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Dive into the research topics where M. Cortellaro is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Cortellaro.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1992

The PLAT Study: hemostatic function in relation to atherothrombotic ischemic events in vascular disease patients. Principal results. PLAT Study Group. Progetto Lombardo Atero-Trombosi (PLAT) Study Group.

M. Cortellaro; C. Boschetti; E. Cofrancesco; C. Zanussi; M. Catalano; G. de Gaetano; Livio Gabrielli; B Lombardi; Giorgina Specchia; L. Tavazzi

The Progetto Lombardo Atero-Trombosi (PLAT) Study was a prospective, multicenter, multidisciplinary study of the association among hemostatic variables, conventional risk factors, and atherothrombotic events in four groups of patients with preexisting vascular ischemic disease (335 myocardial infarction survivors, 123 patients with stable angina pectoris, 160 with transient ischemic attacks, and 335 with peripheral vascular disease). In the myocardial infarction group, univariate analysis showed that atherothrombotic events were associated with high fibrinogen (p = 0.001), factor VIII:C (p less than 0.001), and von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag) (p = 0.004) levels and with low high density lipoprotein cholesterol (p = 0.043), factor VII (p = 0.019), and protein C (p = 0.044) levels; multivariate analysis produced associations with high fibrinogen and factor VIII:C levels and low protein C levels. By both univariate and multivariate analysis, events in the angina pectoris group were associated with high vWF:Ag (p = 0.026) and leukocyte (p = 0.033) levels and the presence of carotid arterial stenosis (p = 0.063); associations with high leukocyte (p = 0.037) and factor VIII:C (p = 0.186) levels, family history (p = 0.031), and diabetes (p = 0.061) were also found in the group with transient ischemic attacks. In those with peripheral vascular disease, events were associated with Fontaine stage greater than or equal to IIB (p = 0.024), high factor VIII:C levels (p = 0.073), and low protein C (p = 0.028), fibrinogen (p = 0.030), antithrombin III (p = 0.054), and factor VII (p = 0.057) levels by univariate analysis and with Fontaine stage and low fibrinogen levels by multivariate analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1993

Increased fibrin turnover and high PAI-1 activity as predictors of ischemic events in atherosclerotic patients. A case-control study. The PLAT Group.

M. Cortellaro; E. Cofrancesco; C. Boschetti; Luciana Mussoni; M B Donati; M Cardillo; M. Catalano; Livio Gabrielli; B Lombardi; G Specchia

A case-control comparison within the framework of the prospective, multidisciplinary PLAT Study was performed to assess whether altered baseline fibrinolytic variables were associated with an elevated risk of ischemic thrombotic events in patients with documented coronary, cerebral, and/or peripheral atherosclerotic disease. Fibrinogen, D-dimer, tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen, and fibrinolytic activity before and after venous stasis (delta = difference between the two values), t-PA inhibitor, and lipid levels in 60 atherosclerotic patients with a thrombotic event during the first year of follow-up were compared with those in 94 atherosclerotic patients without such events, who were matched for age, sex, and diagnosis at enrollment. Events were associated with a higher release of delta t-PA antigen (P = .047), higher D-dimer (P = .024), and higher t-PA inhibitor (P = .001) levels. delta Fibrinolytic activity was correlated inversely with t-PA inhibitor (P < .01) and triglycerides (P < .05). D-Dimer was also correlated with systolic blood pressure (P < .01). Atherosclerotic patients at higher risk of thrombotic ischemic events are characterized by increased fibrin turnover and impaired fibrinolytic activity due to high t-PA inhibitor levels. This hemostatic disequilibrium may participate with conventional risk factors such as elevated triglyceride levels and systolic blood pressure in the multifactorial mechanism of ischemic sequelae in patients with preexisting vascular atherothrombotic disease.


Thrombosis Research | 1991

Short- and long-term effects of hormone replacement therapy (transdermal estradiol vs oral conjugated equine estrogens, combined with medroxyprogesterone acetate) on blood coagulation factors in posimenopausal women

C. Boschetti; M. Cortellaro; T. Nencioni; V. Bertolli; A. Della Volpe; C. Zanussi

We compared the effects on hemostatic variables of transdermal estradiol and oral equine conjugated estrogens (CEE), both combined with medroxyprogesterone acetate, in 40 postmenopausal women, 22 randomly allocated to transdermal estradiol and 18 to CEE. Antithrombin III (AtIII), fibrinogen, factor VII, factor VIII and tissue plasminogen activator before and after venous stasis were measured at the start of therapy and after two and four months in all patients, and after 12 months in a subgroup of 21 patients (12 from the estradiol and nine from the CEE group). In the short-term study (two and four months), analysis of variance did not reveal any significant difference between treatments for any of the hemostatic variables. A significant treatment by time interaction was found only for fibrinogen levels: at two months they were significantly higher in the estradiol group. In the long-term study (12 months), a significant decrease in AtIII and a significant increase in factor VIII were observed in both groups, without differences between treatments. The clinical relevance of the observed changes is doubtful, but nevertheless they should be considered in a more extensive evaluation of the potential cardiovascular risk and benefits of hormone use.


