C. Canali
University of Padua
18 Papers
274 Citations
C. Canali is an academic researcher from University of Padua. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Ambulatory blood pressure. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 18 publications.
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Papers
Changes in Left Ventricular Anatomy and Function in Hypertension and Primary Aldosteronism
Gian Paolo Rossi,Alfredo Sacchetto,P Visentin,C. Canali,Gian Rocco Graniero,Paolo Palatini,Achille C. Pessina +6 more
TL;DR: In patients with primary aldosteronism, the excess aldosterone with suppression of the renin-angiotensin system is associated with both increased left ventricular mass and significant changes ofleft ventricular diastolic filling, and the former changes appear to be reversible on removal of the cause of excessive ald testosterone production.
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•Journal Article
Factors Affecting Ambulatory Blood Pressure Reproducibility Results of the HARVEST Trial
TL;DR: In this paper, the reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure was assessed using a noninvasive technique, which was better for ambula- tory than for office blood pressure and was greater for 24-hour than for daytime blood pressure.
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Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring Editing Criteria Is Standardization Needed
TL;DR: The modified version of the Casadei procedure, which is automatic and can be applied to recordings obtained from any device, should be regarded as the method of choice for ambulatory blood pressure reproducibility.
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Interactive Action of the White-Coat Effect and the Blood Pressure Levels on Cardiovascular Complications in Hypertension
TL;DR: The present results show that the white-coat effect is related to the degree of hypertensive complications and that this association is stronger in the subject with more severe hypertension.
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Does Orthostatic Testing Have Any Role in the Evaluation of the Young Subject With Mild Hypertension?: An Insight From the HARVEST Study
TL;DR: A population of young mild hypertensives with exaggerated BP response to standing was identified with use of mixture analysis, characterized by higher whole-day BP and by a hyperkinetic hemodynamic pattern as a result of increased sympathetic tone.
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