L. Lonati
University of Milan
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Featured researches published by L. Lonati.
Blood Pressure | 2001
Cesare Cuspidi; L. Lonati; G. Macca; Lorena Sampieri; Veronica Fusi; I. Michev; B Severgnini; M Salerno; Fabio Magrini; Alberto Zanchetti
Background: Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and increased carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) represent independent risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Objective: To evaluate the prevalence of echocardiographic LVH and common carotid artery (CCA) intima-media (IM) thickening by different criteria in a large sample of hypertensive patients referred to our Hypertension Clinic. Methods: Echocardiograms and ultrasonographic carotid examinations have been performed in 640 consecutive hypertensives referred to our outpatients hypertension unit. LVH was diagnosed using six different criteria, when left ventricular mass index (LVMI) exceeded (a)100 g/m 2 in women and 120 g/m 2 in men, (b) 110 g/m 2 in women and 125 g/m 2 in men, (c) 110 g/m 2 in women and 134 g/m 2 in men, (d) 125 g/m 2 in both sexes, (e) 47 g/h 2.7 in women and 51 g/h 2.7 in men, (f) 105 g/h in women and 126 g/h in men. Thickening of CCA IM was identified using three partition values; when IMT was (a) S 0.8 mm; (b) S 0.9 mm; (c) S 1.0 mm in both sexes. Results: Echocardiographic and ultrasonographic examinations of sufficient quality to be analysed were obtained in 611 patients (95.2%). Prevalence of LVH ranged from 18.6% (d) to 42.2% (f) and was significantly higher in men than in women by criteria (d) and (e), but slightly higher in women when using criteria (a) and (c). Eccentric hypertrophy was the most frequent type of LVH independently of the criteria used. Prevalence of IM thickening ranged from 14.7% (c) to 44.2% (a). Significant correlations between left ventricular mass (LVM)/body surface area, LVM/height and LVM/height 2.7 , and carotid IM thickness were found ( r = 0.41; p < 0.0001; r = 0.31; p < 0.0001; r = 0.30; p < 0.0001, respectively). Conclusion: The prevalence of LVH and CCA IM thickening in hypertensive patients is markedly dependent on the partition values used to define these markers of target organ damage. Considering the pivotal role of LVH and CCA IM thickening in assessing the global cardiovascular risk profile in hypertensives, improved standardization in defining LVH and carotid IM thickening is needed.
The Cardiology | 1993
L. Lonati; Cesare Cuspidi; Lorena Sampieri; Lea Boselli; Monica Bocciolone; G. Leonetti; Alberto Zanchetti
We measured the intima-media thickness of the common carotid artery (CCA) and of its bifurcation (BIF) in 20 borderline hypertensives (age 24 +/- 4 years) and in 20 normotensive subjects (age 23 +/- 6 years), as a control group. Both carotid axes have been scanned from different views on a transversal and longitudinal section. Carotid diameter and thickness were measured in the longitudinal section. CCA parameters were assessed 20 mm caudally to the flow divider. In borderline patients blood pressure (147.8 +/- 10.5/90.7 +/- 6.6 mm Hg) and left ventricular mass index (102.5 +/- 15.3 g/m2) were significantly higher than in normotensive subjects (blood pressure 120.5 +/- 11.5/78.0 +/- 5.4 mm Hg; left ventricular mass 90.5 +/- 14.3 g/m2, p < 0.01 and p < 0.05 respectively). The intima-media thickness of both the CCA and BIF was significantly higher in borderline hypertensives than in normotensives (CCA 0.6 +/- 0.08 vs. 0.4 +/- 0.05 mm, p < 0.01; BIF 0.7 +/- 0.08 vs. 0.5 +/- 0.08, p < 0.01). In the whole population there was a statistically significant correlation between the carotid wall thickness and the left ventricular mass.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
American Journal of Hypertension | 1999
Cesare Cuspidi; L. Lonati; Lorena Sampieri; L. Valagussa; I. Michev; G. Leonetti; Alberto Zanchetti
