28 results on '"Geraci, M"'
Search Results
2. Closure of fistula-in-ano with laser - FiLaC™: an effective novel sphincter-saving procedure for complex disease.
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Giamundo, P., Geraci, M., Tibaldi, L., and Valente, M.
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FISTULA , *FIBERS , *ANAL fistula , *FECAL incontinence , *SURGICAL complications , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Aim Fistula laser closure (FiLaC™) is a novel sphincter-saving procedure for the treatment of anal fistula. Primary closure of the track is achieved using laser energy emitted by a radial fibre connected to a diode laser. The energy causes shrinkage of the tissue around the radial fibre with the aim being to close the track. This pilot study was designed to investigate the safety and effectiveness of this new technique in the treatment of anal fistula. Method Thirty-five patients with anal fistula underwent the FiLaC™ procedure. They had either a primary or a recurrent trans-sphincteric anal fistula, a previously placed seton or a fistula involving a significant portion of the sphincter with a potential risk of postoperative incontinence on fistulotomy. The surgical procedure consisted of 'sealing' the fistula by laser energy. The primary end-point was cure of the disease and evaluation of morbidity. The secondary end-point was an assessment of the degree of postoperative continence using the Cleveland Clinic Florida ( CCF) Fecal Incontinence Score. Results The median operation time was 20 (6-35) min. No intra-operative complications were reported. Median duration of follow up was 20 (3-36) months. Primary healing was observed in 25 (71.4%) patients. There were eight (23%) failures and two recurrences at 3 and 6 months after the operation. No patient reported incontinence postoperatively. Conclusion The laser FiLaC™ procedure for fistula-in-ano is a safe, relatively simple, minimally invasive, sphincter-saving procedure with a high chance of success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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3. Geographical and temporal distribution of cancer survival in teenagers and young adults in England.
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Geraci, M., Eden, T. O. B., Alston, R. D., Moran, A., Arora, R. S., and Birch, J. M.
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ONCOLOGY , *CANCER patients , *CHILDHOOD cancer , *LEUKEMIA - Abstract
Background: Between 1979 and 2001, an analysis of cancer survival in young people in England, aged 13 to 24 years, showed overall improvements. However, for some diagnostic groups, little or no increases were observed. The aim of this study was to analyse the regional distribution of cancer survival in teenagers and young adults in England in order to identify patterns and potential for improvements at a regional scale.Methods: We examined geographical and temporal patterns in relative survival in cancer patients aged 13-24 years in England during the time period 1979-2001. Cancer cases were grouped according to an internationally recognised morphology-based diagnostic scheme.Results: For most diagnostic groups, there was little variation in survival between regions, except for testicular germ cell tumours (P=0.006) and colorectal carcinoma (P=0.002). For certain diagnostic groups, the temporal pattern in survival differed between regions. However, in regions that showed poor survival during the early part of the study period, greatest improvements were observed in groups such as acute lymphoid leukaemia, acute myeloid leukaemia, testicular tumours and melanoma.Conclusion: In conclusion, there was a reduction in the differences in survival between regions during the study period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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4. Cancer mortality in 13 to 29-year-olds in England and Wales, 1981-2005.
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Geraci, M., Birch, J. M., Alston, R. D., Moran, A., and Eden, T. O. B.
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CANCER-related mortality , *LYMPHOCYTIC leukemia , *LEUKEMIA , *BONE tumors , *ANEMIA - Abstract
We examined cancer mortality at ages 13-29 years in England and Wales between 1981 and 2005, a total of 20 026 deaths over approximately 303 million person-years (mpy) at risk by sex, age group and time period. Overall, the mortality rate was 65.6 per mpy. Malignant neoplasms of the central nervous system showed the highest rate (8.5), followed by myeloid and monocytic leukaemia (6.6), lymphoid leukaemia (6.4), malignant bone tumours (5.4) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (5.2). These groups together accounted for almost 50% of all cancer deaths. The mortality rate for males (72.4) was 23% higher than for females (58.6) (P-value <0.0001). Males showed significantly higher mortality rates than females in almost all diagnostic groups, in general, mortality increasing with age (P-value <0.0001). There were significant decreases in mortality over time, the annual percentage change between 1981 and 2005 being minus 1.86 (95% confidence interval -2.09 to -1.62). Cancer groups with the highest mortality differed from those with the highest incidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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5. Properties of projectile-fragments in the 40Ar+ 27Al reaction at 44 A MeV. Comparison with a multisequential decay model
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Geraci, M., Lanzanò, G., De Filippo, E., Pagano, A., Charvet, J.L., Dayras, R., Legrain, R., Volant, C., Richert, J., and Wagner, P.
