Paola Magri
University of Naples Federico II
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Featured researches published by Paola Magri.
Circulation | 1998
Paola Magri; Maria A.E. Rao; Sara Cangianiello; Vincenzo Bellizzi; Rosaria Russo; Alessandro F. Mele; Michele Andreucci; Bruno Memoli; Luca De Nicola; Massimo Volpe
BACKGROUND The early/asymptomatic stages of heart failure (HF) are characterized by sodium retention secondary to derangement of sodium reabsorption at the proximal nephron level. Because this phenomenon is reversed by ACE inhibition, abnormalities of renal sodium handling may depend on intrarenal changes of angiotensin II (AII)/nitric oxide (NO) levels. Renal hemodynamic reserve (ie, the glomerular vasodilatory response to amino acid infusion) has been proposed as a reliable test to assess in vivo AII/NO balance. METHODS AND RESULTS In this study, the effects of 6 weeks of treatment with 5 mg/d of enalapril or with 50 mg/d of losartan on systemic hemodynamics and renal function were assessed, at baseline and after amino acid infusion (AA), in patients with mild HF (NYHA class I) and in healthy volunteers. Untreated HF patients showed a basal renal function comparable to that of healthy subjects. After AA, glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow significantly increased in healthy subjects (+29.0% and +30.4%, respectively), whereas no vasodilatory response was observed in HF. Although they did not affect basal renal hemodynamics, both enalapril and losartan restored a normal response to AA in HF patients. Blood pressure and heart rate were comparable in HF subjects and healthy subjects at baseline and were not modified by either treatment. Left ventricular ejection fraction was depressed in HF but did not change after either drug. Urinary excretions of cGMP and nitrate (indexes of NO activity in the kidney), comparable in healthy subjects and in HF patients, were unchanged by either enalapril or losartan and did not correlate with renal reserve. CONCLUSIONS (1) Renal functional reserve is absent in patients with early/asymptomatic HF and normal renal function and (2) both enalapril and losartan restore a normal vasodilatory response to AA in these patients without affecting basal systemic and renal hemodynamics. These data suggest a major role of AII in the development of early abnormalities in patients with HF.
Hypertension | 1997
Massimo Volpe; Paola Magri; Maria A.E. Rao; Sara Cangianiello; Luca DeNicola; Alessandro F. Mele; Bruno Memoli; Iolanda Enea; Speranza Rubattu; Bruna Gigante; Bruno Trimarco; Murray Epstein; Mario Condorelli
The onset and the mechanisms leading to Na+ retention in incipient congestive heart failure (CHF) have not been systematically investigated. To investigate renal Na+ handling in the early or mild stages of CHF, Na+ balance and renal clearances were assessed in 10 asymptomatic patients with idiopathic or ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy and mild heart failure (HF) off treatment (left ventricular ejection fraction, 29.7+/-2%) and in 10 matched normal subjects during a diet containing 100 mmol/d of NaCl and after 8 days of high salt intake (250 mmol/d). Six patients were studied again after 6 weeks of treatment with enalapril (5 mg/d P.O.). At the end of the high salt diet, in patients with mild HF the cumulative Na+ balance exceeded by 110 mmol that of normal subjects (F=3.86, P<.001). During high salt intake, renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate were similarly increased in both normal subjects and mild HF patients. In spite of comparable increases of filtered Na+ in the two groups, fractional excretion of Na+, fractional clearance of free water, and fractional excretion of K+ (indexes of distal delivery of Na+) increased in normal subjects and were reduced in patients with mild HF. During enalapril treatment, in the mild HF patients the cumulative Na+ balance was restored to normal; furthermore, enalapril significantly attenuated the abnormalities in the distal delivery of Na+. Our results indicate that a defective adaptation of Na+ reabsorption in the proximal nephron is associated with Na+ retention in response to increased salt intake in the early or mild stages of HF. These abnormalities of renal Na+ handling are largely reversed by enalapril.
