Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sergio Severino is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sergio Severino.


Circulation | 2005

Atrial Myocardial Deformation Properties Predict Maintenance of Sinus Rhythm After External Cardioversion of Recent-Onset Lone Atrial Fibrillation A Color Doppler Myocardial Imaging and Transthoracic and Transesophageal Echocardiographic Study

Giovanni Di Salvo; Pio Caso; Rosalia Lo Piccolo; Angela Fusco; Alfonso Roberto Martiniello; Maria Giovanna Russo; A. D’Onofrio; Sergio Severino; Paolo Calabrò; Giuseppe Pacileo; Nicola Mininni; Raffaele Calabrò

Background—Accurate echocardiographic parameters to predict maintenance of sinus rhythm in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) are poorly defined. This study was conducted to assess the atrial myocardial properties during AF through myocardial velocity, strain rate, and strain and to compare their prognostic value in maintaining sinus rhythm in patients with lone AF with standard transthoracic (TTE) and transesophageal echocardiography (TEE). Methods and Results—Sixty-five consecutive patients with lone AF for ≤3 months underwent TTE, TEE, and myocardial velocity and strain and strain rate imaging examinations before successful external cardioversion. Maintenance of sinus rhythm was assessed during a 9-month follow-up. Atrial myocardial velocity, strain, and strain rate values in AF patients were compared with those of age- and sex-matched referents. Moreover, clinical and echocardiographic parameters of patients with maintenance of sinus rhythm (MSR patients) over the 9-month follow-up period (n=25) were compared with those from patients with AF recurrence (AFR patients; n=40). Atrial myocardial properties assessed by myocardial velocity, strain rate, and strain were significantly reduced (P<0.0001) in patients (velocity, 3.2±1.4 cm/s; strain, 23.3±19%; strain rate, 2±0.9 seconds−1) compared with referents (velocity, 5.7±1.3 cm/s; strain, 92±26%; strain rate, 4.2±1.8 seconds−1). The individual predictors of sinus rhythm maintenance were atrial appendage flow velocity (MSR patients, 39±12 cm/s; AFR patients, 32±15 cm/s; P<0.01) assessed by TEE and atrial strain (MSR patients, 33±27%; AFR patients, 17±9%; P=0.0007) and strain rate (MSR patients, 2.7±1 seconds−1; AFR patients, 1.6±0.6 seconds−1; P<0.0001) peak systolic values. Atrial strain (P<0.0001; coefficient, 0.015; SE, 0.003) and strain rate (P<0.0001; coefficient, 0.372; SE, 0.075) parameters alone were confirmed as independent predictors of sinus rhythm maintenance by multivariable analysis. Conclusions—Patients with higher atrial strain and strain rate appear to have a greater likelihood of staying in sinus rhythm. If the current data are verified in future studies, then additional pharmacological therapy and maintenance of anticoagulants for a longer period may need to be considered in those with lower atrial strain and strain rate measurements.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2000

Pulsed Doppler tissue imaging in endurance athletes: relation between left ventricular preload and myocardial regional diastolic function.

Pio Caso; Antonello D’Andrea; Maurizio Galderisi; Biagio Liccardo; Sergio Severino; Luigi De Simone; A. Izzo; Luigi D’Andrea; Nicola Mininni