The study was designed to evaluate whether the increase in left ventricular (LV) mass in essential hypertensives (H) is associated with a proportional increase in diameter of the left coronary artery (LCA) trunk. Twenty-six hypertensives, 14 with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (left ventricular mass index [LVMI] > or =134 g/m2 in men and > or =110 g/m2 in women) and 12 without LVH, and 10 normotensive controls (C) underwent clinical laboratory and echocardiographic transthoracic examination. LV dimensions were measured according to the Penn convention and LV mass calculated by the formula of Devereux. The LCA main trunk was visualized by two-dimension short axis view at the level of the great vessels section, and the diameter measured as intima-intima distance at end-diastole. Hypertensives with and without LVH and C had similar age, sex, and body surface area distribution. LVMI was, by definition, significantly higher in H with LVH than in H without LVH and in C (144+/-21, 113+/-13, and 98+/-10 g/m2, P<.01), whereas the diameter of the LCA trunk was similar in all groups (0.48+/-0.1, 0.48, and 0.46 cm, respectively). There was no significant correlation between LVMI and LCA diameter in H (r = 0.21, P = not significant). The diameter of LCA trunk was significantly correlated only with BSA (r = 0.5, P<.01), LV end-systolic and end-diastolic diameters (r = 0.5 and r = 0.4, P<.05). Our data suggest that in H the increase in LVM is not associated with a concomitant increase of epicardial coronary artery diameter, and this finding may account in part for the impairment of coronary blood flow reserve in LVH.
The Cardiology | 2000
Cesare Cuspidi; L. Lonati; Lorena Sampieri; G. Macca; I. Michev; M Salerno; Veronica Fusi; G. Leonetti; Alberto Zanchetti
Aim: The aim of the present study was to evaluate (1) the prevalence and patterns of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and (2) the impact of blood pressure (BP) control, assessed by clinical and 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) criteria on the persistence of LVH in a representative sample of treated patients attending our Hypertension Clinic. Methods: One hundred consecutive essential hypertensives (61 m/39 f, age 56± 9 years) regularly followed up by the same medical team (average period 52 months, 12–156 months) were included in the study and underwent 24-hour ABPM and complete echocardiographic examination. Results: Twenty-eight of the 100 patients were found to have LVH [left ventricular mass index (LVMI) >125 g/m2 in men and >110 g/m2 in women]; LVH was eccentric in 20 patients and concentric in the remaining 8. LVMI did not correlate with clinical BP values but only with ABPM values (mean 24 h systolic r = 0.34, p <0.01; diastolic r = 0.37, p <0.01). The prevalence of LVH in patients controlled according to clinical BP criteria (n = 43, BP <140/90 mm Hg) was 19%, in patients controlled according to ABPM criteria (n = 30, BP during daytime <132/85 mm Hg) 17%, and in those controlled with both criteria (n = 16) 6% (p <0.01). Conclusions: The results of this study suggest that the eccentric type of LVH is the prevalent pattern in chronically treated patients. The persistence of LVH is significantly dependent on BP levels achieved during treatment; indeed the prevalence of LVH is very low in patients with an optimal BP control, whereas it is elevated (37%) in uncontrolled patients.
The Cardiology | 1992
L. Lonati; Cesare Cuspidi; Lorena Sampieri; Lea Boselli; Monica Bocciolone; G. Leonetti; Alberto Zanchetti
Since the advent of the Doppler color flow echocardiography, the presence of a small degree of insufficiency of the cardiac valves has been detected with relative frequency in structurally and functionally normal hearts. Data about this so-called physiological regurgitation are presently available only in normotensive subjects and athletes. We therefore studied the prevalence of this phenomenon in a group of patients with essential hypertension compared to a population of normotensive subjects. To this purpose, a Doppler color flow echocardiographic study was performed in 130 essential hypertensive patients (72M/58F; age 44.2 +/- 13.5 years; BP 154.3 +/- 12.8/98.3 +/- 7.1 mm Hg) without any evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy or cardiopathy and in 100 normal subjects (59M/41F; age 41.2 +/- 14.8 years; BP 119.1 +/- 8.1/79.2 +/- 8.1 mm Hg). We conclude that in patients with essential hypertension the physiological regurgitant jets are present in one or more cardiac valves; moreover, the regurgitation of the mitral and aortic valve is found with more frequency than in the normotensive control group (36.1 vs. 27.0% and 17.7 vs. 11.0%, respectively). These data suggest that the increased afterload of the left ventricle may play an important role in the pathogenesis of even minor degree of insufficiency of the cardiac valves. As this finding does not appear to have a pathological relevance, the main clinical implication of this study is that it is not advisable to create a jatrogenic heart disease in the hypertensive patients routinely screened by the echo-Doppler technique.
