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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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24-hour blood pressure monitoring: evaluation of Spacelabs 5300 monitor by comparison with intra-arterial blood pressure recording in ambulant subjects.

TL;DR: The Spacelabs 5300 device has a limited ability to correctly estimate ambulatory blood pressure in individual subjects and may be better suited for the estimation of group blood pressures, but only because errors are smoothed by the summation of individual errors of opposing signs.
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Indexation of left ventricular mass to body surface area and height to allometric power of 2.7: is the difference limited to obese hypertensives?

TL;DR: To avoid a systematic misclassification of cardiovascular risk, LVM should be routinely indexed to height2.7 in overweight and obese patients representing a large percentage of the hypertensive population.
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Sympathetic Nerve Traffic Activation in Essential Hypertension and Its Correlates: Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses

TL;DR: In this article, muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) has shown that sympathetic activation may occur in essential hypertension (EHT), however, the small sample size of the studies, the heterogeneity of the patients examined, and the presence of confounders represented major weaknesses not allowing to draw definite conclusions.
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Limitations of the difference between clinic and daytime blood pressure as a surrogate measure of the 'white-coat' effect. Syst-Eur investigators

TL;DR: The clinic-daytime blood pressure difference has a limited reproducibility; depends not only on clinic but also on daytime average blood pressure, which means that its size is a function of the blood pressure criteria employed for selection of the patients in a trial; and is never associated with a systematic clinic- daytime difference in heart rate.