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Dive into the research topics where Silvana Baruffi is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvana Baruffi.


Circulation Research | 1983

Potential fields on the ventricular surface of the exposed dog heart during normal excitation.

Giorgio Arisi; Emilio Macchi; Silvana Baruffi; Santa Spaggiari; Bruno Taccardi

We studied the normal spread of excitation on the anterior and posterior ventricular surface of open-chest dogs by recording unipolar electrograms from an array of 1124 electrodes spaced 2 mm apart. The array had the shape of the ventricular surface of the heart. The electrograms were processed by a computer and displayed as epicardial equipotential maps at 1-msec intervals. Isochrone maps also were drawn. Several new features of epicardial potential fields were identified: (1) a high number of breakthrough points; (2) the topography, apparent widths, velocities of the wavefronts and the related potential drop; (3) the topography of positive potential peaks in relation to the wavefronts. Fifteen to 24 breakthrough points were located on the anterior, and 10 to 13 on the posterior ventricular surface. Some were in previously described locations and many others in new locations. Specifically, 3 to 5 breakthrough points appeared close to the atrioventricular groove on the anterior right ventricle and 2 to 4 on the posterior heart aspect; these basal breakthrough points appeared when a large portion of ventricular surface was still unexcited. Due to the presence of numerous breakthrough points on the anterior and posterior aspect of the heart which had not previously been described, the spread of excitation on the ventricular surface was “mosaic-like,” with activation wavefronts spreading in all directions, rather than radially from the two breakthrough points, as traditionally described. The positive potential peaks which lay ahead of the expanding wavefronts moved along preferential directions which were probably related to the myocardial fiber direction.


Circulation Research | 1982

Potential fields generated by oblique dipole layers modeling excitation wavefronts in the anisotropic myocardium. Comparison with potential fields elicited by paced dog hearts in a volume conductor.

P Colli-Franzone; L Guerri; C Viganotti; Emilio Macchi; Silvana Baruffi; S Spaggiari; Bruno Taccardi

The potential distribution in a homogeneous, cylindrical volume conductor surrounding an isolated paced dog heart was first measured and then calculated by using a mathematical model that simulates an anisotropic excitation wavefront spreading through the heart muscle. The study was performed with a view to establish to what extent the anisotropy of cardiac generators affects the potential field in the extra-cardiac conducting media at a great distance from the heart. The model considers an oblique dipole layer on the wavefront which, assuming axial symmetry of the electrical properties of the fibers, can be viewed as the superposition of an axial and a transverse dipole layer. These layers are, respectively, parallel and perpendicular to the local fiber direction. A notable feature of the model is that, in the case of axial symmetry, the potential field due to such an oblique distribution is also equivalent to the sum of the potentials generated, respectively, by a normal and an axial dipole layer. In this form, the model generalizes the classical, uniform double layer model, upon which the solid angle theory is based, by adding to it an axial component. The features of the measured potential fields, which could not be interpreted on the basis of the solid angle theory, were satisfactorily reproduced by the model, at least on a qualitative basis. The results clearly showed the dominant role played by the axial component of the potential field even at a considerable distance from the heart.


Cardiovascular Research | 2010

The histone deacetylase inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid reduces cardiac arrhythmias in dystrophic mice

Claudia Colussi; Roberta Berni; Jessica Rosati; Stefania Straino; Serena Vitale; Francesco Spallotta; Silvana Baruffi; Leonardo Bocchi; Francesca Delucchi; Stefano Rossi; Monia Savi; Dante Rotili; Federico Quaini; Emilio Macchi; Donatella Stilli; Ezio Musso; Antonello Mai; Carlo Gaetano; Maurizio C. Capogrossi

