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Dive into the research topics where Massimo Gualerzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Massimo Gualerzi.


Hypertension | 2005

Effects of Salt Sensitivity on Neural Cardiovascular Regulation in Essential Hypertension

Paolo Coruzzi; Gianfranco Parati; Lorenzo Brambilla; Valerio Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Almerico Novarini; Paolo Castiglioni; Marco Di Rienzo

Salt-sensitive hypertensive subjects, as defined by conventional categorical classification, exhibit alterations of autonomic cardiovascular control. The aim of our study was to explore whether, in hypertensive subjects, the degree of autonomic dysfunction and the level of salt sensitivity are correlated even when the latter is only mildly elevated and displays under-threshold values. Salt sensitivity of 34 essential hypertensive subjects was assessed on a continuous basis by the salt sensitivity index after low- and high-sodium diet. Beat-by-beat finger blood pressure was recorded after each diet period. Autonomic cardiovascular control was evaluated by spectral analysis of blood pressure and pulse interval and by assessment of spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (sequence technique). Salt sensitivity and baroreflex sensitivity showed a negative relationship during low and high sodium intake, starting from low values of the salt sensitivity index. All spectral indexes of pulse interval, except the ratio between low- and high-frequency powers, were inversely related to salt sensitivity index after high sodium intake. In subjects with lower salt sensitivity, baroreflex sensitivity and pulse interval power in the high-frequency band were higher after high sodium intake than after low sodium intake. In contrast, subjects with a higher salt sensitivity index showed lower values of baroreflex sensitivity and pulse interval power in the high-frequency band, uninfluenced by salt intake. Our results provide the first demonstration of an impairment of parasympathetic cardiac control in parallel with the increase in the degree of salt sensitivity, also in subjects who were not ranked as salt-sensitive by the conventional categorical classification.


Hypertension | 2011

Detecting sodium-sensitivity in hypertensive patients: Information from 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring

Paolo Castiglioni; Gianfranco Parati; Lorenzo Brambilla; Valerio Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Marco Di Rienzo; Paolo Coruzzi

Sodium sensitivity is an important cardiovascular risk factor for which a diagnosis requires a time-consuming protocol, the implementation of which is often challenging for patients and physicians. Our aim was to assess the reliability of an easier approach based on data from 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring performed in hypertensive subjects during daily-life conditions and habitual diet. We enrolled 46 mild to moderate hypertensive subjects who underwent 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring during usual sodium intake. Patients were divided into 3 classes of sodium sensitivity risk on the basis of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring data: low risk if dippers and a 24-hour heart rate ≤70 bpm; high risk if nondippers and a 24-hour heart rate of >70 bpm; intermediate risk with the remaining combinations (dippers with heart rate >70 bpm or nondippers with heart rate ≤70 bpm). Then patients underwent a traditional sodium sensitivity test for the dichotomous classification as sodium sensitive or sodium resistant and for evaluating the sodium sensitivity index. Prevalence of sodium-sensitive patients and mean value of sodium sensitivity index were calculated in the 3 risk classes. The sodium sensitivity index markedly and significantly increased from the low-risk to the high-risk class, being equal to 19.9±14.4, 37.8±8.3, and 68.3±17.0 mm Hg/(mol/day) in the low-risk, intermediate-risk, and high-risk classes, respectively (M±SEM). Also, the prevalence of sodium-sensitive patients increased significantly from the low-risk class (25%) to the intermediate-risk (40%) and high-risk (70%) classes. Thus, performance of 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in daily-life conditions and habitual diet may give useful information on the sodium sensitivity condition of hypertensive subjects in an easier manner than with the traditional sodium sensitivity test approach.


Radiologia Medica | 2006

Coronary artery anomalies: incidence, pathophysiology, clinical relevance and role of diagnostic imaging

Filippo Cademartiri; Giuseppe Runza; Giacomo Luccichenti; Massimo Galia; Nico R. Mollet; Valerio Alaimo; Valerio Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Paolo Coruzzi; Massimo Midiri; Roberto Lagalla

Conventional coronary angiography is the gold standard for the diagnosis of coronary artery anomalies. Coronary anomalies are relatively rare findings in patients undergoing conventional coronary angiography for suspected obstructive coronary artery disease. Recently, the increasing performance of diagnostic techniques, such as electron beam tomography (EBT), magnetic resonance (MR) and, more recently, multislice computed tomography (MSCT), has enabled their application to cardiac imaging. MSCT, in particular, has a prominent role in coronary imaging due to its spatial and temporal resolution and threedimensional capabilities. We report the incidence and pathophysiology of coronary artery anomalies based on the capabilities of recent diagnostic tools with the aim of improving an accurate and noninvasive diagnostic approach.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

