Paolo Buonamico’s research while affiliated with University of Bari Aldo Moro and other places

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Publications (23)


Figure 1. HHT Patient 41: Arterial phase MSCT (a), venous phase MSCT (b). Imaging by maximum intensity projection of the arterial phase (c). Hypervascular nodular hyperplasia lesion is depicted on segment VI (arrowhead). Multiple telangiectases are visible all over hepatic parenchyma (arrows). MSCT: multi-slice computed tomography. 
Figure 2. HHT patient 43: Arterial phase MSCT (a–b). Venous phase MSCT (c–d). Two hypervascular nodular hyperplasia lesions are depicted in segments VII and V (arrowhead). No diffuse vascular involvement is recognizable. MSCT: multi-slice computed tomography. 
Hepatic angiodynamic profi le in paediatric patients with hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia type 1 and type 2
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2017

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40 Reads

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4 Citations

VASA

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Paolo Buonamico

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Background: Liver involvement is a common manifestation of hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT). Although a number of studies have been carried out in adult patients, no study has ever been focused on investigating HHT-related hepatic involvement in paediatric patients. The present study aimed for the first time to systematically estimate the prevalence of HHT-associated liver involvement and to characterize HHT-associated hepatic angiodynamic features in paediatric age. Patients and methods: The study was designed as a cross-sectional survey in an HHT paediatric cohort, subclassified as HHT1 and HHT2 according to the mutated gene. The evaluation of the angiodynamic profile was performed by duplex ultrasound examination. Investigation by multi-slice computed tomography (MSCT) or magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) was performed in patients >12 years. Results: MSCT/MRA examination disclosed silent hepatic involvement in 7/20 (35.0 %) children, and nodular regenerative hyperplasia in two cases. Diameter of common hepatic artery was significantly larger in HHT2 (0.45 ± 0.15 cm) compared to HHT1 (0.33 ± 0.09, p < 0.01) and control children (0.32 ± 0.08, p < 0.05). None of the patients had clinical manifestations of liver involvement. Angiodynamic profiles were different between paediatric and adult HHT patients. Conclusions: Liver involvement can be detected in paediatric HHT patients, albeit with a lower frequency compared to adults. Paediatric HHT2 children show a higher frequency of liver involvement and a trend to hepatic artery dilation when compared to HHT1 children.

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Liver involvement in a large cohort of patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Echo-color-Doppler vs multislice computed tomography study

June 2008

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92 Reads

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89 Citations

Journal of Hepatology

Hepatic arterio-venous malformations (HAVMs) have been found in 74% of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) patients with multislice CT (MSCT). This single-blind study aimed to compare the diagnostic accuracy of echo-color-Doppler with MSCT and identify the most sensitive ultrasound criteria indicating hepatic shunts. One hundred and fifty-three HHT patients were systematically screened for HAVMs by biological tests, abdominal MSCT and echo-color-Doppler. Twenty-five normal subjects and 15 cirrhotic patients were also included as control groups. Both intrahepatic ("color spots" and hypervascularization) and extrahepatic parameters (diameter, flow velocity and tortuosity of hepatic artery and diameter and flow velocity of portal/hepatic vein) were utilized. "Color-spots" are defined as subcapsular vascular spots with a high-velocity arterial blood flow and low resistivity index and can identify extremely small HAVMs. CT was positive in 128/153 (84%) patients and Doppler color spots were found in 131/153 (86%) patients. The sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy of "color spots" compared to MSCT were 95.3%, 68.0% and 91.8%, respectively. The "color-spot" showed a greater correlation to CT (V(index)=0.655; p<0.0001) than extrahepatic criteria (V=0.317). In 20/29 (69%) subjects, echo-color-Doppler, confirmed by CT, identified the third criterion for definite HHT diagnosis. Intrahepatic criteria was superior to extrahepatic criteria for identification of HAVMs. A new Doppler parameter ("color-spots") with an optimal accuracy for detecting HAVMs is proposed for easy periodic screening of HHT patients.


