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Simone Fezzi

Researcher at University of Verona

Publications -  24
Citations -  69

Simone Fezzi is an academic researcher from University of Verona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 8 publications receiving 10 citations.

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"Cardiac allograft vasculopathy: Pathogenesis, diagnosis and therapy".

TL;DR: Percutaneous revascularization procedures seem to have only a palliative meaning, with no clear evidence of survival advantage over medical therapy and should be considered in case of a focal disease.
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When Aortic Stenosis Is Not Alone: Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, Diagnosis and Management in Mixed and Combined Valvular Disease.

TL;DR: Aortic stenosis may present frequently combined with other valvular diseases or mixed with aortic regurgitation, with peculiar physio-pathological and clinical implications as mentioned in this paper.
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Insights on safety and efficacy of renal artery denervation for uncontrolled-resistant hypertension in a high risk population with chronic kidney disease: first Italian real-world experience

TL;DR: RSD is safe and feasible in patients with uncontrolled resistant hypertension on top of medical therapy, even in a high-risk CKD population with multiple comorbidities, with a significant reduction in systolic BP and a trend towards a reduction in diastolic BP lasting up to 12 months.
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Impact of physiologically diffuse versus focal pattern of coronary disease on quantitative flow reserve diagnostic accuracy.

TL;DR: In this article, the physiological pattern of coronary artery disease has a significant influence on the diagnostic accuracy of quantitative flow reserve (QFR), which may impact on the diagnosis accuracy of QFR.
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Angiography-derived index of microvascular resistance in takotsubo syndrome

TL;DR: In this article , the authors proposed coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) in patients with TTS through the computation of the angiography-derived index of microcirculatory resistance (IMR) and its correlation with clinical presentation.