racz; Andrea Molnár; Levente Littvay; Zsolt Garami; Viktor Berczi; Giuseppe Schillaci

Objective: Central blood pressure and aortic stiffness have been consistently reported as strong cardiovascular risk factors. Twin studies by comparing identical with nonidentical twins produce information on the relative contribution of genes and environment. Methods: One hundred and fifty-four monozygotic (MZ) and 42 dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs (age 43 ± 17 years) from Hungary and the United States underwent brachial and central augmentation index (AIx), brachial and central pressure, and aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) measurements with the invasively validated Arteriograph device. Bivariate Cholesky decomposition models were applied. Results: Age-adjusted, sex-adjusted and country-adjusted heritability was 60.0% for central SBP [95% confidence interval (CI), 44.8–69.6%], 50.1% for aortic PWV (95%CI, 26.0–66.8%), 48.7% for aortic AIx (95%CI, 1.7–74.0%), 46.8% for brachial AIx (95%CI, 1.1–73.8%), 46.7% for central pulse pressure (PP) (95%CI, 12.4–61.4%), and 30.0% for brachial PP (95%CI, 0.0–53.4%). Central SBP and PP had strong bivariate correlations with brachial (r = 0.461 and 0.425) and central AIx (r = 0.457 and 0.419), as well as with aortic PWV (r = 0.341 and 0.292, all P < 0.001). Brachial PP had a weak correlation with brachial AIx (r = −0.118, P < 0.05), central AIx (r = −0.122, P < 0.05), and none with aortic PWV (r = 0.08, P = n.s.). Genetic factors explained a moderate phenotypic correlation between central PP, SBP, brachial SBP and aortic PWV. Conclusions: Central systolic and PPs, brachial PP, AIx, aortic PWV are moderately heritable. A moderate genetic covariance among aortic PWV and central PP, central SBP and brachial SBP was found.


Atherosclerosis | 2013

Association of body mass index with arterial stiffness and blood pressure components: a twin study.

David Laszlo Tarnoki; Leonie H. Bogl; Emanuela Medda; Corrado Fagnani; Lorenza Nisticò; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Sonia Brescianini; Pierleone Lucatelli; Emanuele Boatta; Chiara Zini; Fabrizio Fanelli; Claudio Baracchini; Giorgio Meneghetti; Janos Osztovits; György Jermendy; Róbert Gábor Kiss; István Préda; Kinga Karlinger; Andrea Molnár; Levente Littvay; Zsolt Garami; Viktor Berczi; Giacomo Pucci; Gyorgy Baffy; Giuseppe Schillaci; Kirsi H. Pietiläinen

RATIONALE Obesity, blood pressure and arterial stiffness are heritable traits interconnected to each other but their possible common genetic and environmental etiologies are unknown. METHODS We studied 228 monozygotic and 150 dizygotic twin pairs aged 18-82 years from Italy, Hungary and the United States, of which 45 monozygotic and 38 dizygotic pairs were discordant for body mass index (BMI; intrapair difference (Δ) in BMI ≥ 3 kg/m(2)). Blood pressure components and arterial stiffness were measured by TensioMed Arteriograph. RESULTS Hypertension was more prevalent among obese than non-obese individuals (55% vs. 29%, p < 0.001). Age-, sex- and country-adjusted heritability estimates were high for hemodynamic measures (45%-58%) and BMI (78%). According to bivariate Cholesky decomposition, phenotypic correlations between BMI and blood pressure components (r = -0.15 to 0.24, p < 0.05) were largely explained by additive genetic factors (65%-77%) with the remaining explained by the unique environment. When controlling for genetic factors within all monozygotic pairs, ΔBMI was significantly correlated with Δbrachial systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), Δmean arterial pressure, and Δaortic SBP (r = 0.15-0.17, p < 0.05). For the same measures, heavier co-twins of BMI-discordant monozygotic pairs had significantly higher values than their leaner counterparts (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION Blood pressure components are moderately correlated with BMI, largely because of shared genetic factors. However, for the association of BMI with brachial SBP and DBP, aortic SBP and mean arterial pressure, acquired, modifiable factors were also found to be important.


Stroke | 2012

Evidence for a Strong Genetic Influence on Carotid Plaque Characteristics An International Twin Study

Claudio Baracchini; David Laszlo Tarnoki; Pierleone Lucatelli; Emanuele Boatta; Chiara Zini; Fabrizio Fanelli; Andrea Molnár; Giorgio Meneghetti; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Emanuela Medda; Rodolfo Cotichini; Lorenza Nisticò; Corrado Fagnani; Janos Osztovits; György Jermendy; István Préda; Róbert Gábor Kiss; Júlia Métneki; Tamás Horváth; Giacomo Pucci; Pal Bata; Kinga Karlinger; Levente Littvay; Viktor Berczi; Zsolt Garami; Giuseppe Schillaci

Background and Purpose— Few family studies reported moderate genetic impact on the presence and scores of carotid plaques. However, the heritability of carotid plaque characteristics remains still unclear. Twin studies more reliably estimate the relative contribution of genes to these traits in contrast to family study design. Methods— One hundred ninety-two monozygotic and 83 dizygotic adult twin pairs (age 49±15 years) from Italy, Hungary, and the United States underwent B-mode and color Doppler ultrasound of bilateral common, internal, and external carotid arteries. Results— Age-, sex-, and country-adjusted heritability was 78% for the presence of carotid plaque (95% CI, 55%–90%), 74% for plaque echogenicity (hypoechoic, hyperechoic, or mixed; 95% CI, 38%–87%), 69% for plaque size (area in mm2 in longitudinal plane; < or >50 percentile; 95% CI, 16%–86%), 74% for plaque sidedness (unilateral or bilateral; 95% CI, 25%–90%), 74% for plaque numerosity (95% CI, 26%–86%), 68% (95% CI, 40%–84%), and 66% (95% CI, 32%–90%) for the presence of plaque in carotid bulbs and proximal internal carotid arteries. No role of shared environmental factors was found. Unique environmental factors were responsible for the remaining variance (22%–34%). Controlling for relevant covariates did not change the results significantly. Conclusions— The heritability of ultrasound characteristics of carotid plaque is high. Unshared environmental effects account for a modest portion of the variance. Our findings should stimulate the search for genes responsible for these traits.

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Emanuela Medda

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Corrado Fagnani

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Fabrizio Fanelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Levente Littvay

Central European University

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