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Dive into the research topics where Maria Chiara Matteucci is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Chiara Matteucci.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2005

Left Ventricular Geometry in Children with Mild to Moderate Chronic Renal Insufficiency

Maria Chiara Matteucci; Elke Wühl; Stefano Picca; Antonio Mastrostefano; Gabriele Rinelli; Carmela Romano; Gianfranco Rizzoni; Otto Mehls; Giovanni de Simone; Franz Schaefer

Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is the most important independent marker of cardiovascular risk in adults with chronic kidney disease. Cardiovascular morbidity seems increased even in children with chronic renal insufficiency (CRI), but the age and stage of CRI when cardiac alterations become manifest are unknown. For assessing the prevalence and factors associated with abnormal LV geometry in children with CRI, echocardiograms, ambulatory BP monitoring, and biochemical profiles were obtained in 156 children aged 3 to 18 yr with stages 2 through 4 chronic kidney disease (GFR 49 +/- 19 ml/min per 1.73 m2) and compared with echocardiograms obtained in 133 healthy children of comparable age and gender. LV mass was indexed to height2.7. Concentric LV remodeling was observed in 10.2%, concentric LVH in 12.1%, and eccentric LVH in 21% of patients. LVH was more common in boys (43.3 versus 19.4%; P < 0.005). Probability of LVH independently increased with male gender (odds ratio [OR] 2.62; P < 0.05) and standardized body mass index (OR 1.56; P = 0.01). Low hemoglobin, low GFR, young age, and high body mass index were independent correlates of LV mass index (0.005 < P < 0.05). LV concentricity (relative wall thickness) was positively associated with serum albumin (P < 0.05). Probability of abnormal LV geometry increased with C-reactive protein >10 mg/dl (OR 26; P < 0.001). In conclusion, substantial cardiac remodeling of both concentric and eccentric type is present at young age and early stages of CRI in children. Prevalence of LVH is related to male gender, anemia, and ponderosity but not to BP. Additional effects of volume status and inflammation on cardiac geometry are also evident.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2007

Reduced Systolic Myocardial Function in Children with Chronic Renal Insufficiency

Marcello Chinali; Giovanni de Simone; Maria Chiara Matteucci; Stefano Picca; Antonio Mastrostefano; Ali Anarat; Salim Caliskan; Nikola Jeck; Thomas J. Neuhaus; Amira Peco-Antic; Licia Peruzzi; Sara Testa; Otto Mehls; Elke Wühl; Franz Schaefer

Increased left ventricular (LV) mass in children with chronic renal insufficiency (CRI) might be adaptive to sustain myocardial performance in the presence of increased loading conditions. It was hypothesized that in children with CRI, LV systolic function is impaired despite increased LV mass (LVM). Standard echocardiograms were obtained in 130 predialysis children who were aged 3 to 18 yr (59% boys) and had stages II through IV chronic kidney disease and in 130 healthy children of similar age, gender distribution, and body build. Systolic function was assessed by measurement of fractional shortening at the endocardial (eS) and midwall (mS) levels and computation of end-systolic stress (myocardial afterload). The patients with CRI exhibited a 6% lower eS (33.1 +/- 5.5 versus 35.3 +/- 6.1%; P < 0.05) and 10% lower mS (17.8 +/- 3.1 versus 19.7 +/- 2.7%; P < 0.001) than control subjects in the presence of significantly elevated BP, increased LVM, and more concentric LV geometry. Whereas the decreased eS was explained entirely by augmented end-systolic stress, mS remained reduced after correction for myocardial afterload. The prevalence of subclinical systolic dysfunction as defined by impaired mS was more than five-fold higher in patients with CRI compared with control subjects (24.6 versus 4.5%; P < 0.001). Systolic dysfunction was most common (48%) in patients with concentric hypertrophy and associated with lower hemoglobin levels. CRI in children is associated with impaired intrinsic LV contractility, which parallels increased LVM.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013

Change in cardiac geometry and function in CKD children during strict BP control: A randomized study

Maria Chiara Matteucci; Marcello Chinali; Gabriele Rinelli; Elke Wühl; Aleksandra Zurowska; Marina Charbit; Giacomo Pongiglione; Franz Schaefer