The aim of this study was to assess the effects of endurance training on myocardial regional systolic and diastolic function by pulsed Doppler tissue imaging (DTI). Twenty male water polo players and 20 male control subjects underwent standard Doppler echocardiography and pulsed DTI, performed in apical views by placing a sample volume on left ventricular (LV) basal septal and inferior walls. Age, body surface area, and blood pressure were comparable between the 2 groups, with lower heart rate in athletes (p <0.001). They had significantly increased LV mass index (due to both higher wall thickness and end-diastolic diameter), greater endocardial fractional shortening, higher transmitral early/atrial (E/A) peak velocities ratio. In athletes, DTI analysis showed significantly prolonged myocardial deceleration time and greater myocardial E/A peak velocity ratio of septal and inferior walls, whereas myocardial early peak velocity was increased (p <0.01) only at the inferior wall. In the overall group, we found univariate relations of septal and inferior E/A peak velocity ratio and myocardial deceleration time with LV mass levels, and, in particular, with the sum of wall thickness. By separate multivariate analyses, however, these relations disappeared, being dependent on heart rate degree. Another association found between LV end-diastolic diameter and myocardial early diastolic wave peak velocity of the inferior wall (r = 0.68, p <0.0001) remained significant (standardized beta coefficient 0.60, p <0.00001), even after adjusting for heart rate, body surface area, age, and stroke volume (R(2) = 0.71, p <0.00001). In conclusion, DTI is a useful tool for detecting regional changes in myocardial function induced by training, because athletes present with an improvement in diastolic passive properties of myocardium. The higher early diastolic velocity of the inferior wall and its relation to increased preload may represent an indicator of aerobic training, allowing quantification of the degree of LV adaptation to endurance exercise.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1998

Use of pulsed Doppler tissue imaging to assess regional left ventricular diastolic dysfunction in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Sergio Severino; Pio Caso; Maurizio Galderisi; Luigi De Simone; Antonio Petrocelli; Oreste de Divitiis; Nicola Mininni

In this study, regional diastolic patterns and their relations with transmitral Doppler inflow were investigated in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HC) by pulsed Doppler tissue imaging (DTI). Doppler echocardiography and DTI of basal septum and lateral wall (apical 4-chamber view) were performed in 20 patients (15 men and 5 women) with HC and in 10 healthy subjects (7 men and 3 women). Diabetes, hypertension, coronary artery and valvular disease, mitral regurgitation, New York Heart Association functional classes III to IV, sinus tachycardia, atrial fibrillation, and inadequate echocardiograms were exclusion criteria. Peak velocity and time-velocity integral of early and late waves and their ratios, and deceleration and isovolumic relaxation times were determined by standard Doppler and by DTI at the septal and lateral wall levels. The 2 groups were comparable for age, heart rate, blood pressure, and ejection fraction. Transmitral peak velocity and time-velocity integral E/A ratios were reduced (both p <0.05) and deceleration and isovolumic relaxation times prolonged (both p <0.00001) in HC. Septal DTI showed lower peak velocity and time-velocity integral e/a ratios (p <0.00001 and p <0.001, respectively) and lengthened regional deceleration (p <0.01) and isovolumic (p <0.001) relaxation times. DTI of the lateral wall showed a prolongation of deceleration and isovolumic relaxation times (both p <0.01). By dividing HC according to transmitral E/A, 8 patients with E/A <1 had lower DTI septal e/a ratio (p <0.01) and prolonged septal deceleration and isovolumic relaxation times (both p <0.01) but no changes in DTI pattern of lateral wall than 12 patients with E/A > 1. In conclusion, DTI is useful and complementary to standard Doppler imaging to characterize diastolic properties in HC, reflecting a typical pattern of intramyocardial impaired relaxation at the level of hypertrophied septum and also providing information about the degree of this regional impairment. The lateral wall presents minor changes in diastolic times, which indicate how diastolic asynchrony is not confined to the hypertrophied segment in HC.


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2007

Left ventricular early myocardial dysfunction after chronic misuse of anabolic androgenic steroids: a Doppler myocardial and strain imaging analysis

D'Andrea A; Pio Caso; Salerno G; Scarafile R; De Corato G; Mita C; Di Salvo G; Sergio Severino; Cuomo S; Liccardo B; Esposito N; Calabrò R

