72 results on '"Bilancio, G."'
Search Results
2. 8-Week Study on Effects of Chlorthalidone in Hypertensives with Low eGFR
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Cirillo M, Marcarelli F, Mele AA, Romano M, Lombardi C, Bilancio G., Cirillo, M, Marcarelli, F, Mele, Aa, Romano, M, Lombardi, C, and Bilancio, G.
- Abstract
Background: Ef cacy of chlorthalidone (CT) and thiazides is considered low in low kidney function (LKF). Methods: A parallel-arm,non-inferiority study was done on CT effects in hypertensives with LKF and hypertensives without LKF (Italian Drug Agency Registry ID#671).Study design included:screening visit,baseline visit, 8-week CT treatment with visits at week 1,2,4,6 and 8.The screening visit selected patients on antihypertensive treatment with uncontrolled hypertension (SBP140 or DBP90),ages 25-74,complete diagnostic workup. Eligible patients were prescribed lab evaluations and re-examined after 1-2 week (baseline).Exclusion criteria were treatment with diuretics,CT contraindications,refused consent,SBP180 or DBP110, severe co-morbidities.At baseline, 25 mg CT was prescribed on the top of ongoing treatments to 60 patients with LKF (eGFR by CKD-Epi equation stably 0.17). Week 8 changes were signi cant for eGFR (LKF and Control, mL/min= -2 and -5; -4/-1 and -7/-3), serum potassium (mmol/L= -0.2 and -0.2; -0.3/-0.1 and -0.3/-1), serum uric acid (mg/dL= +0.8 and +0.9; +0.5/+1.1 and +0.7/+1.1). Adverse events incidence was 13.3% in both groups. The commonest events were serum sodium
- Published
- 2013
3. Kidney Stone Risk during Microgravity and Long-Term Bed Rest: Role of Hypercalciuria and Aquaporins
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Tamma G, Di Mise A, Ranieri M, Svelto M, Bilancio G, Cirillo M, De Santo NG, Valenti G, Tamma, G, Di Mise, A, Ranieri, M, Svelto, M, Bilancio, G, Cirillo, M, De Santo, Ng, and Valenti, G
- Abstract
Background: Exposure to microgravity results in alterations of renal function, uid redistribution and bone loss which contributes to the potential risk of renal stone formation. Hypercalciuria is recognized as a condition predisposing to calcium nephrolitiasis and long-term space ights cause bone loss coupled to a rise of urinary calcium excretion. Methods: AQP2 excretion was measured by ELISA in urines collected from healthy volunteers participating at the studies. Results: We recently demonstrated that high calcium delivery to the collecting duct reduces local Aquaporin 2 (AQP2) mediated water reabsorption under vasopressin action, thus limiting the maximal urinary concentration and reducing calcium saturation. To analyze alteration of renal water handling during microgravity, we evaluated two ground-based analog of space ight, thermoneutral water immersion and bed rest. AQP2 excretion and diuresis were measured in two separated studies mimicking acute adaptation (6 hours water immersion) or chronic adaptation (35 days bed rest) to microgravity. Water immersion resulted in a signi cant increase in urinary output apparently not related to AQP2 alteration and manly due to reduced vasopressin secretion. On the other hand 35 days bed rest resulted in an increase in urinary calcium, which coincided with a signi cant decrease in AQP2 excretion (645±7.4 fmol/ml to 569±10.3 fmol/ml), which is expected to result in urine dilution reducing the risk of calcium saturation. Conclusions: Our data indicate that calciuria and water balance have to be strictly controlled during microgravity and long-term bed rest as key elements for the risk of kidney stone formation.
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- 2013
4. Survival in patients treated by long-term dialysis compared with the general population
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Nordio, M, Limido, A, Maggiore, U, Nichelatti, M, Postorino, M, Quintaliani, G, Italian, Dialysis, Transplantation Registry Collaborators: Molino, Italian Dialysis, Collaborators: Molino A, Transplantation R. e. g. i. s. t. r. y., Salomone, M, Cappelli, Gianni, Conte, F, Arosio, E, Antonucci, F, Giacon, B, Adorati, M, Romanini, D, Santoro, A, Mancini, E, Rosati, A, Frascà, Gm, Gaffi, G, Standoli, M, Bonomini, M, Di Liberato, L, Di Giulio, S, Cirillo, M, Bilancio, G, Schena, Fp, Torres, D, Casino, F, Zoccali, C, Marino, C, Sparacino, V, Agnello, V, Pinna, A. m., Nordio, M, Limido, A, Maggiore, U, Nichelatti, M, Postorino, M, Quintaliani, G, Molino, A, Salomone, M, Cappelli, G, Conte, F, Arosio, E, Antonucci, F, Giacon, B, Adorati, M, Romanini, D, Santoro, A, Mancini, E, Rosati, A, Frascà, Gm, Gaffi, G, Standoli, M, Bonomini, M, Di Liberato, L, Di Giulio, S, Cirillo, Massimo, Bilancio, G, Schena, F, P, Torres, D, Casino, F, Zoccali, C, Marino, C, Sparacino, V, Agnello, V, and Pinna, A. M.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,dialysis registry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Relative survival ,Risk Assessment ,Peritoneal dialysis ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Renal Dialysis ,Cause of Death ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,Renal replacement therapy ,Mortality ,education ,excess mortality rate ,Dialysis ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Long-Term Care ,Survival Analysis ,Surgery ,Italy ,Nephrology ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Female ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Relative survival, a methodology previously used in epidemiologic studies of cancer, compares the observed survival of a patient cohort with expected survival derived from general population life tables. We examined relative survival in patients treated by long-term dialysis in the Italian Dialysis and Transplantation Registry in order to determine the prognosis of dialysis patients. STUDY DESIGN: Cohort study drawn from a registry. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: Patients enrolled in the Italian Dialysis and Transplantation Registry. FACTORS: Sex, age, primary kidney disease, renal replacement therapy modality, and main comorbid conditions. OUTCOMES: Death from any cause. MEASUREMENTS: Relative survival ratio (the ratio of observed survival in the population of interest to the survival expected given the age- and period-specific mortality of the general population) and excess mortality rate (difference between observed and expected mortality rates). RESULTS: In January 2000 to December 2008, a total of 27,642 patients were included. The 5-year relative survival estimate was 55.6% (95% CI, 54.7%-56.5%). The excess mortality rate showed a peak at 3 months (21 deaths/100 patient-years), then decreased, becoming constant from the end of year 1 to year 8, with leveling off at about 10 deaths/100 patient-years. Older age, systemic diseases, and diabetes showed the strongest association with excess mortality. Peritoneal dialysis was associated with a lower relative excess risk in only the first year of treatment. LIMITATIONS: The patient cohort comprises about half the Italian patients beginning dialysis therapy in the period. CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights the applicability of relative survival methods in dialysis patients. This measure allows estimation of disease prognosis and severity comparisons among chronic diseases. The excess mortality rate appears to be a more sensitive and informative measure than the simple proportion of survivors.
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- 2012
5. OC.01.5 QUALITY OF LIFE AFTER HCV ERADICATION: A PROSPECTIVE EVALUATION IN LIVER AND KIDNEY TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS
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Santonicola, A., Caputo, C., Zingone, F., Bilancio, G., and Ciacci, C.
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- 2019
- Full Text
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6. A COMPARISON OF NEW AND ESTABILISHED EQUATIONS
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CIRILLO M, LOMBARDI C, LUCIANO MG, BILANCIO G, DE SANTO N.G., ANASTASIO, Pietro, Cirillo, M, Lombardi, C, Luciano, Mg, Bilancio, G, Anastasio, Pietro, and DE SANTO, N. G.
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- 2010
7. To survive is not enough. Quality of life in CKD - The need for a new generation of health-oriented economists
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Santo, N. G., Santo, R. M., Perna, A. F., Anastasio, P., Bilancio, G., Pollastro, R. M., Di Leo, V. A., Massimo Cirillo, DE SANTO, Ng, DE SANTO, Rm, Perna, Af, Anastasio, P, Bilancio, Giancarlo, Pollastro, Rm, DI LEO, Va, Cirillo, Massimo, De Santo, Ng, De Santo, Rm, Perna, Alessandra, Anastasio, Pietro, Bilancio, G, Pollastro, Rosa Maria, Di Leo, Va, and Cirillo, M.
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Quality of file ,Chronic kidney disease ,Prevention ,Dialysi ,Happine ,Dream ,Greek philosophy ,Sleep - Abstract
CKD is utilized as a paradigm, a chronic disease which allows decades of life conquered with great effort through a machine, a life with many losses and many dependencies. We must understand the patient's needs, which are not related to availability of drugs and machines and hospitals. We cannot provide good medical care with the limited amount of national product devoted to health care. Society is much older than ever before. We need a new cadre of economists working on health care with vision and ability, keeping in mind that there are no resources and there are no expenses which can be cut in medical care nowadays. We have to switch from curative medicine towards prevention, by implementing clinical research, bearing in mind that in the Western world, democracy was granted through the correct allocation of resources. The search for happiness and good quality of life are old concepts born in the Mediterranean area over the centuries, starting with Hesiod and Homer, and sleep and dreams were being investigated centuries before Freud was born. © Società Italiana di Nefrologia.
