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Dive into the research topics where Luca Dainese is active.

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Featured researches published by Luca Dainese.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Quick, simple clamping technique in descending thoracic aortic aneurysm repair

Paolo Biglioli; Rita Spirito; Massimo Porqueddu; Marco Agrifoglio; Giulio Pompilio; Alessandro Parolari; Luca Dainese; Erminio Sisillo

BACKGROUND Although significant advances have been made in the surgical treatment of diseases affecting the descending thoracic aorta, paraplegia remains a devastating complication. We propose the quick, simple clamping technique to prevent spinal cord ischemic injury. METHODS From 1983 to 1998, 143 patients had descending thoracic aorta aneurysm repair. We divided the patients into the following three groups according to the surgical technique used: selective atriodistal bypass was used in group 1 (66 patients); simple clamping technique in group 2 (28 patients); and quick simple clamping technique in group 3 (49 patients). Mean aortic cross clamp time was 39+/-13 minutes in group 1, 37+/-11 minutes in group 2, and 17+/-6 minutes in group 3 (p<0.01 group 3 versus group 1 and group 2). RESULTS The overall incidence of paraplegia was 4.8% (7 patients), 4.5% (3 patients) in group 1, 14.3% (4 patients) in group 2, and 0 in group 3 (p<0.05 group 3 versus group 2). The overall in-hospital mortality rate was 5.5%. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed a powerful effect of aortic cross-clamping time as risk factor for both paraplegia (p<0.008), with an odds ratio of 1.03 per minute, and in-hospital mortality (p<0.001), with an odds ratio of 2.5 per minute. The mean follow-up time was 65 months with a lower overall mortality rate in group 3 than in group 1 and group 2 (p<0.05). CONCLUSION In descending thoracic aortic aneurysm repair, spinal cord perfusion can be maintained adequately without reimplantation of segmental vessels or use of atriodistal bypass when the aortic cross-clamp time is short (<15 to 20 minutes).


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Cardiopulmonary bypass and oxygen consumption: oxygen delivery and hemodynamics

Alessandro Parolari; Francesco Alamanni; Tiziano Gherli; Antonella Bertera; Luca Dainese; Cristina Costa; Mara Schena; Erminio Sisillo; Rita Spirito; Massimo Porqueddu; Paolo Rona; Paolo Biglioli

BACKGROUND This study was undertaken to investigate the relations between whole body oxygen consumption (VO2), oxygen delivery (DO2), and hemodynamic variables during cardiopulmonary bypass. METHODS One hundred one patients were studied during cooling, hypothermia, and rewarming. Oxygen consumption, DO2, hemodynamics, and DO2crit were measured at these times. RESULTS There was a direct linear relation between DO2 and VO2 during all three times. No relation between VO2 and hemodynamics was detected during cooling; during hypothermia, an inverse linear relation with peripheral arterial resistance was found. Finally, during rewarming, there was a direct relation with pump flow rate, and an inverse relation with arterial pressure and arterial resistance. The same relations among the variables were found at delivery levels above or below DO2crit. CONCLUSIONS During cardiopulmonary bypass there is a direct linear relation between DO2 and VO2; the relations with hemodynamic variables depend on the phases of cardiopulmonary bypass. This suggests that increasing delivery levels may recruit and perfuse more vascular beds, and higher delivery levels are advisable during perfusion. During rewarming and hypothermia, lower arterial resistances are also desirable to optimize VO2.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2010

Redo in aortic homograft replacement: Transcatheter aortic valve as a valid alternative to surgical replacement

Luca Dainese; Melissa Fusari; Piero Trabattoni; Paolo Biglioli

CLINICAL SUMMARY A 48-year-old woman was referred to our hospital with symptoms of ingravescent severe dyspnea. Fifteen years earlier, she had undergone placement of a 21-mm aortic valve Bravo 400 stentless xenograft (Cryolife International, Atlanta, Ga). Four years later, she underwent a valve replacement with a 21-mm mechanical prosthesis (Carbomedics, Austin, Tex) for valve degeneration, and subsequently, she received a homograft for aortic valve endocarditis. The echocardiographic control, performed during the last 15 years, showed progressive calcific valve degeneration with a peak transvascular pressure gradient of 41 mm Hg and aortic valve area of 0.5 cm. Preoperative computed tomographic angiographic analysis showed diffuse aortic root


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2010

A Bioreactor with Compliance Monitoring for Heart Valve Grafts.

