Giovanni Luzzi
University of Bari
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Featured researches published by Giovanni Luzzi.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002
Maria Vittoria Pitzalis; Massimo Iacoviello; Roberta Romito; Francesco Massari; Brian Rizzon; Giovanni Luzzi; Pietro Guida; Andrea Andriani; Filippo Mastropasqua; Paolo Rizzon
OBJECTIVES The value of interventricular and intraventricular echocardiographic asynchrony parameters in predicting reverse remodeling after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) was investigated. BACKGROUND Cardiac resynchronization therapy has been suggested as a promising strategy in patients with severe heart failure and left bundle branch block (LBBB), but the entity of benefit is variable and no criteria are yet available to predict which patients will gain. METHODS Interventricular and intraventricular mechanical asynchrony was evaluated in 20 patients (8 men and 12 women, 63 +/- 10 years) with advanced heart failure caused by ischemic (n = 4) or nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy (n = 16) and LBBB (QRS duration of at least 140 ms) using echocardiographic Doppler measurements. Left ventricular end-diastolic volume index (LVEDVI) and left ventricular end-systolic volume index (LVESVI) were calculated before and one month after CRT. Patients with a LVESVI reduction of at least 15% were considered as responders. RESULTS Cardiac resynchronization therapy significantly improved ventricular volumes (LVEDVI from 150 +/- 53 ml/m(2) to 119 +/- 37 ml/m(2), p < 0.001; LVESVI from 116 +/- 43 ml/m(2) to 85 +/- 29 ml/m(2), p < 0.0001). At baseline, the responders had a significantly longer septal-to-posterior wall motion delay (SPWMD), a left intraventricular asynchrony parameter; only QRS duration and SPWMD significantly correlated with a reduction in LVESVI (r = -0.54, p < 0.05 and r = -0.70, p < 0.001, respectively), but the accuracy of SPWMD in predicting reverse remodeling was greater than that of the QRS duration (85% vs. 65%). CONCLUSIONS In patients with advanced heart failure and LBBB, baseline SPWMD is a strong predictor of the occurrence of reverse remodeling after CRT, thus suggesting its usefulness in identifying patients likely to benefit from biventricular pacing.
Europace | 2013
Pietro Palmisano; Michele Accogli; Maria Zaccaria; Giovanni Luzzi; Frida Nacci; Matteo Anaclerio; Stefano Favale
AIMS The long-term impact of implantable device-related complications on the patient outcome has not been thoroughly evaluated. The aims of this retrospective, bi-centre study were to analyse the rate and nature of device-related complications requiring surgical revision in a large series of patients undergoing device implantation, elective generator replacement and pacing system upgrade and to systematically assess the impact of such complications on patient outcome and healthcare utilization. METHODS AND RESULTS Data from 2671 consecutive procedures (1511 device implantations, 1034 elective generator replacements, and 126 pacing system upgrades) performed between January 2006 and March 2011 were retrospectively analysed. The outcome measures recorded were complication-related mortality, number of re-operations, need for complex surgical procedures, number of re-hospitalizations, and additional hospital treatment days. Over a median follow-up of 27 months, the overall rate of complications was 2.8% per procedure-year [9.5% in cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) device implantation, 6.1% in pacing system upgrade, 3.5% in implantable cardioverter defibrillator implantation, 1.7% in pacemaker implantation, and 1.7% in generator replacement). The procedure with the highest risk of complications was CRT device implantation (odds ratio: 6.6; P < 0.001); these complications primarily involved coronary sinus lead dislodgement and device infection. Patients with complications had a significantly higher number of device-related hospitalizations (2.3 ± 0.6 vs. 1.0 ± 0.1; P < 0.001) and hospital treatment days (15.7 ± 25.1 vs. 3.6 ± 1.1; P < 0.001) than those without complications. Device infection was the complication with the greatest negative impact on patient outcome. CONCLUSION Cardiac resynchronisation therapy implantation was the procedure with the highest risk of complications requiring surgical revision. Complications were associated with substantial clinical consequences and a significant increase in the number and length of hospitalizations.