Background: Anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS) are sometimes used by power athletes to improve performance by increasing muscle mass and strength. Recent bioptical data have shown that in athletes under the pharmacological effects of AAS, a focal increase in myocardial collagen content might occur as a repair mechanism against myocardial damage. Objective: To investigate the potential underlying left ventricular myocardial dysfunction after chronic misuse of AAS in athletes by use of Doppler myocardial imaging (DMI) and strain rate imaging (SRI). Methods: Standard Doppler echocardiography, DMI, SRI and ECG treadmill test were undertaken by 45 bodybuilders, including 20 athletes misusing AAS for at least 5 years (users), by 25 anabolic-free bodybuilders (non-users) and by 25 age-matched healthy sedentary controls, all men. The mean (SD) number of weeks of AAS use per year was 31.3 (6.4) in users, compared with 8.9 (3.8) years in non-users, and the mean weekly dosage of AAS was 525.4 (90.7) mg. Results: The groups were matched for age. Systolic blood pressure was higher in athletes (145 (9) vs 130 (5) mm Hg) than in controls. Left ventricular mass index did not significantly differ between the two groups of athletes. In particular, both users and non-users showed increased wall thickness and relative wall thickness compared with controls, whereas left ventricular ejection fraction, left ventricular end-diastolic diameter and transmitral Doppler indexes were comparable for the three groups. Colour DMI analysis showed significantly lower myocardial early: myocardial atrial diastolic wave ratios in users at the level of the basal interventricular septum (IVS) and left ventricular lateral wall (p<0.01), in comparison with both non-users and controls. In addition, in users, peak systolic left ventricular strain rate and strain were both reduced in the middle IVS (both p<0.001) and in the left ventricular lateral free wall (both p<0.01). By stepwise forward multivariate analyses, the sum of the left ventricular wall thickness (β coefficient = −0.32, p<0.01), the number of weeks of AAS use per year (β = −0.42, p<0.001) and the weekly dosage of AAS (β = −0.48, p<0.001) were the only independent determinants of middle IVS strain rate. In addition, impaired left ventricular strain in users was associated with a reduced performance during physical effort (p<0.001). Conclusions: Several years after chronic misuse of AAS, power athletes show a subclinical impairment of both systolic and diastolic myocardial function, strongly associated with mean dosage and duration of AAS use. The combined use of DMI and SRI may therefore be useful for the early identification of patients with more diffused cardiac involvement, and eventually for investigation of the reversibility of such myocardial effects after discontinuation of the drug.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2009

Atrial reservoir function by strain rate imaging in asymptomatic mitral stenosis: prognostic value at 3 year follow-up

Pio Caso; Roberta Ancona; G. Di Salvo; S. Comenale Pinto; M. Macrino; V. Di Palma; Antonello D'Andrea; Alfonso Roberto Martiniello; Sergio Severino; Raffaele Calabrò

AIMS Assessment of left and right systolic atrial reservoir function in asymptomatic mitral stenosis (MS) by strain and strain rate imaging (SRI) and their prognostic power at 3 year follow-up was the purpose of this study. There is clear indication to treat (by surgery or percutaneous valvotomy) symptomatic patients with MS, whereas for the asymptomatic ones, the question is much debated. So, we need new echocardiographic parameters helpful for the management of asymtomatic patients. Atrial reservoir function by SRI could help in evaluation of these patients. METHODS AND RESULTS Fifty-three asymptomatic patients with MS and 53 healthy controls were evaluated by the standard echo-Doppler study [mitral valve (MV) area, mean gradient, systolic pulmonary pressure, left atrial (LA) width, LA volumes, LA compliance index] and by Doppler myocardial imaging (velocity, strain, and SR of both atria). The endpoint at 3 year follow-up was symptoms, hospitalization for cardiac cause, atrial fibrillation, thrombo-embolic events, valvular surgery, or percutaneous commissurotomy. LA width, volumes, and systolic pulmonary pressure were significantly increased in MS patients (P < 0.001). Atrial myocardial velocities and deformation indices were significantly compromised in MS patients (P < 0.0001). Significant correlation was found between atrial myocardial velocity and MV area (by pressure half-time method: P = 0.019, R = 0.41; by planimetric method: P = 0.016, R = 0.43). Peak systolic LA myocardial strain and SR were significantly correlated with atrial volumes (strain: P = 0.03, R = -0.28; SR: P = 0.0008, R = -0.42), with atrial compliance index (strain: P = 0.04, R = 0.26; SR: P = 0.04, R = 0.16), with atrial ejection fraction (strain: P < 0.0001, R = 0.56; SR: P = 0.03, R = 0.43). At 3 year follow-up, 22 (41%) patients had events. Comparing the MS patients who had events during the 3 year follow-up with those who did not, the former had bigger LA volumes, although these parameters did not reached a significant value, whereas atrial myocardial systolic SR was significantly impaired in patients with events. In multivariate analysis, the best predictor of adverse events was LA peak systolic SR average (P = 0.04; coefficient: 0.113; SE: 0.055; cut-off value of 1.69 s(-1) for LA peak systolic SR average) with a sensitivity of 88%, specificity of 80.6%, area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.852 (SE: 0.048; 95% CI: 0.74-0.93, P = 0.0001). CONCLUSION Atrial myocardial deformation properties, assessed by SRI, are abnormal in asymptomatic patients with rheumatic MS. The degree of this impairment is predictor of events in a 3 year follow-up. SRI could be helpful in decision-making of asymtomatic patients with MS.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 1999

