G
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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Journal ArticleDOI
Generating Evidence From Computerized Healthcare Utilization Databases
Giovanni Corrao,Giuseppe Mancia +1 more
TL;DR: Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are regarded as the highest level of therapeutic evidence because they are based on random allocation of participants to ≥2 treatment groups, which provides patients with superimposable initial demographic and clinical characteristics and allows the results to reflect the effect of the treatment strategies under study safely.
Journal ArticleDOI
Renal Denervation in High-Risk Patients With Hypertension.
Felix Mahfoud,Giuseppe Mancia,Roland E. Schmieder,Krzysztof Narkiewicz,Luis M. Ruilope,Markus P. Schlaich,Robert Whitbourn,Andreas Zirlik,Thomas Zeller,Philipp Stawowy,Sidney Cohen,Martin Fahy,Michael Böhm +12 more
TL;DR: BP reduction after RDN was similar for patients with varying high-risk comorbidities and across the range of ASCVD risk scores, which was sustained to 3 years.
Journal ArticleDOI
Blood Pressure Responses to Renal Denervation Precede and Are Independent of the Sympathetic and Baroreflex Effects
Guido Grassi,Gino Seravalle,Gianmaria Brambilla,Daniela Trabattoni,Cesare Cuspidi,Rocco Corso,Federico Pieruzzi,Simonetta Genovesi,Andrea Stella,Rita Facchetti,Domenico Spaziani,Antonio L. Bartorelli,Giuseppe Mancia +12 more
TL;DR: The BP reduction associated with RD seems to precede theMSNA changes and not to display a temporal, qualitative, and quantitative relationship with the MSNA and baroreflex effects.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of graded vasoconstriction upon the measurement of finger arterial pressure.
TL;DR: Phenylephrine infusion caused a significant, and clinically important, underestimation of the increase in brachial SBP when assessed by Finapres, whereas MAP and DBP and pulsatile-systolic area track intra-arterial pressure reliably.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in elderly patients with isolated systolic hypertension.
Lutgarde Thijs,Antoon Amery,Denis Clement,J Cox,Paul De Cort,Robert Fagard,Gillian Fowler,Caiying Guo,Giuseppe Mancia,Rafael Marín,Eoin O'Brien,Kevin O'Malley,Paolo Palatini,Gianfranco Parati,J C Petrie,Antonella Ravogli,Joseph B. Rosenfeld,Jan A. Staessen,John Webster +18 more
TL;DR: In older patients with ISH, clinic and ambulatory systolic blood pressure measurements may differ largely: the prognostic significance of this difference remains to be elucidated; in these patients the level of pressure is more reproducible by daytime ambulatory blood pressure measurement than by clinic measurement.