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVESnLeft ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and abnormal systolic function are present in a high proportion of children with CKD. This study evaluated changes in left ventricular (LV) geometry and systolic function in children with mild to moderate CKD as an ancillary project of the Effect of Strict Blood Pressure Control and ACE Inhibition on Progression of Chronic Renal Failure in Pediatric Patients trial.nnnDESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTSnEchocardiograms and ambulatory BP monitoring were performed at baseline and at 1- or 2-year follow-up in 84 patients with CKD and 24-hour mean BP above the 50th percentile and/or receiving fixed high-dose angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition and randomized to conventional or intensified BP control.nnnRESULTSnLVH prevalence decreased from 38% to 25% (P<0.05). Changes in LV mass index (LVMI) were restricted to patients with LVH at baseline (-7.9 g/m(2.7); P<0.02). Changes in LVMI were independent of randomization, reduction in BP, hemoglobin, and estimated GFR. A significant increase in midwall fractional shortening was observed in the total cohort (P<0.05), and was greater in the intensified group compared with the conventional BP control group (12%±1.9% versus 8%±1.5%; P=0.05). In multivariate analysis, improvement in myocardial function was associated with reduction in BP (r=-0.4; P<0.05), independently of LVMI reduction.nnnCONCLUSIONSnIn children with CKD, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition with improved BP control, LVH regression, and improved systolic function was observed within 12 months. Lowering BP to the low-normal range led to a slightly more marked improvement in myocardial function but not in LVMI.


Pediatric Nephrology | 1994

Haemolytic-uraemic syndrome in childhood: surveillance and case-control studies in Italy

Alessandra Gianviti; Francesco Rosmini; Alfredo Caprioli; Rosamaria Corona; Maria Chiara Matteucci; Flavia Principato; Ida Luzzi; Gianfranco Rizzoni

Seventy-six cases of haemolytic-uraemic syndrome (HUS) were collected over a 4-year period during a surveillance and case-control study. The annual incidence of 0.2 per 100,000 children aged 0–14 years is lower than in other countries; 34% had no prodromal diarrhoea. Evidence for verocytotoxin-producingEscherichia coli (VTEC) infection was found in 72% of patients and 3% of controls; 88% of patients with bloody diarrhoea, 67% with non-bloody diarrhoea and 55% without diarrhoea were VTEC positive. Seventy-three percent of patients had creatinine clearance ≥80 ml/min per 1.73 m2, normal blood pressure, no proteinuria and haematuria <2+ after 1 year of follow-up. One patient died and none had non-renal sequelae. VTEC positivity was significantly correlated with a good outcome, while the absence of diarrhoea and a high total white blood cell count at onset were not predictors of a bad outcome. Household contacts of HUS patients had diarrhoea more frequently than those of the control group, supporting the hypothesis of person-to-person transmission of VTEC infection.


Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2013

Focus on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of hypertension in children and adolescents

Amedeo Spagnolo; Marco Giussani; Amalia Maria Ambruzzi; Mario G. Bianchetti; Silvio Maringhini; Maria Chiara Matteucci; Menghetti E; Patrizia Salice; Loredana Simionato; Mirella Strambi; Raffaele Virdis; Simonetta Genovesi

The European Society of Hypertension has recently published its recommendations on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of high blood pressure in children and adolescents. Taking this contribution as a starting point the Study Group of Hypertension of the Italian Society of Pediatrics together with the Italian Society of Hypertension has conducted a reappraisal of the most recent literature on this subject. The present review does not claim to be an exhaustive description of hypertension in the pediatric population but intends to provide Pediatricians with practical and updated indications in order to guide them in this often unappreciated problem.This document pays particular attention to the primary hypertension which represents a growing problem in children and adolescents. Subjects at elevated risk of hypertension are those overweight, with low birth weight and presenting a family history of hypertension. However, also children who do not present these risk factors may have elevated blood pressure levels. In pediatric age diagnosis of hypertension or high normal blood pressure is made with repeated office blood pressure measurements that show values exceeding the reference values. Blood pressure should be monitored at least once a year with adequate methods and instrumentation and the observed values have to be interpreted according to the most updated nomograms that are adjusted for children’s gender, age and height. Currently other available methods such as ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and home blood pressure measurement are not yet adequately validated for use as diagnostic instruments. To diagnose primary hypertension it is necessary to exclude secondary forms. The probability of facing a secondary form of hypertension is inversely proportional to the child’s age and directly proportional to blood pressure levels. Medical history, clinical data and blood tests may guide the differential diagnosis of primary versus secondary forms. The prevention of high blood pressure is based on correct lifestyle and nutrition, starting from childhood age. The treatment of primary hypertension in children is almost exclusively dietary/behavioral and includes: a) reduction of overweight whenever present b) reduction of dietary sodium intake c) increase in physical activity. Pharmacological therapy will be needed rarely and only in specific cases.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Serum Creatinine Levels Are Significantly Influenced by Renal Size in the Normal Pediatric Population

