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Dive into the research topics where Vitantonio Di Bello is active.

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Featured researches published by Vitantonio Di Bello.


Hypertension | 2002

Excess Aldosterone Is Associated With Alterations of Myocardial Texture in Primary Aldosteronism

Gian Paolo Rossi; Vitantonio Di Bello; Chiara Ganzaroli; Alfredo Sacchetto; Maurizio Cesari; A Bertini; D Giorgi; Roldano Scognamiglio; Mario Mariani; Achille C. Pessina

Hyperaldosteronism has been causally linked to myocardial interstitial fibrosis experimentally, but it remains unclear if this link also applies to humans. Thus, we investigated the effects of excess aldosterone due to primary aldosteronism (PA) on collagen deposition in the heart. We used echocardiography to estimate left ventricular (LV) wall thickness and dimensions and for videodensitometric analysis of myocardial texture in 17 consecutive patients with PA and 10 patients with primary (essential) hypertension who were matched for demographics, casual blood pressure, and known duration of hypertension. The groups differed in serum K+, ECG PQ interval duration, plasma renin activity, and aldosterone levels (all P ≤0.002) but not for casual blood pressure values, demographics, and duration of hypertension. Compared with hypertensive patients, PA patients showed a higher LV mass index (53.7±1.8 versus 45.5±2.0 g/m2.7;P =0.008) and lower values of the cyclic variation index of the myocardial mean gray level of septum (CVIs; −12.02±5.84% versus 6.06±3.08%;P =0.012) and posterior wall (−11.13±6.42% versus 8.63±9.62%;P =0.012). A regression analysis showed that CVIs was predicted by the PQ duration, supine plasma renin activity, plasma aldosterone, and age, which collectively accounted for ≈36% of CVIs variance. PA is associated with alterations of myocardial textures that suggest increased collagen deposition and that can explain both the dependence of LV diastolic filling from presystole and the prolongation of the PQ interval.


Circulation | 2003

Mechanical Prevention of Distal Embolization During Primary Angioplasty: Safety, Feasibility, and Impact on Myocardial Reperfusion

Ugo Limbruno; Andrea Micheli; Marco De Carlo; Giovanni Amoroso; Roberta Rossini; C Palagi; Vitantonio Di Bello; Anna Sonia Petronio; Gabriella Fontanini; Mario Mariani

Background—Effective myocardial reperfusion after primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) may be limited by distal embolization. We tested the safety, feasibility, and efficacy of the FilterWire-Ex (FW), a distal embolic protection device, as an adjunct to primary PCI. Methods and Results—Fifty-three consecutive patients undergoing primary PCI with FW protection were compared with a matched control group treated by primary PCI alone. Successful FW positioning was obtained in 47 patients (89%) without complications. Histological analysis of the content of the last 13 filters showed multiple embolic debris in all cases. FW use was associated with lower postinterventional corrected TIMI frame count (22±14 versus 31±19; P =0.005) and higher occurrence of grade 3 myocardial blush (66% versus 36%; P =0.006) and early ST-segment elevation resolution (80% versus 54%; P= 0.006). At multivariate analysis, FW use was the only independent predictor of early ST-segment elevation resolution and of grade 3 myocardial blush. FW patients showed lower peak creatine kinase-MB release (236±172 versus 333±219 ng/mL; P =0.013) and greater improvement at 30 days in left ventricular wall motion score index (−0.30±0.19 versus −0.18±0.26; P= 0.008) and ejection fraction (+7±4% versus +4±7%; P =0.012). Conclusions—FW use during primary PCI is feasible and safe. Distal embolization prevention appears to exert a beneficial effect on markers of myocardial reperfusion and on left ventricular function improvement at 30 days.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Safety of intravenous high-dose dipyridamole echocardiography

