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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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Restoration of normal sympathetic neural function in heart failure following baroreflex activation therapy: final 43-month study report.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that BAT in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction allows not only to improve hemodynamic and clinical profile but also to exert profound sympathoinhibitory effects, allowing an almost complete restoration of physiological levels of the sympathetic neural function.
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Inappropriate left ventricular mass: Reliability and limitations of echocardiographic measurement for risk stratification and follow-up in single patients.

TL;DR: Measurement of the appropriateness of LV mass in single patients allows acceptable risk stratification, with a coefficient of consistency similar to that reported for LV mass.
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Blood pressure monitoring over short day and night times cannot predict 24-hour average blood pressure.

TL;DR: In 40 ambulant subjects BP was recorded intra-arterially for 24 h using the Oxford method and the average mean BP values obtained by the analysis of the 30-min subperiods showed very marked differences compared to the 24-h mean BP average.
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How reliable is isolated clinical hypertension defined by a single 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring?

TL;DR: The findings clearly indicate that the classification of ICH on the basis of a single ABPM, using the cut-offs suggested by major hypertension guidelines, has a limited short-term reproducibility and repeated ABPM recordings should be recommended to correctly diagnose patients with ICH and improve cardiovascular risk stratification.
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Lack of autonomic contributions to tonic nitric oxide-mediated vasodilatation in unanesthetized free-moving rats.

TL;DR: Tonic NO-dependent vasodilatation can normally be maintained in the unanesthetized unrestrained rat irrespective of autonomic or humoral adrenergic influences.