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- 2008
8. Thyroid's follicular neoplasia: surgical dilemma
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PARMEGGIANI, Domenico, De Falco M, SPERLONGANO, Pasquale, Bilancio G, Miranda A, Oliva G, Gilio F, CUCCURULLO, Vincenzo, Accardo M, Agresti M., Parmeggiani, Domenico, De Falco, M, Sperlongano, Pasquale, Bilancio, G, Miranda, A, Oliva, G, Gilio, F, Cuccurullo, Vincenzo, Accardo, M, and Agresti, M.
- Published
- 2002
9. breast pathology and thyroid pathology:correlation and pathogenetic hypotesis
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PARMEGGIANI, Domenico, malinconico f. a, moccia g, de falco m, ripa c, allocca a, bilancio g, agresti m., SPERLONGANO, Pasquale, Parmeggiani, Domenico, Malinconico, f. a., Moccia, G, de falco, M, Ripa, C, Sperlongano, Pasquale, Allocca, A, Bilancio, G, and Agresti, M.
- Published
- 2002
10. BREAST PATHOLOGY AND THYROID PATHOLOGY: CORRELATION AND PATHOGENETIC HYPOTHESIS
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PARMEGGIANI, Domenico, MALINCONICO F. A., MOCCIA G., DE FALCO M., RIPA C., SPERLONGANO, Pasquale, ALLOCCA A., BILANCIO G., AGRESTI, Massimo, Parmeggiani, Domenico, Malinconico, F. A., Moccia, G., DE FALCO, M., Ripa, C., Sperlongano, Pasquale, Allocca, A., Bilancio, G., and Agresti, Massimo
- Published
- 2002
11. Retroperitoneal dedifferentiated lipo-sarcoma (DDLS) with hyperglycemic activity: case report and literature review. [Liposarcoma dedifferenziato retroperitoneale con attività ipergligemica: Caso clinico e review della letteratura]
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Parmeggiani, D., Avenia, N., Falco, M., Bilancio, G., Ruggero, R., Docimo, G., Gubitosi, A., Fiore, A., Atelli, P., Misso, C., Mordente, S., and Parmeggiani, U.
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Retroperitoneal ,lipo-sarcoma ,dedifferentiated ,hyperglycemic activity - Published
- 2010
12. Early Prediction of Cardiovascular Disease in Kidney Transplant Recipients.
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Bilancio, G., Celano, M., Cozza, V., Zingone, F., Palladino, G., and Cirillo, M.
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KIDNEY transplantation , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *CORONARY disease , *PATIENTS , *DIABETIC nephropathies - Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is frequent after kidney transplantation (KT). This study investigated CVD prediction in KT by information available before KT or within 6 months after KT. The study cohort consisted of 629 patients with KT in 2005–10 and with adult age at KT. The end point was incidence up to 2015 of CVD (coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral artery disease). Graft failure, non-CVD death with functioning graft, and loss to follow-up were considered competing events. CVD prediction was investigated for 34 variables by means of competing-risks regression. Follow-up range was 0.28–10.00 years (mean ± SD, 7.30 ± 3.10). First incident event was CVD in 103 patients and competing events in 146 patients. In the multivariable model for pre-KT variables only, CVD predictors were male sex (hazard ratio [HR], 1.68; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.06–2.66), diabetic nephropathy (HR, 6.63; 95% CI, 1.81–24.35), pre-KT dialysis for ≥5 years (HR, 1.52; 95% CI, 1.02–2.27), pre-KT CVD (HR, 4.87; 95% CI, 2.84–8.35), and age at KT ≥45 years (HR, 2.98; 95% CI, 1.83–4.87). In the model for pre-KT and post-KT variables together, the sole post-KT CVD predictor was estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 mL/min at the 6-month visit (HR, 1.75; 95% CI, 1.11–2.77). Diabetic nephropathy, pre-KT dialysis, pre-KT CVD, and age at KT predicted 91.2% of incident CVD. Early available information effectively predicted CVD in KT independently from competing events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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13. GASTROINTESTINAL FUNCTION IN SIMULATED SPACE FLIGHT MICROGRAVITY.
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Iovino, P., Bilancio, G., Tortora, R., Bucci, C., Pascariello, A., Siniscalchi, M., and Ciacci, C.
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- 2009
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14. Serum uric acid levels threshold for mortality in diabetic individuals: The URic acid Right for heArt Health (URRAH) project
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Maria Masulli, Lanfranco D'Elia, Fabio Angeli, Carlo M. Barbagallo, Giancarlo Bilancio, Michele Bombelli, Berardino Bruno, Edoardo Casiglia, Rosario Cianci, Arrigo F.G. Cicero, Massimo Cirillo, Pietro Cirillo, Raffaella Dell’Oro, Giovambattista Desideri, Claudio Ferri, Loreto Gesualdo, Cristina Giannattasio, Guido Grassi, Guido Iaccarino, Luciano Lippa, Francesca Mallamaci, Alessandro Maloberti, Stefano Masi, Alberto Mazza, Alessandro Mengozzi, Maria Lorenza Muiesan, Pietro Nazzaro, Paolo Palatini, Gianfranco Parati, Roberto Pontremoli, Fosca Quarti-Trevano, Marcello Rattazzi, Gianpaolo Reboldi, Giulia Rivasi, Massimo Salvetti, Valerie Tikhonoff, Giuliano Tocci, Andrea Ungar, Paolo Verdecchia, Francesca Viazzi, Agostino Virdis, Massimo Volpe, Claudio Borghi, Ferruccio Galletti, Masulli, M, D'Elia, L, Angeli, F, Barbagallo, C, Bilancio, G, Bombelli, M, Bruno, B, Casiglia, E, Cianci, R, Cicero, A, Cirillo, M, Cirillo, P, Dell'Oro, R, Desideri, G, Ferri, C, Gesualdo, L, Giannattasio, C, Grassi, G, Iaccarino, G, Lippa, L, Mallamaci, F, Maloberti, A, Masi, S, Mazza, A, Mengozzi, A, Muiesan, M, Nazzaro, P, Palatini, P, Parati, G, Pontremoli, R, Quarti-Trevano, F, Rattazzi, M, Reboldi, G, Rivasi, G, Salvetti, M, Tikhonoff, V, Tocci, G, Ungar, A, Verdecchia, P, Viazzi, F, Virdis, A, Volpe, M, Borghi, C, Galletti, F, Masulli, Maria, D'Elia, Lanfranco, Angeli, Fabio, Barbagallo, Carlo M, Bilancio, Giancarlo, Bombelli, Michele, Bruno, Berardino, Casiglia, Edoardo, Cianci, Rosario, Cicero, Arrigo F G, Cirillo, Massimo, Cirillo, Pietro, Dell'Oro, Raffaella, Desideri, Giovambattista, Ferri, Claudio, Gesualdo, Loreto, Giannattasio, Cristina, Grassi, Guido, Iaccarino, Guido, Lippa, Luciano, Mallamaci, Francesca, Maloberti, Alessandro, Masi, Stefano, Mazza, Alberto, Mengozzi, Alessandro, Muiesan, Maria Lorenza, Nazzaro, Pietro, Palatini, Paolo, Parati, Gianfranco, Pontremoli, Roberto, Quarti-Trevano, Fosca, Rattazzi, Marcello, Reboldi, Gianpaolo, Rivasi, Giulia, Salvetti, Massimo, Tikhonoff, Valerie, Tocci, Giuliano, Ungar, Andrea, Verdecchia, Paolo, Viazzi, Francesca, Virdis, Agostino, Volpe, Massimo, Borghi, Claudio, Galletti, Ferruccio, and Masulli M, D'Elia L, Angeli F, Barbagallo CM, Bilancio G, Bombelli M, Bruno B, Casiglia E, Cianci R, Cicero AFG, Cirillo M, Cirillo P, Dell'Oro R, Desideri G, Ferri C, Gesualdo L, Giannattasio C, Grassi G, Iaccarino G, Lippa L, Mallamaci F, Maloberti A, Masi S, Mazza A, Mengozzi A, Muiesan ML, Nazzaro P, Palatini P, Parati G, Pontremoli R, Quarti-Trevano F, Rattazzi M, Reboldi G, Rivasi G, Salvetti M, Tikhonoff V, Tocci G, Ungar A, Verdecchia P, Viazzi F, Virdis A, Volpe M, Borghi C, Galletti F
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Diabetes mellitu ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna ,Cardiovascular mortality ,Serum uric acid Cardiovascular mortality All-cause mortality Diabetes mellitus Hyperuricemia Diagnostic thresholds ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Hyperuricemia ,All-cause mortality ,Uric Acid ,Diagnostic thresholds ,all-cause mortality ,cardiovascular mortality ,diabetes mellitus ,diagnostic thresholds ,hyperuricemia ,serum uric acid ,humans ,risk factors ,uric acid ,Diagnostic threshold ,Diabetes mellitus ,Serum uric acid ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background and aim: The URRAH (URic acid Right for heArt Health) Study has identified cut-off values of serum uric acid (SUA) predictive of total mortality at 4.7 mg/dl, and cardiovascular (CV) mortality at 5.6 mg/dl. Our aim was to validate these SUA thresholds in people with diabetes. Methods and results: The URRAH subpopulation of people with diabetes was studied. All-cause and CV deaths were evaluated at the end of follow-up. A total of 2570 diabetic subjects were studied. During a median follow-up of 107 months, 744 deaths occurred. In the multivariate Cox regression analyses adjusted for several confounders, subjects with SUA ≥5.6 mg/dl had higher risk of total (HR: 1.23, 95%CI: 1.04-1.47) and CV mortality (HR:1.31, 95%CI:1.03-1.66), than those with SUA
- Published
- 2022
15. Bone composition and the birth of quantitative chemistry
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De Santo, N. G., DE Santo, R. M., Pisot, R., Bisaccia, C., Perna, A., Bizzarri, M., Di Leo, V. A., Bilancio, Giancarlo, Cirillo, Massimo, De Santo, Ng, De Santo, Rm, Pisot, R, Bisaccia, C, Perna, Alessandra, Bizzarri, M, Di Leo, Va, Bilancio, G, Cirillo, M., De Santo, N. G., DE Santo, R. M., Pisot, R., Bisaccia, C., Perna, A., Bizzarri, M., Di Leo, V. A., and Bilancio, G.
