P. Battisti
Sapienza University of Rome
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Publication
Featured researches published by P. Battisti.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1992
Pietro Cugini; Loredana Di Palma; P. Battisti; Giuseppe Leone; A. Pachi; Rosalba Paesano; Cristiana Masella; Giovanni Stirati; Alessandro Pierucci; Anna Rachele Rocca; Santo Morabito
The time course of blood pressure in clinically healthy (pregnant and nonpregnant) women was followed by automatic ambulatory monitoring. Chronobiologic methods revealed the time course of dynamic rhythm characteristics as a function of gestational age. Differences were found between nonpregnant and pregnant women with an overall lowering during pregnancy of the rhythm-adjusted midline estimating statistic of rhythm (mesor).
Chronobiology International | 1993
Pietro Cugini; Loredana Di Palma; Salvatore Di Simone; Piernatale Lucia; P. Battisti; Alessandro Coppola; Giuseppe Leone
This study aimed to explore the 24-h patterns of stroke volume, cardiac output, and peripheral vascular resistance along with other correlated variables, such as left ventricular ejection time, ejection velocity index, thoracic fluid index, heart rate, and blood pressure. The study was performed on 12 clinically healthy subjects by means of a noninvasive beat-to-beat monitoring using the thoracic electric bioimpedance technique associated with the automated sphygmomanometric recording. Time data series were analyzed by means of chronobiological procedures. The results documented the occurrence of a circadian rhythm for all the variables investigated, giving relevance to the beat-to-beat bioperiodicity of cardiac output and peripheral vascular resistance. Temporal quantification of the investigated variables may be useful for a better insight of the chronophysiology of the cardiovascular apparatus.
Regulatory Peptides | 1991
Pietro Cugini; Piernatale Lucia; Loredana Di Palma; Massimo Re; Giuseppe Leone; P. Battisti; R. Canova; L. Gasbarrone; A. Cianetti
The vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) may be radioimmunoassayed in systemic venous blood. The plasma concentrations of VIP were investigated in human blood according to a chronobiological design. The study documented a circadian rhythmicity in time-qualified concentrations of VIP. Accordingly, VIP may be ascribed to biological variables characterized by periodicity in their physiological attributes. The rhythmic physiology of VIP is, however, highly disturbed in its tonic and phasic properties during senescence.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1989
Pietro Cugini; Daniele Danese; P. Battisti; Loredana Di Palma; Giuseppe Leone; T. Kawasaki
Twenty clinically healthy subjects were studied to identify normotensive adults with a predisposition to arterial hypertension by monitoring blood pressure (BP) and restricting dietary sodium intake. Short-term restriction in sodium intake resulted in a decrease of the mean level for the circadian rhythm of BP. The phenomenon is visible in subjects without familial hypertension but not in individuals with a positive history for high BP. The response of the 24-hour BP patterns to abrupt sodium deprivation seems to be an indicator for discovering normotensive subjects at risk of developing arterial hypertension.
Renal Failure | 1992
Pietro Cugini; P. Battisti; L. Di Palma; M. Cavallini; P. Pozzilli; G. Scibilia; Claudio Letizia; A. Cassisi; A. R. Cioli; B. Marino; V. Stipa; D. Scavo
The circadian rhythm (CR) of plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma aldosterone (PA), and plasma cortisol (PC) was investigated in 8 patients with kidney transplantation, and in 10 patients with heart transplantation. Ten clinically healthy subjects were studied as controls. The transplanted patients were all under cyclosporine treatment associated with prednisone (PDN). Time-qualified levels of PRA and PA were seen to be higher than normal in both groups of transplanted patients. The analysis of PRA and PA circadian rhythm provided evidence for a systematically higher level of within-day concentrations. The higher level of oscillation suggests the occurrence of a condition of hyperreninemic hyperaldosteronism. The higher levels of PRA and PA 24-h values show no periodicity. The finding suggests the abrogation of the rhythmic function for renin-aldosterone system. The disappearance of PRA-PA circadian rhythm seems to be attributable to a side effect of immunosuppressive therapy.
Enzyme | 1990
P. Cugini; Claudio Letizia; L. Di Palma; P. Battisti; D. Caserta; M. Moscarini; D. Scavo
The circadian rhythm of serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity was investigated in pregnant women with normal and pre-eclamptic gestation. The chronobiological approach was able to document the occurrence of a circadian rhythm for serum ACE activity in normal pregnancy. Such a rhythm is characterized by a decreased mesor and amplitude and a shifted crest. The circadian rhythm for serum ACE activity was not detectable in pre-eclamptic pregnancy. Such an abrogation is accompanied by a negligible decrease of mesor suggesting the occurrence of a relative hyperACEemia. This disorder could play a role in pregnancy-induced hypertension.
Chronobiology International | 1993
P. Cugini; Claudio Letizia; S. Cerci; L. Di Palma; P. Battisti; Alessandro Coppola; D. Scavo
This study deals with a chronobiological approach to the circadian rhythm of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and the ACTH-cortisol axis (ACA) in patients with Addisons disease (PAD). The aim is to explore the mechanism(s) for which the circadian rhythmicity of the RAAS and ACA takes place. The study has shown that both the RAAS and ACA are devoid of a circadian rhythm in PAD. The lack of rhythmicity for renin and ACTH provides indirect evidence that their rhythmic secretion is in some way related to the circadian oscillation of aldosterone and cortisol. This implies a new concept: a positive feedback may be included among the mechanisms which chronoregulate the RAAS and ACA.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1993
Pietro Cugini; T. Kawasaki; Loredana Di Palma; Giuseppe Leone; P. Battisti; Alessandro Coppola; Angela Ciamei; Antonietta De Luca; Haruka Sasaki; Keiko Uezono
This study investigates the blood pressure (BP) 24-hour pattern in representative samples of 2 industrialized countries, Italy and Japan, showing different cultures in salt intake. BP was monitored by means of a noninvasive ambulatory device whose readings were analyzed by means of chronobiometric procedures. The results show that the 24-hour BP pattern is not substantially different in Italian and Japanese subjects. In particular, the expected lower BP in the Italians was not detected despite their lower salt intake. Because the 24-hour mean BP value was seen not to be proportional to salt intake, the hypothesis is formulated that maintenance of the pressure regimen within a given range of variability is a principle of human physiology. To comply with this rule the Japanese people are supposed to have ethnically developed a certain resistance to dietary salt for which their cardiovascular apparatus is protected (phyletic escape to dietary sodium excess).
Hypertension in Pregnancy | 1990
Pietro Cugini; Loredana Di Palma; P. Battisti; A. Pachi; Rosalba Paesano; Carla Masella; Giovanni Stirati; Alessandro Pierucci; Anna Rachele Rocca; Santo Morabito
Blood pressure (BP) monitoring is a clinical reality because of the availability of non-invasive automated recorders. BP 24-h patterns were explored during physiologic pregnancies in order to obtain time-qualified standards for clinical use. Non-inferential and inferential reference boundaries were computed by using chronobiometric procedures. The computed confidence limits provide a set of reference standards that serves to optimize the diagnosis of pregnancy-induced deviation in BP 24-h patterns.
Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1991
P. Cugini; P. Battisti; L. Di Palma
The recent report /I/ by Matoth and coworkers of a rare case of infantile adrenocortical dysplasia prompted us to review the literature with the aim of clarifying the nature of this disease in the pediatric age group. Statistical criteria were adopted to detect possible differences between the pediatric and non-pediatric descriptions. We found a large enough number of case reports to permit statistical analysis of clinical and laboratory parameters in this entity.