European Journal of Heart Failure | 2006
Mariavittoria Pitzalis; Massimo Iacoviello; Francesca Di Serio; Roberta Romito; Pietro Guida; Elisabetta De Tommasi; Giovanni Luzzi; Matteo Anaclerio; Lucia Varraso; Cinzia Forleo; Nicola Pansini
To evaluate the role of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) in predicting the progression of heart failure (HF) after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT).
American Heart Journal | 1997
Maria Vittoria Pitzalis; Filippo Mastropasqua; Francesco Massari; Andrea Passantino; Cinzia Forleo; Giovanni Luzzi; Paolo Totaro; Marco De Nicolò; Paolo Rizzon
To identify a method for characterizing the dynamic behavior of ventricular arrhythmias at different heart rates, 201 consecutive patients with frequent premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) underwent two 24-hour electrocardiographic monitoring periods. The percentage of PVCs for each cycle length was calculated and then analyzed by linear regression analysis. On the basis of the significance of the p value, and the positive or negative value of the slope, we identified three trends: a tachycardia-enhanced pattern (p < 0.01, slope negative), a bradycardia-enhanced pattern (p < 0.01, slope positive), and an indifferent pattern (p > 0.01). During the first monitoring period, a tachycardia-enhanced pattern was present in 56 patients (28%), a bradycardia-enhanced pattern was present in 49 patients (24%), and an indifferent pattern was present in 96 patients (48%). This relationship was reproducible in 41 of the patients with a tachycardia-enhanced pattern (73%), in 29 of the patients with a bradycardia-enhanced pattern (59%), and in 70 patients with an indifferent pattern (72%). In conclusion, it is possible to identify a spontaneous trend between the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias and the length of the preceding cardiac cycle that seems to remain stable over time.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2013
Pietro Palmisano; Michele Accogli; Maria Zaccaria; Giovanni Luzzi; Frida Nacci; Matteo Anaclerio; Stefano Favale
BACKGROUND Several previous implantable loop recorder (ILR) studies have shown bradyarrhythmic events requiring a pacemaker implantation in a significant proportion of patients with unexplained syncope (US). The aim of this observational, two-centre, study was to identify the predictive factors for pacemaker implantation in a population of patients receiving an ILR for US with suspected arrhythmic aetiology. METHODS Fifty-six patients (mean age 68 years, 61% male) with a history of US and negative cardiac and neurological workup, who underwent ILR implantation, were enrolled. After the implantation, a follow-up visit was undertaken after symptomatic events or every 3 months in asymptomatic subjects. The end-point of the study was the detection of a bradyarrhythmia (with or without a syncopal recurrence) requiring pacemaker implantation. RESULTS After a median ILR observation of 22 months, a clinically significant bradyarrhythmia was detected in 11 patients (20%), of which 9 cases related to syncopal relapses. In the multivariable analysis, three independent predictive factors for pacemaker implantation were identified: an age >75 years (odd ratio [OR]: 29.9; p=0.035); a history of trauma secondary to syncope (OR: 26.8; p=0.039); and the detection of periods of asymptomatic bradycardia, not sufficient to explain the mechanism of syncope, during conventional ECG monitoring (through 24 h Holter or in hospital telemetry), performed before ILR implantation (OR: 24.7; p=0.045). CONCLUSIONS An advanced age, a history of trauma secondary to syncope, and the detection of periods of asymptomatic bradycardia during conventional ECG monitoring were independent predictive factors for bradyarrhythmias requiring pacemaker implantation in patients receiving an ILR for US.