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lcsh:Sports ,lcsh:GV557-1198.995 ,medicina aerospaziale - Abstract
Bone is an important tissue for space specialists since it undergoes significant changes under microgravity conditions and its healing is slow. Bone has been considered a special tissue since the very inception of medical theories. In Akragas, Empedocles' (493-432 BC) hypothesis regarding bone was that it was made of two parts earth, two parts water and four parts fire, thus marking the beginning of quantitative chemistry.
- Published
- 2011
16. Correlates of Calcidiol Deficiency in Adults—Cross-Sectional, Observational, Population-Based Study
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Licia Iacoviello, Augusto Filippo Di Castelnuovo, Pierpaolo Cavallo, Amalia De curtis, Simona Costanzo, Massimo Cirillo, Giancarlo Bilancio, Cirillo, M., Bilancio, G., Cavallo, P., Costanzo, S., De Curtis, A., Di Castelnuovo, A., and Iacoviello, L.
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Adult ,Male ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Physical activity ,Smoking ,25-hydroxyvitamin D (calcidiol) ,Abdominal obesity ,Alcohol ,Cholesterol ,Vitamin D Deficiency ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,physical activity ,abdominal obesity ,cholesterol ,smoking ,alcohol ,Risk Factors ,Dietary Supplements ,Sunlight ,Humans ,Female ,TX341-641 ,Food Science ,Calcifediol - Abstract
The prevalence, determinants, and clinical significance of vitamin D deficiency in the population are debated. The population-based study investigated the cross-sectional associations of several variables with serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (calcidiol) measured using standardized calibrators. The study cohort consisted of 979 persons of the Moli-sani study, both sexes, ages ≥35 years. The correlates in the analyses were sex, age, education, local solar irradiance in the month preceding the visit, physical activity, anthropometry, diabetes, kidney function, albuminuria, blood pressure, serum cholesterol, smoking, alcohol intake, calorie intake, dietary vitamin D intake, and vitamin D supplement. The serum calcidiol was log transformed for linear regression because it was positively skewed (skewness = 1.16). The prevalence of calcidiol deficiency defined as serum calcidiol ≤12 ng/mL was 24.5%. In multi-variable regression, older age, lower solar irradiance, lower leisure physical activity, higher waist/hip ratio, higher systolic pressure, higher serum cholesterol, smoking, lower alcohol intake, and no vitamin D supplement were independent correlates of lower serum calcidiol (95% confidence interval of standardized regression coefficient ≠ 0) and of calcidiol deficiency (95% confidence interval of odds ratio > 1). The data indicate that low serum calcidiol in the population could reflect not only sun exposure, age, and vitamin D supplementation but also leisure physical activity, abdominal obesity, systolic hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, smoking, and alcohol intake.
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- 2022
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17. Urinary Potassium and Kidney Function Decline in the Population—Observational Study
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Massimo Cirillo, Rosangela Veneziano, Enrico Zulli, Giancarlo Bilancio, Rachele Villa, Pierpaolo Cavallo, Martino Laurenzi, Raffaele Palladino, Cirillo, M., Bilancio, G., Cavallo, P., Palladino, R., Zulli, E., Villa, R., Veneziano, R., and Laurenzi, M.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Urinary system ,Potassium ,Population ,education ,Urology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Renal function ,Kidney ,Kidney Function Tests ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Young Adult ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,eGFR ,Humans ,TX341-641 ,Longitudinal Studies ,Aged ,Creatinine ,education.field_of_study ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Population Health ,business.industry ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,potassium ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Blood pressure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,chemistry ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,epidemiology ,business ,Food Science ,Glomerular Filtration Rate - Abstract
Background—Some data suggest favorable effects of a high potassium intake on kidney function. The present population-based study investigated cross-sectional and longitudinal relations of urinary potassium with kidney function. Methods—Study cohort included 2027 Gubbio Study examinees (56.9% women) with age ≥ 18 years at exam-1 and with complete data on selected variables at exam-1 (1983–1985), exam-2 (1989–1992), and exam-3 (2001–2007). Urinary potassium as urinary potassium/creatinine ratio was measured in daytime spot samples at exam-1 and in overnight timed collections at exam-2. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was measured at all exams. Covariates in analyses included demographics, anthropometry, blood pressure, drug treatments, diabetes, smoking, alcohol intake, and urinary markers of dietary sodium and protein. Results—In multivariable regression, urinary potassium/creatinine ratio cross-sectionally related to eGFR neither at exam-1 (standardized coefficient and 95%CI = 0.020 and −0.059/0.019) nor at exam-2 (0.024 and −0.013/0.056). Exam-1 urinary potassium/creatinine ratio related to eGFR change from exam-1 to exam-2 (0.051 and 0.018/0.084). Exam-2 urinary potassium/creatinine ratio related to eGFR change from exam-2 to exam-3 (0.048 and 0.005/0.091). Mean of urinary potassium/creatinine ratio at exam-1 and exam-2 related to eGFR change from exam-1 to exam-3 (0.056 and 0.027/0.087) and to incidence of eGFR <, 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2 from exam-1 to exam-3 (odds ratio and 95%CI = 0.78 and 0.61/0.98). Conclusion—In the population, urinary potassium did not relate cross-sectionally to eGFR but related to eGFR decline over time. Data support the existence of favorable effects of potassium intake on ageing-associated decline in kidney function.
- Published
- 2021
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18. Skin Architecture, Kidney Transplantation, and Their Relationship to Basal and Squamous Cell Carcinomas
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Giancarlo Bilancio, Giuseppe Palladino, Rosa Maria Pollastro, Renato Franco, Michael W. Lee, Davide Viggiano, Alessandro Caputo, Carmine Secondulfo, Mariadelina Simeoni, Pio Zeppa, Anna Capasso, Giovambattista Capasso, Andrea Ronchi, Capasso, A., Bilancio, G., Lee, M. W., Palladino, G., Pollastro, R. M., Simeoni, M., Secondulfo, C., Ronchi, A., Caputo, A., Franco, R., Zeppa, P., Capasso, G., Viggiano, D., Capasso, Anna, Bilancio, Giancarlo, Lee, Michael W, Palladino, Giuseppe, Pollastro, Rosa Maria, Simeoni, Mariadelina, Secondulfo, Carmine, Ronchi, Andrea, Caputo, Alessandro, Franco, Renato, Zeppa, Pio, Capasso, Giovambattista, and Viggiano, Davide
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Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,skin ,Skin Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell ,Basal Cell ,kidney transplantation ,Immunosuppression ,onconephrology ,Aged ,Carcinoma, Basal Cell ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Skin ,Kidney Transplantation ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,medicine ,Basal cell carcinoma ,Skin Neoplasm ,Kidney transplantation ,Proteinuria ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Carcinoma ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Transplantation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Squamous Cell ,Skin cancer ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Human - Abstract
Background/aim Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is highly prevalent in kidney transplant patients (KT). It is characterized by the presence of an inflammatory infiltrate. In this study, we examined the presence of similar infiltrates in intact skin, which could be regarded as a precancerous step. Patients and methods We retrospectively analyzed skin biopsies of 19 non-transplanted patients with a diagnosis of SCC or basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and 17 KT with either SCC or BCC. Results KT showed increased inflammatory infiltrate in the subepithelial region, compared to non-transplanted patients. The density of basal cell nuclei was also different among the four groups with an interaction effect between tumor type and transplantation. The extent of inflammatory infiltrates did not correlate with the eGFR and proteinuria. Conclusion KT with a non-melanoma skin cancer show increased intact skin inflammatory infiltrate and alterations in the density of the basal cell layer compared to non-transplanted patients.
- Published
- 2020
19. 25-Hydroxyvitamin D, 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D, and Peripheral Bone Densitometry in Adults with Celiac Disease
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Cristina Bucci, Giancarlo Bilancio, Ilaria Russo, Fabiana Zingone, Carolina Ciacci, Antonella Santonicola, Paola Iovino, Pierpaolo Cavallo, Massimo Cirillo, Ciacci, C, Bilancio, G, Russo, I, Iovino, P, Cavallo, P, Santonicola, A, Bucci, C, Cirillo, M, and Zingone, F.