AIMS The effect of histone deacetylase inhibitors on dystrophic heart function is not established. To investigate this aspect, dystrophic mdx mice and wild-type (WT) animals were treated 90 days either with suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA, 5 mg/kg/day) or with an equivalent amount of vehicle. METHODS AND RESULTS The following parameters were evaluated: (i) number of ventricular arrhythmias in resting and stress conditions (restraint test) or after aconitine administration; (ii) cardiac excitability, conduction velocity, and refractoriness; (iii) expression and distribution of connexins (Cxs) and Na(v)1.5 sodium channel. Ventricular arrhythmias were negligible in all resting animals. During restraint, however, an increase in the number of arrhythmias was detected in vehicle-treated mdx mice (mdx-V) when compared with SAHA-treated mdx (mdx-SAHA) mice or normal control (WT-V). Interestingly, aconitine, a sodium channel pharmacologic opener, induced ventricular arrhythmias in 83% of WT-V mice, 11% of mdx-V, and in 57% of mdx-SAHA. Epicardial multiple lead recording revealed a prolongation of the QRS complex in mdx-V mice in comparison to WT-V and WT-SAHA mice, paralleled by a significant reduction in impulse propagation velocity. These alterations were efficiently counteracted by SAHA. Molecular analyses revealed that in mdx mice, SAHA determined Cx remodelling of Cx40, Cx37 and Cx32, whereas expression levels of Cx43 and Cx45 were unaltered. Remarkably, Cx43 lateralization observed in mdx control animals was reversed by SAHA treatment which also re-induced Na(v)1.5 expression. CONCLUSION SAHA attenuates arrhythmias in mdx mice by a mechanism in which Cx remodelling and sodium channel re-expression could play an important role.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2008

Ventricular activation is impaired in aged rat hearts.

Stefano Rossi; Silvana Baruffi; Andrea Bertuzzi; Michele Miragoli; Domenico Corradi; Roberta Maestri; Rossella Alinovi; Antonio Mutti; Ezio Musso; Andrea Sgoifo; Donatella Brisinda; Riccardo Fenici; Emilio Macchi

Ventricular arrhythmias are frequently observed in the elderly population secondary to alterations of electrophysiological properties that occur with the normal aging process of the heart. However, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. The aim of the present study was to determine specific age-related changes in electrophysiological properties and myocardial structure in the ventricles that can be related to a structural-functional arrhythmogenic substrate. Multiple unipolar electrograms were recorded in vivo on the anterior ventricular surface of four control and seven aged rats during normal sinus rhythm and ventricular pacing. Electrical data were related to morphometric and immunohistochemical parameters of the underlying ventricular myocardium. In aged hearts total ventricular activation time was significantly delayed (QRS duration: +69%), while ventricular conduction velocity did not change significantly compared with control hearts. Moreover, ventricular activation patterns displayed variable numbers of epicardial breakthrough points whose appearance could change with time. Morphological analysis in aged rats revealed that heart weight and myocyte transverse diameter increased significantly, scattered microfoci of interstitial fibrosis were mostly present in the ventricular subendocardium, and gap junction connexin expression decreased significantly in ventricular myocardium compared with control rats. Our results show that in aged hearts delayed total ventricular activation time and abnormal activation patterns are not due to delayed myocardial conduction and suggest the occurrence of impaired impulse propagation through the conduction system leading to uncoordinated myocardial excitation. Impaired interaction between the conduction system and ventricular myocardium might create a potential reentry substrate, contributing to a higher incidence of ventricular arrhythmias in the elderly population.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 1998

High-density epicardial mapping during current injection and ventricular activation in rat hearts

Emilio Macchi; Massimo Cavalieri; Donatella Stilli; Ezio Musso; Silvana Baruffi; Giorgio Olivetti; Philip R. Ershler; Robert L. Lux; Bruno Taccardi

The purpose of this study is to report new methods for manufacturing precision electrode arrays for recording high-resolution potential distributions from epicardial surfaces of small-animal hearts. Electrode arrays of 64 leads (8 × 8) and 121 leads (11 × 11) were constructed with a tulle substrate to which insulated, fine silver wires (60-μm diameter) were attached by knots at mesh node intervals of 540 × 720 μm. Insulation was removed at the tips of the knots. Potential distributions and waveforms were recorded from saline solutions and rat heart epicardium during ventricular paced beats and during passive current injection in the diastolic interval. Electrical responses obtained from rat epicardium compared favorably with those observed in studies of larger-animal hearts, which used arrays having greater electrode spacing, and revealed the effects of myocardial anisotropy. Epicardial potentials measured early after stimulation in the region surrounding the pacing site were interpreted in terms of potentials generated by an equivalent quadrupolar source. We conclude that electrode arrays for epicardial mapping of small hearts can be constructed with sufficient ease and precision to allow detailed study of fiber structure and electrophysiology in these hearts in normal and pathological conditions.


