Roberta Lapenna
University of Udine
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JAMA Internal Medicine | 2008
Cristiana Catena; GianLuca Colussi; Elisa Nadalini; Alessandra Chiuch; Sara Baroselli; Roberta Lapenna; Leonardo A. Sechi
BACKGROUND Experimental and human studies demonstrate that long-term exposure to elevated aldosterone levels results in cardiac and vascular damage. METHODS We investigated long-term cardiovascular outcomes in patients with primary aldosteronism after surgical or medical treatment. Fifty-four patients with or without evidence of adrenal adenomas were prospectively followed up for a mean of 7.4 years after treatment with adrenalectomy or spironolactone. Patients with primary aldosteronism were compared with patients with essential hypertension and were treated to reach a blood pressure of less than 140/90 mm Hg. The main outcome measure was a combined cardiovascular end point comprising myocardial infarction, stroke, any type of revascularization procedure, and sustained arrhythmias. RESULTS At baseline, the prevalence of cardiovascular events was greater in primary aldosteronism (35%) than in essential hypertension (11%) (odds ratio, 4.61; 95% confidence interval, 2.38-8.95; P< .001), with odds ratios of 4.93, 4.36, and 2.80 for sustained arrhythmias, cerebrovascular events, and coronary heart disease, respectively. Blood pressure during follow-up was comparable in the primary aldosteronism and essential hypertension groups. Ten patients in the primary aldosteronism group and 19 in the essential hypertension group reached the primary end point (P= .85). Cox analysis indicated that older age and longer duration of hypertension were factors independently associated with the cardiovascular end point. Cardiovascular outcome was comparable in patients with aldosteronism treated with adrenalectomy vs aldosterone antagonists (P= .71). CONCLUSION Primary aldosteronism is associated with a cardiovascular complication rate out of proportion to blood pressure levels that benefits substantially from surgical and medical treatment in the long term.
Hypertension | 2007
Cristiana Catena; GianLuca Colussi; Roberta Lapenna; Elisa Nadalini; Alessandra Chiuch; Pasquale Gianfagna; Leonardo A. Sechi
Exposure to excess aldosterone results in cardiac damage in hypertensive states. We evaluated the long-term cardiac structural and functional evolution in patients with primary aldosteronism after surgical or medical treatment. Fifty-four patients with primary aldosteronism were enrolled in a prospective study and were followed for a mean of 6.4 years after treatment with adrenalectomy (n=24) or spironolactone (n=30). At baseline, echocardiographic measurements of patients with primary aldosteronism were compared with those of 274 patients with essential hypertension. Patients with primary aldosteronism had greater left ventricular mass, more prevalent left ventricular hypertrophy, lower early:late-wave diastolic filling velocities ratio, and longer deceleration time than patients with essential hypertension but no differences in relative wall thickness and systolic function. During follow-up, average blood pressure was 135/82 and 137/82 mm Hg in patients treated with adrenalectomy and spironolactone, respectively. In the initial 1-year period, left ventricular mass decreased significantly only in adrenalectomized patients. Subsequent changes in left ventricular mass were greater in patients treated with spironolactone, with an overall change from baseline to the end of follow-up that was comparable in the 2 groups. Prevalence of hypertrophy decreased in both treatment groups, whereas diastolic parameters had only mild and nonsignificant improvement. Changes in blood pressure and pretreatment plasma aldosterone were independent predictors of left ventricular mass decrease in both treatment groups. Thus, in the long-term, both adrenalectomy and spironolactone are effective in reducing left ventricular mass in patients with primary aldosteronism, with effects that are partially independent of blood pressure changes.
Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2007
Cristiana Catena; GianLuca Colussi; Elisa Nadalini; Alessandra Chiuch; Sara Baroselli; Roberta Lapenna; Leonardo Antonio Sechi
BACKGROUND The renal damage that is present in primary aldosteronism might reflect functional and potentially reversible abnormalities that are initiated by glomerular hyperfiltration. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships of plasma renin and aldosterone concentrations with renal outcomes after treatment of primary aldosteronism. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, AND MEASUREMENTS Fifty-six consecutive patients who had primary aldosteronism and were recruited in a university center were studied. Patients were prospectively followed after either surgical or medical treatment for a mean of 6.2 yr, during which they received antihypertensive drugs to reach a target BP of <140/90 mmHg. RESULTS At baseline, patients with primary aldosteronism had higher creatinine clearance and albuminuria than 323 patients with essential hypertension and 113 normotensive individuals. In patients with primary aldosteronism, plasma active renin levels that were higher than the lower limit of detection (2.5 pg/ml) were associated with higher BP, plasma potassium, and albuminuria and lower creatinine clearance. Plasma aldosterone concentrations that were higher than the median value (225 pg/ml) were associated with lower plasma potassium and higher creatinine clearance. Creatinine clearance was correlated directly with plasma aldosterone and inversely with renin. During follow-up, patients with higher baseline plasma renin required use of more antihypertensive drugs to obtain BP control and had a smaller early decline in albuminuria than did patients with suppressed renin. CONCLUSIONS Escape of renin from suppression by excess aldosterone is associated with evidence of more severe renal damage in patients with primary aldosteronism and predicts less favorable outcomes after treatment.
Journal of Hypertension | 2005
Cristiana Catena; Marileda Novello; Roberta Lapenna; Sara Baroselli; GianLuca Colussi; Elisa Nadalini; Grazia Favret; Alessandro Cavarape; Giorgio Soardo; Leonardo Antonio Sechi
Although adequate control of blood pressure is of basic importance in cardiovascular prevention in hypertensive patients, correction of additional risk factors is an integral part of their management. In addition to classical risk factors, epidemiological research has identified a number of other conditions that might significantly contribute to cardiovascular risk in the general population and might achieve specific relevance in patients with high blood pressure. In fact, more than 20% of patients with premature cardiovascular events do not have any of the traditional risk factors and, although effective intervention on blood pressure and additional risk factors has significantly reduced cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, the contribution to stroke, coronary artery disease and renal failure is still unacceptably high. Evaluation of new risk factors may further expand our capacity to predict atherothrombotic events when these factors are included along with the traditional ones in the assessment of global cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients. Because it could be anticipated that the role of these novel factors will become increasingly evident in the future, researchers with an interest in hypertension and physicians dealing with problems related to cardiovascular prevention should give them appropriate consideration. This review summarizes the basic biology and clinical evidence of two emerging risk factors that are reciprocally related and contribute to the development and progression of organ damage in hypertension: the prothrombotic state and lipoprotein(a).
Recent Patents on Cardiovascular Drug Discovery | 2007
GianLuca Colussi; Cristiana Catena; Sara Baroselli; Elisa Nadalini; Roberta Lapenna; Alessandra Chiuch; Leonardo Antonio Sechi
Omega-3 and omega-6 Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) are the major families of PUFA that can be found as components of the human diet. After ingestion, both omega-3 and omega-6 PUFA are distributed to every cell in the body where they are involved in a myriad of physiological processes, including regulation of cardiovascular, immune, hormonal, metabolic, neuronal, and visual functions. At the cell level, these effects are mediated by changes in membrane phospholipids structure, interference with eicosanoid intracellular signaling, and regulation of gene expression. Two long-chain omega-3 PUFAs, the docosahexaenoic (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic (EPA) acid, are found in fatty fish and other marine sources and might be the putative dietary components thought to modify the cardiovascular risk in subjects consuming high amounts of such food. Evidence of an inverse relationship between fatty fish intake and cardiovascular risk has, in fact, emerged in studies performed more than twenty years ago in Eskimos and has been subsequently confirmed in other ethnic groups. The benefits of omega-3 PUFA might relate principally to prevention of coronary heart disease, coronary artery restenosis after angioplasty, and sudden arrhythmic death. In this brief review, we will cover the general biochemical aspects of omega-3 PUFA, summarize the evidence relating these fatty acids with control of cardiovascular risk factors and prevention of cardiovascular events, and overview the most recent and relevant patents that are related to these issues. More specifically, we will deal with the possibility to use PUFA in association with other molecules that can potentiate their antiinflammatory and antiatherogenic effects.