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Adult ,Male ,Vitamin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parathyroid hormone ,chemistry.chemical_element ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,vitamin D ,Calcium ,Article ,Diet, Gluten-Free ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bone Density ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Vitamin D and neurology ,Humans ,parathyroid hormone ,Prospective Studies ,Quantitative computed tomography ,peripheral quantitative computed tomography ,Bone mineral ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,bone mineral density ,celiac disease ,bone mineral densityceliac disease ,fungi ,Middle Aged ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Densitometry ,Body mass index ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Food Science - Abstract
Background: Adults with celiac disease (CeD) show low bone mineral density (BMD) and high fracture risk. CeD guidelines suggest measurements of serum minerals and vitamin D. However, studies on vitamin levels in CeD patients are contradictory. Aim: To investigate in CeD, 25-hydroxy-vitamin D [25(OH)D], 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D [1,25(OH)2D], and related analytes and to evaluate their relationships to peripheral BMD as assessed by peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT). Methods: Gluten-free diet (GFD)-treated, and untreated adult CeD patients naï, ve to vitamin D and calcium supplementation underwent measurements of serum 25(OH)D, 1,25(OH)2D, parathyroid hormone (PTH), total calcium, phosphate, and of radius BMD by pQCT. Results: Complete data were collected in 105 patients for lab tests and 87 patients for BMD. For lab tests, untreated CeD differed from treated CeD for 22.0% lower serum 25(OH)D (p = 0.023), 42.5% higher serum PTH (p <, 0.001), and 13.0% higher serum 1,25(OH)2D (p = 0.029) in the presence of similar serum calcium and phosphorus (p >, 0.35). For BMD, untreated CeD differed from treated CeD for lower diaphyseal cortical BMD (1133 and 1157 mg/cm3, p = 0.004) but not for distal BMD (total, trabecular, and subcortical, p >, 0.13). Independent correlates of diaphyseal cortical BMD were GFD treatment and body mass index (p <, 0.05). Conclusions: Data indicated that, compared to CeD patients on a gluten-free diet, untreated adult CeD patients at diagnosis had lower 25(OH)D, higher PTH, and higher 1,25(OH)2D in the absence of difference in serum calcium and phosphorus. 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D, even below the normal range, were not associated with BMD. Our findings do not support the use of vitamin D supplementation for all CeD adults.
- Published
- 2020
20. Protein Intake and Kidney Function in the Population: Differences in Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Data
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Cirillo, Massimo, Lombardi, C, Chiricone, D, De Santo NG, Zanchetti, A, Bilancio, Giancarlo, Cirillo, M, Lombardi, C, Chiricone, D, De Santo, Ng, Zanchetti, A, and Bilancio, G
- Abstract
Background: Protein intake is considered a determinant of glomerular ltration rate (GFR). Urinary urea (U-urea) is an objective marker of protein intake. This population-based study investigated cross-sectionally and longitudinally the association of U-urea as index of protein intake with GFR indexed by serum creatinine (S-cr) and estimated GFR (eGFR). Methods: Data were collected about overnight U-urea, S-cr, eGFR, and other variables in 1,522 men and women aged 45-64 year who participated in the Gubbio Study (baseline). Age, S-Cr, and eGFR were re-assessed after 12-year follow-up in 1,144 of the 1,425 surviving participants. Results: Mean±SD of U-urea was 17.0±7.1 mmol/h corresponding to an estimated daily protein intake of 71.5±29.8 g/d. U-urea associated inversely with S-cr and directly with eGFR in cross-sectional quartile analyses (P
- Published
- 2013
21. A population-based approach for the definition of chronic kidney disease: the CKD Prognosis Consortium
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Cinzia Lombardi, Fabiana Marcarelli, Giancarlo Bilancio, Massimo Cirillo, Alessandra Antonia Mele, Cirillo, M, Lombardi, C, Mele, Aa, Marcarelli, F, and Bilancio, G.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Renal function ,urologic and male genital diseases ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Albuminuria ,Humans ,Medicine ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,education ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Creatinine ,Proteinuria ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Age Factors ,Absolute risk reduction ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,chemistry ,Nephrology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Introduction: The Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) foundation promoted the establishment of the Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Prognosis Consortium to meta-analyze the association of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and albuminuria with incidence of various outcomes in samples of general populations from all over the world. Methods: Variables in meta-analysis included eGFR by the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) Study equation, the urinary albumin to creatinine ratio (uACR) as index of albuminuria, together with proteinuria at dipstick urinalysis and classical markers of cardiovascular risk. Overall, 105,872 participants had uACR measurements, and 1,128,310 participants had dipstick measurements. Results: The association with mortality was continuous over the whole range of uACR/proteinuria and Jshaped for eGFR which was associated with an excess risk for values
- Published
- 2012
22. Ageing and changes in phosphate transport: clinical implications
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Cirillo M, Giancarlo Bilancio, Marcarelli F, Cirillo, M, Bilancio, G, and Marcarelli, F.
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Male ,Aging ,Ion Transport ,Animals ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Female ,Kidney ,Models, Biological ,Phosphates - Abstract
Hyperphosphatemia is pivotal in some complications secondary to kidney dysfunction. Current guidelines suggest that hyperphosphatemia secondary to kidney dysfunction develops only when glomerular filtration rate is reduced well below the threshold of 60 ml/min. This paper deals with the relationship of age with serum phosphorus and with the possible influences of this relationship on hyperphosphatemia secondary to kidney dysfunction. A recent epidemiologic study shows that serum phosphorus decreases over time not only in pediatric age but also during adulthood. This decrease differs between men and women: continuous in men, but not in women, because of a transitory serum phosphorus increase during climacterics. Data show also that age-associated differences in serum phosphorus among adults are explained by differences in the maximal phosphorus reabsorption in the renal proximal tubule (TmP/GFR). Other studies suggest that the opposite influences on TmP/GFR of growth hormone (stimulation) and estrogen (inhibition) are the determinants of the age-associated changes in TmP/GFR and serum phosphorus. The decline of serum phosphorus with age leads to the hypothesis that, in the presence of a disorder inducing phosphorus retention, the prevalence of hyperphosphatemia should be higher in young adults than in the elderly because the healthy elderly have lower serum phosphorus. A large clinical study supports this hypothesis showing that hyperphosphatemia secondary to kidney dysfunction is approximately 4 times higher at age 65. Data suggest that the relation between kidney function and serum phosphorus should be reevaluated considering the possible confounding effect of age.
- Published
- 2010
23. The high prevalence of alexithymia in hemodialyzed patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism unsuppressed by medical therapy is cured by parathyroidectomy
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Antonio Livrea, Giancarlo Bilancio, Massimo Cirillo, Natale G. De Santo, Giovanni Conzo, Celsi S, Rosa Maria De Santo, DE SANTO, Rm, Livrea, A, DE SANTO, Ng, Bilancio, G, Celsi, S, Conzo, Giovanni, De Santo, Rm, De Santo, Ng, Conzo, G, and Cirillo, M.
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Parathyroidectomy ,Male ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Phosphates ,Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index ,Alexithymia ,Renal Dialysis ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Affective Symptoms ,Hyperparathyroidism ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Depression ,Beck Depression Inventory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Nephrology ,Parathyroid Hormone ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Secondary hyperparathyroidism ,Calcium ,Female ,Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary ,Hemodialysis ,business - Abstract
There are scanty data available on alexithymia in patients with end-stage renal disease, which point to an independent association with depression and social support. This study was devised to investigate the prevalence of alexithymia and sleep disorders in patients maintenance hemodialysis with insuppressible secondary hyperparathyroidism, who need parathyroidectomy (PTX), because previous data from our laboratories as well as those of others showed that this patient-group are the worst sleepers among hemodialysis patients with end-stage renal disease. A total of 40 patients needing PTX were enrolled and studied before the surgery. As for the control group, 80 patients on maintenance hemodialysis not needing PTX were enrolled. We measured alexithymia with the Toronto Alexithymia Score (TAS-20), sleep disorders with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), and depression with Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH), calcium, phosphate, use of antihypertensives, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, hemoglobin concentration, and albumin concentration. Patients needing PTX in comparison with those not needing PTX had significantly higher iPTH, calcium, and phosphate; they also had significantly higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure. They were more significantly alexithymic (P < .001), had more severe sleep disorders (P < .001), and were more depressed (P < .043). In multivariate analysis, BDI correlated significantly with iPTH concentration (r = 0.505, P < .001). A reduction of TAS-20 occurred after PTX which correlated with the number of patients on antihypertensive drugs, PSQI, BDI, hemoglobin concentration in the univariate and multivariate analysis. When TAS-20 and PSQI were adjusted for BDI (using analysis of variance) there was still a significant difference of TAS-20 and PSQI between patients needing PTX and not needing PTX (P < .001). This study confirms the high prevalence of sleep disorders in patients with unsuppressed secondary hyperparathyroidism and discloses a high prevalence of Alexithymia which is ameliorated by PTX. However, the correlation of Alexithymia with sleep disorders does not depend on depression.
- Published
- 2010
24. A longitudinal study of sleep disorders in early-stage chronic kidney disease
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Natale G. De Santo, Massimo Cirillo, Rosa Maria De Santo, Alessandra F. Perna, Maurizio Li Vecchi, Domenico Santoro, Giancarlo Bilancio, De Santo, Rm, Bilancio, Giancarlo, Santoro, D, Vecchi, Ml, Perna, A, De Santo, Ng, Cirillo, Massimo, Bilancio, G, Perna, Alessandra, and Cirillo, M.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Logistic regression ,Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index ,Renal Dialysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Stage (cooking) ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Depression ,business.industry ,Beck Depression Inventory ,Hepatitis C ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Nephrology ,Chronic Disease ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Kidney Diseases ,business ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Few studies have addressed the problem of sleep disturbances in patients with early-stage chronic kidney disease (CKD). A total of 220 patients newly diagnosed with CKD and 220 patients newly diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C were studied within 1 month from the diagnosis. They were evaluated by using the Charlson Comorbidity Index, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, and the Beck Depression Inventory. Patients with CKD were followed up for 4 years. Sleep disturbances affected 59.5% of patients with chronic hepatitis C and 84.6% of patients with CKD. Sleeping disorders that were severe and peculiar in early CKD improved significantly over time. Beck Depression Inventory disclosed significant depression, which was ameliorated over time. Charlson Comorbidity Index was constant over time. Logistic regression analysis failed to detect significant correlations for putative factors emerging from studies in hemodialyzed patients, with the exception of depression.
