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Dive into the research topics where Salvatore Pipitone is active.

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Featured researches published by Salvatore Pipitone.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2007

Ventricular Tachycardia in Non-Compaction of Left Ventricle: Is This a Frequent Complication?

Giovanni Fazio; Giovanni Corrado; Elisabetta Zachara; Carlo Rapezzi; Ali K. Sulafa; Loredana Sutera; Caterina Pizzuto; Claudia Stollberger; Luca Sormani; Joseph Finsterer; Abraham Benatar; Gabriele Di Gesaro; Caterina Cascio; Debora Cangemi; Yuksel Cavusoglu; Magnus Baumhakel; Fabrizio Drago; Scipione Carerj; Salvatore Pipitone; Salvatore Novo

Background: Isolated left ventricular non‐compaction is the result of incomplete myocardial morphogenesis, leading to persistence of the embryonic myocardium. The condition is recognized by an excessively prominent trabecular meshwork and deep intertrabecular recesses of the left ventricle. Whether these intertrabecular recesses are a favorable substrate for ventricular arrhythmias is unclear. Some reports have found that the fatal ventricular arrhythmias may occur in approximately half of the patients. In this report we investigated about this association.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2007

The noncompaction of the left ventricular myocardium: our paediatric experience.

Giovanni Fazio; Salvatore Pipitone; Maria Aurora Iacona; Salvatore Marchi; Maurizio Mongiovì; Rosanna Zito; Loredana Sutera; Salvatore Novo

Objectives The noncompaction of the left ventricular myocardium is a rare congenital heart disease, characterized by an excessive prominence of trabecular meshwork, spaced out by deep intertrabecular recesses, consequent to the arrest of the normal myocardium embryogenesis. Although there are numerous descriptions, the physiopathological effects of the structural alterations, just like the clinical spectrum and the evolution of the disease, are not totally clarified. In the present study, we have evaluated the natural history of the disease, the familial incidence and the alterations of the systolic and diastolic function. Methods We collected a series of 21 young patients who were affected by noncompaction of left ventricular myocardium. In all cases, a diagnosis was echocardiographically made on the basis of a reported spongy/compacted ratio > 2 in one or more segments of the left ventricle. Thirteen patients were male and eight were female, with a mean age of 12.7 years (range 21 days to 27 years). The average follow-up time was 7.8 years (range 1–18 years); all patients were periodically tested by ECG Holter and two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiogram. In 14 patients, the last echocardiographic evaluation included the analysis of tissue Doppler imaging (TDI). Results The noncompaction of left ventricular myocardium was isolated in nine cases and associated with a structural cardiopathy in 12 cases: with atrial septal defect in four cases, ventricular septal defect in four cases, aortopulmonary window in one case, aortic coarctation in one case and bicuspid aortic valve in one case. One case presented a type Kent ventricular pre-excitation. Twelve cases were symptomatic at the moment of the diagnosis (for heart failure in 11 cases and for syncope in one case). Nine cases were asymptomatic and the diagnosis was made during a family screening or occasionally. In ten of the 11 subjects affected by congestive heart failure, medical therapy re-established a good haemodynamic balance (in two cases, it was possible to suspend the therapy). In one case with congestive heart failure and pulmonary hypertension in New York Heart Association class III, we recommended heart transplantation. We did not find any dysrhythmia in any of the cases. Diastolic function impairment, tested by transmitral blood pressure monitoring and TDI, was found in seven of 14 patients, all with reduced left ventricular contractility. Conclusions We noticed a considerable variability of clinical presentation in our cases, according to the number of the ventricular segments affected by the anomaly. According to our data, middle-term prognosis appears to be better than that previously reported in the literature. We found a reduction of the systolic function only in 50% of cases, all with severe involvement of the apical and postero-lateral segments. Diastolic function was compromised only in those patients with severe impairment of systolic function.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2003

Abnormalities of the umbilico-portal venous system in Down syndrome: A report of two new patients

Salvatore Pipitone; Caterina Garofalo; Giovanni Corsello; Maurizio Mongiovì; Maria Piccione; Emiliano Maresi; Velio Sperandeo