Noninvasive Assessment of Left and Right Internal Mammary Artery Graft Patency with High-Frequency Transthoracic Echocardiography

Luigi De Simone; Pio Caso; Sergio Severino; Marino Scherillo; Antonello D’Andrea; Attilio Varricchio; Roberto Violini; Nicola Mininni

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was (1) to visualize internal mammary artery grafts (IMAG) on coronary artery by transthoracic echocardiography and (2) to assess the patency of the grafts. METHODS Twenty-three patients (21 men, 56 +/- 6 years) with previous coronary artery bypass grafting were studied at baseline and after they underwent low-dose dipyridamole infusion. The parameters obtained were systolic (SPV) and diastolic (DPV) peak velocities and their ratio (DPV/SPV); the dipyridamole infusion to baseline ratio of DPV was an index of IMAG blood flow reserve (FR). Two groups of patients were selected at baseline: group A, (n = 12) with a DPV/SPV >1, and group B (n = 11), with a DPV/SPV <1. RESULTS The IMAG was identified in all patients. Intraluminal flow signals obtained with pulsed wave Doppler showed a biphasic pattern (1 systolic and 1 diastolic wave). After dipyridamole infusion was administered, flow velocities increased in 11 of 12 patients in group A and in 5 of 11 patients in group B. In group A the DPV/SPV increased from 1.79 +/- 0.47 to 1.8 +/- 0.43 (P = not significant), and the FR was 1.8 +/- 0.4. In group B the DPV/SPV increased from 0. 46 +/- 0.05 to 0.5 +/- 0.09 (P = not significant), and the FR was 1. 3 +/- 0.41. Coronary angiography showed the graft patency in all patients in group A and in 5 patients in group B with increased flow velocity after dipyridamole infusion. In the identification of graft stenosis at baseline, DPV/SPV showed 100% sensibility and 58% specificity, and FR showed 92% sensibility and 84% specificity. CONCLUSION Doppler echocardiographic evaluation of the IMAG is a simple noninvasive method to assess the functional impairment of the vessel.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2003

Prognostic value of pharmacological stress echocardiography in diabetic patients.

Alan D. D'Andrea; Sergio Severino; Pio Caso; L. de Simone; Biagio Liccardo; Alberto Forni; M. Pascotto; G. Di Salvo; Marino Scherillo; Nicola Mininni; Raffaele Calabrò

Our study was undertaken to assess the prognostic significance of pharmacological stress echocardiography in 325 diabetic patients. Pharmacological stress echocardiography was performed for diagnosis of coronary artery disease in 128 patients, and for risk stratification in 197 patients. Follow-up was 34 months. Cardiac-related death and non-fatal myocardial infarction were considered hard events. During the follow-up period, there were 38 deaths and 23 acute non-fatal myocardial infarctions. By univariate analysis, a pharmacological stress echocardiography positive response for ischaemia indicated an increased risk of cardiovascular death. However, by multivariate analysis, advanced age and peak ejection fraction <40% were the only independent predictors of cardiac death. The same peak ejection fraction (EF) <40%, rest wall motion score index and previous myocardial infarction were independent predictors of hard events. After dividing the population into two subgroups on the basis of EF at rest, only a peak EF <40% and a pharmacological stress echocardiography positive test were powerful independent predictors of cardiovascular mortality.