- Published
- 2010
25. Gut mucosa alterations after kidney transplantation: a cross sectional study.
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Joshi R, Secondulfo C, Caputo A, Zeppa P, Iacuzzo C, Apicella L, Borriello M, Bilancio G, and Viggiano D
- Abstract
Background: Kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) rely on immunosuppressants like mycophenolate to prevent organ rejection. However, mycophenolate often causes intestinal symptoms and inflammation in various organs, including the skin and the colon. While KTRs have an increased risk for skin cancer, the risk of colorectal cancer is not increased. Elucidating the histological alterations in the colon of KTRs and comparing these changes with known skin alterations would help understand how immunosuppressants influence cancer development and progression., Methods: Whole slide images from gut biopsies (Non-transplanted subjects n = 35, KTRs n = 49) were analyzed using the ImageJ and R programming environment. A total of 22,035 epithelial cells, 38,870 interstitial cells, 3465 epithelial cell mitoses, and 7477 endothelial cells, each characterized by multiple microscopy parameters, from a total of 1788 glands were analyzed. The large database was subsequently analyzed to verify the changes of inflammatory milieu in KTRs and in cancer., Results: KTRs without colon-cancer showed a significantly higher density of interstitial cells in the colon compared to non-transplanted patients. Moreover, the increase in interstitial cell number was accompanied by subtle modifications in the architecture of the colon glands, without altering the epithelial cell density. We could not identify significant structural modifications in cancer samples between KTRs and non-transplanted patients., Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate an increased number of resident interstitial cells in the colon of KTRs, as in other patients treated with mycophenolate. These changes are associated with subtle alterations in the architecture of colon glands., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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26. Combination of Intranasal Dexmedetomidine and Midazolam for Sedation in Pediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging: A Retrospective Observational Study.
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Palmese S, Bilancio G, Caterino V, De Anseris AG, Perciato S, Siglioccolo A, and Gammaldi R
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Child, Preschool, Male, Child, Female, Infant, Adolescent, Italy, Conscious Sedation methods, Dexmedetomidine administration & dosage, Midazolam administration & dosage, Administration, Intranasal, Hypnotics and Sedatives administration & dosage, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
Background: Intranasal dexmedetomidine associated with midazolam has been used for pediatric magnetic resonance imaging studies because immobility is a fundamental requirement for correct execution. Many studies have shown dexmedetomidine to be a good option for non-operating room sedation. However, identifying the optimal dose remains a key challenge, especially for pediatric patients., Methods: All medical records of 139 pediatric patients who underwent sedation for magnetic resonance imaging studies between September 2021 and November 2022 at the University Hospital of Salerno, Italy, were retrospectively reviewed about success rate and adverse events. Our protocol required dosing 30 minutes before the procedure. Patients weighing up to 40 kg received intranasal dexmedetomidine (3 μg/kg) with intranasal midazolam (0.2 mg/kg). Those weighing more than 40 kg received intranasal dexmedetomidine (2 μg/kg) with midazolam orally (0.3 mg/kg; maximum dose, 15 mg)., Results: A total of 139 pediatric patients, with age range between 2 months and 16 years, median (95% confidence interval) of 3 (3-5) years, and weight range between 4 and 70 kg, median (95% confidence interval) of 19 (15-24) kg, were reviewed.The procedure was satisfactorily completed in 93.5% (130 patients) ( P < 0.01). Only 9 (6.5%) patients completed the procedure with general anesthesia; there are hot adverse events., Conclusions: Our experience with association of intranasal dexmedetomidine and midazolam has a high success rate, with high effectiveness and safety., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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27. Vitamin D: A Bridge between Kidney and Heart.
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Secondulfo C, Visco V, Virtuoso N, Fortunato M, Migliarino S, Rispoli A, La Mura L, Stellato A, Caliendo G, Settembre E, Galluccio F, Hamzeh S, and Bilancio G
- Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) are highly prevalent conditions, each significantly contributing to the global burden of morbidity and mortality. CVD and CKD share a great number of common risk factors, such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and smoking, among others. Their relationship extends beyond these factors, encompassing intricate interplay between the two systems. Within this complex network of pathophysiological processes, vitamin D has emerged as a potential linchpin, exerting influence over diverse physiological pathways implicated in both CKD and CVD. In recent years, scientific exploration has unveiled a close connection between these two prevalent conditions and vitamin D, a crucial hormone traditionally recognized for its role in bone health. This article aims to provide an extensive review of vitamin D's multifaceted and expanding actions concerning its involvement in CKD and CVD.
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- 2024
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28. Chronic Kidney Disease with Mineral Bone Disorder and Vascular Calcification: An Overview.
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Izzo C, Secondulfo C, Bilancio G, Visco V, Virtuoso N, Migliarino S, Ciccarelli M, Di Pietro P, La Mura L, Damato A, Carrizzo A, and Vecchione C
- Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a global health issue with a rising prevalence, affecting 697.5 million people worldwide. It imposes a substantial burden, contributing to 35.8 million disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and 1.2 million deaths in 2017. The mortality rate for CKD has increased by 41.5% between 1990 and 2017, positioning it as a significant cause of global mortality. CKD is associated with diverse health complications, impacting cardiovascular, neurological, nutritional, and endocrine aspects. One prominent complication is CKD-mineral and bone disorder (MBD), a complex condition involving dysregulation of bone turnover, mineralization, and strength, accompanied by soft tissue and vascular calcification. Alterations in mineral metabolism, including calcium, phosphate, parathyroid hormone (PTH), vitamin D, fibroblast growth factor-23 (FGF-23), and Klotho, play pivotal roles in CKD-MBD. These disturbances, observed early in CKD, contribute to the progression of bone disorders and renal osteodystrophy (ROD). Vascular calcification (VC) is a key component of CKD-MBD, accelerated by CKD. The pathophysiology involves complex processes in vascular smooth muscle cells and the formation of calciprotein particles (CPP). VC is closely linked to cardiovascular events and mortality, emphasizing its prognostic significance. Various serum markers and imaging techniques, including lateral plain X-ray, Kauppila Score, Adragao Score, and pulse wave velocity, aid in VC detection. Additionally, pQCT provides valuable information on arterial calcifications, offering an advantage over traditional scoring systems. CKD poses a substantial global health burden, and its complications, including CKD-MBD and VC, significantly contribute to morbidity and mortality. Understanding the intricate relationships between mineral metabolism, bone disorders, and vascular calcification is crucial for effective diagnosis and therapeutic interventions.
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- 2024
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29. Diet and Other Modifiable Factors in Long-Term Decline of Kidney Function: Observational and Population-Based Cohort Study.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Secondulfo C, Terradura-Vagnarelli O, Pisani A, Riccio E, and Laurenzi M
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- Adult, Humans, Cohort Studies, Prospective Studies, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Logistic Models, Kidney, Potassium, Risk Factors, Diet, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Lower physical activity, lower alcohol intake, higher protein intake, higher sodium intake, and lower potassium intake related to greater kidney function decline over time, according to previous studies. The present study aimed to analyze the cumulative effects of these factors., Methods: This prospective, observational, population-based cohort study included 3039 adult examinees of the Gubbio study who participated in the baseline exam and 15-year follow-up exam. Kidney function was evaluated as estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Habitual physical activity in leisure time and habitual alcohol intake were assessed by questionnaires; dietary intakes of protein, sodium, and potassium were assessed by urinary markers. Based on previous reports, each one of the five modifiable factors was scored 0 for the tertile associated with smaller eGFR decline (low risk), 2 for the tertile associated with greater eGFR decline (high risk), and 1 for the intermediate tertile (intermediate risk). A cumulative score was calculated as the sum of the factor-specific scores and used as the main independent variable., Results: The cumulative score ranged from 0 to 10, that is, from low risk for all factors to high risk for all factors (skewness = 0.032, mean ± SD = 5 ± 2). To avoid the bias of low-n analyses, score 0 was re-coded as 1 and score 10 was recoded as 9; after re-coding, the cumulative score ranged from 1 to 9 (skewness = 0.016, mean ± SD = 5 ± 2). The cumulative score related to annualized eGFR change in multi-variable linear regression (slope = -0.027, 95%CI = -0.039/-0.014, p < 0.001); findings were consistent in apparently healthy examinees and other subgroups. De novo incidence of eGFR < 60 mL/min × 1.73 m
2 was higher along the cumulative score ( p < 0.001). Compared to score 1 (n examinees = 35, adjusted incidence = 2.0%), incidence of low kidney function was 4.5 times higher in score 5 (n examinees = 624, adjusted incidence = 8.9%) and 6.5 times higher in score 9 (n examinees = 86, adjusted incidence = 12.9%). The cumulative score related to incidence of low kidney function in multi-variable logistic regression (odds ratio = 1.19, 95%CI = 1.08/1.32, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: The combination of five modifiable factors predicted large differences in long-term incidence of low kidney function.- Published
- 2023
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30. Antiproteinuric effect of paricalcitol in kidney transplant recipients with severe proteinuria: a prospective cohort study.