Giacomo Di Zazzo; Gilda Stringini; Maria Chiara Matteucci; Maurizio Muraca; Saverio Malena; Francesco Emma

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVESnClinical and experimental data have shown that differences in nephron endowment result in differences in renal mass and predisposition to chronic renal failure, hypertension, and proteinuria. We hypothesized that a significant proportion of the variance in GFR, as estimated by serum creatinine, is attributable to differences in renal size in normal children.nnnDESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTSnA total of 1748 normal renal ultrasounds that were performed in children older than 6 months were reviewed. For each ultrasound, serum creatinine, serum blood urea nitrogen, and systolic and diastolic office BP were recorded. Renal size was evaluated as a function of renal length and thickness. All data were normalized for height, weight, age, and gender.nnnRESULTSnWhen expressed as SD scores, a significant correlation was found between kidney size and serum creatinine (P < 0.0001) and between kidney size and serum blood urea nitrogen (P < 0.002). When dividing kidney size data per quintiles, a difference of 0.51 SD score in serum creatinine was observed between the lowest and highest quintile. No significant correlation was found with office BP measurements.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThese data show that, even in the normal pediatric population, differences in renal function are significantly explained by differences in renal mass. Methodologic limitations of this study are likely to underestimate this relationship.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2015

Advanced Parameters of Cardiac Mechanics in Children with CKD: The 4C Study

Marcello Chinali; Maria Chiara Matteucci; Alessio Franceschini; Anke Doyon; Giacomo Pongiglione; Gabriele Rinelli; Franz Schaefer

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVESnNewer parameters of cardiac mechanics provide additional insights on cardiac dysfunction in adult patients with CKD. The aim of this study was to identify prevalence of subclinical abnormalities in cardiac function through the analysis of novel indices of cardiac mechanics in a large population of children with CKD.nnnDESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTSnBetween 2009 and 2011, the prospective observational Cardiovascular Comorbidity in Children with CKD Study enrolled patients with CKD ages 6-17 years old with eGFR=10-45 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) in 14 European countries. Cardiac morphology and function were assessed through echocardiography. The analysis presented encompasses global radial, longitudinal, and circumferential strains as well as time to peak analysis. Data were compared with 61 healthy children with comparable age and sex.nnnRESULTSnData on 272 patients with CKD with complete echocardiographic assessment are reported (age =12.8±3.5 years old; 65% boys). Patients with CKD showed mildly higher office BP values and higher prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy, but no differences were observed among groups in left ventricular ejection fraction. Strain analysis showed significantly lower global radial strain (29.6%±13.3% versus 35.5%±8.9%) and circumferential strain components (-21.8%±4.8% versus -28.2%±5.0%; both P<0.05) in patients with CKD without significant differences observed in longitudinal strain (-15.9%±3.4% versus -16.2%±3.7%). Lower values of global radial strain were associated with lower circumferential endocardial-to-epicardial gradient (r=0.51; P<0.01). This association remained significant after adjusting for BP, eGFR, and presence of left ventricular hypertrophy. Eventually, patients with CKD also showed higher delay in time to peak cardiac contraction (58±28 versus 37±18 milliseconds; P<0.05).nnnCONCLUSIONSnA significant proportion of children with CKD show impaired systolic mechanics. Impaired systolic function is characterized by lower radial strain, transmural circumferential gradient, and mild cardiac dyssynchrony. This study suggests that analysis of cardiac strain is feasible in a large multicenter study in children with CKD and provides additional information on cardiac pathophysiology of this high-risk population.