Hepatic involvement in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: CT findings

March 2004

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232 Reads

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100 Citations

Abdominal Imaging

Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT), also known as Rendu-Osler-Weber disease, is an autosomal-dominant vascular disease characterized by mucocutaneous or visceral angiodysplastic lesions (telangiectases and arteriovenous malformations) that may be widely distributed throughout the cardiovascular system. The recognition of mucocutaneous telangiectases, the occurrence of spontaneous and recurrent episodes of epistaxis, the presence of visceral involvement, and a family history of this disease are the clinical criteria that allow diagnosis. In comparison with skin, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, and brain involvement, hepatic involvement defined by clinical criteria alone has long been considered uncommon. Our experience with a large group of HHT patients, even those asymptomatic for liver involvement, demonstrates that it is more frequent than reported and is characterized by the presence of intrahepatic shunts, disseminated intraparenchymal telangiectases, and other vascular lesions. Congestive cardiac failure, portal hypertension, portosystemic encephalopathy, cholangitis, and atypical cirrhosis have been reported as possible serious complications related to this condition. Thus, a correct diagnosis is important, and diagnostic imaging has a fundamental role in detecting alterations involving the liver. The possibilities to perform a multiphasic study and to provide high-quality multiplanar and angiographic reconstructions, gives multidetector row helical computed tomography the ability to detect and characterize the complex anatomopathologic alterations typical of this disease.



Haemodynamic effects of propranolol, octreotide and their combination during fasting and post-prandial splanchnic hyperaemia in patients with cirrhosis

March 2001

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40 Reads

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20 Citations

European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology

This double-blind study was designed to evaluate the haemodynamic effect of two drugs, propranolol and octreotide, and their combination in patients with cirrhosis. Fifteen patients with cirrhosis were randomly assigned to two groups receiving either octreotide subcutaneously at 100 microg ('octreotide' group, n = 9) or propranolol orally at 40 mg followed by a subcutaneous dose of octreotide (100 microg) after 1 h ('propranolol + octreotide' group, n = 6); then, after 30 min, a standard meal was administered to both groups. The hepatic vein pressure gradient by hepatic vein catheterization, portal and superior mesenteric artery blood flow velocity, superior mesenteric artery pulsatility index by the echo-Doppler duplex system were recorded at baseline, 1 h after propranolol in the 'propranolol + octreotide' group, and in both groups 30 min after octreotide and 30 min after meal. At fast, propranolol was more active in decreasing portal pressure (from 16 +/- 2.2 to 12.7 +/- 3.8 mmHg, -20%, P < 0.05) as compared to octreotide (from 18.6 +/- 4.8 to 16.6 +/- 4.3 mmHg, -11%, P < 0.05). Conversely, octreotide was more active on the mean blood flow velocity of superior mesenteric artery (from 22.8 +/- 5 to 19 +/- 4.5 cm/ s, -17%; P< 0.05). Octreotide administration in patients receiving beta-blockers showed, also, a trend to increase the mesenteric vascular resistances (pulsatility index from 3.14 +/- 0.69 to 3.68 +/- 1.29, +17%, not significant (NS)) which had not been affected by previous treatment with propranolol. After the meal, a reduction of the expected hyperaemic response occurred in both groups. The combined acute haemodynamic effect of this association suggests the possible combination of these two drugs in critical situations, such as variceal bleeding in patients receiving beta-blockers. The simultaneous use of echo-Doppler and hepatic vein catheterization permitted us a more complete analysis of the acute haemodynamic events.


Effect of chronic treatment with nadolol plus isosorbide mononitrate on liver blood flow and liver metabolic activity in cirrhosis

November 1999

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10 Reads

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14 Citations

European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology

To assess the long-term effect of the addition of long-acting nitrates to beta-blockers on liver blood flow and liver metabolic activity in patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension. Eleven patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension were investigated by using hepatic vein catheterization and indocyanine green (ICG) constant infusion on baseline conditions, after 1 month of treatment with nadolol, after 3 months of treatment with nadolol plus isosorbide mononitrate, and (in seven cases) after 1 year of combined treatment. The hepatic venous pressure gradient decreased significantly after nadolol, and more so after addition of isosorbide mononitrate. Hepatic blood flow, and ICG intrinsic hepatic clearance did not change significantly, although few cases showed an increase or decrease in either parameter. A significant correlation was found between changes in ICG intrinsic hepatic clearance and in hepatic venous pressure gradient (r = 0.62, P = 0.04). Liver blood flow and liver metabolic activity are not consistently affected by addition of isosorbide mononitrate to nadolol. Substantial decreases in portal pressure may be associated with a decrease in ICG intrinsic hepatic clearance.