Eugenio Picano; Cecilia Marini; Salvatore Pirelli; Stefano Maffei; Leonardo Bolognese; Giampaolo Chiriatti; Francesco Chiarella; Andrés Orlandini; Giovanni Seveso; Massimo Quarta Colosso; Maria Grazia Sclavo; Ornella Magaia; Luciano Agati; Mario Previtali; Jorge Lowenstein; Franco Torre; Paola Rosselli; Manrico Ciuti; Miodrag Ostojic; Nicola Gandolfo; Franca Margaria; Pantaleo Giannuzzi; Vitantonio Di Bello; Massimo Lombardi; Guido Gigli; Nicola Ferrara; Franco Santoro; Anna Maria Lusa; Giacomo Chiarandà; Domenico Papagna

Abstract Clinical data on 10,451 high-dose (up to 0.84 mg/kg over 10 minutes) dipyridamole-echocardiography tests (DET) performed in 9,122 patients were prospectively collected from 33 echocardiographic laboratories, each contributing >100 tests. All patients were studied for documented or suspected coronary artery disease (1,117 early [


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995

Increased echodensity of myocardial wall in the diabetic heart: An ultrasound tissue characterization study

Vitantonio Di Bello; L Talarico; Eugenio Picano; Carmine Di Muro; Luigi Landini; Marco Paterni; Elena Matteucci; C. Giusti; Ottavio Giampietro

OBJECTIVES We sought to characterize myocardial echodensity in asymptomatic patients with insulin-dependent diabetes and normal conventional two-dimensional echocardiographic findings to determine whether ultrasound tissue characterization can detect ultrastructural changes in myocardium, such as an increase in collagen content. BACKGROUND Fibrosis alters the acoustic properties of the heart in animals and humans, and these changes are detectable by cardiac tissue characterization with ultrasound. Early changes detected in the diabetic heart include increased interstitial collagen deposition. METHODS Using two-dimensional echocardiography, we evaluated 26 asymptomatic patients with insulin-dependent diabetes with normal regional and global rest function, and 17 age- and gender-matched control subjects. By selection, all diabetic patients were normotensive and had negative maximal exercise stress test results to avoid the confounding effects of hypertension and coronary artery disease. Using an echocardiographic instrument implemented at the Institute of Clinical Physiology, we performed an on-line radiofrequency analysis to obtain quantitative operator-independent measurements of the integrated back-scatter signal of the ventricular septum and posterior wall. The integrated values of the radiofrequency signal from the myocardial wall were normalized for those from the pericardial interface and were expressed as percentages (integrated backscatter index). RESULTS Diabetic patients showed a significant increase in myocardial echodensity both in the septum ([mean +/- SD] 36.6 +/- 8.1 vs. 23.6 +/- 4.4, p < 0.0001) and posterior wall (21.2 +/- 5.3 vs. 18.4 +/- 3.7, p < 0.001). By individual patient analysis, 17 patients exceeded the 95% confidence limits for normal myocardial echocardiographic reflectivity found in normal subjects, and only 3 had a relatively abnormal transmitral Doppler filling pattern (E/A ratio), mainly consisting of an abnormally increased late peak flow velocity (65% vs. 11%, p < 0.001). The increased myocardial intensity was similar in patients with (n = 16) and without (n = 10) noncardiac complications, such as retinopathy or nephropathy (37.5 +/- 7.9% vs. 35.0 +/- 8.3%, p = 0.35). CONCLUSIONS Abnormally increased myocardial echodensity, possibly related to collagen deposition, can be detected in asymptomatic diabetic patients with normal rest function. Theoretically, this finding might be considered a very early preclinical alteration potentially related to subsequent development of diabetic cardiomyopathy.