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COLLISIONS (Nuclear physics) , *NUCLEAR physics , *PROJECTILES , *BULLETS - Abstract
Abstract: Results on projectile fragment–fragment coincidences in the forward direction and for the reaction 40Ar+ 27Al at 44 A MeV are presented and compared with the predictions of two different entrance channel models, a two-body and a three-body mechanism both followed by a binary multisequential decay including fission. This analysis shows that many features of the projectile decay products are well accounted for by the binary multisequential decay model. However the results depend critically upon the initial masses and excitation energies of the primary projectile fragments. In this respect, the three-body approach underestimates the excitation energy imparted to the primary fragments whereas the two-body scenario overestimates it. The present data put strong constraints on the initial excitation energy imparted to the primary fragments which appears to be intermediate between the predictions of the two models. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2006
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6. Influence of obesity on postural capacities of teenagers. Preliminary study
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Bernard, P.L., Geraci, M., Hue, O., Amato, M., Seynnes, O., and Lantieri, D.
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ADOLESCENT obesity , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
Objective. – The purpose of this work was to define the influence of obesity on static postural control of teenagers.Subjects and method. – Nine obese subjects and seven non-obese subjects were charactezised with stabilometric data of Surface, of Lenghts and spontaneous sway in the lateral (X) and antero-posterior (Y) axis with open eyes and closed eyes in two conditions on firm floor and foam floor condition.Results. – For length data, significative differences were observed between the two groups for the opened eyes condition (p < 0.02) and eyes closed (p < 0.03) during foam floor condition.Conclusion. – During experimental sollicitations, obesity influences significatively the postural control of teenagers. Instead of systematic statistic differences, we observed a decrease in balance capacities of obese subjects. The effects of fat tissue distributions were not verified. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2003
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7. Genomic approaches to research in pulmonary hypertension.
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Geraci, M W, Gao, B, Hoshikawa, Y, Yeager, M E, Tuder, R M, and Voelkel, N F
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Genomics, or the study of genes and their function, is a burgeoning field with many new technologies. In the present review, we explore the application of genomic approaches to the study of pulmonary hypertension (PH). Candidate genes, important to the pathobiology of the disease, have been investigated. Rodent models enable the manipulation of selected genes, either by transgenesis or targeted disruption. Mutational analysis of genes in the transforming growth factor-beta family have proven pivotal in both familial and sporadic forms of primary PH. Finally, microarray gene expression analysis is a robust molecular tool to aid in delineating the pathobiology of this disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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8. Fistula-tract Laser Closure (FiLaC™): long-term results and new operative strategies.
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Giamundo, P., Esercizio, L., Geraci, M., Tibaldi, L., and Valente, M.
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ANAL fistula , *SPHINCTERS , *SEMICONDUCTOR lasers , *FECAL incontinence , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Fistula-tract Laser Closure (FiLaC™) is a sphincter-saving technique for the treatment of anal fistulas that has been shown to be successful in the short and middle term. However, the long-term success rate is unknown. This study aimed to report long-term results in performing FiLaC™. Methods: This study was performed as a retrospective observational study. Forty-five patients who underwent FiLaC™ between July 2010 and May 2014 were evaluated. In all cases, FiLaC™ was performed with a diode laser at a wavelength of 1470 nm by means of a radial fiber. Patients and fistula characteristics, previous treatments, healing rates, failures and postoperative incontinence were reviewed. Results: Median follow-up time was 30 months (range 6-46 months). Thirty-five patients (78 %) had a history of previous surgery for their fistulas. Primary healing was observed in 32 patients (71.1 %), and the median healing time was 5 weeks (range 3-8 weeks). Eleven of the 13 failures (85 %) were early failures (persistent symptoms). No patient reported postoperative incontinence. The best healing rate was observed in patients who had been previously treated with loose seton (19/24, 79 %). Conclusions: Long-term follow-up after FiLaC™ seems to confirm the favorable short-term success rates reported for this procedure. Although sealing of chronic anal fistulas may be obtained with FiLaC™ in a single treatment, our current strategy consists of placing a loose seton into the fistula tract a few weeks prior to laser treatment. Seton treatment facilitates the following laser procedure and seems to have favorable effects on healing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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9. Increasing rates of cervical cancer in young women in England: an analysis of national data 1982-2006.