Cardiovascular Ultrasound | 2017

Stress echo 2020: the international stress echo study in ischemic and non-ischemic heart disease

Eugenio Picano; Quirino Ciampi; Rodolfo Citro; Antonello D’Andrea; Maria Chiara Scali; Lauro Cortigiani; Iacopo Olivotto; Fabio Mori; Maurizio Galderisi; Marco Fabio Costantino; Lorenza Pratali; Giovanni Di Salvo; Eduardo Bossone; Francesco Ferrara; Luna Gargani; Fausto Rigo; Nicola Gaibazzi; Giuseppe Limongelli; Giuseppe Pacileo; Maria Grazia Andreassi; Bruno Pinamonti; Laura Massa; Marco Antonio Rodrigues Torres; Marcelo Haertel Miglioranza; Clarissa Borguezan Daros; José Luis de Castro e Silva Pretto; Branko Beleslin; Ana Djordjevic-Dikic; Albert Varga; Attila Pálinkás

BackgroundStress echocardiography (SE) has an established role in evidence-based guidelines, but recently its breadth and variety of applications have extended well beyond coronary artery disease (CAD). We lack a prospective research study of SE applications, in and beyond CAD, also considering a variety of signs in addition to regional wall motion abnormalities.MethodsIn a prospective, multicenter, international, observational study design, > 100 certified high-volume SE labs (initially from Italy, Brazil, Hungary, and Serbia) will be networked with an organized system of clinical, laboratory and imaging data collection at the time of physical or pharmacological SE, with structured follow-up information. The study is endorsed by the Italian Society of Cardiovascular Echography and organized in 10 subprojects focusing on: contractile reserve for prediction of cardiac resynchronization or medical therapy response; stress B-lines in heart failure; hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; mitral regurgitation after either transcatheter or surgical aortic valve replacement; outdoor SE in extreme physiology; right ventricular contractile reserve in repaired Tetralogy of Fallot; suspected or initial pulmonary arterial hypertension; coronary flow velocity, left ventricular elastance reserve and B-lines in known or suspected CAD; identification of subclinical familial disease in genotype-positive, phenotype- negative healthy relatives of inherited disease (such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy).ResultsWe expect to recruit about 10,000 patients over a 5-year period (2016-2020), with sample sizes ranging from 5,000 for coronary flow velocity/ left ventricular elastance/ B-lines in CAD to around 250 for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or repaired Tetralogy of Fallot. This data-base will allow to investigate technical questions such as feasibility and reproducibility of various SE parameters and to assess their prognostic value in different clinical scenarios.ConclusionsThe study will create the cultural, informatic and scientific infrastructure connecting high-volume, accredited SE labs, sharing common criteria of indication, execution, reporting and image storage of SE to obtain original safety, feasibility, and outcome data in evidence-poor diagnostic fields, also outside the established core application of SE in CAD based on regional wall motion abnormalities. The study will standardize procedures, validate emerging signs, and integrate the new information with established knowledge, helping to build a next-generation SE lab without inner walls.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2003

Myocardial Ultrasound Tissue Characterization in Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: Noninvasive Evidence of Electrical and Textural Substrate for Ventricular Arrhythmias

Giuseppe Limongelli; Giuseppe Pacileo; Fabiana Cerrato; Marina Verrengia; Andrea Di Simone; Sergio Severino; Berardo Sarubbi; Raffaele Calabrò