Congenital anomalies of the umbilical and portal venous system are rare vascular malformations which are often associated with anomalies of the heart and gastrointestinal tract. Association with chromosomal disorders has been sporadically reported. We now report on two patients with trisomy 21 and congenital anomalies of the umbilico‐portal system. A male fetus showed absence of the intrahepatic portal vein (PV) and ductus venosus with a direct communication between portal sinus and inferior vena cava exhibiting an umbilicosystemic total shunt during the fetal life and a portosystemic total shunt after birth. A female infant showed absence of the intrahepatic PV and a total portocaval shunt. Both patients also had heart defects. As previously documented in other reports, our cases demonstrated that this association may be causally‐related to the chromosomal aberration. In addition, the umbilico‐portal venous system abnormalities seems to be the most frequent congenital vascular malformation in Down syndrome. A presumptive pathogenetic mechanism could be a trisomy 21‐related altered angiogenesis of the vitelloumbilical plexus.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2010

Ventricular dysfunction and number of non compacted segments in non compaction: non-independent predictors.

Giovanni Fazio; Giovanni Corrado; Giuseppina Novo; Elisabetta Zachara; Claudio Rapezzi; Ali K. Sulafa; Loredana Sutera; Luciana D'Angelo; Claudia Visconti; Claudia Stöllberger; Luca Sormani; Joseph Finsterer; Yuksel Cavusoglu; Gabriele Di Gesaro; Emanuele Grassedonio; Filippo Ferrara; Massino Galia; Massimo Midiri; Salvatore Pipitone; Scipione Carerj; Salvatore Novo

BACKGROUND Isolated ventricular noncompaction (IVNC) is characterized by multiple prominent trabeculations and deep intertrabecular recesses. Some reports prove that the chronic heart failure may occur in approximately half of the patients. In this report we investigate the correlation between the number of non compacted segments and entity of systolic dysfunction from the registry and subregistries of the SIEC. METHOD To identify the correlation between ventricular dysfunction and number of segments involved in non compaction we evaluated a consecutive series of 238 patients affected by non compaction, from the SIEC (Società Italiana di Ecografia Cardiovascolare) registry. The average age of patients was 41.5 years (range: 1-92 years), 137 were males and 101 females. In 122 cases we found ventricular systolic dysfunctions with an EF average of 34.6%. The number of affected segments by non-compactation and diastolic dysfunction were found to be non-independent predictors of LV systolic dysfunction. CONCLUSION From the analyses we carried out, it seems that ventricular dysfunction seems to be completely independent from the segment numbers of non compacted segments.


International Journal of Pediatrics | 2010

Features and outcomes in utero and after birth of fetuses with myocardial disease.

Vlasta Fesslova; Maurizio Mongiovì; Salvatore Pipitone; Jelena Brankovic; Laura Villa

Objectives. Ninety-one fetuses with dilated or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (DCM, HCM) and myocarditis were studied. Results. Group 1 “DCM” included 19 fetuses: 13 with hydrops (FH) and 5 with associated extracardiac anomalies (ECAs) (15.8%). Group 2 “Myocarditis” included twelve fetuses, having 11 with FH. Group 3 “HCM” included sixty fetuses: 26 had associated ECAs, 17 had maternal diabetes, and 17 were “idiopathic”; however, in one case, a metabolic disorder was found postnatally, and 4 had familiarity for HCM. Outcomes. Ten cases opted for termination of pregnancy. Two cases with DCM and 1 with HCM were lost at follow-up. Out of the cases that continued pregnancy, with known follow-up, mortality was 68.75% in Group 1, 63.6% in Group 2, and 31.3% in Group 3 (the majority with severe ECAs). Surviving cases with DCM and myocarditis improved, 2 with HCM worsened, 6 remained stable, and 26 improved or normalized. Conclusions. Our data show more severe prognosis in DCM and myocarditis and forms with severe associated ECAs.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2008

Supraventricular Tachycardia in Fetus: How Can We Treat ?