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Foley, G., Alston, R., Geraci, M., Brabin, L., Kitchener, H., and Birch, J.
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CERVICAL cancer , *CANCER in women , *PAPILLOMAVIRUSES , *VACCINATION , *AGE distribution , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL screening , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *TIME , *EVALUATION research , *DISEASE incidence , *CERVICAL intraepithelial neoplasia , *DIAGNOSIS ,CERVIX uteri tumors - Abstract
Background: In England, cervical cancer is the second most common cancer in women aged under 35 years. Overall incidence of cervical cancer has decreased since the introduction of the national screening programme in 1988 but recent trends of incidence in young women have not been studied in detail.Methods: Information on 71,511 incident cases of cervical cancer in England, 1982-2006, in 20-79-year-olds was extracted from a national cancer registration database. Changes in incidence were analysed by age group, time period and birth cohort. Poisson regression was used to estimate annual percentage change (APC).Results: Overall incidence, during 1982-2006, fell significantly from 213 to 112 per million person years. However, in 20-29-year-olds, after an initial fall, incidence increased significantly during 1992-2006, (APC 2.16). In 30-39-year-olds incidence stabilised during the latter part of the study period. The pattern was most marked in the North East, Yorkshire and the Humber and East Midlands regions. Birth cohorts that were initially called for screening between 60-64 and 35-39 years of age show an incidence peak soon after the age of presumed first screen, whereas younger birth cohorts show a peak at about 35 years of age. Incidence in the 1977-1981 birth cohort has increased relative to that among women born between 1962 and 1976.Conclusion: These results have implications for cervical screening, human papilloma virus vaccination and other public health interventions targeting young people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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10. Stimulus-reinforcement-based decision making and anxiety: impairment in generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) but not in generalized social phobia (GSP)
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DeVido J, Jones M, Geraci M, Hollon N, Blair RJR, Pine DS, and Blair K
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BACKGROUND: Generalized social phobia (GSP) involves the fear/avoidance of social situations whereas generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) involves an intrusive worry about everyday life circumstances. It remains unclear whether these, highly co-morbid, conditions represent distinct disorders or alternative presentations of a single underlying pathology. In this study, we examined stimulus-reinforcement-based decision making in GSP and GAD. METHOD: Twenty unmedicated patients with GSP, 16 unmedicated patients with GAD and 19 age-, IQ- and gender-matched healthy comparison (HC) individuals completed the Differential Reward/Punishment Learning Task (DRPLT). In this task, the subject chooses between two objects associated with different levels of reward or punishment. Thus, response choice indexes not only reward/punishment sensitivity but also sensitivity to reward/punishment level according to between-object reinforcement distance. RESULTS: We found that patients with GAD committed a significantly greater number of errors than both the patients with GSP and the HC individuals. By contrast, the patients with GSP and the HC individuals did not differ in performance on this task. CONCLUSIONS: These results link GAD with anomalous non-affective-based decision making. They also indicate that GSP and GAD are associated with distinct pathophysiologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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11. Stimulus-reinforcement-based decision making and anxiety: impairment in generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) but not in generalized social phobia (GSP).
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DeVido, J., Jones, M., Geraci, M., Hollon, N., Blair, R. J. R., Pine, D. S., and Blair, K.
