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Institution

University of Florence

EducationFlorence, Toscana, Italy
About: University of Florence is a education organization based out in Florence, Toscana, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Carbonic anhydrase. The organization has 27292 authors who have published 79599 publications receiving 2341684 citations. The organization is also known as: Università degli studi di Firenze & Universita degli studi di Firenze.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Giancarlo Casolo1, E. Balli1, Tamara Taddei1, John Amuhasi1, Cesare Gori1 
TL;DR: CHF patients with depressed ejection fraction (less than 30%) have a low HR variability compared to normal individuals, which can be interpreted as adjunctive evidence for decreased parasympathetic activity to the heart during CHF.
Abstract: Heart rate (HR) variability is a noninvasive index of the neural activity of the heart. Although also dependent on the sympathetic activity of the heart, HR variability is mainly determined by the vagal outflow of the heart. Several HR abnormalities have been described in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF); however, there are no data on HR variability in CHF patients. In the present study HR variability was assessed in 20 CHF patients and 20 control subjects from 24-hour Holter tapes. HR variability was evaluated by calculating the mean hourly HR standard deviation and by analyzing the 24-hour RR histogram. Mean hourly HR standard deviation was markedly and significantly reduced in CHF patients both over the 24-hour period (97.5 +/- 41 vs 233.2 +/- 26 ms, p less than 0.001) as well as during most of the individual hours examined. The 24-hour RR histogram of CHF patients had a different shape and had a decreased variation compared to control subjects (total variability 356 +/- 102 vs 757 +/- 156 ms, p less than 0.001). Thus, CHF patients with depressed ejection fraction (less than 30%) have a low HR variability compared to normal individuals. This result can be interpreted as adjunctive evidence for decreased parasympathetic activity to the heart during CHF.

353 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Iacopo Olivotto1, Artur Oreziak, Roberto Barriales-Villa, Theodore P. Abraham2, Ahmad Masri3, Pablo García-Pavía4, Pablo García-Pavía5, Sara Saberi6, Neal K. Lakdawala7, Matthew T. Wheeler8, Anjali T. Owens9, Milos Kubanek, Wojciech Wojakowski10, Morten Kvistholm Jensen11, Juan Ramón Gimeno-Blanes, Kia Afshar12, Jonathan Myers8, Jonathan Myers13, Sheila M. Hegde7, Scott D. Solomon7, Amy J. Sehnert, David Zhang, Wanying Li, Mondira Bhattacharya, Jay M. Edelberg, Cynthia Burstein Waldman, Steven J. Lester14, Andrew Wang15, Carolyn Y. Ho7, Daniel Jacoby16, Jozef Bartunek, Antoine Bondue, Emeline Van Craenenbroeck, David Zemanek, Morten Søndergaard Jensen17, Jens Mogensen, Jens Jakob Thune, Philippe Charron, Albert Hagège, Olivier Lairez, Jean Noël Trochu, Christoph Axthelm, Hans Dirk Duengen, Norbert Frey, Veselin Mitrovic, Michael Preusch, Jeanette Schulz-Menger, Tim Seidler, Michael Arad, Majdi Halabi, Amos Katz, Daniel Monakier, Offir Paz, Samuel Viskin, Donna R. Zwas, Hans-Peter Brunner-La Rocca, Michelle Michels, Dariusz Dudek, Zofia Oko-Sarnowska, Nuno Cardim, Helder Pereira, Pablo García Pavia, Juan Ramon Gimeno Blanes, Rafael Hidalgo Urbano, Luis Miguel Rincón Diaz, Perry M. Elliott, Zaheer Yousef, Theodore Abraham18, Paulino Alvarez, Richard G. Bach, Richard C. Becker, Lubna Choudhury, David Fermin, John L. Jefferies, Christopher M. Kramer, Neal K. Lakdawala19, Steven Lester14, Ali J. Marian, Mathew S. Maurer, Sherif F. Nagueh, David R. Owens, Florian Rader, Mark V. Sherrid, Jamshid Shirani, John Symanski, Aslan T. Turer, Omar Wever-Pinzon, Timothy C. Wong, Mohamad H. Yamani 
TL;DR: Treatment with mavacamten improved exercise capacity, LVOT obstruction, NYHA functional class, and health status in patients with obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and highlights the benefits of disease-specific treatment for this condition.