Basic Research in Cardiology | 2007

Preservation of ventricular performance at early stages of diabetic cardiomyopathy involves changes in myocyte size, number and intercellular coupling

Donatella Stilli; Costanza Lagrasta; Roberta Berni; Leonardo Bocchi; Monia Savi; Francesca Delucchi; Gallia Graiani; Manuela Monica; Roberta Maestri; Silvana Baruffi; Stefano Rossi; Emilio Macchi; Ezio Musso; Federico Quaini

In a rat model of diabetic cardiomyopathy, we tested whether specific changes in myocyte turnover and intercellular coupling contribute to preserving ventricular performance after a short period of hyperglycemia. In 41 rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes and 24 control animals, cardiac electromechanical properties were assessed by telemetry ECG, epicardial potential mapping, and hemodynamic measurements to document normal ventricular function. Myocardial remodeling, expression of gap-junction proteins and myocyte regeneration were evaluated by tissue morphometry, immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting. Ventricular myocyte number and volume were also determined. In diabetic hearts, after 3 weeks of hyperglycemia, left ventricular mass was lowered by 23%, while left ventricular wall thickness and chamber volume were maintained, in the absence of fibrosis and myocyte hypertrophy. In the presence of a marked DNA oxidative damage, an increased rate of DNA replication and mitotic divisions associated with generation of new myocytes were detected. The number of cells expressing the receptor for Stem Cell Factor (c-kit) and their rate of proliferation were preserved in the left ventricle while the atrial storage of these primitive cells was severely reduced by diabetes-induced oxidative stress. Despite a down-regulation of Connexin43 and over-expression of both Connexin40 and Connexin45, the junctional proteins were normally distributed in diabetic ventricular myocardium,justifying the preserved tissue excitability and conduction velocity. In conclusion, before the appearance of the diabetic cardiomyopathic phenotype,myocardial cell proliferation associated with gap junction protein remodeling may contribute to prevent marked alterations of cardiac structure and electrophysiological properties, preserving ventricular performance.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Growth factor-induced mobilization of cardiac progenitor cells reduces the risk of arrhythmias, in a rat model of chronic myocardial infarction.

Leonardo Bocchi; Monia Savi; Gallia Graiani; Stefano Rossi; Aldo Agnetti; Francesca Stillitano; Costanza Lagrasta; Silvana Baruffi; Roberta Berni; Caterina Frati; Mario Vassalle; Umberto Squarcia; Elisabetta Cerbai; Emilio Macchi; Donatella Stilli; Federico Quaini; Ezio Musso

Heart repair by stem cell treatment may involve life-threatening arrhythmias. Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) appear best suited for reconstituting lost myocardium without posing arrhythmic risks, being commissioned towards cardiac phenotype. In this study we tested the hypothesis that mobilization of CPCs through locally delivered Hepatocyte Growth Factor and Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 to heal chronic myocardial infarction (MI), lowers the proneness to arrhythmias. We used 133 adult male Wistar rats either with one-month old MI and treated with growth factors (GFs, n = 60) or vehicle (V, n = 55), or sham operated (n = 18). In selected groups of animals, prior to and two weeks after GF/V delivery, we evaluated stress-induced ventricular arrhythmias by telemetry-ECG, cardiac mechanics by echocardiography, and ventricular excitability, conduction velocity and refractoriness by epicardial multiple-lead recording. Invasive hemodynamic measurements were performed before sacrifice and eventually the hearts were subjected to anatomical, morphometric, immunohistochemical, and molecular biology analyses. When compared with untreated MI, GFs decreased stress-induced arrhythmias and concurrently prolonged the effective refractory period (ERP) without affecting neither the duration of ventricular repolarization, as suggested by measurements of QTc interval and mRNA levels for K-channel α-subunits Kv4.2 and Kv4.3, nor the dispersion of refractoriness. Further, markers of cardiomyocyte reactive hypertrophy, including mRNA levels for K-channel α-subunit Kv1.4 and β-subunit KChIP2, interstitial fibrosis and negative structural remodeling were significantly reduced in peri-infarcted/remote ventricular myocardium. Finally, analyses of BrdU incorporation and distribution of connexin43 and N-cadherin indicated that cytokines generated new vessels and electromechanically-connected myocytes and abolished the correlation of infarct size with deterioration of mechanical function. In conclusion, local injection of GFs ameliorates electromechanical competence in chronic MI. Reduced arrhythmogenesis is attributable to prolongation of ERP resulting from improved intercellular coupling via increased expression of connexin43, and attenuation of unfavorable remodeling.