Riccardo Vismara; Monica Soncini; Giuseppe Talò; Luca Dainese; Anna Guarino; Alberto Redaelli; Gianfranco Beniamino Fiore

The drawbacks of state-of-the-art heart valve prostheses lead researchers to explore the prospect of using tissue-engineered constructs as possible valve substitutes. It is widely accepted that the mechanical properties of the construct are improved with mechanical stimulation during in vitro growth. We designed a new dynamic bioreactor with the perspective of using decellularized valve homografts as scaffolds in order to produce tissue-engineered valve substitutes. The design guidelines were (a) compatibility with the procedures for the treatment of homografts; (b) delivery of finely controlled pulsatile pressure loads, which induce strain stimuli that may drive cells toward repopulation of and integration with the natural scaffold; and (c) monitoring the construct’s biomechanical status through a comprehensive index, i.e., its compliance. The handling needs during the set-up of the homograft and the use of the bioreactor were minimized. The bioreactor and its automated control system underwent tests with a compliant phantom valve. The estimated compliances are in good agreement with the measured ones. Tests were also carried out with porcine aortic samples in order to assess the hydrodynamic and biomechanical reliability. In the future, monitoring the construct’s compliance might represent a key factor in controlling the recellularization of the valve homografts, which provides awareness of the construct’s biomechanical status by real-time, non-destructive, and non-invasive means.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2010

Simultaneous quantification of 8-iso-prostaglandin-F2α and 11-dehydro thromboxane B2 in human urine by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry

Viviana Cavalca; Fabiana Minardi; Samuele Scurati; Federico Guidugli; Isabella Squellerio; Fabrizio Veglia; Luca Dainese; Anna Guarino; Elena Tremoli; Donatella Caruso

Both F(2)-isoprostanes (8-iso-PGF(2alpha)), a well-known marker of oxidative stress, and thromboxanes A(2) (TXA(2)) are involved in atherosclerosis through LDL oxidation and platelet activation. Different aspects of the pathology can be described by 8-iso-PGF(2alpha) and TXA(2) so it is important to determine both their concentrations to monitor the disease progression and/or therapy effects. We developed a simple and sensitive method based on liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, using electrospray ionization in negative-ion mode, for the simultaneous measurement of the concentration of 8-iso-PGF(2alpha) and 11-dehydro thromboxane B(2) (11-DH-TXB(2)), a TXA(2) metabolite. This method was applied to analyze urine samples collected overnight from 15 atherosclerotic patients, with documented carotid artery sclerosis (CAS), and from 20 controls. The detection limit was 0.097pg/microL for 8-iso-PGF(2alpha) and 0.375pg/microL for 11-DH-TXB(2), with a linear range of 0.78-25pg/microL; the inter- and intraday imprecision was <5% for both metabolites. These analytes were higher in CAS (P<0.005 vs controls) and were positively correlated in patients but not in controls, even after adjustment for age and gender (r=0.60; P=0.032). This highly sensitive, precise, and rapid method allows for the simultaneous determination of 8-iso-PGF(2alpha) and 11-DH-TXB(2) in human urine samples in order to evaluate oxidative stress and platelet aggregation.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2008

On- and off-pump coronary surgery and perioperative myocardial infarction: an issue between incomplete and extensive revascularization.

Francesco Alamanni; Luca Dainese; Moreno Naliato; Sebastiana Gregu; Marco Agrifoglio; Gian Luca Polvani; Paolo Biglioli; Alessandro Parolari

OBJECTIVE Complete myocardial revascularization is the standard for coronary artery bypass grafting. It has been shown, however, that off-pump coronary bypass surgery (OPCAB) may reduce completeness of revascularization without affecting perioperative myocardial infarction rates. We evaluated the influence of OPCAB on major postoperative events in a large consecutive cohort of patients, with special emphasis on risk factors for perioperative myocardial infarction. METHODS From 1995 to 2004, 5935 patients underwent isolated coronary bypass surgery; of these, 4623 (77.9%) and 1312 (22.1%) underwent on-pump coronary surgery (CABG) and OPCAB, respectively. Patients undergoing OPCAB were matched to patients undergoing CABG by propensity score; logistic regression analysis models were used to study predictors of perioperative myocardial infarction. RESULTS In matched pairs, postoperative mortality, myocardial infarction, stroke, and atrial fibrillation were similar between groups, while reoperation for bleeding, time on ventilator and red blood cell use were lower in patients undergoing OPCAB. The number of distal anastomoses was lower in patients undergoing OPCAB (2.2+/-0.80 in OPCAB vs 2.9+/-0.86 in CABG, p<0.001), as well as complete revascularization rates (61.9% in OPCAB vs 90.0% in CABG, p<0.001). Multivariate analyses, performed on preoperative and intraoperative variables, showed that both incomplete revascularization and increasing numbers of distal anastomoses (even when controlling for completeness of revascularization) were significant predictors of perioperative myocardial infarction, while CABG/OPCAB strategy did not influence it. CONCLUSIONS The choice of surgical technique did not influence the occurrence of major perioperative complications and of myocardial infarction, which is negatively affected by incomplete or too extensive revascularization strategies.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1998