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Garofalo C, Secondulfo C, Apicella L, Bilancio G, De Nicola L, Minutolo R, Borrelli S, Provenzano M, Luciani R, and Bellizzi V
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- Ergocalciferols therapeutic use, Humans, Prospective Studies, Proteinuria drug therapy, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
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- 2022
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31. Serum uric acid levels threshold for mortality in diabetic individuals: The URic acid Right for heArt Health (URRAH) project.
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Masulli M, D'Elia L, Angeli F, Barbagallo CM, Bilancio G, Bombelli M, Bruno B, Casiglia E, Cianci R, Cicero AFG, Cirillo M, Cirillo P, Dell'Oro R, Desideri G, Ferri C, Gesualdo L, Giannattasio C, Grassi G, Iaccarino G, Lippa L, Mallamaci F, Maloberti A, Masi S, Mazza A, Mengozzi A, Muiesan ML, Nazzaro P, Palatini P, Parati G, Pontremoli R, Quarti-Trevano F, Rattazzi M, Reboldi G, Rivasi G, Salvetti M, Tikhonoff V, Tocci G, Ungar A, Verdecchia P, Viazzi F, Virdis A, Volpe M, Borghi C, and Galletti F
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- Humans, Risk Factors, Uric Acid, Diabetes Mellitus diagnosis, Hyperuricemia diagnosis
- Abstract
Background and Aim: The URRAH (URic acid Right for heArt Health) Study has identified cut-off values of serum uric acid (SUA) predictive of total mortality at 4.7 mg/dl, and cardiovascular (CV) mortality at 5.6 mg/dl. Our aim was to validate these SUA thresholds in people with diabetes., Methods and Results: The URRAH subpopulation of people with diabetes was studied. All-cause and CV deaths were evaluated at the end of follow-up. A total of 2570 diabetic subjects were studied. During a median follow-up of 107 months, 744 deaths occurred. In the multivariate Cox regression analyses adjusted for several confounders, subjects with SUA ≥5.6 mg/dl had higher risk of total (HR: 1.23, 95%CI: 1.04-1.47) and CV mortality (HR:1.31, 95%CI:1.03-1.66), than those with SUA <5.6 mg/dl. Increased all-cause mortality risk was shown in participants with SUA ≥4.7 mg/dl vs SUA below 4.7 mg/dl, but not statistically significant after adjustment for all confounders., Conclusions: SUA thresholds previously proposed by the URRAH study group are predictive of total and CV mortality also in people with diabetes. The threshold of 5.6 mg/dl can predict both total and CV mortality, and so is candidate to be a clinical cut-off for the definition of hyperuricemia in patients with diabetes., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 The Italian Diabetes Society, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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32. Relation of Alcohol Intake to Kidney Function and Mortality Observational, Population-Based, Cohort Study.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Secondulfo C, Iesce G, Ferrara C, Terradura-Vagnarelli O, and Laurenzi M
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Kidney Function Tests, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Kidney
- Abstract
Data are conflicting about the effects of alcohol intake on kidney function. This population-based study investigated associations of alcohol intake with kidney function and mortality. The study cohort included adult participants in Exam-1, Exam-2 (6-year follow-up), and Exam-3 (20-year follow-up) of the Gubbio study. Kidney function was evaluated as estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR, CKD-Epi equation, mL/min × 1.73 m2). Daily habitual alcohol intake was assessed by questionnaires. Wine intake accounted for >94% of total alcohol intake at all exams. Alcohol intake significantly tracked over time (R > 0.66, p < 0.001). Alcohol intake distribution was skewed at all exams (skewness > 2) and was divided into four strata for analyses (g/day = 0, 1−24, 25−48, and >48). Strata of alcohol intake differed substantially for lab markers of alcohol intake (p < 0.001). In multivariable regression, strata of alcohol intake related cross-sectionally to eGFR at all exams (Exam-1: B = 1.70, p < 0.001; Exam-2: B = 1.03, p < 0.001; Exam-3: B = 0.55, p = 0.010) and related longitudinally to less negative eGFR change from Exam-1 to Exam-2 (B = 0.133, p = 0.002) and from Exam-2 to Exam-3 (B = 0.065, p = 0.004). In multivariable Cox models, compared to no intake, intakes > 24 g/day were not associated with different mortality while an intake of 1−24 g/day was associated with lower mortality in the whole cohort (HR = 0.77, p = 0.003) and in the subgroup with eGFR < 60 mL/min × 1.73 m2 (HR = 0.69, p = 0.033). These data indicate a positive independent association of alcohol intake with kidney function not due to a mortality-related selection.
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- 2022
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33. Correlates of Calcidiol Deficiency in Adults-Cross-Sectional, Observational, Population-Based Study.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Costanzo S, De Curtis A, Di Castelnuovo A, and Iacoviello L
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- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dietary Supplements, Female, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Sunlight, Calcifediol deficiency, Vitamin D Deficiency epidemiology
- Abstract
The prevalence, determinants, and clinical significance of vitamin D deficiency in the population are debated. The population-based study investigated the cross-sectional associations of several variables with serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (calcidiol) measured using standardized calibrators. The study cohort consisted of 979 persons of the Moli-sani study, both sexes, ages ≥35 years. The correlates in the analyses were sex, age, education, local solar irradiance in the month preceding the visit, physical activity, anthropometry, diabetes, kidney function, albuminuria, blood pressure, serum cholesterol, smoking, alcohol intake, calorie intake, dietary vitamin D intake, and vitamin D supplement. The serum calcidiol was log transformed for linear regression because it was positively skewed (skewness = 1.16). The prevalence of calcidiol deficiency defined as serum calcidiol ≤12 ng/mL was 24.5%. In multi-variable regression, older age, lower solar irradiance, lower leisure physical activity, higher waist/hip ratio, higher systolic pressure, higher serum cholesterol, smoking, lower alcohol intake, and no vitamin D supplement were independent correlates of lower serum calcidiol (95% confidence interval of standardized regression coefficient ≠ 0) and of calcidiol deficiency (95% confidence interval of odds ratio > 1). The data indicate that low serum calcidiol in the population could reflect not only sun exposure, age, and vitamin D supplementation but also leisure physical activity, abdominal obesity, systolic hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, smoking, and alcohol intake.
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- 2022
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34. Urinary Potassium and Kidney Function Decline in the Population-Observational Study.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Palladino R, Zulli E, Villa R, Veneziano R, and Laurenzi M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Creatinine urine, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Kidney physiopathology, Kidney Function Tests, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Regression Analysis, Young Adult, Aging urine, Population Health statistics & numerical data, Potassium urine
- Abstract
Background -Some data suggest favorable effects of a high potassium intake on kidney function. The present population-based study investigated cross-sectional and longitudinal relations of urinary potassium with kidney function. Methods -Study cohort included 2027 Gubbio Study examinees (56.9% women) with age ≥ 18 years at exam-1 and with complete data on selected variables at exam-1 (1983-1985), exam-2 (1989-1992), and exam-3 (2001-2007). Urinary potassium as urinary potassium/creatinine ratio was measured in daytime spot samples at exam-1 and in overnight timed collections at exam-2. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was measured at all exams. Covariates in analyses included demographics, anthropometry, blood pressure, drug treatments, diabetes, smoking, alcohol intake, and urinary markers of dietary sodium and protein. Results -In multivariable regression, urinary potassium/creatinine ratio cross-sectionally related to eGFR neither at exam-1 (standardized coefficient and 95%CI = 0.020 and -0.059/0.019) nor at exam-2 (0.024 and -0.013/0.056). Exam-1 urinary potassium/creatinine ratio related to eGFR change from exam-1 to exam-2 (0.051 and 0.018/0.084). Exam-2 urinary potassium/creatinine ratio related to eGFR change from exam-2 to exam-3 (0.048 and 0.005/0.091). Mean of urinary potassium/creatinine ratio at exam-1 and exam-2 related to eGFR change from exam-1 to exam-3 (0.056 and 0.027/0.087) and to incidence of eGFR < 60 mL/min per 1.73 m
2 from exam-1 to exam-3 (odds ratio and 95%CI = 0.78 and 0.61/0.98). Conclusion -In the population, urinary potassium did not relate cross-sectionally to eGFR but related to eGFR decline over time. Data support the existence of favorable effects of potassium intake on ageing-associated decline in kidney function.- Published
- 2021
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35. Reduced Kidney Function and Relative Hypocalciuria-Observational, Cross-Sectional, Population-Based Data.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Giordano F, Iesce G, Costanzo S, De Curtis A, Di Castelnuovo A, and Iacoviello L
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This observational, cross-sectional, epidemiological analysis investigated relationships of kidney function to urine calcium and other variables. The analyses targeted two population-based samples of adults (Gubbio study and Moli-sani study: n = 3508 and 955, respectively). Kidney function was assessed as estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Calcium/creatinine ratio (Ca/Cr) was used as index of urinary calcium in timed overnight urine under fed condition (Gubbio study), morning urine after overnight fast (Gubbio study), and first-void morning urine (Moli-sani study). Moli-sani study included also data for glomerular filtered calcium load, tubular calcium handling, and serum phosphorus, parathyroid hormone, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, calcium, and 25-hydroxyvitamin D. eGFR positively and independently related to Ca/Cr ( p < 0.001). In multivariate analyses, eGFR lower by 10 mL/min × 1.73 m