Blood Pressure | 1997
Cesare Cuspidi; L. Lonati; Lorena Sampieri; G. Leonetti; Maria Lorenza Muiesan; Alberto Zanchetti
Arterial hypertension may be associated with altered left ventricular filling dynamics. The specific goal of this study was to evaluate whether short-term administration of the ACE inhibitor lisinopril in hypertensive patients with an altered diastolic pattern induced an improvement of left ventricular dynamics, assessed by the echocardio-Doppler technique, independently of effects on left ventricular mass. In a double-blind cross-over study 39 essential hypertensive patients with a ratio of peak early to peak atrial velocity (E/A) < 1 were randomized, after a run-in period of 2 weeks without any antihypertensive treatment, to receive lisinopril (20 mg once a day) and placebo for 4 weeks, respectively. At the end of both the run-in and the treatment periods, blood pressure and heart rate were measured and an echocardio-Doppler examination was carried out. The echocardio-Doppler evaluation was performed both at rest and at the peak of a hand-grip test (3 min at 30% of maximal strength). Left ventricular dimensions were obtained from two-dimensionally guided M-mode tracings using the criteria of the American Society of Echocardiography. Left ventricular peak filling rates and filling rate integrals were measured by a pulsed Doppler technique. Lisinopril caused a significant reduction in systolic and diastolic blood pressure at rest (-13/-9 mmHg vs baseline values, p < 0.05; -6/-4 mmHg vs placebo values, p < 0.05) and during isometric exercise (-17/-9 mmHg vs baseline period, p < 0.05; -6/-5 mmHg vs placebo, p < 0.05). Lisinopril did not induce any significant change in left ventricular structure and systolic function. All the left ventricular filling parameters considered (E velocity, A velocity, E/A ratio) both at rest and during isometric exercise did not significantly differ after lisinopril treatment when compared to those obtained in basal conditions and after placebo administration. This double-blind cross-over study demonstrates that short-term afterload reduction induced by lisinopril does not modify altered diastolic dynamics in hypertensive patients. Diastolic dysfunction of the left ventricle is a complex process influenced by a number of functional and structural factors and apparently cannot be significantly improved by short-term blood pressure reduction by antihypertensive therapy.
Blood Pressure | 2000
Cesare Cuspidi; L. Lonati; Lorena Sampieri; I. Michev; G. Macca; Fusi; M Salerno; Alberto Zanchetti
Background: Pilot educational meetings were conducted to (1) verify the support of hypertensive patients in this initiative; (2) test the knowledge of patients regularly followed-up in our Hypertension Centre Outpatient Clinic concerning problems related to hypertension; (3) improve patients knowledge about hypertension through a formal teaching session, (4) compare the knowledge of these patients with that of a control group. Methods: An invitation to participate in an educational program on hypertension was extended to 210 consecutive patients (group I) followed-up in the outpatient clinic of our Hypertension Centre. Each meeting included four sessions: (1) an interactive phase with electronic devices aimed at evaluating the degree of information about hypertension by means of multiple-choice questionnaires, (2) a traditional teaching session, (3) an interactive phase to assess the compliance to treatment, and (4) a general discussion session. The control group (II) included 144 hypertensive patients referred for the first time to our Hypertension Centre. Before the initial visit the patients were asked to answer a questionnaire identical to that provided to group I during the meetings. Results
Archive | 1997
Cesare Cuspidi; L. Lonati; Lorena Sampieri; G. Leonetti; Alberto Zanchetti
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in humans is a common adaptive process induced by different physiological and pathological stimuli.
