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Maurizio Galderisi

Researcher at University of Naples Federico II

Publications -  424
Citations -  50204

Maurizio Galderisi is an academic researcher from University of Naples Federico II. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diastole & Heart failure. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 423 publications receiving 44442 citations. Previous affiliations of Maurizio Galderisi include Vita-Salute San Raffaele University & Istituto Superiore di Sanità.

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Additive Prognostic Value of Coronary Flow Reserve in Patients With Chest Pain Syndrome and Normal or Near-Normal Coronary Arteries

TL;DR: In patients with angiographically normal or near-normal coronary arteries and preserved at-rest regional and global left ventricular function at baseline and during stress, CFR adds incremental value to the prognostic stratification achieved with clinical and angiographic data.
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Plasma leptin level is associated with myocardial wall thickness in hypertensive insulin-resistant men

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that fasting plasma leptin levels are associated with increased myocardial wall thickness independent of body composition and blood pressure levels in hypertensives.
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The impact of ageing on right ventricular longitudinal function in healthy subjects: a pulsed tissue Doppler study.

TL;DR: Ageing shows an independent impact on pulsed Tissue Doppler-derived indexes of RV myocardial function in healthy subjects.
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The multi-modality cardiac imaging approach to the Athlete's heart: an expert consensus of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging

TL;DR: In this paper, a multi-modality imaging approach to the athlete's heart aims to differentiate physiological changes due to intensive training in the athletes' heart from serious cardiac diseases with similar morphological features.
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Pulsed Doppler tissue imaging in endurance athletes: relation between left ventricular preload and myocardial regional diastolic function.

TL;DR: DTI is a useful tool for detecting regional changes in myocardial function induced by training, because athletes present with an improvement in diastolic passive properties of myocardium, and may represent an indicator of aerobic training.