2 related to overnight urine Ca/Cr lower by 14.0 mg/g in men and 17.8 mg/g in women, to morning urine Ca/Cr lower by 9.3 mg/g in men and 11.2 mg/g in women, and to first-void urine Ca/Cr lower by 7.7 mg/g in men and 9.6 mg/g in women ( p < 0.001). eGFR independently related to glomerular filtered calcium load ( p < 0.001) and did not relate to tubular calcium handling ( p ≥ 0.35). In reduced eGFR only (<90 mL/min × 1.73 m2 ), low urine Ca/Cr independently related to low serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D ( p = 0.002) and did not relate to hyperphosphatemia, high serum parathyroid hormone, or hypocalcemia ( p ≥ 0.14). Population-based data indicated consistent associations of lower kidney function with lower urine calcium due to reduction in glomerular filtered calcium. In reduced kidney function, relative hypocalciuria associated with higher prevalence of low serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D.- Published
- 2020
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36. Sodium intake and kidney function in the general population: an observational, population-based study.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Palladino R, Terradura-Vagnarelli O, and Laurenzi M
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Background: The relationships of sodium intake to kidney function within the population have been poorly investigated and are the objective of the study., Methods: This observational, population-based, cross-sectional and longitudinal study targeted 4595 adult participants of the Gubbio study with complete data at baseline exam. Of these participants, 3016 participated in the 15-year follow-up (mortality-corrected response rate 78.4%). Baseline measures included sodium:creatinine ratio in timed overnight urine collection, used as an index of sodium intake, together with serum creatinine, sex, age and other variables. Follow-up measures included serum creatinine and other variables. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR, mL/min/1.73 m
2 ) was calculated using serum creatinine, sex and age and was taken as an index of kidney function., Results: The study cohort was stratified in sex- and age-controlled quintiles of baseline urine sodium:creatinine ratio. A higher quintile associated with higher baseline eGFR (P < 0.001). In multivariable analysis, the odds ratio (OR) of Stage1 kidney function (eGFR ≥90 mL/min/1.73 m2 ) was 1.98 times higher in Quintile 5 compared with Quintile 1 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.50-2.59, P < 0.001]. The time from baseline to follow-up was 14.1 ± 2.5 years. Baseline to follow-up, the eGFR change was more negative along quintiles (P < 0.001). In multivariable analysis, the OR in Quintile 5 compared with Quintile 1 was 2.21 for eGFR decline ≥30% (1.18-4.13, P = 0.001) and 1.38 for worsened stage of kidney function (1.05-1.82, P = 0.006). Findings were consistent within subgroups., Conclusions: Within the general population, an index of higher sodium intake associated cross-sectionally with higher kidney function but longitudinally with greater kidney function decline., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA.)- Published
- 2020
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37. The Psychosocial Burden of HCV Infection and the Impact of Antiviral Therapy on the Quality of Life in Liver and Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Pilot Study.
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Santonicola A, Bilancio G, Zingone F, Donnarumma L, Caputo C, and Ciacci C
- Abstract
Background: Therapy with direct-acting antivirals (DAA) for HCV is safe and effective in the liver (LT) and kidney transplant (KT) recipients; however, data on the quality of life (QoL) of patients are scanty. This pilot study is aimed at prospectively evaluating the QoL in LT and KT recipients before and after DAA treatment., Methods: We prospectively enrolled 17 LT and 11 KT recipients with HCV infection starting a sofosbuvir-based antiviral therapy for 12 weeks. All participants before (T0), 12 (T12), and 24 (T24) weeks after the end of the therapy completed the Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) questionnaire, the Zung Self-rating Depression Scale, and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y1-Y2)., Results: At T0, LT and KT patients were similar for gender, age, BMI, smoking habits, marital status, mean liver stiffness values at Fibroscan, and HCV genotype distribution ( p > 0.05). There were no significant differences between the 2 groups in STAI-Y1, STAI-Y2, Zung, and SF-36 scores ( p > 0.05). At T12, all the participants showed a sustained virological response (SVR). All items of the SF-36 questionnaire improved from the pretreatment to posttreatment period within the LT group, and the 4 domains role-physical, bodily pain, social function, role-emotional, and mental health reached statistical significance ( p < 0.05 in all cases). On the contrary, in KT patients, there was no significant improvement in SF-36 mean scores compared to at baseline at T12 and T24., Conclusions: This pilot study suggested that DAA therapy is associated with a significant improvement of the QoL only in LT recipients. Probably, KT recipients did not consider HCV a "central player" in the course of their disease, and HCV eradication did not significantly impact on their QoL., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 Antonella Santonicola et al.)
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- 2020
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38. Skin Architecture, Kidney Transplantation, and Their Relationship to Basal and Squamous Cell Carcinomas.
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Capasso A, Bilancio G, Lee MW, Palladino G, Pollastro RM, Simeoni M, Secondulfo C, Ronchi A, Caputo A, Franco R, Zeppa P, Capasso G, and Viggiano D
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- Aged, Humans, Middle Aged, Carcinoma, Basal Cell pathology, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell pathology, Kidney Transplantation, Skin pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology
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Background/aim: Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is highly prevalent in kidney transplant patients (KT). It is characterized by the presence of an inflammatory infiltrate. In this study, we examined the presence of similar infiltrates in intact skin, which could be regarded as a precancerous step., Patients and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed skin biopsies of 19 non-transplanted patients with a diagnosis of SCC or basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and 17 KT with either SCC or BCC., Results: KT showed increased inflammatory infiltrate in the subepithelial region, compared to non-transplanted patients. The density of basal cell nuclei was also different among the four groups with an interaction effect between tumor type and transplantation. The extent of inflammatory infiltrates did not correlate with the eGFR and proteinuria., Conclusion: KT with a non-melanoma skin cancer show increased intact skin inflammatory infiltrate and alterations in the density of the basal cell layer compared to non-transplanted patients., (Copyright© 2020, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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39. 25-Hydroxyvitamin D, 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D, and Peripheral Bone Densitometry in Adults with Celiac Disease.
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Ciacci C, Bilancio G, Russo I, Iovino P, Cavallo P, Santonicola A, Bucci C, Cirillo M, and Zingone F
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- Adult, Diet, Gluten-Free, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Prospective Studies, Vitamin D blood, Bone Density physiology, Celiac Disease blood, Celiac Disease diet therapy, Celiac Disease epidemiology, Celiac Disease physiopathology, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives
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Background : Adults with celiac disease (CeD) show low bone mineral density (BMD) and high fracture risk. CeD guidelines suggest measurements of serum minerals and vitamin D. However, studies on vitamin levels in CeD patients are contradictory. Aim : To investigate in CeD, 25-hydroxy-vitamin D [25(OH)D], 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D [1,25(OH)2D], and related analytes and to evaluate their relationships to peripheral BMD as assessed by peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT). Methods : Gluten-free diet (GFD)-treated, and untreated adult CeD patients naïve to vitamin D and calcium supplementation underwent measurements of serum 25(OH)D, 1,25(OH)2D, parathyroid hormone (PTH), total calcium, phosphate, and of radius BMD by pQCT. Results : Complete data were collected in 105 patients for lab tests and 87 patients for BMD. For lab tests, untreated CeD differed from treated CeD for 22.0% lower serum 25(OH)D ( p = 0.023), 42.5% higher serum PTH ( p < 0.001), and 13.0% higher serum 1,25(OH)2D ( p = 0.029) in the presence of similar serum calcium and phosphorus ( p > 0.35). For BMD, untreated CeD differed from treated CeD for lower diaphyseal cortical BMD (1133 and 1157 mg/cm
3 , p = 0.004) but not for distal BMD (total, trabecular, and subcortical, p > 0.13). Independent correlates of diaphyseal cortical BMD were GFD treatment and body mass index ( p < 0.05). Conclusions : Data indicated that, compared to CeD patients on a gluten-free diet, untreated adult CeD patients at diagnosis had lower 25(OH)D, higher PTH, and higher 1,25(OH)2 D in the absence of difference in serum calcium and phosphorus. 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2 D, even below the normal range, were not associated with BMD. Our findings do not support the use of vitamin D supplementation for all CeD adults.- Published
- 2020
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40. Kidney Transplant Modifies the Architecture and Microenvironment of Basal Cell Carcinomas.