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SOCIAL phobia , *ANXIETY disorders , *SOCIAL anxiety , *WORRY , *FEAR , *SENSITIVITY (Personality trait) - Abstract
Background. Generalized social phobia (GSP) involves the fear/avoidance of social situations whereas generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) involves an intrusive worry about everyday life circumstances. It remains unclear whether these, highly co-morbid, conditions represent distinct disorders or alternative presentations of a single underlying pathology. In this study, we examined stimulus-reinforcement-based decision making in GSP and GAD. Method. Twenty unmedicated patients with GSP, 16 unmedicated patients with GAD and 19 age-, IQ- and gendermatched healthy comparison (HC) individuals completed the Differential Reward/Punishment Learning Task (DRPLT). In this task, the subject chooses between two objects associated with different levels of reward or punishment. Thus, response choice indexes not only reward/punishment sensitivity but also sensitivity to reward/ punishment level according to between-object reinforcement distance. Results. We found that patients with GAD committed a significantly greater number of errors than both the patients with GSP and the HC individuals. By contrast, the patients with GSP and the HC individuals did not differ in performance on this task. Conclusions. These results link GAD with anomalous non-affective-based decision making. They also indicate that GSP and GAD are associated with distinct pathophysiologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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12. Combined COI barcode‐based methods to avoid mislabelling of threatened species of deep‐sea skates.
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Carugati, L., Melis, R., Cariani, A., Cau, A., Crobe, V., Ferrari, A., Follesa, M. C., Geraci, M. L., Iglésias, S. P., Pesci, P., Tinti, F., and Cannas, R.
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ENDANGERED species , *BIOLOGICAL classification , *CYTOCHROME oxidase , *WILDLIFE conservation , *CONTINENTAL slopes , *BAR codes - Abstract
Skates are characterised by conservative body morphology which hampers identification and leads to frequent taxonomic confusion and market mislabelling. Accurate specimen classification is crucial for reliable stock assessments and effective conservation plans, otherwise the risk of extinction could be unnoticed. The misclassification issue is evident for the genus Dipturus, distributed worldwide, from the continental shelf and slope to the deep sea. In this study, barcode cytochrome oxidase I gene (COI) sequences were used along with species delimitation and specimen assignment methods to improve taxonomy and zoogeography of species of conservation interest inhabiting the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. In this study, we provided new evidence of the occurence of D. nidarosiensis in the Central‐Western Mediterranean Sea and the lack of Atlantic‐Mediterranean genetic divergence. The Atlantic endangered species D. laevis and D. batis clustered together under the same molecular operational taxonomic unit (MOTU) with any delimitation methods used, while the assignment approach correctly discriminated specimens into the two species. These results provided evidence that the presence of the barcode gap is not an essential predictor of identification success, but the use of different approaches is crucially needed for specimen classification, especially when threshold‐ or tree‐based methods result less powerful. The analyses also showed how different putative, vulnerable, species dwelling across South‐Western Atlantic and South‐Eastern Pacific are frequently misidentified in public sequence repositories. Our study emphasised the limits associated to public databases, highlighting the urgency to verify and implement the information deposited therein in order to guarantee accurate species identification and thus effective conservation measures for deep‐sea skates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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13. Reduced optimism and a heightened neural response to everyday worries are specific to generalized anxiety disorder, and not seen in social anxiety.
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Blair, K. S., Otero, M., Teng, C., Geraci, M., Ernst, M., Blair, R. J. R., Pine, D. S., and Grillon, C.
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BIOMARKERS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *OPTIMISM , *COMORBIDITY , *SOCIAL anxiety , *GENERALIZED anxiety disorder - Abstract
BackgroundGeneralized anxiety disorder (GAD) and social anxiety disorder (SAD) are co-morbid and associated with similar neural disruptions during emotion regulation. In contrast, the lack of optimism examined here may be specific to GAD and could prove an important biomarker for that disorder.MethodUnmedicated individuals with GAD (n = 18) and age-, intelligence quotient- and gender-matched SAD (n = 18) and healthy (n = 18) comparison individuals were scanned while contemplating likelihoods of high- and low-impact negative (e.g. heart attack; heartburn) or positive (e.g. winning lottery; hug) events occurring to themselves in the future.ResultsAs expected, healthy subjects showed significant optimistic bias (OB); they considered themselves significantly less likely to experience future negative but significantly more likely to experience future positive events relative to others (p < 0.001). This was also seen in SAD, albeit at trend level for positive events (p < 0.001 and p < 0.10, respectively). However, GAD patients showed no OB for positive events (t17 = 0.82, n.s.) and showed significantly reduced neural modulation relative to the two other groups of regions including the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and caudate to these events (p < 0.001 for all). The GAD group further differed from the other groups by showing increased neural responses to low-impact events in regions including the rostral mPFC (p < 0.05 for both).ConclusionsThe neural dysfunction identified here may represent a unique feature associated with reduced optimism and increased worry about everyday events in GAD. Consistent with this possibility, patients with SAD did not show such dysfunction. Future studies should consider if this dysfunction represents a biomarker for GAD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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14. Learning from other people's fear: amygdala-based social reference learning in social anxiety disorder.