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1998
Maria Vittoria Pitzalis; Filippo Mastropasqua; Francesco Massari; Andrea Passantino; Giovanni Luzzi; Luana Ligurgo; Roberto Colombo; Maria Giuseppina Biasco; Paolo Rizzon
Modifications in heart rate variability (HRV) parameters occur after acute myocardial infarction. The aim of this study was to evaluate the trend of HRV change during the acute phase and the first month after myocardial infarction, and establish whether they were affected by the anterior or inferior location of the infarction. The time‐domain HRV measures of 59 patients with a first uncomplicated acute myocardial infarction were computed from 24‐hour ECG recordings made on days 1, 2, 10, and 28 after hospital admission. At day 1, the mean RR cycle length (NN), the standard deviation of the NN intervals (SDNN), and the root mean square successive difference of NN intervals (RMSSD) were lower in the patients with anterior myocardial infarction. Although the parameters were similar in all of the patients at day 28, their behavior over time was different (P = 0.01): the SDNN in the patients with inferior myocardial infarction had decreased to the values found in anterior myocardial infarction patients by day 2 but, at day 10, both NN and SDNN tended to recover in both groups; RMSSD had diminished in both groups by day 2, but at day 10, had increased in the patients with anterior, but not in those with inferior myocardial infarction. These findings suggest that (1) in the very early phase of myocardial infarction, HRV is different in the two locations, (2) during the first hours of myocardial infarction patients with inferior location showed a greater vagal activity than patients with anterior location that became lower at day 10, and (3) the recovery of HRV is an early phenomenon in both groups, being already evident by the second week after myocardial infarction.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1996
Maria Vittoria Pitzalis; Filippo Mastropasqua; Francesco Massari; Andrea Passantino; Giovanni Luzzi; Cinzia Forleo; Paolo Rizzon
To explore the role of heart rate in the genesis of ventricular premature complexes whose incidence increases when the length of the preceding cardiac cycle decreases, we analyzed the effect of nadolol alone and together with atrial pacing in 4 patients. Nadolol lengthened the RR cycle and suppressed ventricular premature complexes; atrial pacing, restoring the baseline RR cycle lengths, led to the reappearance of ventricular premature complexes, suggesting the major role of heart rate.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2001
Maria Vittoria Pitzalis; Massimo Grimaldi; Matteo Anaclerio; Massimo Iacoviello; Giovanni Luzzi; Cinzia Forleo; Paolo Rizzon
We analyzed the effect of handgrip on atrial electrical activity during atrial fibrillation (AF) by recording right and left atrial activity in 15 patients with persistent AF under baseline conditions and after saline and ibutilide infusions. The handgrip test for 15 seconds, which was always associated with a significant increase in mean atrial cycle length, was recorded in both atria (right atrium: saline vs saline + handgrip 141 +/- 29 vs 171 +/- 24 ms, p <0.001; ibutilide vs ibutilide + handgrip: 197 +/- 43 vs 221 +/- 39 ms, p <0.005). Handgrip favorably modifies atrial electrophysiologic properties during AF.
Case reports in cardiology | 2017
Zefferino Palamà; Roberta Trotta; Cosimo Mandurino; Mariangela Pinto; Giovanni Luzzi; Stefano Favale
We report the case of a man affected by polymicrobial endocarditis developed on a St. Jude Medical Riata lead with a malfunction because of the outsourcing of conductors. The patient was treated with antibiotic targeted therapy and showed different bacteria at the blood cultures and then underwent transvenous leads extraction. Vegetations were highlighted on the caval, atrial, and ventricular tracts of the Riata lead, but the cultures were all negative. The externalization of Riata lead may cause the malfunction but it could also promote bacterial colonies and vegetations. In conclusion, looking for early signs of infection is mandatory during Riata leads follow-up checks.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2016
Carlo Caiati; Giovanni Luzzi; Mario Lepera; Daniela Santoro; Paolo Pollice; Isabella Lacitignola; Zefferino Palamà; Tommaso Acquaviva; Mario Catalano; Stefano Favale
Ghosts are new mass lesions in the right cardiac chamber after leads extraction, whose clinical significance is not clear. Because we do not know the true origin of ghosts, prolonged hospitalization and antibiotic therapy are considered necessary. Sixteen patients scheduled for leads removal