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Giuseppe Mancia

Researcher at University of Milano-Bicocca

Publications -  1465
Citations -  152794

Giuseppe Mancia is an academic researcher from University of Milano-Bicocca. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Ambulatory blood pressure. The author has an hindex of 145, co-authored 1369 publications receiving 139692 citations. Previous affiliations of Giuseppe Mancia include University of Milan & Instituto Politécnico Nacional.

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Reproducibility and Clinical Value of the Trough-to-Peak Ratio of the Antihypertensive Effect: Evidence From the Sample Study

TL;DR: In this paper, the reproducibility of the trough-to-peak ratio (T/P) and whether a high T/P is accompanied by more organ protection or vice versa was assessed.
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Heterogeneity in antihypertensive treatment discontinuation between drugs belonging to the same class

TL;DR: Comparison of treatment discontinuation between antihypertensive drug classes masks the fact that this phenomenon is heterogeneous within any given class, relevant to calculations of the cost-benefit of treatment, which, thus, should be drug-based rather than class-based.
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Alterations in cardiac parasympathetic function in aged rats

TL;DR: The bradycardic responses to graded electrical stimulations of the right efferent vagus and to graded bolus intravenous injections of acetylcholine in anesthetized, vagotomized rats suggest the more general conclusion that aging has complex and diversified effects rather than simply and uniformly depressing biological functions.
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in the evaluation of antihypertensive treatment

TL;DR: Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring is a valid method for assessing the effectiveness of antihypertensive treatment because it allows the physician to determine whether the initially elevated blood pressure is reduced under the various circumstances of the patient's lifetime, but this approach has a cost that makes its use impractical in clinical practice.