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Blair, K. S., Otero, M., Teng, C., Geraci, M., Lewis, E., Hollon, N., Blair, R. J. R., Ernst, Monique, Grillon, C., and Pine, D. S.
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BRAIN , *RADIOGRAPHY , *AMYGDALOID body , *BIOMARKERS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EMOTIONS , *FEAR , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *SOCIAL anxiety - Abstract
BackgroundSocial anxiety disorder involves fear of social objects or situations. Social referencing may play an important role in the acquisition of this fear and could be a key determinant in future biomarkers and treatment pathways. However, the neural underpinnings mediating such learning in social anxiety are unknown. Using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging, we examined social reference learning in social anxiety disorder. Specifically, would patients with the disorder show increased amygdala activity during social reference learning, and further, following social reference learning, show particularly increased response to objects associated with other people's negative reactions?MethodA total of 32 unmedicated patients with social anxiety disorder and 22 age-, intelligence quotient- and gender-matched healthy individuals responded to objects that had become associated with others’ fearful, angry, happy or neutral reactions.ResultsDuring the social reference learning phase, a significant group × social context interaction revealed that, relative to the comparison group, the social anxiety group showed a significantly greater response in the amygdala, as well as rostral, dorsomedial and lateral frontal and parietal cortices during the social, relative to non-social, referencing trials. In addition, during the object test phase, relative to the comparison group, the social anxiety group showed increased bilateral amygdala activation to objects associated with others’ fearful reactions, and a trend towards decreased amygdala activation to objects associated with others’ happy and neutral reactions.ConclusionsThese results suggest perturbed observational learning in social anxiety disorder. In addition, they further implicate the amygdala and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex in the disorder, and underscore their importance in future biomarker developments. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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15. Early diagnosis and treatment of postoperative endoscopic recurrence of Crohn's disease: partial benefit by infliximab--a pilot study.
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Sorrentino D, Terrosu G, Paviotti A, Geraci M, Avellini C, Zoli G, Fries W, Danese S, Occhipinti P, Croatto T, Zarifi D, Sorrentino, Dario, Terrosu, Giovanni, Paviotti, Alberto, Geraci, Marco, Avellini, Claudio, Zoli, Giorgio, Fries, Walter, Danese, Silvio, and Occhipinti, Pietro
- Abstract
Background: Current data indicate that infliximab-given immediately after surgery-may be very effective in preventing postsurgical recurrence of Crohn's disease. However, it is unknown whether a similar benefit would result from early diagnosis and treatment, rather than prevention of endoscopic recurrence.Aims: The primary outcome of this study was to clarify whether infliximab, given after diagnosis of postoperative endoscopic recurrence of Crohn's diseases (Rutgeerts score ≥ 2) can induce endoscopic remission (score <2) at 54 weeks. The secondary outcomes were improvement in the endoscopic score and clinical recurrence at 54 weeks.Methods: In this prospective open label multicenter pilot study 43 patients with ileocolonic Crohn's disease subjected to curative surgery underwent colonoscopy 6 months after surgery. Patients with endoscopic recurrence (Rutgeerts score ≥2) were treated with either mesalamine 800 mg tid or infliximab 5 mg/kg bw on a maintenance basis. Colonoscopy was performed after 54 weeks of therapy.Results: A total of 24/43 patients were diagnosed with endoscopic recurrence at 6 months. Thirteen were treated with infliximab and 11 with mesalamine. None of the 11 mesalamine-treated patients had endoscopic remission at 54 weeks. Two had clinical recurrence at 8 and 9 months. Fifty-four percent of patients treated with infliximab had endoscopic remission at 54 weeks (P = 0.01) while 69% had an improvement in the endoscopic score. None had clinical recurrence.Conclusions: Treatment of postsurgical endoscopic lesions by infliximab appears superior to mesalamine. However, a sizeable proportion of patients did not fully benefit from this strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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16. Are reported increases in incidence of primary CNS tumours real? An analysis of longitudinal trends in England, 1979-2003.
