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Dive into the research topics where Salvatore Giannico is active.

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Featured researches published by Salvatore Giannico.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1997

Extracardiac Fontan operation for complex cardiac anomalies: Seven years' experience

Antonio Amodeo; Lorenzo Galletti; Stefano M. Marianeschi; Sergio Picardo; Salvatore Giannico; Paolo Di Renzi; Marcelletti C

METHODS Between 1988 and 1995, 60 patients with complex cardiac anomalies underwent a total extracardiac cavopulmonary connection, a combination of a bidirectional cavopulmonary anastomosis with an extracardiac conduit interposition between the inferior vena cava and pulmonary arteries, except in one patient in whom direct anastomosis was possible. In 40 patients the total extracardiac cavopulmonary connection followed preliminary bidirectional cavopulmonary anastomosis, associated with a modified Damus-Kaye-Stansel anastomosis in 16. The conduits were constructed of Dacron fabric (n = 34), homografts (n = 3), and polytetrafluoroethylene (n = 22). RESULTS Total early failure rate was 15% (n = 9). Six patients died, and three more had conduit takedown owing to pulmonary artery stenosis and hypoplasia (n = 2) and severe atrioventricular valve regurgitation (n = 1). Two other patients required anastomosis revision owing to stricture. In a mean follow-up of 48 months (6 to 86 months) there were no late deaths (actuarial 5-year survival 88% +/- 4%); 52 of 54 patients are in New York Heart Association class I or II. Two patients required pulmonary artery balloon dilation or stent implantation, or both, after total extracardiac cavopulmonary connection. Late tachyarrhythmias were detected in four of 54 patients: two had sick sinus syndrome with flutter necessitating a pacemaker implantation and two had recurrent flutter (actuarial 5-year arrhythmia-free rate 92% +/- 4%). Conduit patency was evaluated by serial magnetic resonance imaging studies. Preliminary data showed a 17.8% +/- 7.6% mean reduction in conduit internal diameter during the first 6 months after total extracardiac cavopulmonary connection, with no progression over the next 5 years. CONCLUSION These results demonstrate that the total extracardiac cavopulmonary connection provides good early and midterm results and may reduce the prevalence of late arrhythmias in patients undergoing the Fontan operation.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Total anomalous pulmonary venous connection: long-term appraisal with evolving technical solutions

Guido Michielon; Roberto M. Di Donato; Luciano Pasquini; Salvatore Giannico; Gianluca Brancaccio; Ennio Mazzera; Cosimo Squitieri; Glauco Catena

OBJECTIVES To evaluate late outcome of non-isomeric total anomalous pulmonary venous connection (TAPVC) repair, controlling for anatomic subtypes and surgical technique. METHODS Between 1983 and 2001, 89 patients (median age 54 days) underwent repair for supracardiac (38), cardiac (26), infracardiac (16) or mixed (nine) TAPVC. Ten patients (11.2%) presented associated anomalies other than PDA. Twenty-eight patients (31.5%) were emergencies, due to obstructed drainage. Supracardiac and infracardiac TAPVC repair included the double-patch technique with left atrial enlargement in 29 patients and side-to-side anastomosis between the pulmonary venous (PV) confluence and the left atrium in 29 patients. Coronary sinus unroofing was preferred for cardiac TAPVC repair. Total follow-up was 727.16 patient-years (mean 8.55 years, 98.8% complete). RESULTS Early mortality was 7.86% (7/89). Ten patients (11.2%) underwent reintervention, including reoperation (eight), balloon dilation (one) and intraoperative stents placement (one), for anastomotic (four) or diffuse PV stenosis (six), with four late deaths. Kaplan-Meier survival is 87.3+/-0.036 SE% at 18.07 years with no difference according to anatomic type or surgical technique. Freedom from PV reintervention for operative survivors is 86.7+/-0.052 SE% at 18.07 years. Cox proportional hazard indicates associated anomalies (P=0.008) and reoperation for intrinsic PV stenosis (P=0.034) as independent predictors of mortality. According to logistic analysis, preoperative obstruction predicts higher risk of reintervention for intrinsic PV stenosis (P=0.022), while the double-patch technique increased the risk of late arrhythmias (P=0.005). CONCLUSIONS Side-to-side anastomosis provides excellent results for TAPVC repair while left atrial enlargement procedures appear to be associated with higher risk of late arrhythmias. Although early and aggressive reintervention for recurrent PV obstruction is mandatory, intrinsic PV stenosis remains a predictor of adverse outcome.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1984

Right oblique subxiphoid view for two-dimensional echocardiographic visualization of the right ventricle in congenital heart disease.

