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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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Different effects of antihypertensive treatment on office and ambulatory blood pressure: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: It is confirmed that overall treatment-induced reduction is markedly greater for office BP than for 24-h BP, but it also shows that the quantitative relationship between these two measuring approaches varies with demographic, clinical and therapeutic conditions as well as in relation to placebo correction.
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in the design of studies on antihypertensive drug efficacy.

TL;DR: Advantages of ABPM include the inability of automatic ABPM to consistently provide accurate BP readings and to estimate BP variability, and the lack of a substantial placebo effect, which eliminates the need for a placebo group.
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Harmonization of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association and European Society of Cardiology/European Society of Hypertension Blood Pressure/Hypertension Guidelines

TL;DR: There is substantial concordance in the recommendations provided by the 2 guideline-writing committees, with greater congruity between them than their predecessors, and additional harmonization of future guidelines would help underscore the commonality of their core recommendations.
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Introduction to a Compendium on Hypertension

TL;DR: This compendium, the first devoted to hypertension by Circulation Research, is to offer clinicians and investigators a critical review of this knowledge, covering a large spectrum of data, that is, from genetic and molecular to integrated pathophysiology, epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment.
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Sympathetic Nerve Traffic and Arterial Baroreflex Function in Apparent Drug-Resistant Hypertension.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that the marked sympathetic activation and baroreflex dysfunction detected in RHT is not present in ARHT, which displays a sympathetic and barOREflex profile superimposable to that seen in HT.