Maurizio Mongiovì; Salvatore Pipitone

The normal fetal cardiac rhythm is characterized by a regular heart rate ranging between 100 and 160 -180 beats/min with a normal 1: 1 atrioventricular electromechanical relationship during each cardiac cycle. Fetal tachycardia occurring in approximately 0.5% of all pregnancies and it is an important cause of fetal morbidity and mortality. A fetal tachycardic heart is at risk for developing low cardiac output, hydrops and ultimately fetal death or significant neurological morbidity. Different conditions can play a role to determine the natural history of tachycardic fetus as gestational age, underlying pathophysiology of the arrhythmia, fetal heart rate, duration of the tachyarrhythmia, and presence or absence of cardiac dysfunction. Reliable diagnosis in utero of fetal arrhythmia is possible by ultrasound examination of the fetal heart. In fact pulsed wave Doppler guided by two-dimensional echocardiography provided important information on cardiac rhythm as it study the blood flow from different chambers. With the introduction of the latest myocardial deformation methodology, the fetal tachyarrhythmias can be diagnosed more accu notrately. Precise diagnosis of cardiac arrhythmias in the fetus is crucial for a managed therapeutic approach. The choice of management is correlated to many factors: gestational age, underlying pathophysiology of the arrhythmia, fetal heart rate, duration of the tachyarrhythmia, and presence or absence of cardiac dysfunction. A large review of fetal arrhythmias was been reported in our work.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2008

Sympathetic tone and ventricular tachycardia.

Giovanni Fazio; Giuseppina Novo; Loredana Sutera; Gabriele Di Gesaro; Marco Fazio; Luciana DʼAngelo; Claudia Visconti; Vernuccio D; Salvatore Pipitone; Salvatore Novo

Background The pathogenesis of idiopathic monomorphic ventricular tachycardia is not clear. We suppose that a lack of balance of the sympathetic system could be involved. Frequency domain analyses of the heart rate can be useful to understand autonomic system balance. Therefore we performed this evaluation on a sample of seven children affected by idiopathic monomorphic ventricular tachycardia. Methods and results We performed a Holter recording for palpitations on all the children, with an average age of 12 (range: 7–18 years). In all the patients many episodes of repeated sustained or nonsustained ventricular tachycardia were demonstrated, with an average heart rate of 170 bpm. We excluded any structural heart defect through echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging studies in all the children. A negative tridimensional electroanatomic mapping was performed on five of them. Holter analysis of ventricular rate variability was performed in the frequency domain. Two main components were distinguished in a spectrum calculated on the basis of 24 h-long recordings. We studied low frequency and high frequency components. We compared the values obtained with those of a control group of 10 healthy children, admitted to our cardiology division, day-care system. Affected patients showed a reduction of average high frequency as a sign of a reduction of vagal activity and an average increase of the low frequency/high frequency ratio. Conclusions The data may confirm our hypothesis of the involvement of the sympathetic nervous system in idiopathic monomorphic ventricular tachycardia in children.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2012

A cardiac fibroma in a 7-year-old asymptomatic girl admitted for ECG anomalies.

Giovanni Fazio; Emanuele Grassedonio; Giuseppe Lo Re; Mongiovi Maurizio; Loredana Sutera; Daniela Bacarella; Giuseppina Novo; Salvatore Pipitone; Salvatore Novo; Massimo Midiri

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Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2012

Superoinferior ventricles with superior left ventricle: an example of hyperstrophic cardiac looping?

Salvatore Pipitone

To the editor Superoinferior ventricles are a rare cardiac malformation in which the ventricular septum is horizontal and the ventricles are situated one above the other, rather than the usual side-by-side arrangement. The great majority of reported cases of superoinferior ventricles have a superior and usually hypoplastic morphological right ventricle (RV) and an inferior and well developed left ventricle (LV). To the best of my knowledge, only three cases of superoinferior ventricles with a superior LV have been reported. Herein is described another case of a 22-year-old woman with post-Fontan status.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2008

Segmental dyskinesia in Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome: a possible cause of dilatative cardiomyopathy.

Giovanni Fazio; Maurizio Mongiovì; Loredana Sutera; Giuseppina Novo; Salvatore Novo; Salvatore Pipitone

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