European Journal of Pediatrics | 2014

Association between nocturnal blood pressure dipping and insulin resistance in children affected by NAFLD

Ugo Giordano; Claudia Della Corte; Giulia Cafiero; Daniela Liccardo; Attilio Turchetta; Kazem Hoshemand; Danilo Fintini; Giorgio Bedogni; Maria Chiara Matteucci; Valerio Nobili

The aim of this study was to analyse the relationship between insulin–glucose metabolism, nocturnal blood pressure dipping and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in obese adolescents without diabetes. One hundred one consecutive children, with biopsy-proven NAFLD, were included in this study. Blood samples were drawn for the analyses of liver function tests, insulin–glucose metabolism and lipid profile appraisal. An ambulatory blood pressure measurement (ABPM) was performed. Seventy-six children (75.3xa0%) were systolic nondippers, and 23 of them were diastolic nondippers (30.3xa0%). No differences were found in the anthropometric parameters between the two groups. When compared to the systolic dippers, the systolic nondippers had higher medians of mean nocturnal blood pressure, glucose at 0, 60 and 120xa0min in the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), OGTT insulin at all time points and insulin-resistance values. No correlation of histopathological features with dipping/nondipping statuses was found. Conclusions: We found an association between a nocturnal blood pressure fall and measures of insulin levels, independent of obesity, or daytime blood pressure levels, among the obese patients with NAFLD. Although no association between nondipping profiles and NAFLD was observed in our study, further studies with a longer term follow-up are needed, to better elucidate the complex link between these particular entities.


Transplantation | 1997

Combined heart and kidney transplantation in a child: will we need it more in the future?

Maria Chiara Matteucci; Luca Dello Strologo; Francesco Parisi; C. Squitieri; Paolo Caione; N. Capozza; Gianfranco Rizzoni

A 12-year-old girl affected by idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy and renal failure was referred to our institution for cardiac transplantation. A simultaneous heart-kidney transplantation from the same donor was decided. The immunosuppression schedule consisted of azathioprine, antithymocyte globulin, steroids, and cyclosporine. At a follow-up visit at 24 months after transplantation, no episodes of heart or kidney rejection had occurred and cardiac and renal function were good. Concomitant failure of heart and kidney is well known in the literature, but it appears to be more frequent in adult as compared with the pediatric population. This is the first case of combined heart and kidney transplantation in a child. Because of the successful outcome and good follow-up, the number of combined organ transplantations will most likely increase in the future.


Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2016

Novelty in hypertension in children and adolescents: focus on hypertension during the first year of life, use and interpretation of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, role of physical activity in prevention and treatment, simple carbohydrates and uric acid as risk factors

Mirella Strambi; Marco Giussani; Maria Amalia Ambruzzi; Paolo Brambilla; Ciro Corrado; Ugo Giordano; Claudio Maffeis; Silvio Maringhin; Maria Chiara Matteucci; Menghetti E; Patrizia Salice; Federico Schena; Pietro Strisciuglio; Giuliana Valerio; Francesca Viazzi; Raffaele Virdis; Simonetta Genovesi

The present article intends to provide an update of the article “Focus on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of hypertension in children and adolescents” published in 2013 (Spagnolo et al., Ital J Pediatr 39:20, 2013) in this journal. This revision is justified by the fact that during the last years there have been several new scientific contributions to the problem of hypertension in pediatric age and during adolescence. Nevertheless, for what regards some aspects of the previous article, the newly acquired information did not require substantial changes to what was already published, both from a cultural and from a clinical point of view. We felt, however, the necessity to rewrite and/or to extend other parts in the light of the most recent scientific publications. More specifically, we updated and extended the chapters on the diagnosis and management of hypertension in newborns and unweaned babies, on the use and interpretation of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, and on the usefulness of and indications for physical activity. Furthermore, we added an entirely new section on the role that simple carbohydrates (fructose in particular) and uric acid may play in the pathogenesis of hypertension in pediatric age.

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Ugo Giordano

Boston Children's Hospital

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Franz Schaefer

University Hospital Heidelberg

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Francesco Emma

Boston Children's Hospital

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Gabriele Rinelli

Boston Children's Hospital

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Marcello Chinali

University of Naples Federico II

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