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2009

Cardiovascular involvement in systemic autoimmune diseases

Simona Sitia; Fabiola Atzeni; Piercarlo Sarzi-Puttini; Vitantonio Di Bello; Livio Tomasoni; L. Delfino; Francesco Antonini-Canterin; Giovanni Di Salvo; Vito De Gennaro Colonna; Salvatore La Carrubba; Scipione Carerj; Maurizio Turiel

Autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), primary antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), systemic sclerosis and systemic vasculitis, affect a large number of people in whom one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality is cardiovascular disease. Cardiovascular disease is associated with the development of accelerated atherosclerosis. It seems to occur at a younger age than in the general population, is often asymptomatic and, in addition to traditional risk factors, also involves specific risk factors as chronic inflammation, the duration and activity of the autoimmune disease, and immunosuppressive therapy. The early phases of cardiovascular involvement in patients with autoimmune diseases may be clinically silent, with only a microcirculation disorder present. There are various means of detecting morphological cardiac damage: coronary angiography remains the gold standard for diagnosing coronary stenosis, but new, non invasive and more reliable methods have been introduced into clinical practice in order to detect subclinical microcirculation abnormalities.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2004

Low-Grade Inflammation and Microalbuminuria in Hypertension

Roberto Pedrinelli; Giulia Dell’Omo; Vitantonio Di Bello; G. Pellegrini; Laura Pucci; Stefano Del Prato; Giuseppe Penno

Background—Albuminuria and C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of systemic low-grade inflammation, are frequently elevated in essential hypertension and predict cardiovascular prognosis independent of conventional risk factors. However, in spite of their potentially important links, the interrelationships between the 2 parameters have not been explored in depth in hypertensive patients. Methods and Results—Albuminuria (the mean of 3 overnight urine collections), high-sensitive CRP (hs-CRP), 24-hour blood pressure (BP), weight, lipids, poststimulative (75 g PO) plasma glucose, insulin, and insulin sensitivity by the homeostasis model assessment model were evaluated in 220 never treated, nondiabetic, uncomplicated essential hypertensive men. Albuminuria ≥15 &mgr;g/min was defined as microalbuminuria and hs-CRP values above and below median (2.3 mg/L) as high and low, respectively. Concentric left ventricular hypertrophy was diagnosed by echocardiography, and a full-blown metabolic syndrome was identified in presence of hypertension and at least 3 of following: obesity, subclinical hyperglycemia, low high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and high triglycerides. Microalbuminuria was present in 54 patients, 29 with high hs-CRP characterized by higher 24-hour systolic BP, postload glucose, body mass index, lower HDL cholesterol, more frequent metabolic syndrome, concentric LVH, and active smoking than those with either isolated microalbuminuria (n=27) or normoalbuminuria. Conclusions—Microalbuminuria accompanied by evidence of subclinical inflammation is a strong correlate of metabolic abnormalities in essential hypertension and identifies a patient subset at very high cardiovascular risk. In contrast, isolated microalbuminuria may represent a distinct pathophysiological condition characterized by a more benign profile and possibly a better prognosis.


American Journal of Hypertension | 2010

Early Left Ventricular Mechanics Abnormalities in Prehypertension: A Two-Dimensional Strain Echocardiography Study

Vitantonio Di Bello; E Talini; G Dell'Omo; Cristina Giannini; Maria Grazia Delle Donne; Maria Laura Canale; Carmela Nardi; C Palagi; Frank Lloyd Dini; Giuseppe Penno; Stefano Del Prato; Mario Marzilli; Roberto Pedrinelli