Circulation Research | 1997
Massimo Volpe; Bruna Gigante; Iolanda Enea; Antonio Porcellini; Rosaria Russo; Min Ae Lee; Paola Magri; Gerolama Condorelli; Carmine Savoia; Klaus Lindpaintner; Speranza Rubattu
The aim of the study was to investigate whether the adrenal renin-angiotensin system plays an independent role in the regulation of mineralocorticoid biosynthesis in the adrenal gland and to explore the mechanisms of this action. Twelve-week-old male Sprague-Dawley rats were studied: 22 rats were maintained on a regular diet; 27 and 22 rats received a low salt diet with and without treatment, respectively, with the angiotensin II (Ang II) AT1-subtype receptor antagonist losartan (10 mg/kg per day). A fraction of each group of rats underwent bilateral nephrectomy (n = 12, 15, and 10, respectively) and was killed 48 hours later. In an additional group of 24 (12 intact and 12 nephrectomized) rats, the effects of the Ang II AT2-subtype receptor antagonist PD123319 were investigated. In intact rats, plasma renin activity (PRA) and adrenal renin activity and expression were progressively raised by salt restriction and losartan, whereas aldosterone synthase mRNA and plasma aldosterone (PA) levels were increased by salt restriction and reduced by losartan. Forty-eight hours after nephrectomy, PRA fell to undetectable levels; in contrast, adrenal renin expression, assessed by semiquantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (using GAPDH as a standard for gene expression), showed an 18-fold increase and was further increased after salt restriction and losartan (all P < .05). Also, adrenal renin activity was raised after nephrectomy and further increased after salt restriction (P < .05) and losartan. Cytochrome P450 aldosterone synthase expression in the adrenal cortex was stimulated by nephrectomy alone and by nephrectomy combined with low salt intake (P < .05), with consequent increases in PA concentrations. In losartan-treated salt-restricted nephrectomized rats, cytochrome P450 aldosterone synthase expression (P < .05 versus nephrectomy alone and nephrectomy plus salt restriction) and PA concentrations were diminished (P < .05) in spite of the observed increases of adrenal renin expression. The AT2-receptor antagonism did not significantly affect PRA, adrenal renin, and aldosterone biosynthesis and production in either intact or nephrectomized salt-restricted rats. These results demonstrate that the adrenal renin-angiotensin system plays an independent role in the regulation of mineralocorticoid biosynthesis in vivo. This action is mediated primarily via the Ang II AT1-subtype receptors.
Enzyme | 1990
Salvatore Antoniello; Maria Auletta; Cerini R; Cacciatore F; Paola Magri
beta-Hexosaminidase (Hex) activity has been shown to be increased in the sera of patients with chronic liver diseases as well as in rats with CCl4-induced liver cirrhosis. In this study, serum and liver Hex activity was determined in rats during the acute phase of CCl4 poisoning, a widely used animal model of acute necrotic liver damage. The results showed a statistically significant decrease of Hex activity in the sera of rats 36 h after CCl4 poisoning (5.84 +/- 2.90 U/l), as compared to controls (11.58 +/- 1.35 U/l; p less than 0.001). No significant change was observed in liver tissue of CCl4-treated animals and controls. A significant correlation between the decrease in Hex and the increase in serum aspartate aminotransferase in serum was found. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that this lysosomal enzyme could be released by non-parenchymal liver cells, such as activated macrophages; its increased activity could be the expression of macrophage activation, as demonstrated in patients with chronic liver diseases.
Kidney International | 1994
Massimo Sabbatini; Gennaro Sansone; Francesco Uccello; Luca De Nicola; Antonella Giliberti; Vincenzo Sepe; Paola Magri; Giuseppe Conte; Vittorio E. Andreucci
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 1996
G. Fuiano; Nicola Comi; Paola Magri; V. Sepe; Mario M. Balletta; Ciro Esposito; Francesco Uccello; A Dal Canton; Giuseppe Conte
Contributions To Nephrology | 1992
Mario M. Balletta; Dario Sabella; Paola Magri; Vincenzo Sepe; Pasquale Stanziale; Rosanna Di Luccio; G. Colucci; Giorgio Fuiano
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 1998
Vincenzo Bellizzi; Massimo Sabbatini; G. Fuiano; Gennaro Sansone; Paola Magri; Francesco Uccello; Michele Andreucci; L De Nicola; Bruno Cianciaruso
Seminars in Nephrology | 2001
Paola Magri; Maria Auletta; Michele Andreucci; Giovanni Somma; Dario Musone; Maria Fiorillo; Serena Torraca; Salvatore Antoniello; Bruno Cianciaruso
Contributions To Nephrology | 1991
Giorgio Fuiano; Vincenzo Sepe; Pasquale Stanziale; Mario M. Balletta; Nicola Comi; Paola Magri; Antonio Dal Canton