Interobserver and interequipment variability of hepatic, splenic, and renal arterial Doppler resistance indices in normal subjects and patients with cirrhosis

January 1998

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12 Reads

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118 Citations

Journal of Hepatology

Background/aims: Doppler arterial resistance indices are used to evaluate alterations in arterial hemodynamics in the liver, spleen, and kidney. The purpose of this study was to determine the interobserver and interequipment variability of hepatic, splenic, and renal arterial Doppler resistance indices, and the influence of a cooperative training program of the operators on the reproducibility of the results. Methods: In the first part of the study, hepatic (PI-L, RI-L), splenic (PI-S, RI-S), and renal (PI-K, RI-K) pulsatility and resistive indices were measured by echo-color-Doppler in eight control subjects and ten patients with cirrhosis by three operators using three different machines. In the second part of the study, measurements were taken by the three operators in nine controls and nine patients with cirrhosis, after cooperative training, with a single machine. Results: Significant interobserver variability was present for all parameters except RI-L. Significant interequipment variability was present for all parameters except PI-S and RI-S. Only 0-3% of variance was equipment- or operator-related, while 58-72% was patient-related. Hepatic and renal coefficients of variation were similar in patients with cirrhosis and controls, while splenic coefficients of variation were higher in patients with cirrhosis than in controls. After training, differences among operators disappeared for all variables except RI-K, and the operator-related component of variance nearly disappeared for all parameters. Conclusions: Hepatic, splenic, and renal arterial resistance indices show small but significant interobserver and interequipment variability. Interobserver variability can be decreased to non-significant levels by a common training program. Thus, these indices can be widely applied to the study of arterial circulation in these organs.


Oxidation of circulating proteins in alcoholics: Role of acetaldehyde and xanthine oxidase

July 1996

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21 Reads

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98 Citations

Journal of Hepatology

This study aimed to evaluate the protein and lipid redox status in plasma erythrocytes and erythrocyte ghosts of alcoholics and of patients with non-alcoholic liver disease; we also investigated the relation to glutathione levels and the role of acetaldehyde and xanthine oxidase activity in plasma. Carbonyl and sulfhydryl proteins, glutathione and malondialdehyde levels and the activity of the circulating xanthine oxidase were determined in: active and abstinent alcoholics, patients with chronic viral hepatitis and healthy controls. Active alcoholics showed a decrease of sulfhydryl protein and glutathione concentrations in plasma, erythrocytes and ghosts compared to the other groups. Also, an increase of the carbonyl protein and malondialdehyde levels and of the activity of circulating xanthine oxidase (9.2 +/- 1.8 nmol.min.ml, p < 0.001) were observed. Significant correlations between carbonyl protein and malondialdehyde concentrations in plasma (r = 0.775, p < 0.001), as well as between daily alcohol intake and carbonyl protein content in plasma (r = 0.879, p < 0.001) and erythrocytes (r = 0.605, p < 0.01) were observed. However, carbonyl protein levels did not correlate with the degree of liver injury. Incubation of plasma with acetaldehyde, but not with ethanol, significantly increased the carbonyl protein formation. Administration of N-Ethylmaleimide, a thiol depletor, or glutathione significantly increased or delayed, respectively, the carbonyl protein formation. Proteins are oxidatively modified in plasma and erythrocytes of active alcoholics, whereas no such alterations are detectable in patients with non-alcoholic liver disease. Protein oxidation in alcoholics does not seem to result directly from ethanol; circulating xanthine oxidase, delivered from injured cells, may play a contributory role and glutathione appears to be directly involved in the protection of plasma proteins against acetaldehyde toxicity.


Citations (13)


... Many HHT-related manifestations become apparent in adulthood, at a variable onset age, due to the age-dependent expressivity of the disease. However, at a lesser frequency, some manifestations can also occur in childhood, as shown by some studies [3,17,[19][20][21][22][23]. In most cases, arteriovenous malformations [AVMs] remain asymptomatic. ...

Reference:

A Rare Case of Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding: Osler-Weber-Rendu Syndrome
Hepatic angiodynamic profi le in paediatric patients with hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia type 1 and type 2

VASA

... The addition of organic nitrates to NSBBs may lead to a further reduction in PVP [177,178]. Hemodynamic response to this combined medical treatment is usually sustained after a long-term follow-up [179]. Results from studies using organic nitrates as monotherapy as primary prophylaxis were inconsistent [177]. ...

Effect of chronic treatment with nadolol plus isosorbide mononitrate on liver blood flow and liver metabolic activity in cirrhosis
  • Citing Article
  • November 1999

European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology

... Because intraabdominal pressure was not measured in this study, a direct effect of intraabdominal hypertension on splenic flow and RI cannot be ruled out. Nevertheless, the values of splenic flow RI in the control group coincide with those previously reported in healthy people [27] and dogs [28]. ...

Interobserver and interequipment variability of hepatic, splenic, and renal arterial Doppler resistance indices in normal subjects and patients with cirrhosis
  • Citing Article
  • January 1998

Journal of Hepatology

... Consequently, the ability of propranolol (20 mg) to reduce V max provide evidence that fulfilled the standard acceptable criteria and therefore can be taken to be the optimal dose to reduce V max maximally in cirrhotic liver patients. The result is also in agreement with a previous study which used 40 mg propranolol (32,33). Vorobioff et al (10) showed that propranolol could reduce portal pressure without influencing arterial pressure in patients with portal hypertension. ...