BACKGROUND Prehypertension predicts established hypertension. In this study, the aim was to analyze left ventricular (LV) mechanics in borderline prehypertensive (pre-HT) and hypertensive (HT) subjects through two-dimensional (2D)-strain echocardiography and then evaluate possible relations between cardiac parameters and insulin metabolism (homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA(IR)). METHODS Seventy-four consecutive newly diagnosed, untreated HT were divided, on the basis of their office blood pressure (BP) measurements, confirmed by ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), in 41 borderline pre-HT (ABPM: 122.5 +/- 6.7/76.2 +/- 5.2 mm Hg) and 33 never-treated mild HT (ABPM: 138.3 +/- 7.3/87.6 +/- 7.1 mm Hg). Thirty-three healthy normotensive (NT) controls (ABPM: 114.8 +/- 6.3/73.1 +/- 6.1 mm Hg) (P < 0.0001) were also studied (NT). All subjects performed 2D color Doppler and pulsed-wave tissue Doppler imaging (PW-TDI). RESULTS Left ventricular mass (LVM) was significantly higher in pre-HT (39.2 +/- 8.7 g/m(2.7)) and in HT (43.6 +/- 8.5 g/m(2.7)) compared with NT (30.9 +/- 7.4 g/m(2.7)) (P < 0.0001). A mild LV diastolic dysfunction was found both with Doppler mitral flow velocity and PW-TDI at mitral annulus level analysis. Longitudinal 2D strain in pre-HT (-18.9% +/- 3.4) and in HT (-18.0% +/- 3.3) was significantly lower than in NT (-23.9% +/- 3.0) (P < 0.002). These LV abnormalities were associated with systolic ABPM, LVM, and HOMA(IR). CONCLUSIONS Early abnormalities of LV longitudinal systolic deformation were found both in pre-HT and HT, together with a mild LV diastolic dysfunction. In both groups this early cardiac systolic and diastolic dysfunction is associated to insulin resistance, systolic pressure load, and cardiac remodeling.


Hypertension | 1997

Ultrasonic Videodensitometric Analysis of Two Different Models of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Athlete’s Heart and Hypertension

Vitantonio Di Bello; Roberto Pedrinelli; D Giorgi; A Bertini; Luigi Talarico; Maria Teresa Caputo; Bianchi Massimiliano; Giulia Dell’Omo; Marco Paterni; C. Giusti

Absolute or relative increases in intramyocardial fibrosis accompany hypertrophy development in human hypertension. Myocardial texture analysis of two-dimensional echocardiographic gray-level distribution has been shown to identify alterations attributed to abnormal collagen content in several conditions. Therefore, this echocardiographic tool might help to identify those hypertensive individuals with abnormal interstitial collagen deposition, a condition that may promote and/or aggravate morbidity in this group of people who are at high risk for cardiovascular events. We compared male essential hypertensive subjects who had marked cardiac hypertrophy (left ventricular mass index adjusted for height > 2 SD of mean of control group) (group 1) with normotensive elite veteran athletes who had comparable cardiac hypertrophy (group 2) and sedentary normotensive subjects as controls (group 3). The groups (n = 14 each) were matched for age (+/- 2 years) and sex. We analyzed echocardiographic digitized data quantitatively by means of a calibrated 256 gray level digitization system to calculate midseptal and midposterior end-diastolic and end-systolic mean gray levels and to derive the so-called cyclic variation index, ie, the percent mean gray level variation during the cardiac cycle. Echocardiographic parietal and septal thicknesses and masses were evaluated according to the Penn convention. Left ventricular mass index (adjusted for height) overlapped between groups 1 and 2 (187.1 +/- 17.5 and 181.3 +/- 19.3 g/m, respectively; P = NS), whereas it was obviously smaller in control subjects (93.1 +/- 18.6 g/m; P < .001 for both). According to inclusion criteria, both septal and posterior wall thicknesses were comparable in athletes and hypertensive subjects, and they were higher than in the control group (P < .0001). The hypertensive subjects showed a significantly lower cyclic variation index than the control and athlete groups for both the septum (P < .001) and posterior wall (P < .001); no statistical difference was found between athletes and control subjects for this parameter. In conclusion, abnormalities of two-dimensional echocardiographic gray-level distribution are present in hypertensive hypertrophied individuals but seem unrelated to the degree of echocardiographic hypertrophy as such. An altered collagen network distribution or a decrease in capillary distribution in severe myocardial hypertrophy, secondary to pressure-volume overload in hypertension with other yet unknown mechanisms, could help to explain our findings. Further work is needed to establish the prognostic, clinical, and therapeutic implications of these findings.


