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Featured researches published by Paride Giannantoni.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Doppler myocardial imaging to evaluate the effectiveness of pacing sites in patients receiving biventricular pacing

Gerardo Ansalone; Paride Giannantoni; Renato Ricci; Paolo Trambaiolo; Francesco Fedele; Massimo Santini

OBJECTIVES The goal of this study was to compare the efficacy of biventricular pacing (BIV) at the most delayed wall of the left ventricle (LV) and at other LV walls. BACKGROUND Biventricular pacing could provide additional benefit when it is applied at the most delayed site. METHODS In 31 patients with advanced nonischemic heart failure, the activation delay was defined, in blind before BIV, by regional noninvasive Tissue Doppler Imaging as the time interval between the end of the A-wave (C point) and the beginning of the E-wave (O point) from the basal level of each wall. The left pacing site was considered concordant with the most delayed site when the lead was inserted at the wall with the greatest regional interval between C and O points (CO(R)). After BIV, patients were divided into group A (13/31) (i.e., paced at the most delayed site) and group B (18/31) (i.e., paced at any other site). RESULTS After BIV, in all patients LV end-diastolic (LVEDV) and end-systolic (LVESV) volumes decreased (p = 0.025 and 0.001), LV ejection fraction (LVEF) increased (p = 0.002), QRS narrowed (p = 0.000), New York Heart Association class decreased (p = 0.006), 6-min walked distance (WD) increased (p = 0.046), the interval between closure and opening of mitral valve (CO) and isovolumic contraction time (ICT) decreased (p = 0.001 and 0.000), diastolic time (EA) and Q-P(2) interval increased (p = 0.003 and 0.000), while Q-A(2) interval and mean performance index (MPI) did not change. Group A showed greater improvement over group B in LVESV (p = 0.04), LVEF (p = 0.04), bicycle stress testing work (p = 0.03) and time (p = 0.08) capacity, CO (p = 0.04) and ICT (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS After BIV, LV performance improved significantly in all patients; however, the greatest improvement was found in patients paced at the most delayed site.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2003

Biventricular pacing in heart failure: back to basics in the pathophysiology of left bundle branch block to reduce the number of nonresponders

Gerardo Ansalone; Paride Giannantoni; Renato Ricci; Paolo Trambaiolo; Francesco Fedele; Massimo Santini

Cardiac resynchronization therapy is a novel nonpharmacologic approach to treating patients who have advanced heart failure with left bundle branch block (LBBB). Such a therapy is based on the original theory that synchronous biventricular pacing is able to reduce the interventricular delay caused by LBBB in patients with heart failure. Although there is convincing evidence that biventricular pacing increases the left ventricular ejection fraction, decreases mitral regurgitation, and improves symptoms caused by heart failure, the percentage of nonresponders to such therapy has been described as high as about one third of patients with heart failure having LBBB. Factors responsible for this relatively high prevalence are reviewed, the most important of them probably being left intraventricular dyssynchrony, which can persist after biventricular pacing, notwithstanding right and left interventricular resynchronization. Such a dyssynchrony, as evaluated by tissue Doppler imaging, may be because of the discordance between the site of the left ventricular pacing and the site of the left ventricular delay. Therefore, to characterize the pathophysiologic pattern of LBBB, the investigators suggest an assessment of the electromechanical dysfunction with a noninvasive reliable technique, such as tissue Doppler imaging, which can be repeated after biventricular pacing.


Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology | 2004

Triple-site pacing in patients with biventricular device-incidence of the phenomenon and cardiac resynchronization benefit.

Alan Bulava; Gerardo Ansalone; Renato Ricci; Paride Giannantoni; Carlo Pignalberi; Petr Heinc; Jan Lukl; Massimo Santini

AbstractBackground: In patients with biventricular pacing (BIV), triple-site pacing (TSP), i.e. standard biventricular cathodal pacing of the right and the left ventricle plus additional anodal capture of the right ventricle, is sometimes present. Aims: To evaluate the incidence of TSP phenomenon, to examine TSP-related QRS changes, and to assess the effect of TSP on intraventricular resynchronization by means of tissue Doppler imaging (TDI). Methods and results: 23 patients with a first generation biventricular device (Medtronic 8040) and 16 patients with a new generation device (Medtronic 8042) were evaluated to look for the presence of TSP. TSP was found in 6 patients (26%) with the Medtronic 8040 (group I) and in 13 patients (81%) with the Medtronic 8042 device (group II). QRS duration decreased by 10 to 20 ms and QRS amplitude of leads I and aVL increased in almost all patients in group I during TSP modality. In group II, QRS morphology, duration and amplitude did not change as obviously. TDI analysis of the left ventricular (LV) basal segments showed significant shortening of the systole, together with a corresponding prolongation of the diastole, at the inferior wall of the LV, during TSP compared to standard BIV in all patients (p < 0.01). Other LV segments did not show any change. Qualitative TDI electro-mechanical activation pattern of all LV segments improved in 22%, while it remained unchanged in 72%. Conclusions: TSP phenomenon can be identified in approximately a quarter of patients with the first-generation biventricular devices on the basis of the QRS morphology changes. In the second-generation biventricular pacemakers it can be demonstrated in the vast majority of patients. TSP may increase the effectiveness of cardiac resynchronization therapy by counteracting the regional activation delay located at the inferior wall of the LV.


American Heart Journal | 2001

Doppler myocardial imaging in patients with heart failure receiving biventricular pacing treatment.

Gerardo Ansalone; Paride Giannantoni; Renato Ricci; Paolo Trambaiolo; Anna Laurenti; Francesco Fedele; Massimo Santini


European Heart Journal | 1992

Heart involvement in AIDS : a prospective study during various stages of the disease

S. De Castro; Giorgio Migliau; A. Silvestri; Giulia d'Amati; Paride Giannantoni; Domenico Cartoni; A. Kol; Vincenzo Vullo; A. Cirelli


American Heart Journal | 2006

Autologous bone marrow mononuclear cell transplantation in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting

David Mocini; Mario Staibano; Luca Mele; Paride Giannantoni; Giacomo Menichella; Furio Colivicchi; Paolo Sordini; Paola Salera; Marco Tubaro; Massimo Santini


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2007

A new variant of Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy: transient mid-ventricular ballooning

Luca Cacciotti; Giovanni Camastra; Sergio Beni; Paride Giannantoni; Salvatore Musarò; Igino Proietti; Laura De Angelis; Raffaella Semeraro; Gerardo Ansalone


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Unusual sites of metastatic malignancy: case 1. Cardiac metastasis in hepatocellular carcinoma.

Raffaele Longo; David Mocini; Massimo Santini; Paride Giannantoni; Guido Carillio; Francesco Torino; Antonio Auriti; Roberto Marcello; Giovanna Lanzi; Francesco Cortese; Giampietro Gasparini


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2008

2- and 3-dimensional echocardiographic analysis of an unusual transient apical ballooning.

Stefano Caselli; Ilaria Passaseo; Paride Giannantoni; Daria Santini; Andrea Marcantonio; Stefano De Castro


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2004

Giant Vegetation of the Mitral Valve Simulating Primary Cardiac Tumor

Antonio Auriti; Mara Chieffi; Cinzia Cianfrocca; Liborio Manente; Ignazio Podda; Vincenzo Guido; Marco Galeazzi; Paride Giannantoni; Massimo Santini

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Gerardo Ansalone

The Catholic University of America

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Francesco Fedele

Sapienza University of Rome

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Paolo Trambaiolo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Domenico Cartoni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giorgio Migliau

Sapienza University of Rome

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Sergio Beni

Sapienza University of Rome

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