BACKGROUND Although in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) pathologic studies seem to suggest a correlation between morphologic findings and arrhythmias, it has never been confirmed in the clinical setting. OBJECTIVE We sought to noninvasively assess the electrical and textural properties of the myocardium and to define their potential relationship in patients with HCM. METHODS We studied 48 patients: 22 with HCM (mean age: 22 +/- 5.1 years) and 26 age- and body surface area-matched healthy patients. They underwent a standard echocardiographic examination to assess left ventricular size and thickness. In addition, by integrated backscatter analysis, we assessed textural properties of left ventricular myocardium with calibrated averaged intensity (IB) and to assess functional properties of the myocardium with cyclic variation, both at the interventricular septum (IVS) and posterior wall. Finally, we studied ventricular late potentials (VLPs) by signal-averaged electrocardiography and performed a 24-hour electrocardiography Holter monitoring to respectively define electrical instability and ventricular arrhythmias. RESULTS Compared with control patients, patients with HCM had, both at IVS and posterior wall, increased IB (-28.8 +/- 10 vs -35 +/- 4 dB [P =.007] and -29 +/- 8 vs -33 +/- 5 dB [P <.035], respectively) and decreased cyclic variation (6.8 +/- 2.7 vs 10.3 +/- 2.3 dB [P <.001] and 8.2 +/- 2.9 vs 11.4 +/- 2.1 dB [P <.001], respectively). In all, 5 patients with HCM had positivity of VLPs, and 4 of them showed nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (nsVT) on the Holter monitoring. Compared with patients who had HCM without VLPs and nsVT, patients with positivity of VLPs and nsVT showed higher IB both at IVS (-15.8 +/- 8.4 vs -32.6 +/- 5.9 dB [P <.001] and -16.6 +/- 9.5 vs -31.5 +/- 7.5 dB [P =.002], respectively) and at posterior wall (-19.08 +/- 8.42 vs -32.5 +/- 4.2 dB [P <.001] and -22.4 +/- 4.6 vs -31 +/- 7.5 [P =.04], respectively). A multivariate analysis showed IB at IVS (P =.042; odds ratio = 1.19) and positivity of VLPs (P =.026; odds ratio = 3.67) as independent predictors of nsVT. CONCLUSION Patients with HCM showed abnormal morphologic and electrical properties of the myocardium. The correlation between VLPs and IB at IVS and their relationship with nsVT suggests a link between textural and electrical nonhomogeneity of myocardial fibers, a potential substrate of nsVT in patients with HCM.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2013

Dipyridamole coronary flow reserve stratifies prognosis in acute coronary syndrome patients without left anterior descending disease

Guido Carlomagno; Chiara Sordelli; Raffaele Iengo; Vittorio Monda; Sergio Severino; Raffaele Merenda; Antonello D'Andrea; Pio Caso

AIMS Coronary flow reserve (CFR) assessment by transthoracic ultrasound of the left anterior descending (LAD) artery during dipyridamole stress echocardiography has been shown to predict prognosis in large unselected populations. Low values of CFR are strongly correlated with significant stenosis of the LAD; aim of the present study was to assess the prognostic impact of CFR in patients recovering from an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) with proven absence of LAD disease. METHODS From an overall cohort of 325 patients with ACS who underwent a high-dose dipyridamole stress with combined assessment of CFR in the LAD and wall motion, 152 patients without LAD disease (stenosis <50%) were included in the present analysis; all subjects underwent coronary angiography and were subsequently monitored for the incidence of major cardiac events (MACE). RESULTS After a median follow-up of 29 months, 22 patients developed MACE. Patients who experienced MACE differed from stable patients in terms of age, prevalence of diabetes, and CFR. Receiver-operating characteristic curve analysis defined a CFR <2.25 as the optimal cut point for prediction of MACE. Cox multivariable analysis for the prediction of MACE demonstrated independent predictive value only for CFR <2.25, smoking status, and number of stenotic vessels at angiogram. CONCLUSION In high-risk patients with ACS, even in the absence of LAD disease, CFR significantly improves prediction of adverse events when added to standard evaluation. This finding supports a role of CFR in the risk stratification early after ACS and is in context with the concept that CFR reflects global atherosclerotic burden, endothelial dysfunction, and microvascular damage, more than just mirroring focal LAD disease.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sergio Severino's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pio Caso

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicola Mininni

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raffaele Calabrò

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonello D'Andrea

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maurizio Galderisi

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Biagio Liccardo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alfonso Roberto Martiniello

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giovanni Di Salvo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Quirino Ciampi

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge