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danilo giannini

daniorn@yahoo.it

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Massimiliano Bianchi, Danilo Giannini, Alberto Balbarini, Maido Giovacchino Castiglioni (2008)  Congenital hypoplasia of the inferior vena cava and inherited thrombophilia: rare associated risk factors for idiopathic deep vein thrombosis. A case report.   J Cardiovasc Med (Hagerstown) 9: 1. 101-104 Jan  
Abstract: In young patients, acquired and genetic causes of deep vein thrombosis frequently interact. The association of congenital hypoplasia of the inferior vena cava with antithrombin III deficiency has never been described in the literature as a causal factor of proximal deep vein thrombosis in young patients. We report the case of an 18-year-old patient affected by deep vein thrombosis due to this rare association without other common risk factors.
Notes:
2007
 
DOI   
PMID 
D Giannini, A Leone, D Di Bisceglie, M Nuti, G Strata, F Buttitta, L Masserini, A Balbarini (2007)  The effects of acute passive smoke exposure on endothelium-dependent brachial artery dilation in healthy individuals.   Angiology 58: 2. 211-217 Apr/May  
Abstract: Passive smoking has both short-term and long-term vascular effects. It is not clear whether impairment of endothelial function reflects the acute effects of passive smoke exposure or the chronic effects. The purpose of this study was to assess the hypothesis that short-term exposure to passive smoke impairs endothelium-dependent vasodilation in healthy nonsmokers. Eighteen healthy young never smokers (12 men, 6 women) 21 to 55 years old (mean +/- SD: 34 +/-9 years) underwent ultrasonography measuring baseline brachial-artery diameter and brachial-artery diameter during hyperemia and after sublingual administration of nitroglycerin, twice: in a smoke-free environment, and then in the same environment polluted by 30 to 35 ppm carbon monoxide. Each subject served as his/her control. Carboxyhemoglobin was measured in blood samples of subjects tested. Mean value of carboxyhemoglobin was 0.6 +/-0.5% in a smoke-free environment and 1.4 +/- 0.5% in a smoking environment (p <0.02). Mean values of flow-mediated dilation (FMD) were 12.6% +/- 7.8% in a smoke-free environment versus 6.8 +/- 7.8% in a smoking environment (p <0.01). On the contrary, nitroglycerin-induced vasodilation did not show any statistical difference (21 +/- 9.8% versus 23 +/-1.4%). Finally, the increase of carboxyhemoglobin was related statistically to the impairment of flow-mediated dilation (r = 0.51; p <0.002). Passive smoking impaired flow-mediated vasodilation in healthy never smokers in a smoking environment. The impairment was strongly related to carboxyhemoglobin level.
Notes:
2004
 
PMID 
Aurelio Leone, Danilo Giannini, Chiara Bellotto, Alberto Balbarini (2004)  Passive smoking and coronary heart disease.   Curr Vasc Pharmacol 2: 2. 175-182 Apr  
Abstract: A large series of clinico-epidemiological studies, meta-analyses and experimental findings have concluded that there is a relationship between coronary heart disease (CHD) and passive smoking either after acute or chronic exposure. Cigarette smoking is the most important cause of premature death in industrialized countries because it is associated with an increased risk of developing several types of cancer and arterial disease. In family homes as well as in workplaces, environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure is associated with an increased risk of CHD in exposed non-smokers when compared to un-exposed non-smokers. Different anatomical structures are damaged by ETS. The endothelium, artery wall and heart are target organs for passive smoking. Therefore, smoking cessation will benefit both smokers and those exposed to ETS.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Giannini, A Balbarini (2004)  Thrombolytic therapy in peripheral arterial disease.   Curr Drug Targets Cardiovasc Haematol Disord 4: 3. 249-258 Sep  
Abstract: The two main causes of peripheral arterial occlusion (PAO) are embolism and thrombosis. Surgical treatment of acute limb ischemia, because of related complications, has a 30-day mortality rate of 15% to 25%. Intra-arterial thrombolysis for lower extremity ischemia is a well-accepted and frequently used technique. It may offer definitive treatment without the need for major surgery in a significant series of patients with acute occlusion of a native leg artery or a by-pass graft. Thrombolysis can offer several potential advantages when compared with surgical therapy. Thrombolytic agents include streptokinase (SK), urokinase (UK), pro-UK and recombinant tissue plasminogen activators (rt-PA-Alteplase and r-PA-Reteplase). All these agents induce a systemic fibrinolytic state. Three prospective randomized trials, ROCHESTER, STILE, and TOPAS, which compared thrombolytic therapy with traditional surgical revascularization for lower limb ischemia, have recently been published. They suggest that thrombolysis, as an initial therapy, reduces the risk of subsequent surgery and improves limb salvage for patients with PAO. Using this approach, the underlying lesions can be identified and treated by transluminal balloon angioplasty or stenting, or by elective surgical revascularization. However, severe bleeding is still a non rare complication of intra-arterial thrombolysis and the risk of intracranial hemorrhage is 1-2%.
Notes:
2000
 
PMID 
R Pedrinelli, G Dell'Omo, G Penno, S Bandinelli, D Giannini, A Balbarini, M Mariani (2000)  Dissociation between microalbuminuria and common carotid thickness in essential hypertensive men.   J Hum Hypertens 14: 12. 831-835 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The reasons why microalbuminuria (albuminuria > or = 15 microg/min), an expression of a renal microcirculatory abnormality, predicts cardiovascular disease in essential hypertension are unsettled. To test the hypothesis that microalbuminuria represents a marker of subclinical atherosclerosis, we evaluated its association with common carotid artery (CCA) intima media thickness (IMT), a measure of preclinical atherosclerosis and an independent predictor of cardiac and cerebrovascular events, in uncomplicated essential hypertensive individuals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Albuminuria, ultrasonographic CCA IMT (the mean of six bilateral far wall measurements within 1.5 cm proximally to the flow divider), brachial blood pressure (BP), smoking habits and lipids were evaluated in 136 stage 1-3 untreated essential hypertensive men free of cardiovascular disease. RESULTS: CCA IMT did not differ between normo- (n = 99) and microalbuminuric (n = 37) patients. The correlation between CCA IMT and albuminuria was not significant, and the prevalence of microalbuminuria across IMT quartiles was not different. Microalbuminuric patients showed higher systolic BP and that parameter was the only independent correlate in a multivariate logistic regression model including also age, CCA IMT, diastolic BP, lipids and smoking habits as independent variables and microalbuminuria as the dependent one. CONCLUSION: This cross-sectional study in hypertensive subjects free of cardiovascular disease has shown a dissociation between microalbuminuria and CCA IMT, a surrogate measure of subclinical atherosclerosis, and a parameter linearly related to cardiovascular events. The data do not support the theory of microalbuminuria as a surrogate measure of subclinical atherosclerosis, while confirming the importance of systolic BP levels as an independent correlate of increased albuminuria in essential hypertension. Journal of Human Hypertension (2000) 14, 831-835
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1999
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