Autonomic cardiovascular regulation in quiescent ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease

Paolo Coruzzi; Paolo Castiglioni; Gianfranco Parati; Valerio Brambilla; Lorenzo Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Filippo Cademartiri; A. Franzè; G. De Angelis; M. Di Rienzo; F. Di Mario

Background  In inflammatory bowel diseases, changes in autonomic enteric regulation may also affect neural cardiovascular control. However, while cardiac autonomic modulation has been shown to be impaired in active ulcerative colitis, the occurrence of cardiovascular autonomic alterations, also in the quiescent phase of inflammatory bowel diseases, is still a matter of debate. The aim of our study was thus to explore the features of cardiovascular autonomic regulation in ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease during their remission phase.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

A new index of sodium sensitivity risk from arterial blood pressure monitoring during habitual salt intake

Paolo Castiglioni; Gianfranco Parati; Lorenzo Brambilla; Valerio Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Marco Di Rienzo; Paolo Coruzzi

[1] Gersh BJ, Maron BJ, Bonow RO, et al. 2011 ACCF/AHA Guideline for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. Developed in collaborationwith theAmericanAssociation for Thoracic Surgery, American Society of Echocardiography, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, Heart Failure Society of America, Heart Rhythm Society, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons. J Am Coll Cardiol 2011;58:e212–60. [2] Yajima R, Kataoka A, Takahashi A, et al. Distinguishing focal fibrotic lesions and nonfibrotic lesions in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy by assessment of regional myocardial strain using two-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography: comparison with multislice CT. Int J Cardiol 2012;158:423–32. [3] Stevenson WG, Friedman PL, Sager PT, et al. Exploring postinfarction reentrant ventricular tachycardia with entrainment mapping. J Am Coll Cardiol 1997;29:1180–9. [4] Rubinshtein R, Glockner JF, Ommen SR, et al. Characteristics and clinical significance of late gadoliniumenhancement bycontrast-enhancedmagnetic resonance imaging in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Circ Heart Fail 2010;3:51–8. [5] Gersh BJ, Maron BJ, Bonow RO, et al. 2011 ACCF/AHA guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: executive summary: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. Circulation 2011;124:2761–96. [6] Spirito P, Bellone P, Harris KM, Bernabo P, Bruzzi P,Maron BJ.Magnitude of left ventricular hypertrophy and risk of sudden death in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. N Engl J Med 2000;342:1778–85. [7] Popović ZB, Kwon DH,MishraM, et al. Association between regional ventricular function and myocardial fibrosis in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy assessed by speckle tracking echocardiography and delayed hyperenhancement magnetic resonance imaging. J Am Soc Echocardiogr 2008;21:1299–305.


Journal of Human Hypertension | 2015

Blood pressure changes after high- and low-salt diets: are intermittent arm measures and beat-by-beat finger measures equivalent?

P. Castiglioni; G. Parati; M. Di Rienzo; Valerio Brambilla; Lorenzo Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Davide Lazzeroni; Paolo Coruzzi

The assessment of sodium sensitivity requires to measure the difference in mean arterial pressure (MAP) at the end of sodium-loading (SLoad) and sodium-depletion (SDepl) maneuvers with an arm-cuff manometer. Aim of this study is to evaluate whether MAP measuring devices based on the volume-clamp method at the finger can also be used for assessing sodium sensitivity. Sixty-eight normotensive volunteers underwent SLoad and SDepl diets in random order. MAP was simultaneously measured at the end of each diet with arm (Spacelabs 90207) and finger (Portapres model-2) cuff devices. The sodium sensitivity was assessed as the difference in MAP at the end of SLoad and SDepl diets (ΔMAP), and as salt-sensitivity index (SSI; SSI=ΔMAP divided by the difference in urinary-sodium-excretion rate at the end of the diets). Discrepancies between finger and arm-cuff devices in ΔMAP or SSI were evaluated by Bland and Altman analysis. Even if discrepancies between devices had null-fixed bias, results showed a significant proportional bias and large limits of agreement (between −25 and 25 mm Hg for ΔMAP, between −196 and 180 mm Hg mol−1 per day for SSI). The SSI distribution over the group was larger, flatter and less symmetric if derived from finger-cuff rather than arm-cuff devices, and this influenced substantially the identification of salt-sensitive individuals. Therefore, the response of MAP to SLoad/SDepl diets and consequently the assessment of the salt-sensitivity condition depends importantly on the measurement site, and brachial measures should be preferred for consistency with literature and normative data.