Bruno Marino; Luigi Ballerini; Marcelletti C; Roberto Piva; Luciano Pasquini; Cristina Zacché; Salvatore Giannico; Giuseppe De Simone

Two-dimensional echocardiography in the right oblique subxiphoid view (ROSV) was used to visualize all right ventricular components in 351 patients younger than 2 years of age (100 normal and 251 with various types of congenital heart disease). The ROSV, which is anterior and parallel to the ventricular septum, displays all right-sided cardiac components, the left atrium and the aorta. This view provided the correct diagnosis in patients with pulmonary stenosis or atresia with intact ventricular septum, Ebsteins anomaly, tricuspid atresia, infundibular ventricular septal defect, tetralogy of Fallot and truncus arteriosus. In all patients studied with the ROSV, an excellent definition of morphologic characteristics, equivalent to that in the right oblique axial angiocardiographic view, was achieved. The ROSV should be used routinely to delineate the right ventricular anatomy in all infants with congenital heart disease.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1986

Two-dimensional echocardiographic anatomy in crisscross heart

Bruno Marino; Stephen P. Sanders; Luciano Pasquini; Salvatore Giannico; Ira A. Parness; Steven D. Colan

The anatomy of crisscross heart was studied in 14 patients, aged 2 days to 26 years, using 2-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography. The visceroatrial situs was solitus in all 14 patients. Crossing of the atrioventricular (AV) valves could be seen in each case by scanning in a subxiphoid or apical 4-chamber view. The subpulmonary infundibulum was deficient in 13 of the 14 patients, resulting in approximation of the pulmonary and tricuspid valves. Subpulmonary stenosis, seen in 11 patients, resulted from proximity of the infundibular septum, the tricuspid valve and the subpulmonary infundibular free wall. A subaortic infundibulum, present in all cases, was well developed in 13 patients, who had malposition of the great arteries, and was short in 1 patient, with nearly normally related great arteries. In cases that conformed to the inverse loop rule (segmental combination (S,D,L) or (S,L,D)), the pulmonary valve was posterior to the tricuspid valve and wedged between the AV valves. In 3 patients (double outlet right ventricle (S,D,L)) the mitral valve straddled into a large, left-sided subaortic infundibulum. In both patients with arterial malposition who did not follow the inverse loop rule, the pulmonary trunk was anterior to the tricuspid valve and well separated from the mitral valve. In patients with crisscross heart the ventricles appeared to have been rotated about their long axes without concomitant motion of the AV valve anuli, producing actual crossing of the ventricular inflow tracts. The right ventricular sinus was significantly smaller and the infundibulum significantly larger in the patients with crisscross heart than in age-matched control subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1989

Palliation of complex cardiac anomalies with subaortic obstruction: New operative approach

Roberto M. Di Donato; Duccio C. Di Carlo; Salvatore Giannico; Carlo Marcelletti

The modified Fontan operation for complex cardiac anomalies associated with subaortic obstruction entails a high surgical risk. It is likely that ventricular hypertrophy secondary to chronic pressure overload plays a significant role. This problem was approached with a new type of palliative operation comprising both a proximal pulmonary artery to ascending aorta anastomosis and a bidirectional cavopulmonary anastomosis. This operation was performed in six children ranging in age from 26 to 63 months. There was one intraoperative death due to hemorrhage. In one patient, a pulmonary to aorta conduit caused compression of the right coronary artery; the problem was solved by lengthening the conduit with a second period of cardiopulmonary bypass. The five survivors experienced an uneventful postoperative course. Repeat cardiac catheterization in these five patients showed low pressure in the cavopulmonary system (mean 10 mm Hg), absence of a gradient at rest between the systemic ventricle and aorta and fair arterial oxygenation (mean 82%). A technetium-99m perfusion lung scan visualized a slight prevalence of pulmonary blood flow ipsilateral to the shunt in three cases, whereas in one case preferential flow to the right lung was associated with a narrowing at the site of the cavopulmonary anastomosis. Mild hypoperfusion of the anterior pulmonary segments was observed in two cases. Both pressure and volume overload are abolished with this procedure and a satisfactory oxygenation is provided. Low venous pressure in the coronary, hepatic and renal areas as well as the short bypass time may explain the smoothness of the postoperative course in our patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2014

The Ross procedure in patients aged less than 18 years: The midterm results

Gianluca Brancaccio; Angelo Polito; Stiljan Hoxha; Fabrizio Gandolfo; Salvatore Giannico; Antonio Amodeo; Adriano Carotti