Echo-Doppler evaluation of acute flow changes in portal hypertensive patients: flow velocity as a reliable parameter
  • Citing Article
  • August 1992

Journal of Hepatology

... Moreover, separating the hepatic arterial and portal venous components of the liver blood flow is complex. However, with the introduction of noninvasive methods, such as Doppler, measurements of these two components can be performed in patients with cirrhosis and in liver transplant recipients [3,[9][10][11]. Several reports, from our and other laboratories, have demonstrated the reliability of this technique for evaluating portal hemodynamic changes under physiological and pharmacological stimuli in patients with portal hypertension and in liver transplant recipients [9][10][11]. Moreover, this technique is also useful to evaluate the resistive index or the pulsatility index of the hepatic artery, an indirect measurement of the hepatic arterial perfusion [12][13][14]. ...

A Randomized study of propranolol on postprandial portal hyperemia in cirrhotic patients
  • Citing Article
  • April 1992

Gastroenterology

... Blunting of stress-mediated hyperemia is a relatively common phenomenon in diverse pathological conditions including hypertension [81] [82] [83] , diabetes [84][85] [86] , and Alzheimer's disease [87] , It has been repeatedly described to occur in several tissue locations, including the forearm [86][88] [83] , skeletal muscle [81] [84] , myocardium [82] [89] , mesenteric bed [90] , and brain [86][85] [87] . Whether or not postprandial hyperemia occurs in visceral AT in the early stages of metabolic disease may still require an unequivocal demonstration. ...

Evaluation of postprandial hyperemia in superior mesenteric artery and portal vein in healthy and cirrhotic humans: An operator-blind echo-Doppler study
  • Citing Article
  • April 1991

Hepatology

... Congestion index was defined by Moriyasu et al. in 1986 as the ratio of cross-sectional area to portal flow velocity (Moriyasu F, Nishida O, Ban N, Nakamura T, Sakai M, Miyake T, et al., 1986). This index has been shown to be more sensitive and more specific in the diagnosis of portal hypertension than measurements of portal velocity (Haag K, Rössle M, Ochs A, Huber M, Siegerstetter V, Olschewski M, et al, 1999), although it was also found to have a critical limitation in that it needed a very skillful operator (Buonamico & Sabbá, 1991). For simplicity, the author set up a new index, the portal hypertension index, calculated as the ratio of the main portal vein dimension (D, mm) at the porta hepatis to the mean portal velocity (Vmean, cm/s) at the same site (Wu CC, Yeh YH, & Hwang MH, 1994), to detect portal hypertension in an easier way. ...

Echo Doppler Duplex Scanner and Color in the Study of Portal Hypertension
  • Citing Article
  • July 1991

Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology

... The combination of an arterial vasoconstrictor (midodrine) and a glucagon inhibitor (octreotide) can increase the effectiveness of the former in the treatment of HRS [32]. Octreotide has been shown to be effective in reducing visceral hyperemia and portal pressure [32][33][34][35], but it can also increase the mean arterial pressure in patients with cirrhosis [32]. ...

Octreotide blunts postprandial splanchnic hyperemia in cirrhotic patients: a double-blind randomized Echo-Doppler study
  • Citing Article
  • February 1995

Hepatology

... Indeed, L-carnitine and its derivatives have antioxidant properties that might represent a novel means of therapeutic intervention. While the mechanism of action is not yet completely understood, carnitine derivatives appear to mediate the metabolism of monocytes directly, as shown by studies in skeletal muscle [4,91011, as well as in myocardial models121314 and any therapeutic effect did not related to changes on haemodynamic [15,16]. In an animal model, L-carnitine treatment was suggested to have beneficial effects on the oxidant/antioxidant state and vascular reactivity of streptozotocin-diabetic rat aorta and, accordingly, may represent a therapeutic approach in the treatment of diabetic vascular complications [17]. ...

Comparison between the effect of L-propionylcarnitine, L-acetylcarnitine and nitroglycerin in chronic peripheral arterial disease: A haemodynamic double blind echo-Doppler study
  • Citing Article
  • November 1994

European Heart Journal

... Protein sulfhydryl (PSH) content was carried out based on the method of Grattagliano et al. (1996) and described previously by Amri et al. (2020). Briefly, the PSH content was determined by subtracting the absorbance of non-sulfhydryl proteins (A2) from absorbance of the total protein sulfhydryl (A1) in the liver supernatant. ...

Oxidation of circulating proteins in alcoholics: Role of acetaldehyde and xanthine oxidase
  • Citing Article
  • July 1996

Journal of Hepatology