Atherosclerosis | 1991

The PLAT Study: a multidisciplinary study of hemostatic function and conventional risk factors in vascular disease patients

M. Cortellaro; C. Boschetti; E. Cofrancesco; C. Zanussi; M. Catalano; G. de Gaetano; Livio Gabrielli; B Lombardi; Giorgina Specchia; L. Tavazzi; Elena Tremoli; A. Della Volpe; Elio Polli; G. Agrifoglio; O. Bugiani; F. Cobelli; M.B. Donati; Silvio Garattini; Libretti A; P. Mantegazza; C. Montemartini; Rodolfo Paoletti

In this paper are reported the basal results of a multidisciplinary, multicenter study designed to explore in a population with ischemic disease the relation between hemostatic variables, conventional risk factors and atherothrombotic sequelae. 953 patients less than or equal to 69 yrs with documented coronary, cerebral or peripheral atherosclerotic disease were studied and followed-up for 24 months. Examinations included hemostatic and lipid laboratory assays, arterial Doppler examination, cerebral computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance, exercise electrocardiogram and coronary angiography. Fibrinogen (301.4 +/- 71.52 mg/dl) correlated positively with antithrombin III (r = 0.27) and leukocytes (r = 0.25), negatively with HDL-cholesterol (r = 0.18) and tended to increase with smoking. Heavy smokers had higher leukocyte counts than non-smokers (8.0 +/- 2.0 vs. 7.2 +/- 2.1 x 10(3)/microliters), higher triglycerides (1.87 +/- 1.12 vs. 1.53 +/- 1.35 mmol/l) and lower HDL-cholesterol (0.93 +/- 0.27 vs. 1.00 +/- 0.25 mmol/l). FVII correlated positively with triglycerides (r = 0.16) and protein C (r = 0.45). vWF:Ag (145.4 +/- 70.58%) ad FVII:C (139.7 +/- 59.10%) were positively correlated (r = 0.44). FVIII:C correlated positively with fibrinogen (r = 0.21). Myocardial infarction survivors with associated cerebral and peripheral vascular lesions had higher FVIII:C, FVII, fibronogen and vWF:Ag. These findings suggest that hemostatic factors may enhance and/or mediate the effects of conventional risk factors in atherothrombotic ischemic events.


Stroke | 1996

Relation Between Hemostatic Variables and Increase of Common Carotid Intima-Media Thickness in Patients With Peripheral Arterial Disease

M. Cortellaro; Damiano Baldassarre; E. Cofrancesco; Elena Tremoli; Alvaro Colombo; C. Boschetti; Rodolfo Paoletti

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Increases in common carotid intima-media thickness (CC-IMT), as measured by B-mode ultrasonography, have been widely used in both population studies and clinical trials in the search for risk factors for early atherosclerosis progression and have been found to correlate with age and with high concentrations of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, leukocytes, and hemoglobin. We have now investigated the relation between several baseline hemostatic and conventional risk factors and CC-IMT changes over 16 months in 64 patients with peripheral arterial disease randomly selected from the prospective PLAT study series. METHODS Samples from 24 patients (37.5%) who showed increases in CC-IMT during the follow-up period were compared with those from 40 (62.5%) in whom CC-IMT remained unchanged. RESULTS Baseline conventional risk factors and coagulation variables were similar in the two groups except for higher plasma concentrations of von Willebrand factor (vWF) (178.3 +/- 53.6% versus 141.2 +/- 53.7%, P=.01) and factor VII (FVII) (133.9 +/- 36.4% versus 107.0 +/- 27.3%, P=.001) in the patients with increased CC-IMT. CC-IMT increase correlated positively with plasma levels of FVII (r=.31, P<.01) and vWF (r=.31, P<.01). Multiple stepwise regression analysis identified FVII as the only independent variable associated with an increase in CC-IMT (beta=.83, P=.01). CONCLUSIONS High plasma concentration of FVII and vWF may be associated with the progression of early carotid atherosclerosis in patients with peripheral arterial disease.


European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 1991

Cyclic hormonal replacement therapy after the menopause: transdermal versus oral treatment.