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Arora RS, Alston RD, Eden TOB, Estlin EJ, Moran A, Geraci M, and Birch JM
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Reported increases in the incidence of CNS tumours in the developed world in the 1970s to 1990s have been a cause for concern and debate. It still remains to be adequately answered whether these increases are true or an artefact of changes in diagnostic and registration practices. Using high-quality national cancer registration data, we have analysed incidence trends for each major histological subgroup of CNS tumour (2000 World Health Organisation (WHO) classification) registered in those aged 0-84 years for the whole of England during the period 1979 through 2003. 134,509 primary CNS tumours of malignant, benign and uncertain behaviour located in the brain, meninges, spinal cord, cranial nerves, other parts of the central nervous system and in the pituitary and pineal glands were registered. In summary, we present the single largest nationwide study on the longitudinal incidence trends of CNS tumours. The increase in incidence observed in the 1970s and 1980s was mainly in the young and the elderly and has now plateaued and may even be decreasing. There is however variation in trends by histology. The incidence of some histological sub-groups has continued to increase until the most recent period of analysis. Much of the initial increase can be attributed to the emergence of much more widely available neuroimaging, while the most recent incidence changes for specific sub-groups of CNS tumours appear to be due to greater diagnostic specificity leading to a shift in registered categories. However, the trends for high-grade astrocytomas and other gliomas need further observation and investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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17. Survival from cancer in teenagers and young adults in England, 1979-2003.
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Birch, J. M., Pang, D., Alston, R. D., Rowan, S., Geraci, M., Moran, A., and Eden, T. O. B.
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TEENAGERS & adults , *CANCER research , *GERM cell tumors , *TUMORS , *LYMPHOMAS , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) , *TUMOR classification , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Cancer is the leading cause of disease-related death in teenagers and young adults aged 13-24 years (TYAs) in England. We have analysed national 5-year relative survival among more than 30,000 incident cancer cases in TYAs. For cancer overall, 5-year survival improved from 63% in 1979-84 to 74% during 1996-2001 (P<0.001). However, there were no sustained improvements in survival over time among high-grade brain tumours and bone and soft tissue sarcomas. Survival patterns varied by age group (13-16, 17-20, 21-24 years), sex and diagnosis. Survival from leukaemia and brain tumours was better in the youngest age group but in the oldest from germ-cell tumours (GCTs). For lymphomas, bone and soft tissue sarcomas, melanoma and carcinomas, survival was not significantly associated with age. Females had a better survival than males except for GCTs. Most groups showed no association between survival and socioeconomic deprivation, but for leukaemias, head and neck carcinoma and colorectal carcinoma, survival was significantly poorer with increasing deprivation. These results will aid the development of national specialised service provision for this age group and identify areas of clinical need that present the greatest challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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18. Forward and backward electron emission cross-sections for 23 MeVu-1 C , Ni and Au projectiles traversing C , Al , Ni , Ag , Au and Bi foils.
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De Filippo, E., Lanzanò, G., Rothard, H., Volant, C., Anzalone, A., Arena, N., Geraci, M., Giustolisi, F., and Pagano, A.
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ELECTRON emission , *CARBON , *ALUMINUM , *NICKEL , *SILVER , *METAL foils - Abstract
A rather complete experimental study of forward and backward electron velocity spectra from thin foils bombarded with ions at constant velocity of 30 atomic units (23MeV u^-1) was performed. Three different beams ( 12C3+ , 58Ni14+ and 197Au36+ and six different targets ( 12C , 27Al , natNi , natAg , 197Au and 209Bi of approximately 90μg cm^-2 thickness were used. This procedure allowed to study the evolution of electron emission (velocity and angular distributions) for the [projectile; target] matrix [ C , Ni , Au ; C , Al , Ni , Ag , Au , Bi ] in a wide angular range. The projectile and target dependence of absolute cross-sections for binary encounter-, Auger- and backward-emitted electrons are analyzed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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19. Correlation functions of light charged particles from projectile-like fragment source in E/A=44Al collisions
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Ghetti, R., Helgesson, J., Lanzanò, G., De Filippo, E., Geraci, M., Aiello, S., Cavallaro, S., Pagano, A., Politi, G., Charvet, J.L., Dayras, R., Pollacco, E., Volant, C., Beck, C., Mahboub, D., and Nouicer, R.