Endothelial-Dependent Dynamic and Antithrombotic Properties of Porcine Aortic and Pulmonary Valves

Giulio Pompilio; Giuseppe Rossoni; A. Sala; Gian Luca Polvani; F. Berti; Luca Dainese; Massimo Porqueddu; Paolo Biglioli

BACKGROUND In the present study, the endothelium-dependent antithrombotic and dynamic properties of porcine aortic (AoV) and pulmonary valves (PuV) were investigated. METHODS Fifteen fresh AoV and 15 fresh PuV were obtained from 25 9-month-old swines. The valves were examined for endothelial function by pharmacologic evaluation (with and without endothelium) of both the endothelial-releasing capacity of prostacyclin and the endothelial-dependent dynamic response to relaxing (acetylcholine from 10[-10] mol/L to 10[-4] mol/L in AoV and PuV segments precontracted with norepinephrine [3 x 10(-6) mol/L]) and contracting (endothelin-1, from 10[-11] mol/L to 10[-5] mol/L; and NG-monomethyl-L-arginine, 10[-4] mol/L) drugs. The ultrastructural integrity of the endothelial valve layer was also examined with transmission electron microscopy. RESULTS Acetylcholine caused potent relaxation in both AoV and PuV specimens with, but not in those without, endothelium. Endothelin-1 produced a concentration-dependent tension increase in AoV and PuV with and without endothelium. However, the intrinsic activity of the peptide significantly increased in tissues without endothelium. NG-monomethyl-L-arginine evoked a progressive increase in resting tension of the preparations, but the AoV and PuV without endothelium were less sensitive to the inhibition of the nitric oxide generation. Aortic and pulmonary valves with an intact endothelium showed a spontaneous ability to release prostacyclin. The basal release of this lipidic autacoid significantly decreased in cardiac valves without endothelium. This phenomenon was observed in both basal conditions, and under stimulation with the aforementioned drugs. Transmission electron microscopy showed the perfect preservation of endothelial cells in all the preparations examined. CONCLUSIONS Valvular endothelium of AoV and PuV seems to have similar antithrombotic and dynamic functions of vascular endothelium, actively participating in valvular homeostasis.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2012

Cumulative radiation exposure during thoracic endovascular aneurysm repair and subsequent follow-up

Stefano Zoli; Piero Trabattoni; Luca Dainese; Andrea Annoni; Claudio Saccu; Miriam Fumagalli; Rita Spirito; Paolo Biglioli

OBJECTIVES Thoracic endovascular aneurysm repair (TEVAR) is an appealing alternative to the standard surgical approach, but requires rigorous radiological follow-up. The cumulative radiation exposure (RE) of patients undergoing TEVAR-including pre-operative workup, the procedure and subsequent follow-up computed tomography (CT) imaging-has not previously been investigated. METHODS From August 2003 to February 2011, 48 patients underwent TEVAR at our institution. Mean age was 66 ± 11 years, with 10 patients (21%) aged <60 years. Forty-one (85%) patients were male; 7 (15%) had urgent/emergent operation; 21 (44%) had undergone previous aortic surgery. Mean aortic diameter was 7.3 ± 2.1 cm. Intra-operative screening time and RE were reviewed, and typical institutional thoracic CT scan RE was calculated (17.8 mSv). Life expectancy of an age- and sex-matched population was estimated to assess the cumulative RE from recurrent CT follow-up. RESULTS The average screening time was 15.7 ± 11.4 min, with an RE of 11.3 ± 9 mSv. Obese patients had significantly higher RE during TEVAR (Pearsons coefficient = 0.388, P = 0.019). The RE dropped from 14.9 ± 9.4 mSv to 8.6 ± 7.9 mSv (P = 0.033) after a hybrid suite was established. Our institutional TEVAR protocol involves one pre-operative thoracoabdominal CT scan and three follow-up thoracic CT scans for the first year, with a yearly evaluation thereafter. The life expectancy of an age- and sex-matched population was 17 years. A patient adhering to our surveillance protocol would be subjected to an overall exposure of 89 mSv at 1 year and 161 mSv at 5 years, with a projected lifetime RE >350 mSv. CONCLUSIONS A 2-year RE exceeding the threshold of 100 mSv with a life expectancy >15 years can be estimated to lead to a lifetime risk increase in radiation-induced leukaemia and solid-tumour cancer >2.7%. The risks of cumulative RE especially in younger and/or obese patients must be balanced with the expected morbidity and mortality reduction in TEVAR versus traditional open repair, and the anticipated benefits of recurrent radiographic imaging.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Do Women Currently Receive the Same Standard of Care in Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Procedures as Men? A Propensity Analysis