Hypertension | 1999

Microalbuminuria and Transcapillary Albumin Leakage in Essential Hypertension

Roberto Pedrinelli; Giuseppe Penno; Giulia Dell’Omo; S. Bandinelli; D Giorgi; Vitantonio Di Bello; R. Navalesi; Mario Mariani

Microalbuminuria (an increased urinary albumin excretion that is not detectable by the usual dipstick methods for macroproteinuria) predicts cardiovascular events in essential hypertensive patients. A possible reason for this behavior is that albumin leaks through exaggeratedly permeant glomeruli exposed to the damaging impact of subclinical atherogenesis. To evaluate this possibility, the transcapillary escape rate of albumin (TER(alb), the 1-hour decline rate of intravenous (125)I-albumin), a parameter that estimates the integrity of systemic capillary permeability, albuminuria, blood pressure, echocardiographic left ventricular mass, lipids, and body mass index were measured in 73 uncomplicated, glucose-tolerant men with essential hypertension and normal renal function; 53 were normoalbuminuric, and 20 were microalbuminuric. Twenty-one normotensive age-matched male subjects were the controls. TER(alb) was higher in hypertensives, a behavior explained in part by a positive correlation with blood pressure values, although body mass index, lipids, and left ventricular mass showed no association. Transcapillary albumin leakage values did not differ between normoalbuminuric and microalbuminuric patients and were unrelated to albuminuria. Blood pressure, particularly systolic, and cardiac mass were higher in microalbuminuric patients in whom albuminuria correlated with both cardiovascular variables and indicated the influence of the hemodynamic load on urinary albumin levels. Thus, TER(alb), a parameter influenced by the permeability surface area product for macromolecules and the filtration power across the vascular wall, is altered in essential hypertensives. However, this abnormality is dissociated from the amount of albuminuria, which is contrary to the hypothesis that a higher albumin excretion reflects a greater degree of systemic microvascular damage in essential hypertension.


Circulation | 2004

Severe Aortic Stenosis and Myocardial Function Diagnostic and Prognostic Usefulness of Ultrasonic Integrated Backscatter Analysis

Vitantonio Di Bello; D Giorgi; Paolo Viacava; Talini Enrica; Carmela Nardi; C Palagi; Maria Grazia Delle Donne; Francesco Verunelli; Massimo A. Mariani; Jean Grandjean; Rita Dell’Anna; Andrea Di Cori; Giulio Zucchelli; M.F. Romano; Mario Mariani

Background—The aim of this study was to assess the myocardial reflectivity pattern in severe aortic valve stenosis through the use of integrated backscatter (IBS) analysis. Patients with aortic stenosis (AS) were carefully selected in the Department of Cardiology. Methods and Results—Thirty-five subjects (AS: valve orifice ≤1 cm2; 12 female; mean age, 71.8±6.2 years) and 25 healthy subjects were studied. All subjects of the study had conventional 2D-Doppler echocardiography and IBS. Backscatter signal was sampled at the septum and posterior wall levels. Patients with AS were divided into 2 groups: 16 patients with initial signs of congestive heart failure and a depressed left ventricular systolic function (DSF) (ejection fraction [EF] range, 35% to 50%) and 19 asymptomatic patients with normal left ventricular systolic function (NSF) (EF >50%). Myocardial echo intensity (pericardium related) was significantly higher at the septum and posterior wall levels in DSF than in NSF and in control subjects. IBS variation, as an expression of variation of the signal, appeared to be significantly lower in AS with DSF than in NSF and in control subjects, at both the septum and posterior wall levels. Patients with DSF underwent aortic valve replacement, and, during surgical intervention, a septal myocardial biopsy was made for evaluation of myocardium/fibrosis ratio. Abnormally increased echo intensity was detected in left ventricular pressure overload by severe aortic stenosis and correlated with increase of myocardial collagen content (operating biopsy). Conclusions—One year after aortic valve replacement, we observed a significant reduction of left ventricular mass, and, only if pericardial indexed IBS value (reduction of interstitial fibrosis) decreased, it was possible to observe an improvement of EF and of IBS variation.

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