Journal of Hypertension | 2007
Marileda Novello; Cristiana Catena; Elisa Nadalini; GianLuca Colussi; Sara Baroselli; Alessandra Chiuch; Roberta Lapenna; Massimo Bazzocchi; Leonardo Antonio Sechi
Background Cross-sectional studies have reported an elevated prevalence of renal cysts in patients with primary aldosteronism. The nature of this association could be related to hypokalemia and/or hypertension and has never been evaluated in prospective studies. Methods A consecutive sample of 54 patients with tumoral or idiopathic primary aldosteronism was followed after adrenalectomy or treatment with aldosterone antagonists. At baseline, renal cysts were evaluated by renal ultrasound and patients with primary aldosteronism were compared with 323 essential hypertension patients with the same severity and duration of disease, and 113 age- and sex-matched normotensive subjects. Results The adjusted prevalence and average number of renal cysts were significantly greater in patients with primary aldosteronism than in patients with essential hypertension and normotensive subjects. Multivariate analysis revealed that age and plasma potassium levels were independently associated with the presence of renal cysts in patients with primary aldosteronism. Treatment of primary aldosteronism decreased blood pressure (BP) and restored normal potassium concentrations. After a median follow-up of 6.2 years, no significant change from baseline of cyst number and cyst total volume was observed in patients with both tumoral and idiopathic aldosteronism and in a subset of 100 patients with essential hypertension. In patients with primary aldosteronism, stepwise logistic analysis showed that the presence of renal cysts was associated with worse BP outcome after treatment. Conclusion Renal cystic disease is highly frequent in patients with primary aldosteronism and either surgical or medical treatment halt its progression, supporting the contention that hypokalemia and its severity are the main contributors to cyst formation in these patients.
Current Hypertension Reviews | 2005
Cristiana Catena; Roberta Lapenna; Sara Baroselli; Marileda Novello; Elisa Nadalini; Gian L. Colussi; Giorgio Soardo; Alessandro Cavarape; Leonardo Antonio Sechi
Correction of cardiovascular risk factors is a mainstay of the treatment of hypertensive patients that have developed or might develop target organ damage. In addition to traditional risk factors, such as smoking, diabetes, obesity, and dyslipidemia, clinical research has identified additional conditions that put patients at a greater risk of developing cardiovascular disease and that might achieve particular relevance in the hypertensive state. Over the last decades, effective intervention in the treatment of traditional risk factors has reduced remarkably cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, but the incidence of coronary artery disease, stroke, and renal failure remains unacceptably high. Emerging cardiovascular risk factors are likely to contribute substantially to this picture and it could be anticipated that their contribution will become increasingly evident in the future. Physicians involved in the field of hypertension and dealing with problems concerning cardiovascular prevention should be aware of these new risk factors, give them an appropriate consideration, and correct them whenever possible. This review will consider the literature supporting the role of lipoprotein(a), homocysteine, and fibrinogen as contributors to cardiovascular risk in the general population and, more specifically, to the development and progression of target organ damage in hypertensive patients. The impact of early impairment of renal function on these factors will be analyzed in relation to the progression of renal disease as found in patients with hypertensive nephrosclerosis.
JAMA | 2006
Leonardo A. Sechi; Marileda Novello; Roberta Lapenna; Sara Baroselli; Elisa Nadalini; GianLuca Colussi; Cristiana Catena
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2006
Cristiana Catena; Roberta Lapenna; Sara Baroselli; Elisa Nadalini; GianLuca Colussi; Marileda Novello; Grazia Favret; Alessandra Melis; Alessandro Cavarape; Leonardo A. Sechi
Diabetes Care | 2007
GianLuca Colussi; Cristiana Catena; Roberta Lapenna; Elisa Nadalini; Alessandra Chiuch; Leonardo Antonio Sechi