PLOS ONE | 2014

The Effect of Aging on the Specialized Conducting System: A Telemetry ECG Study in Rats over a 6 Month Period

Stefano Rossi; Ilaria Fortunati; Luca Carnevali; Silvana Baruffi; Francesca Mastorci; Mimosa Trombini; Andrea Sgoifo; Domenico Corradi; Sergio Callegari; Michele Miragoli; Emilio Macchi

Advanced age alone appears to be a risk factor for increased susceptibility to cardiac arrhythmias. We previously observed in the aged rat heart that sinus rhythm ventricular activation is delayed and characterized by abnormal epicardial patterns although conduction velocity is normal. While these findings relate to an advanced stage of aging, it is not yet known when and how ventricular electrical impairment originates and which is the underlying substrate. To address these points, we performed continuous telemetry ECG recordings in freely moving rats over a six-month period to monitor ECG waveform changes, heart rate variability and the incidence of cardiac arrhythmias. At the end of the study, we performed in-vivo multiple lead epicardial recordings and histopathology of cardiac tissue. We found that the duration of ECG waves and intervals gradually increased and heart rate variability gradually decreased with age. Moreover, the incidence of cardiac arrhythmias gradually increased, with atrial arrhythmias exceeding ventricular arrhythmias. Epicardial multiple lead recordings confirmed abnormalities in ventricular activation patterns, likely attributable to distal conducting system dysfunctions. Microscopic analysis of aged heart specimens revealed multifocal connective tissue deposition and perinuclear myocytolysis in the atria. Our results demonstrate that aging gradually modifies the terminal part of the specialized cardiac conducting system, creating a substrate for increased arrhythmogenesis. These findings may open new therapeutic options in the management of cardiac arrhythmias in the elderly population.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2007

Susceptibility to Ventricular Arrhythmias in Aged Hearts

Stefano Rossi; Silvana Baruffi; Andrea Bertuzzi; Francesca Mastorci; Andrea Sgoifo; Ezio Musso; Domenico Corradi; Roberta Maestri; Donatella Brisinda; Riccardo Fenici; Emilio Macchi

Cardiac arrhythmias are frequent in the elderly population, perhaps secondary to an increased prevalence of hypertension and coronary artery disease as well as aging related changes resulting in loss of pacemaker cells and degenerative alteration of the conduction system. Independent from underlying structural heart disease, advanced age alone appears to be a risk factor for increased susceptibility to ventricular arrhythmia. However, the electrophysiological basis of this phenomenon is still unclear. Thus, it is important to assess and to define the underlying arrhythmogenic substrate. The aim of the present study was to identify a likely structural-functional ventricular arrhythmogenic substrate in aged hearts. For this purpose ventricular activation patterns were measured in control (n = 4) and aged (n = 10) in vivo rat hearts by recording unipolar electrograms with an epicardial, 1 mm resolution, 8 times 8 electrode array, during pacing and spontaneous or induced ventricular ectopic beats. Our results in aged hearts suggest that peripheral conduction system might be involved in perpetuating sequences of ventricular ectopic beats, regardless of their origin.


Circulation | 1987

A new intracavitary probe for detecting the site of origin of ectopic ventricular beats during one cardiac cycle.

Bruno Taccardi; G Arisi; Emilio Macchi; Silvana Baruffi; S Spaggiari

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