Nephron Physiology | 2003

Renal and Cardiovascular Responses to Water Immersion in Essential Hypertension: Is There a Role for the Opioidergic System?

Paolo Coruzzi; Gianfranco Parati; Lorenzo Brambilla; Valerio Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Almerico Novarini; Giuseppe Mancia; Paolo Castiglioni; Marco Di Rienzo

Our study aimed at elucidating the effects of acute central hypervolemia induced by water immersion (WI) on renal hemodynamics, hormonal responses and on cardiovascular control in hypertensive patients, as well as at evaluating the possible role of the opioidergic system (OS) in determining these effects. Thirteen essential hypertensives were studied for 2 h before and for 2 h during WI. This was done twice, without and with i.v. injection of the OS antagonist naloxone. Before and during WI alone, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), effective renal plasma flow (ERPF), renal vascular resistance (RVR), mean arterial pressure (MAP), pulse interval (PI), spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (BRS), Low frequency to High frequency (LF/HF) ratio in PI spectra, hematocrit, urinary sodium excretion, plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone (PA) were assessed. Based on their response to WI, hypertensives were subdivided into two groups: ERPF+ (n = 7) in whom WI increased ERPF, and ERPF– (n = 6) in whom WI reduced ERPF. ERPF+ displayed a higher BRS than ERPF– at baseline and during WI. A suppression of PRA and PA and an increase in MAP and urinary sodium excretion were found in both groups. In ERPF+ naloxone caused RVR and MAP to increase during WI and this response was associated with a blockade of the increase in ERPF in this group, while BRS and natriuresis were unchanged. In ERPF– naloxone did not affect WI-induced MAP, ERPF, RVR and BRS changes, while it blunted sodium excretion. Our data provide the first evidence of a differentiate renal hemodynamic response to WI in hypertension; they also suggest that while OS may significantly potentiate the renal vasodilatory response to WI in ERPF+, it does not affect the natriuretic response nor the changes in systemic cardiovascular regulation induced by central hypervolemia.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2015

The fractal structure of cardiovascular beat-to-beat series described over a broad range of scales: Differences between blood pressure and heart rate, and the effect of gender.

Paolo Castiglioni; Valerio Brambilla; Lorenzo Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; Davide Lazzeroni; Paolo Coruzzi

The fractal characteristics of heart rate variability are usually assessed by estimating short- and long-term scale coefficients, α<;sub>1<;/sub>and α<;sub>2<;/sub>, by detrended fluctuation analysis. Recently we extended this approach introducing a temporal spectrum of scale coefficients, α(τ), that describes the deviations of self-similarity from the bi-fractal model at each scale τ. Until now relatively short recordings were considered and α(τ) was characterized only for scales τ<;100 s. Aim of this work is to describe α(τ) of cardiovascular signals extending the range τ by an order of magnitude with respect to previous studies. We considered 2-hour recordings of systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP) and of pulse interval (PI) in 68 volunteers (26 males, 42 females) sitting at rest. The α(τ) spectra were estimated for 5s ≤τ ≤1000s and compared. We found important differences between α(τ) of SBP, DBP and PI. In particular, α(τ) of PI was lower than α(τ) of SBP at all the scales τ, with a relative maximum at τ =26 s and a minimum at τ =300 s that were completely missing in α(τ) of DBP. Significant differences were also found between α(τ) of males and females, probably linked to gender differences in the cardiovascular autonomic tone.


Chest | 2006

Autonomic Cardiac Modulation in Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Effect of an Oral Jaw-Positioning Appliance

Paolo Coruzzi; Massimo Gualerzi; Edoardo Bernkopf; Lorenzo Brambilla; Valerio Brambilla; Vanna Broia; Carolina Lombardi; Gianfranco Parati


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2001

Potassium Depletion and Salt Sensitivity in Essential Hypertension

Paolo Coruzzi; Lorenzo Brambilla; Valerio Brambilla; Massimo Gualerzi; M. Rossi; G. Parati; M. Di Rienzo; J. Tadonio; Almerico Novarini

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Gianfranco Parati

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Filippo Cademartiri

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Marco Di Rienzo

Polytechnic University of Milan

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