Alessandro Parolari; Luca Dainese; Moreno Naliato; Gianluca Polvani; Claudia Loardi; Matteo Trezzi; Melissa Fusari; Cristina Beverini; Elena Tremoli; Paolo Biglioli; Francesco Alamanni

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to determine whether, in recent years, sex differences in the type of care during coronary artery bypass graft surgery procedures occurred. METHODS Between 1995 and 2004, 5,935 consecutive patients (4,867 men and 1,068 women) underwent isolated coronary artery bypass graft surgery; propensity score matching was used to investigate whether sex adversely impacts standard care and early outcomes of coronary revascularization. RESULTS Of the 1,068 women undergoing isolated coronary artery bypass graft surgery, only 280 (26.2%) were matched on propensity scores with men. Distribution of preoperative variables among matched pairs was, on average, equal. Propensity-matched women received similar number of distal anastomoses as men (2.70 +/- 0.89 versus 2.82 +/- 0.97; p = 0.13), had similar rates of complete revascularization (82.5% versus 81.6%; p = 0.78), and of off-pump procedures (24.3% versus 27.5%; p = 0.39); also, the rate of utilization of arterial grafts (left internal mammary artery 98.5% versus 98.2%; p = 0.73; right internal mammary artery 3.2% versus 3.2%; p > 0.99; radial artery 8.2% versus 9.6%; p = 0.55), as well as the number of distal anastomoses performed with arterial grafts (1.11 +/- 0.36 versus 1.13 +/- 0.39; p = 0.47), were similar in women and men. No differences were detected in major complications (in-hospital mortality, perioperative myocardial infarction, and stroke) in propensity-matched pairs, whereas women had lower reexploration for bleeding and blood transfusion rates. CONCLUSIONS The preoperative profiles of women and men were markedly different, as only one fourth of women could be matched. In the current era, after adjustment for preoperative variables, female patients received the same standard of care as men, with improved results in some minor early outcomes.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Residual antibiotics in decontaminated human cardiovascular tissues intended for transplantation and risk of falsely negative microbiological analyses

Marina Buzzi; Anna Guarino; Claudio Gatto; Sabrina Manara; Luca Dainese; Gianluca Polvani; Jana D’Amato Tothova

We investigated the presence of antibiotics in cryopreserved cardiovascular tissues and cryopreservation media, after tissue decontamination with antibiotic cocktails, and the impact of antibiotic residues on standard tissue bank microbiological analyses. Sixteen cardiovascular tissues were decontaminated with bank-prepared cocktails and cryopreserved by two different tissue banks according to their standard operating procedures. Before and after decontamination, samples underwent microbiological analysis by standard tissue bank methods. Cryopreserved samples were tested again with and without the removal of antibiotic residues using a RESEP tube, after thawing. Presence of antibiotics in tissue homogenates and processing liquids was determined by a modified agar diffusion test. All cryopreserved tissue homogenates and cryopreservation media induced important inhibition zones on both Staphylococcus aureus- and Pseudomonas aeruginosa-seeded plates, immediately after thawing and at the end of the sterility test. The RESEP tube treatment markedly reduced or totally eliminated the antimicrobial activity of tested tissues and media. Based on standard tissue bank analysis, 50% of tissues were found positive for bacteria and/or fungi, before decontamination and 2 out of 16 tested samples (13%) still contained microorganisms after decontamination. After thawing, none of the 16 cryopreserved samples resulted positive with direct inoculum method. When the same samples were tested after removal of antibiotic residues, 8 out of 16 (50%) were contaminated. Antibiotic residues present in tissue allografts and processing liquids after decontamination may mask microbial contamination during microbiological analysis performed with standard tissue bank methods, thus resulting in false negatives.

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