353 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a general picture of agroclimatic conditions in western and central Europe (study area lays between 8.5°W−27°E and 37°63°N), which allows for a more general assessment of climate-change impacts.
Abstract: To date, projections of European crop yields under climate change have been based almost entirely on the outputs of crop-growth models. While this strategy can provide good estimates of the effects of climatic factors, soil conditions and management on crop yield, these models usually do not capture all of the important aspects related to crop management, or the relevant environmental factors. Moreover, crop-simulation studies often have severe limitations with respect to the number of crops covered or the spatial extent. The present study, based on agroclimatic indices, provides a general picture of agroclimatic conditions in western and central Europe (study area lays between 8.5°W–27°E and 37–63.5°N), which allows for a more general assessment of climate-change impacts. The results obtained from the analysis of data from 86 different sites were clustered according to an environmental stratification of Europe. The analysis was carried for the baseline (1971–2000) and future climate conditions (time horizons of 2030, 2050 and with a global temperature increase of 5 °C) based on outputs of three global circulation models. For many environmental zones, there were clear signs of deteriorating agroclimatic condition in terms of increased drought stress and shortening of the active growing season, which in some regions become increasingly squeezed between a cold winter and a hot summer. For most zones the projections show a marked need for adaptive measures to either increase soil water availability or drought resistance of crops. This study concludes that rainfed agriculture is likely to face more climate-related risks, although the analyzed agroclimatic indicators will probably remain at a level that should permit rainfed production. However, results suggests that there is a risk of increasing number of extremely unfavorable years in many climate zones, which might result in higher interannual yield variability and constitute a challenge for proper crop management.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trace the evolution of three cases of regional food production, where local actors pursued the opportunity to qualify products under EEC Regulation 2081/92, and conclude with analysis of factors influencing the involvement and behaviour of actors in regional food qualification.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is believed that, with use of accurate and proven surgical and rehabilitation techniques, both grafts are an equivalent option for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.
Abstract: Background: The choice of graft for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction is a matter of debate, with patellar and hamstring tendons being the two most popular autologous graft options. The objective of this study was to determine in a prospective, randomized clinical trial whether two grafts (bone-patellar tendon-bone or doubled hamstring tendons) fixed with modern devices affect the two-year minimum clinical and radiographic outcomes of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Methods: One hundred and twenty patients with a chronic unilateral rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament underwent arthroscopically assisted reconstruction with use of either autologous bone-patellar tendon-bone or doubled hamstring tendon grafts, in a strictly alternating manner. Both groups were comparable with regard to demographic data, preoperative activity level, mechanism of injury, interval between the injury and the operation, and the amount of knee laxity present preoperatively. The same well-proven surgical technique and aggressive controlled rehabilitation was used. An independent observer, who was blinded with regard to the involved leg and the type of graft, performed the outcome assessment with use of a visual analog scale, the new International Knee Documentation Committee form, the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score, the Functional Knee Score for Anterior Knee Pain, and an arthrometric and an isokinetic dynamometric evaluation. Radiographs were also made. Results: At the two-year follow-up evaluation, no differences were found in terms of the visual analog score, the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score, the new International Knee Documentation Committee subjective and objective evaluation scores, the KT-1000 side-to-side laxity measurements, the Functional Knee Score for Anterior Knee Pain, muscle strength recovery, or return to sports activities. In the bone-patellar tendon-bone group, we found a higher prevalence of postoperative kneeling discomfort (p < 0.01) and an increased area of decreased skin sensitivity (p < 0.001). In the hamstring tendon group, we recorded a higher prevalence of femoral tunnel widening (p < 0.01). In this group, a correlation was also found between medial meniscectomy and an increased prevalence of pivot-shift glide (p = 0.035). Conclusions: We believe that, with use of accurate and proven surgical and rehabilitation techniques, both grafts are an equivalent option for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Level of Evidence: Therapeutic study, Level I-1b (randomized controlled trial [no significant difference but narrow confidence intervals]). See Instructions to Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

351 citations


Authors

Showing all 27699 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Charles A. Dinarello1901058139668
D. M. Strom1763167194314
Gregory Y.H. Lip1693159171742
Christopher M. Dobson1501008105475
Dirk Inzé14964774468
Thomas Hebbeker1481984114004
Marco Zanetti1451439104610
Richard B. Devereux144962116403
Gunther Roland1411471100681
Markus Klute1391447104196
Tariq Aziz138164696586
Guido Tonelli138145897248
Giorgio Trinchieri13843378028
Christof Roland137130896632
Christoph Paus1371585100801
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023244
2022631
20215,298
20205,251
20194,652
20184,147