Annual Review of Physiology | 2018
Giuliano Tocci; Giovambattista Desideri; Elisa Roca; Calogero Calcullo; M. Crippa; Nicola De Luca; Giovanni Gaudio; L. Lonati; Leo Orselli; Angelo Scuteri; V. Vulpis; Benedetto Acone; Augusto Zaninelli
Essential hypertension is a complex clinical condition, characterized by multiple and concomitant abnormal activation of different regulatory and contra-regulatory pathophysiological mechanisms, leading to sustained increase of blood pressure (BP) levels. Asymptomatic rise of BP may, indeed, promote development and progression of hypertension-related organ damage, which in turn, increases the risk of major cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events. A progressive and independent relationship has been demonstrated between high BP levels and increased cardiovascular risk, even in the high-to-normal range. Conversely, evidence from randomized controlled clinical trials have independently shown that lowering BP to the recommended targets reduces individual cardiovascular risk, thus improving event-free survival and reducing the incidence of hypertension-related cardiovascular events. Despite these benefits, overall rates of BP control remain poor, worldwide. Currently available guidelines support a substantial equivalence amongst various antihypertensive drug classes. However, several studies have also reported clinically relevant differences among antihypertensive drugs, in terms of both BP lowering efficacy and tolerability/safety profile. These differences should be taken into account not only when adopting first-line antihypertensive therapy, but also when titrating or modulating combination therapies, with the aim of achieving effective and sustained BP control. This review will briefly describe evidence supporting the use of dihydropyridinic calcium channel blockers for the clinical management of hypertension, with a particular focus on barnidipine. Indeed, this drug has been demonstrated to be effective, safe and well tolerated in lowering BP levels and in reducing hypertension-related organ damage, thus showing a potential key role for improving the clinical management of hypertension.
American Journal of Hypertension | 1999
Cesare Cuspidi; L. Lonati; Lorena Sampieri; G. Macca; I. Michev; T. Zaro; L. Valagussa; G. Leonetti; Alberto Zanchetti
OBJECTIVESnFirst, to evaluate the prevalence of clinic blood pressure (BP) control (BP < or = 140/90 mm Hg) in a representative sample of treated hypertensive patients followed in our hypertension clinic. Second, to assess in a subgroup of these patients: (a) the proportion of BP control with both clinic blood pressure (CBP < or =140/90 mm Hg) and daytime ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) (< or =132/85 mm Hg) criteria, and (b) the prevalence of echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (left ventricular mass index, LVMI>125 g/m2 in men and >110 g/m2 in women).nnnDESIGN AND METHODSnSeven hundred consecutive hypertensive patients who attended our hypertension centre clinic during a period of 6 months and who had regularly been followed up by the same medical team were included in the study. BP was taken in the clinic by a doctor using a mercury sphygmomanometer with the participants seated. Seventy-four patients with similar demographic and clinical characteristics to the entire population of participants underwent complete echocardiographic examination and 24 h ABP monitoring.nnnRESULTSnDuring follow-up, 352 of the treated patients had clinic BP < or =140/90 mm Hg, 198< or =160/95 mm Hg and 150>160/95 mm Hg, indicating that BP control was satisfactory in 50.3%, borderline in 28.3% and unsatisfactory in 21.4% of the cases. In the subgroup of 74 patients, the proportion of individuals with satisfactory clinic BP control (CBP< or =140/90 mm Hg) was higher (50.0 versus 33.6%) than with satisfactory ABP control (daytime ABP values < or =132/85 mm Hg). LVH was found in 21 of the 74 patients (28.3%): 12 of them had unsatisfactory CBP control and 19 had unsatisfactory ABP control. LVMI did not correlate with CBP values but only with ABP values (mean 24 h systolic r = 0.47, diastolic r = 0.40, P<0.001; mean daytime systolic r = 0.45, mean daytime diastolic r = 0.39, P<0.001; mean night-time systolic r = 0.38, mean night-time diastolic r = 0.38, P<0.001).nnnCONCLUSIONnThis study demonstrates that hypertensive patients managed in a hypertension centre clinic have satisfactory CBP control in 50% of cases, but this rate seems to over-estimate the effective BP control during daily life. A large fraction of patients show persistence of LVH and this evidence of organ damage almost entirely concerns individuals with poor ABP control.