211 research outputs found

    L'epistola dedicatoria della summontina come finale dell''Arcadia' di Sannazaro

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    In questo intervento la tesi della paternità sannazariana della lettera dedicatoria dell’Arcadia di Sannazaro, firmata ufficialmente da Pietro Summonte, è dimostrata sulla scorta del riconoscimento di un saldo rapporto intertestuale con l’epistola proemiale della Raccolta aragonese. Passaggio importante dell’indagine è l’individuazione del motivo della mistificazione di Sannazaro, che accreditò con la dedica la versione di un’Arcadia pubblicata da Summonte senza l’autorizzazione dell’autore: la volontà di stabilire un parallelismo tra la storia editoriale del suo romanzo e le circostanze in cui avvenne la pubblicazione dell’Eneide. Alla luce della natura letteraria e intertestuale della lettera dedicatoria dell’Arcadia è posto l’interrogativo circa la natura autentica di questo testo: si tratta di testo o di paratesto? Le risultanze dell’analisi consentono di affermare che la dedica dell’Arcadia è testo a tutti gli effetti, dal momento che essa contribuisce addirittura a delineare l’assetto definitivo della trama dell’opera

    Impaired cardiac performance in elderly patients with growth hormone deficiency

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    Several evidences indicate that GH and/or insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) are involved in the regulation of cardiovascular function. In patients with childhood and adulthood-onset GH deficiency (GHD), the impairment of cardiac performance is manifest primarily as a reduction in the left ventricular (LV) mass (LVM), inadequacy of LV ejection fraction both at rest and at peak exercise, and abnormalities of LV diastolic filling. No study has been reported to date in elderly GHD patients that investigated cardiac function. In particular, it is unknown whether cardiac function is modified in accordance with patients' age as a physiological response to aging, as in normal subjects the rate and extent of LV filling are reduced with age. This study was designed to evaluate heart morphology and function, by echocardiography and equilibrium radionuclide angiography, respectively, in rigorously selected elderly patients with GHD but without evidence of other complications able to affect cardiac performance. Eleven patients with hypopituitarism (6 men and 5 women, aged 60-72 yr) and 11 sex- age- and body mass index-matched healthy subjects entered this study. None of the patients and controls presented with or had previously suffered from other concomitant diseases, such as diabetes mellitus, coronary artery diseases, long-standing hypertension, and hyperthyroidism, which could affect cardiac function. All patients had been previously operated on via the transsphenoidal and/or transcranic route for nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma, meningioma, or craniopharyngioma, and 6 of them had been irradiated. Eight patients had FSH/LH insufficiency, 5 had TSH insufficiency, and 6 had ACTH insufficiency, appropriately replaced. All subjects were tested with the combined arginine plus GHRH test showing a GH response below 9 microg/L. No significant difference was found in plasma IGF-I levels (49.2 +/- 8.5 vs. 71.8 +/- 7.5 microg/L) between patients and controls. However, IGF-I levels were lower than the normal range in 8 patients and 3 controls. Interventricular septum thickness (9.1 +/- 0.2 vs. 9.1 +/- 0.2 mm), LV posterior wall thickness (9.1 +/- 0.2 vs. 9.0 +/- 0.2 mm), and LVM after correction for body surface area (97.6 +/- 1.8 vs. 99.9 +/- 1.5 g/m2) were similar in patients and controls. Similarly, the LV ejection fraction at rest was similar in patients and controls (57.1 +/- 2% vs. 63.2 +/- 2.5%; P = NS), and it was normal (> or = 50%) in all controls and in 10 of 11 patients. By contrast, the LV ejection fraction at peak exercise was markedly depressed in elderly GHD patients compared to age-matched controls (51 +/- 2.5% vs. 73.3 +/- 3%; P or = 5% increase compared to basal value) of LV ejection fraction at peak exercise was found in 8 controls (72.7%) and in 2 of 11 patients (18.2%). No difference was found in the peak rate of LV filling, whether peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (2.5 +/- 0.2 vs. 2.6 +/- 0.2 end-diastolic volume/s) or stroke volume (4.3 +/- 0.3 vs. 4.0 +/- 0.3 stroke volume/s), between patients and controls. Finally, exercise duration was significantly shorter in elderly GHD patients than in age-matched controls (7.2 +/- 2.1 vs. 9.1 +/- 0.2 min; P < 0.01). In the patient group, the GH peak after arginine plus GHRH test was significantly correlated with the LV ejection fraction at rest (r = 0.822; P < 0.01), whereas IGF-I was significantly correlated with the peak rate of LV filling whether the peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (r = -0.863; P < 0.001) or stroke volume (r = -0.616; P < 0.05) or expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection fraction rate (r = -0.736; P < 0.01). Disease duration was significantly correlated with heart rate at peak exercise (r = 0.614; P < 0.05) and with systolic and diastolic blood pressures both at rest (r = 0.745; P < 0.01 and r = 0.650; P < 0.05) and at peak exercise (r = 0.684; P < 0.05 and

    Is the acromegalic cardiomyopathy reversible? Effect of 5 year normalization of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-I levels on cardiac performance.

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    Acromegalic patients are considered to be exposed to a doubled mortality rate, mostly for cardiovascular diseases. This open prospective study was designed to evaluate whether the impairment of cardiac performance could be reversed by the long-term suppression of GH and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) levels. Eighteen patients with active acromegaly were studied before and 5 yr after surgery, followed by sc octreotide in 11 patients. Disease control (GH levels < or =1 microg/L after glucose load or < or =2.5 microg/L after fasting, respectively, together with normalized IGF-I levels for age) was achieved in seven patients after surgery and in six patients after 0.3--0.6 mg/day sc octreotide. Five patients were not controlled during the 5-yr follow-up. Cardiac performance at rest and at peak exercise was assessed by equilibrium radionuclide angiography at study entry and 5 yr after surgery alone or plus octreotide. Thirty-six sex- and age-matched healthy subjects served as controls. At study entry, patients had a lower left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) at peak exercise and LVEF exercise-induced changes, exercise duration, and capacity than controls (P < 0.001). After 5 yr of treatment, a significant decrease of resting heart rate (P = 0.03) and a significant increase of LVEF at peak exercise (P = 0.003) was found in patients achieving disease control. LVEF response at peak exercise worsened in none of the patients with controlled disease and in three patients with uncontrolled disease (60%) (chi(2) = 5.5; P = 0.02). Diastolic filling, exercise duration, and workload did not significantly change during the 5-yr follow-up. No difference was found between patients controlled by surgery alone or by surgery plus octreotide. This 5-yr prospective study demonstrated that the LVEF response at peak exercise improved in all patients achieving disease control, while it was worsened in 60% of uncontrolled ones. These results strengthen the need of a stable suppression of GH and IGF-I hypersecretion to restore a normal cardiac performance in acromegaly
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