M
Massimo Cirillo
Researcher at University of Naples Federico II
Publications - 269
Citations - 79153
Massimo Cirillo is an academic researcher from University of Naples Federico II. The author has contributed to research in topics: Renal function & Population. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 254 publications receiving 61136 citations. Previous affiliations of Massimo Cirillo include Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli & Northwestern University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Relationship of Estimated GFR and Albuminuria to Concurrent Laboratory Abnormalities: An Individual Participant Data Meta-analysis in a Global Consortium.
L A Inker,Morgan E. Grams,Andrew S. Levey,Josef Coresh,Massimo Cirillo,John F. Collins,Ron T. Gansevoort,Orlando M. Gutiérrez,Takayuki Hamano,Gunnar H. Heine,S Ishikawa,Sun Ha Jee,Florian Kronenberg,Martin J Landray,Katsuyuki Miura,Girish N. Nadkarni,Carmen A. Peralta,Dietrich Rothenbacher,Elke Schaeffner,Sanaz Sedaghat,Michael G. Shlipak,Li Zhang,A D van Zuilen,Stein Hallan,Csaba P. Kovesdy,Mark Woodward,Adeera Levin +26 more
TL;DR: Lower eGFR was strongly associated with higher odds of multiple laboratory result abnormalities and hypertension, and knowledge of risk associations might help guide management in the heterogeneous group of patients with CKD.
Journal Article
Hypocalciuria in overt and subclinical celiac disease.
TL;DR: Overt and subclinical CD is associated with low urinary Ca excretion under fed condition, which relates to low intestinal absorption.
Journal ArticleDOI
Parallel-Group 8-Week Study on Chlorthalidone Effects in Hypertensives With Low Kidney Function
Massimo Cirillo,Fabiana Marcarelli,Alessandra Antonia Mele,Massimo Romano,Cinzia Lombardi,Giancarlo Bilancio +5 more
TL;DR: Data show that short-term chlorthalidone effects were not reduced in hypertensives with low kidney function and estimated glomerular filtration rate did not predict blood pressure changes and adverse events in either groups.
Gubbio population study: baseline findings.
Martino Laurenzi,Massimo Cirillo,Mario Angeletti,A. Buongiorno,G. Morisi,Walter Panarelli,M. Panfili,J. Stamler,O. Terradura,Maurizio Trevisan,Rose Stamler +10 more
Journal Article
Sleep disorders occur very early in chronic kidney disease.
TL;DR: Assessment of the prevalence of sleep disorders in patients with recent diagnosis of CKD and the relation with indices of kidney function, PTH, anemia, blood pressure status, antihypertensive drug(s) and other comorbidities found that poor sleep is highly prevalent in early CKD patients.