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PAIRING correlations (Nuclear physics) , *NUCLEAR energy , *SPECTRUM analysis , *RESONANCE - Abstract
Abstract: Two-particle correlation functions, involving protons, deuterons, tritons, and α-particles, have been measured at very forward angles (), in order to study projectile-like fragment (PLF) emission in = 44 and 77 MeV 40Ar + 27Al collisions. The observed correlations are similar for the two reactions at and 77 MeV, except for peaks originating from resonance decays, which are larger at the lower bombarding energy. Particle-velocity gated correlation functions are presented, and possible implications on the time sequence of the light charged particles, emitted from the PLF, are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2006
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20. Fast electron production in collisions of swift heavy ions (20MeV/u < E <100MeV/u) with foils of solids
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Lanzanò, G., De Filippo, E., Rothard, H., Volant, C., Anzalone, A., Arena, N., Geraci, M., Giustolisi, F., and Pagano, A.
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PARTICLES (Nuclear physics) , *ELECTRONS , *PROPERTIES of matter , *CATHODE rays - Abstract
Abstract: In nuclear and atomic experiments at high incident ion energies, 20MeV/u < E <100MeV/u, the impact of swift heavy ions on thin solid targets is a source of fast electrons. The knowledge of their spatial and kinematical distributions is very useful for experimental nuclear and radiobiological applications as well as testing atomic ionization theories. An overview on the main mechanisms underlying the production of the electrons is given. Some recent results obtained at the Catania LNS superconducting cyclotron, mainly with a 45MeV/u 58Ni19+ beam are shown. In particular, the production and the properties of binary encounter-, convoy-, in-flight Auger- and backward emitted electrons are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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21. Fast-electron ejection from C, Ni, Ag and Au foils by 36Ar18 + (95 MeV/u): Measurements of absolute cross-sections.
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de Filippo, E., Lanzanò, G., Rothard, H., Volant, C., Aiello, S., Anzalone, A., Arena, N., Geraci, M., Giustolisi, F., and Pagano, A.
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PARTICLES (Nuclear physics) , *SPECTRUM analysis , *ATOMS , *ELECTRONS , *CATHODE rays , *MATHEMATICAL physics , *ENERGY dissipation - Abstract
Doubly differential electron velocity spectra induced by 36Ar18 + (95 MeV/u) from thin target foils (C, Ni, Ag, Au) were measured at GANIL (Caen, France) by means of the ARGOS multidetector and the time-of-flight technique. The main features observed in the forward spectra are convoy electrons, binary-encounter electrons, and (for the Au target only) a high-velocity tail which we attribute to a “Fermi shuttle” acceleration mechanism. Backward spectra do not show distinct structures. The spectra allow us to determine absolute singly differential cross-sections as a function of the target material and the emission angle. The convoy electron yield increases with the target atomic number, but for C their yield is so small that our experiment is not able to detect them. Absolute doubly differential cross-sections for binary-encounter electron ejection from C targets are well described by a transport theory which is based on the relativistic electron impact approximation (EIA) for electron production and which accounts for angular deflection, energy loss and energy straggling of the transmitted electrons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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22. Recent results on fast electron production induced by energetic heavy ions on thin solid targets
- Author
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Lanzanò, G., Anzalone, A., Arena, N., De Filippo, E., Geraci, M., Giustolisi, F., Pagano, A., Rothard, H., and Volant, C.
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HEAVY ions , *CARBON , *BISMUTH , *ION bombardment - Abstract
In order to study the emission of energetic electrons induced by the impact of swift heavy ions on thin solid targets, we carried out a series of experiments at the Superconducting Cyclotron of the Catania Laboratori Nazionali del Sud (LNS) in November and December 2001. We bombarded solid thin targets, ranging from carbon to bismuth, with different ion beams at fixed velocity, i.e. ∼23 MeV/nucleon 197Au36+, 58Ni14+ and 12C3+. Absolute velocity spectra were measured in a wide laboratory angular range, from 1.5° to 175°. At forward angles, besides the well-known convoy and binary encounter components with the beam velocity and two times the beam velocity respectively, we observe also a high velocity tail and an intermediate velocity component. At backward laboratory angles, the spectra remain complex, still presenting an energetic tail. These electron velocity spectra strongly depend on the beam and target atomic numbers. We suggest a Fermi–Shuttle (or multiscattering) mechanism and an in-flight-emission of projectile Auger electrons to explain some of the observed features in the velocity spectra. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
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23. Recent results on fast intermediate velocity electron production induced by 19+ 45 A MeV 58Ni highly charged ions on thin solid targets
- Author
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Lanzanò, G., De Filippo, E., Anzalone, A., Arena, N., Geraci, M., Giustolisi, F., Pagano, A., Rothard, H., and Volant, C.