M. Cortellaro; T. Nencioni; C. Boschetti; S. Ortolani; F. Buzzi; B. Francucci; M.P Caraceni; P. Abelli; F. Polvani; C. Zanussi

SummaryIn an open, randomized, comparative, between-patient trial, 45 postmenopausal women were treated for 4 months with cyclical transdermal oestradiol 0.05 mg per day or oral conjugated equine oestrogens 0.625 mg per day, in both cases, plus, medroxyprogesterone acetate 10 mg per day on the last 8 days of each cycle. Similar relief from postmenopausal symptoms was obtained with both treatments. Post-treatment histological evaluation of the endometrium did not reveal neoplastic or hyperplastic change in any patient.Early follicular-phase plasma oestradiol levels were observed only after transdermal oestradiol. There was a significant reduction in serum total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol in both treatment groups, with no difference between treatments, whereas serum triglyceride levels were decreased only by transdermal oestradiol. Plasma calcium and phosphorus fell significantly and serum intact parathyroid hormone rose significantly, with no difference between the therapies. No significant changes were observed in clotting factors.Transdermal oestradiol appears to be an effective and safe hormonal replacement therapy, and this route of administration may be responsible for the more useful action of the drug on serum lipids and plasma oestradiol levels.


European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 1984

Pharmacokinetics of S-adenosyl-L-methionine in healthy volunteers.

P. Giulidori; M. Cortellaro; G. Moreo; G. Stramentinoli

SummaryS-Adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet) kinetics was studied in 6 male subjects given 100 and 500 mg i. v. Drug concentrations in plasma and urine were assayed using a radioenzymatic method. Pharmacokinetic parameters were estimated according to an open two-compartment model. The apparent volumes of distribution after the 100 and 500 mg doses were 407±27 and 443±36 ml/kg (mean±SEM), terminal half-lives 81±8 and 101±7 min and body clearances 3.7±0.5 and 3.1±0.2 ml/min per kg. Urinary excretion was 34±3 and 40±2% of the administered dose. The results demonstrate that drug disposition occurs more via metabolism than via renal excretion, and it is not dependent on the administered dose. Binding of AdoMet to serum proteins is negligible.


Acta Haematologica | 1984

Response to vincristine treatment in a case of idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome with multiple clinical manifestations.

E. Cofrancesco; M. Cortellaro; Enrico Maria Pogliani; Carla Boschetti; M. Salvatore; Elio Polli

A case is reported of idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome involving many organs and systems and with a wide range of clinical findings: hematologic, cardiovascular, skin, pulmonary, spleen, liver, and gastrointestinal. Mortality in such patients is very high, but aggressive medical treatment (vincristine 2 mg/week for 5 weeks) produced a significant clinical benefit and considerably improved our patients prognosis.


Thrombosis Research | 1995

Association of lipoprotein(a) with atherothrombotic events and fibrinolytic variables. A case-control study

Guido Franceschini; E. Cofrancesco; Omid Safa; C. Boschetti; Elena Tremoli; Luciana Mussoni; Cesare R. Sirtori; M. Cortellaro

Elevated plasma levels of lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] have been associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether Lp(a) plasma levels were associated with subsequent ischemic events and with fibrinolytic variables in patients with established atherosclerotic disease enrolled in the prospective PLAT study. Lp(a) levels and fibrinolytic variables in 37 atherosclerotic patients who subsequently developed an atherothrombotic event during the first year of follow-up (cases) were compared with those in paired controls, matched for age, sex, diagnosis at enrollment and lipid pattern, who remained free from vascular events during the same time frame. Median and mean Lp(a) levels were similar in cases (6.05 mg/dl; 13.8 +/- 19.4 mg/dl) and controls (6.05 mg/dl; 17.1 +/- 21.6 mg/dl). In the whole group plasma Lp(a) levels correlated significantly with the increase of t-PA antigen (r = 0.368; p = 0.002) and fibrinolytic activity (r = 0.410; p = 0.001) induced by venous stasis but not with baseline fibrinolytic variables. These findings indicate that in patients with established atherosclerotic disease Lp(a) may interfere in vivo with the fibrinolytic process but is not predictive of subsequent ischemic events.


Thrombosis Research | 1994

Dermatan sulphate for the treatment of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in acute leukaemia: A randomised, heparin-controlled pilot study

E. Cofrancesco; C. Boschetti; Patrizia Leonardi; Francesco Gianese; M. Cortellaro

Efficacy and safety of i.v. dermatan sulphate (DS) and heparin (H) in controlling laboratory alterations due to DIC were compared in 10 patients with acute leukaemia, in a prospective, randomised pilot study. The time courses of the coagulation and fibrinolysis markers for DIC were similar in the two treatment groups except for activated partial thromboplastin time and thrombin time, which were prolonged in the H but not in the DS group. Blood product support tended to be greater in the H than in the DS group. DS appears to be as effective as H in controlling thrombin production during leukaemic cytolysis and may represent a safer alternative to H in the management of DIC in acute leukaemia.

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C. Boschetti

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Carla Boschetti

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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