OBJECTIVE This study reviews a single-center experience with the Ross procedure in infants and young children. METHODS From November 1993 to March 2012, 55 children aged less than 17 years underwent a Ross procedure. The patients ranged in age from 2 days to 17 years (median, 5.9 years). Thirteen patients were infants, and 18 patients were preschool children. The predominant indication for the Ross procedure was aortic stenosis. Twenty-seven patients (49%) with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction underwent a modified Ross-Konno procedure. Twenty-five patients (45%) had undergone 40 previous cardiac procedures. Preoperatively, 3 patients showed severe left ventricular dysfunction, with 2 of the patients requiring intubation and inotropic support. Concomitant procedures were performed in 11 patients (20%). Nine patients underwent mitral valve surgery, and 2 patients underwent subaortic membrane resection. RESULTS Patients were followed up for a median of 66 months (range, 3 months to 17 years). Overall survival at 1, 2, 5, and 10 years was 84.9%. Hospital mortality rate was 13% (7/55 patients). All deaths occurred in neonates or infants, except 1 who was aged less than 4 years. Freedom from reoperation for autograft failure was 100% at 1 year, 96.7% at 5 years, and 73.7% at 10 years. During follow-up, 7 patients required a reoperation on the autograft for dilatation and severe aortic insufficiency. Freedom from reoperation for the right ventricular outflow tract replacement was 56.1% at 10 years. CONCLUSIONS The low rate of autograft failure demonstrates that the Ross procedure is an attractive option for the management of aortic valve disease and complex left ventricular outflow tract obstruction in the pediatric population. However, alternative options must be considered in adolescents and young adults.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1985

Complete transposition of the great arteries: Visualization of left and right outflow tract obstruction by oblique subcostal two-dimensional echocardiography

Bruno Marino; Giuseppe De Simone; Luciano Pasquini; Salvatore Giannico; Marcelletti C; Antonio Ammirati; Paolo Guccione; Renata Boldrini; Luigi Ballerini

Subcostal oblique 2-dimensional echocardiography was performed in 64 infants younger than 2 years with complete transposition of the great arteries (TGA) (situs solitus, concordant atrioventricular and discordant ventriculoarterial connections). All patients examined before cardiac catheterization had a correct diagnosis by 2-dimensional echocardiography using the subcostal oblique views. Twelve patients had associated left ventricular (LV) outflow tract obstruction and 7 had right ventricular (RV) outflow obstruction. The standard parasternal views failed to diagnose obstruction in 1 patients with LV outflow obstruction and 5 with RV outflow obstruction; the subcostal left oblique cut and long axis of the left ventricle visualized all left-sided obstructions, and right-sided obstructions were correctly displayed in 5 of 7 cases using a combination of left oblique and right oblique cuts. Two-dimensional echocardiographic subcostal oblique views allow an excellent definition of the morphologic characteristics of RV and LV outflow tracts in patients with TGA and improve the diagnosis of the outflow obstruction in these malformations.


Journal of Cardiac Surgery | 1988

Long-Term Results After Extracardiac Valved Conduits Implanted for Complex Congenital Heart Disease

Antonia Corno; Alessandro Giamberti; Salvatore Giannico; Bruno Marino; Sergio Picardo; Luigi Ballerini; Carlo Marcelletti

Abstract Between August 1982 and December 1986, 56 patients survived implantation of an extracardiac valved conduit for complex congenital heart disease. The mean age at operation was 4.2 years (16 days to 24 yrs) and the mean weight was 15.9 kg (2.4 to 93.0 kg). The diagnosis was pulmonary atresia (PA) with ventricular septal defect (VSD) in 13 patients, tetralogy of Fallot in 11, transposition of the great arteries (TGA) with VSD in 8, truncus arteriosus in 7, complex left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO) in 6, complex left atrioventricular valve obstruction in 4, double outlet right ventricle with VSD and subaortic obstruction in 3, univentricular heart with pulmonary stenosis in 2, TGA with LVOTO in 1, and PA with intact ventricular septum in 1. In 35 patients, a preclotted conventional Dacron conduit (CDC) with bioprosthetic valve was used, in 19 patients a collagen‐sealed Tascon valved conduit (TC) was implanted, and in 1 patient an aortic homograft was used. In a mean follow‐up of 32.5 months (9 to 64 mo), there were two deaths (2/56, 3.6%) that were not related to the conduit. All survivors have been evaluated by two‐dimensional and Doppler echocardiography, and 29/56 (51.8%) underwent cardiac catheterization. Nine patients (9/56, 16.1%) underwent successful valved conduit replacement, in seven cases with a nonvalved conduit. There was a significant difference (P =.011) with regard to the incidence of conduit replacement between the group with CDC (2/36, 5.5%) and the group with TC (7/19, 36.8%). Five patients underwent percutaneous transluminal balloon dilatation of the prosthetic conduit, with adequate relief of the gradient in four patients. All survivors are in good conditiion; 32/54 patients (59.2%) are taking digoxin and/or diuretics and 16/54 patients (29.6%) receive antiplatelet agents.


Cardiology in The Young | 2009

Mid-term results, and therapeutic management, for patients suffering hypertension after surgical repair of aortic coarctation.

Ugo Giordano; Barbara Cifra; Salvatore Giannico; Attilio Turchetta; Armando Calzolari

We designed our study to investigate the efficacy of a new therapeutic approach to late onset hypertension in patients after surgical repair of aortic coarctation. Several studies have shown a higher incidence of hypertension during daily activities, and during exercise, in patients after surgical correction of coarctation. To the best of our knowledge, however, no data exists concerning haemodynamics, the response of arterial pressures, and the effects of medications for lowering blood pressure during exercise or during daily activities.We studied 128 patients, aged 15.6 +/- 4.3 years, to determine the response of blood pressure as we administered treatment in the attempt to achieve a normotensive state. We excluded patient with associated cardiac abnormalities, apart from those with bicuspid aortic valves. We evaluated blood pressure at rest in both the right arm and leg to establish presence of any gradient, as well as the blood pressure in the arm during exercise testing, and by 24-hour ambulatory monitoring.Atenolol was prescribed for those with elevated values of blood pressure but with a normal increment of heart rate during exercise. We prescribed Candesartan for those with elevated levels of blood pressure but with reduced increments of heart rate, specifically maximal heart rates of less than 85% of their predicted value. Both drugs were used when one alone was not effective. We found that, in young patients, candesartan provided better control of blood pressure with no side-effects, especially as demonstrated using 24-hour ambulatory monitoring, while atenolol was less effective, with more side-effects. Our experience suggests that both drugs should be used in patients who are non-responsive to monotherapy.


Cardiology in The Young | 2005

The influence of different surgical procedures on hypertension after repair of coarctation

Ugo Giordano; Salvatore Giannico; Attilio Turchetta; Fatma Hammad; Flaminia Calzolari; Armando Calzolari

We measured resting and exercise haemodynamics, as well as 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure, so as to study the influence on development of hypertension in children after repair of coarctation by either construction of a subclavian flap or end-to-end anastamosis. The patients in both groups were studied a mean time of 13 years after surgery. Thus, we divided 43 children who had undergone surgical repair of coarctation, and who were not on antihypertensive therapy, into a group of 22 patients who had undergone subclavian flap repair, with a mean age of 14 plus or minus 2.6 years, and another group of 21 patients undergoing end-to-end anastomosis, with a mean age of 13.5 plus or minus 3.9 years. We examined blood pressure at rest and during exercise, along with the measurement of cardiac output using impedance cardiography, and during 24-hour ambulatory monitoring. We recorded systolic and diastolic blood pressures, pulse pressure, cardiac output and total peripheral vascular resistance at rest and at peak exercise. During ambulatory monitoring, we measured mean pressures over 24 hours, in daytime and nighttime, 24-hour pulse pressure, and 24-hour mean arterial pressure. Students t test was used to judge significance, accepting this when p was less than 0.05. The group repaired using the subclavian flap showed significantly disadvantageous differences for diastolic blood pressure at rest, systolic blood pressure at peak exercise and for 24-hour systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 24-hour mean arterial pressure, and daytime and nighttime systolic blood pressure during ambulatory monitoring. Our findings suggest that, after repair using the subclavian flap in comparison to end-to-end anastomosis, patients show a higher incidence of late hypertension, both during exercise and ambulatory monitoring. The data indicate different residual aortic stiffnesses, these being lower after end-to-end anastomosis, which may be due to the greater resection of the abnormal aortic tissue when coarctation is repaired using the latter technique.

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Bruno Marino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marcelletti C

Boston Children's Hospital

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Luciano Pasquini

Boston Children's Hospital

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Adriano Carotti

Boston Children's Hospital

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Antonio Amodeo

Boston Children's Hospital

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Fabrizio Drago

Boston Children's Hospital

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Attilio Turchetta

Boston Children's Hospital

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Fiore S. Iorio

Boston Children's Hospital

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Luigi Ballerini

Boston Children's Hospital

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