- Subjects
- *
IONS , *AUGER effect - Abstract
In order to study the emission of energetic electrons induced by the impact of swift heavy ions on thin solid targets, we carried out a series of experiments at the superconducting cyclotron of the Catania Laboratori Nazionali del Sud. We report results on a recent experiment where electron–electron coincidences were measured in a forward ring by bombarding a thin carbon target of 7.4 μg/cm2 with 19+ 45 A MeV 58Ni beam. The velocity1–velocity2 bidimensional plot is dominated by events in which the two detected electrons have a velocity close to the beam velocity 9.03 cm/ns (convoy electrons). The remaining small fraction of coincidences has still a convoy electron and a second electron having either a velocity almost twice the beam velocity 16.5 cm/ns (binary encounter, BE electrons) or a velocity of about 12.7 cm/ns intermediate between BE and convoy velocities (IV electrons). We interprete this last intermediate component as due to in-flight de-excitation of highly excited n+ 58Ni ions by Auger electrons. Although less distinct, we observe also an intense peak close to the convoy velocity peak, centered at ≈9.7 cm/ns, corresponding to electrons emitted with an energy of only about ≈170 eV in the projectile rest frame of reference. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2003
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24. The data acquisition and control system for the 4pi detector CHIMERA.
- Author
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Aiello, S., Anzalone, A., Cardella, G., Cavallaro, S., De Filippo, E., Femino, S., Geraci, M., Giustolisi, F., Guazzoni, P., Iacono-Manno, C.M., Lanzalone, G., Lanzano, G., Lo Nigro, S., Pagano, A., Papa, M., Pirrone, S., Politi, G., Porto, F., Rizzio, F., and Sambataro, S.
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ELECTRONICS , *DETECTORS - Abstract
Focuses on the introductory data acquisition system which was built to handle the signals from the detectors with a rate up to 1 kilohertz (kHz) on an estimation of 5000 electronic channels, referencing to the detector CHIMERA. Information on the CHIMERA detector; Reference to the on-line diagnostic system under development; Performance of the on-line data control.
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- 1998
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25. Detector array control and triggering.
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Aiello, S., Anzalone, A., Bartolucci, M., Cardella, G., Cavallaro, S., De Filippo, E., Femino, S., Geraci, M., Guazzoni, F., Iacono-Manno, M., Lanzalone, G., Lanzano, G., LoNigro, S., Manfredi, G., Pagano, A., Papa, M., Pironne, S., Politi, G., Porto, F., and Rizzio, F.
- Subjects
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ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Presents information on the employing of a commercial DSP-based board installed in a host-PC for the fast, on-line and real-time computation of special algorithms. Performance of experiments to probe the properties of the nuclei under extreme temperature and density conditions; Consistency of each cell; What the stability of the whole apparatus depends on.
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- 1998
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26. Decreased neurokinin-1 (Substance P) receptor binding in patients with panic disorder: Positron emission tomography study with [18F]SPA-RQ
- Author
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Fujimura, Yota, Yasuno, F., Farris, A., Liow, J.-S., Geraci, M., Drevets, W., Pine, D., Lerner, A., Hargreaves, R., Burns, D., Morse, C., Pike, V.W., and Innis, R.B.
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- 2008
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27. PD-056 Clinical update on the phase II trial of oral iloprost in the chemoprevention of lung cancer in high risk patients
- Author
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Keith, R., Miller, Y., Kelly, K., Hirsch, F., Kittelson, J., Jackson, M., Metsinger, V., Franklin, W., Bunn, P., and Geraci, M.
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- 2005
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28. O-049 Affymetrix gene expression profiles in premalignant bronchialmucosa
- Author
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Merrick, D., Sugita, M., Hirsch, F., Keith, R., Miller, Y., Coldren, C., Lapadat, R., Witta, S., Geraci, M., and Franklin, W.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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