0000000000354695

AUTHOR

Alberto Di Girolamo

showing 2 related works from this author

Effects of ambient temperature, humidity, and other meteorological variables on hospital admissions for angina pectoris.

2012

Background: Seasonal peaks in cardiovascular disease incidence have been widely reported, suggesting weather has a role. Design The aim of our study was to determine the influence of climatic variables on angina pectoris hospital admissions. Methods: We correlated the daily number of angina cases admitted to a western Sicilian hospital over a period of 12 years and local weather conditions (temperature, humidity, wind force and direction, precipitation, sunny hours and atmospheric pressure) on a day-to-day basis. A total of 2459 consecutive patients were admitted over the period 1987–1998 (1562 men, 867 women; M/F – 1:8). Results: A seasonal variation was found with a noticeable winter pea…

MaleMultivariate statisticsTime FactorsMultivariate analysisEpidemiologyRisk AssessmentAngina PectorisAnginaPatient AdmissionSex FactorsRisk FactorsmedicineHumansSicilyWeatherAgedRetrospective StudiesAngina pectoris hospital admission weather meteorologybusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)TemperatureHumidityHumidityMiddle AgedSeasonalitymedicine.diseaseSettore MED/11 - Malattie Dell'Apparato CardiovascolareConfidence intervalMultivariate AnalysisHospital admissionFemaleSeasonsMedical emergencyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessDemography
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In-hospital complications of acute myocardial infarction in hypertensive subjects

2005

Recent studies have shown a worse in-hospital outcome in hypertensive than in normotensive patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), which has been attributed to more frequent complications. The aim of this study was to investigate clinical patterns, risk factors, and in-hospital complications in hypertensive and normotensive patients with AMI.Of 4994 consecutive patients with AMI admitted to the intensive care unit, hypertensive patients with first infarction (n = 915; mean age 68.8 +/- 11.4 years) and 915 gender- and age-matched normotensive subjects were retrospectively studied.In the univariate analysis, hypertensive subjects presented more frequently non-Q-wave infarction and ST…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyHeart DiseasesMyocardial InfarctionInfarctionlaw.inventionElectrocardiographylawInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusInternal MedicinemedicineHumansST segmentcardiovascular diseasesMyocardial infarctionAntihypertensive AgentsAgedRetrospective StudiesAged 80 and overST depressionInpatientsUnivariate analysisbusiness.industryCoronary Care UnitsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseIntensive care unitCase-Control StudiesHypertensionCardiologyFemalemedicine.symptombusinessDyslipidemiaAmerican Journal of Hypertension
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