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Gino Seravalle

Researcher at University of Milano-Bicocca

Publications -  203
Citations -  10458

Gino Seravalle is an academic researcher from University of Milano-Bicocca. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Heart rate. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 187 publications receiving 9303 citations. Previous affiliations of Gino Seravalle include University of Alabama at Birmingham & University of Milan.

Papers
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Sympathetic activation in obese normotensive subjects

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether these alterations involve sympathetic drive in 10 young obese sub-groups and found that the sympathetic drive was not involved in the majority of the cases.
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Sympathetic Activation in the Pathogenesis of Hypertension and Progression of Organ Damage

TL;DR: Evidence is reviewed by examining data showing that plasma norepinephrine is increased in essential hypertension and that this is also the case for systemic and regional norpinephrine spillover, as well as for the sympathetic nerve firing rate in the skeletal muscle nerve district.
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Baroreflex Control of Sympathetic Nerve Activity in Essential and Secondary Hypertension

TL;DR: In both essential and secondary hypertensives, baroreceptor-heart rate control was displaced toward elevated blood pressure values and markedly impaired compared with normotensive subjects, and sympathetic activation characterizes essential but not secondary hypertension.
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Obesity and hypertension

TL;DR: This chapter examines the main mechanisms of obesity and obesity‐related hypertension and in particular the role of sympathetic nervous system, the alterations of the renal function and at the microvascular level, and depicts therole of insulin resistance as factor stimulating and potentiating the other mechanisms.
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Mechanisms responsible for sympathetic activation by cigarette smoking in humans.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that in humans the sympathetic activation induced by smoking depends on an increased release and/or a reduced clearance of catecholamines at the neuroeffector junctions is supported.