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Capasso A, Viggiano D, Lee MW, Palladino G, Bilancio G, Simeoni M, Capolongo G, Secondulfo C, Ronchi A, Caputo A, Zeppa P, and Franco R
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- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Carcinoma, Basal Cell therapy, Kidney Transplantation methods
- Abstract
Background/aims: Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is a frequent type of nonmelanoma skin cancer, which shows a greater prevalence in kidney-transplanted (KT) patients than in the general population. The study of this tumor in KT patients may allow us to understand the influence of the tumor inflammatory microenvironment on cancer behavior, and to design new image analysis methods to determine prognosis and apply personalized medicine. The major hypothesis of the present work is that antirejection drugs, by modifying the B-cell/T-cell balance, induce measurable differences in tumoral cell microarchitecture and in the inflammatory microenvironment in KT patients compared to nontransplanted controls., Methods: In this retrospective study in an Italian cohort including 15 KT patients and 15 control subjects from the general population who developed BCC, we analyzed tissue microarchitecture and inflammatory infiltrates of BCC using state-of-the-art nonlinear image analysis techniques such as fractal dimension and sample entropy of internuclear distances., Results: KT patients showed a nonsignificant trend to a greater number of nuclei in the basal cell layer compared to non-KT controls and subtle changes in the intact skin compared to controls. Similarly, the number of mitoses per unit length was almost doubled in the patients with KT compared to controls. However, when the number of mitotic cells was normalized by the total number of cells in the basal layer (mitotic index), these differences were not significant, although a clear trend was still present. Finally, KT patients showed a nonsignificant trend to an increased -density of inflammatory cells close to the tumoral cell layer. When considering the intact skin, this difference was significant, with a 70% increase in the density of inflammatory cells., Conclusion: Data comparing the microarchitecture of BCC in normal subjects and KT patients are scanty, and the present study is the first to use nonlinear image analysis techniques to this aim. The observed differences underscore the relevance of T-cell suppression in cancer behavior. These data suggest that BCC develops in treated patients with specific biological characteristics which should be further analyzed in terms of therapeutic response., (© 2020 The Author(s) Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2020
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41. Vitamin D Status and Indices of Mineral Homeostasis in the Population: Differences Between 25-Hydroxyvitamin D and 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Guarino E, Cavallo P, Lombardi C, Costanzo S, De Curtis A, Di Castelnuovo A, and Iacoviello L
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- Adult, Aged, Biomarkers blood, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Homeostasis, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism diagnosis, Hyperparathyroidism epidemiology, Hypocalcemia diagnosis, Hypocalcemia epidemiology, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Vitamin D blood, Vitamin D Deficiency diagnosis, Vitamin D Deficiency epidemiology, Calcium blood, Hyperparathyroidism blood, Hypocalcemia blood, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives, Vitamin D Deficiency blood
- Abstract
Opinions are conflicting about the epidemiology of vitamin D deficiency. This population-based study investigated cross-sectionally the associations of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (calcidiol) and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (calcitriol) with indices of mineral homeostasis. Study cohort consisted of 979 persons of the Moli-Sani study, both sexes, ages ≥35 years. Data collection included serum calcidiol by different assays, serum calcitriol, serum parathyroid hormone, serum and urine calcium, and phosphorus. Prevalence of mild-to-moderate calcidiol deficiency (10-19 ng/mL) was 36.4% and did not associate with hypocalcemia or hyperparathyroidism. Prevalence of severe calcidiol deficiency (<10 ng/mL) was 16.8% and associated with hyperparathyroidism only (odds ratio = 8.81, 95% confidence interval = 2.4/32.9). Prevalence of calcitriol deficiency (<18 pg/mL) was 3.1% and associated with hypocalcemia (29.1, 7.4/114.5) but not hyperparathyroidism. In ANOVA along concentration strata, lower calcidiol associated with higher parathyroid hormone only ( p < 0.001). Lower calcitriol associated with lower serum and urine calcium ( p < 0.001) but not with parathyroid hormone. Calcidiol findings were consistent with different calcidiol assays. In the population, mild-to-moderate calcidiol deficiency did not associate with abnormal mineral homeostasis. Severe calcidiol deficiency and calcitriol deficiency associated with different disorders: lower calcidiol associated with hyperparathyroidism whereas lower calcitriol associated with hypocalcemia and low urine calcium.
- Published
- 2019
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42. Saliva for assessing creatinine, uric acid, and potassium in nephropathic patients.
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Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Lombardi C, Guarino E, Cozza V, Giordano F, Palladino G, and Cirillo M
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- Adult, Biomarkers analysis, Biomarkers metabolism, Creatinine analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Potassium analysis, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic diagnosis, Saliva chemistry, Uric Acid analysis, Creatinine metabolism, Potassium metabolism, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic metabolism, Saliva metabolism, Uric Acid metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Lab tests on saliva could be useful because of low invasivity. Previous reports indicated that creatinine, uric acid, and potassium are measurable in saliva. For these analytes the study investigated methodology of saliva tests and correlations between plasma and saliva levels., Methods: The study enrolled 15 healthy volunteers for methodological analyses and 42 nephropathic patients for plasma-saliva correlations (35 non-dialysis and 7 dialysis). Saliva was collected by synthetic swap right after venipuncture for blood withdrawal. Blood and saliva, unless otherwise indicated, were collected early in the morning after overnight fast and lab tests were performed in fresh samples by automated biochemistry (standard). Methodological analyses included blind duplicates, different collection mouth sites, day-to-day variability, different collection times, and freezing-thawing effects. Analyses on plasma-saliva correlations included post-dialysis changes., Results: For saliva lab tests of all analytes, blind duplicates, samples from different mouth sites or of different days were not significantly different but were significantly correlated (differences ≤14.4%; R ≥ 0.620, P ≤ 0.01). For all analytes, mid-morning saliva had lower levels than but correlated with standard saliva (differences ≥15.8%; R ≥ 0.728, P ≤ 0.01). Frozen-thawed saliva had lower levels than fresh saliva for uric acid only (- 17.2%, P < 0.001). Frozen-thawed saliva correlated with fresh saliva for all analytes (R ≥ 0.818, P ≤ 0.001). Saliva and plasma levels differed but correlated with plasma for creatinine (R = 0.874, P < 0.001), uric acid (R = 0.821, P < 0.001) and potassium (R = 0.767, P < 0.001). Post-dialysis changes in saliva paralleled post-dialysis changes in plasma., Conclusion: Saliva levels of creatinine, uric acid, and potassium are measurable and correlated with their plasma levels. Early morning fasting fresh saliva samples are advisable because later collection times or freezing lower the saliva levels of these analytes.
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- 2019
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43. Dietary Protein, Kidney Function and Mortality: Review of the Evidence from Epidemiological Studies.
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Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Ciacci C, and Cirillo M
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- Dietary Proteins pharmacology, Humans, Recommended Dietary Allowances, Cause of Death, Diet, Protein-Restricted adverse effects, Dietary Proteins administration & dosage, Kidney drug effects, Nutritional Requirements, Renal Insufficiency diet therapy
- Abstract
The World Health Organization recommends a minimum requirement of 0.8 g/day protein/kg ideal weight. Low protein diets are used against kidney failure progression. Efficacy and safety of these diets are uncertain. This paper reviews epidemiological studies about associations of protein intake with kidney function decline and mortality. Three studies investigated these associations; two reported data on mortality. Protein intake averaged >60 g/day and 1.2 g/day/kg ideal weight. An association of baseline protein intake with long-term kidney function decline was absent in the general population and/or persons with normal kidney function but was significantly positive in persons with below-normal kidney function. Independent of kidney function and other confounders, a J-curve relationship was found between baseline protein intake and mortality due to ≈35% mortality excess for non-cardiovascular disease in the lowest quintile of protein intake, a quintile where protein intake averaged <0.8 g/day/kg ideal weight. Altogether, epidemiological evidence suggests that, in patients with reduced kidney function, protein intakes of ≈0.8 g/d/kg ideal weight could limit kidney function decline without adding non-renal risks. Long-term lower protein intake could increase mortality. In most patients, an intake of ≈0.8 g/day/kg would represent a substantial reduction of habitual intake considering that average intake is largely higher., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2019
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44. Urea and Minerals Monitoring in Space Missions by Spot Samples of Saliva and Urine.
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Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Lombardi C, Guarino E, Cozza V, Giordano F, and Cirillo M
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- Adult, Aerospace Medicine, Body Fluids, Bone Density, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Physiologic methods, Pilot Projects, Saliva chemistry, Specimen Handling, Urine chemistry, Astronauts, Phosphorus analysis, Space Flight, Urea analysis
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Microgravity induces redistribution of body fluids and reductions in muscle and bone mass. These effects correlate with changes in lab test results, including urea and bone minerals. Difficulties with collecting blood and urine during space missions limit the available data. This pilot study investigated metabolic changes during a space mission using untimed spot samples of urine and saliva. Untimed spot urine was used for urinalysis with data normalization per creatinine concentration. Saliva was proven useful as an index of serum urea and phosphorus. METHODS: Two astronauts collected urine and saliva samples 75 ± 5 d before launch (baseline) and 3-5 times during a 6-mo space mission. Samples were collected 3 h after morning breakfast. Urine was collected using a standard NASA device. Saliva was collected using a Salivette™ synthetic swab. Samples were kept frozen using automated biochemistry until lab work-up. Anthropometric data were collected at baseline and after the mission. RESULTS: For astronauts 1 and 2, respectively, total bone mineral density decreased (-1.4% and -0.9%). In-flight changes were as follows: transiently decreased urine urea/creatinine ratio (-32% and -24%), transiently decreased urine phosphorus/creatinine ratio (-52% and -30%), increased urine calcium/creatinine ratio (up to +116% and +27%), and transient increases in saliva urea (up to +48% and +195%) and phosphorus (up to +29% and +46%). The astronaut with greater changes in urine minerals had greater reduction in bone mineral density. DISCUSSION: The results support the hypothesis that untimed samples of urine and saliva are useful for investigation of metabolic changes during space missions. Changes in urine and saliva minerals suggested down-regulation of parathyroid gland activity during the space mission. Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Lombardi C, Guarino E, Cozza V, Giordano F, Cirillo M. Urea and minerals monitoring in space missions by spot samples of saliva and urine. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2019; 90(1):43-47.
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- 2019
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45. Salivary levels of phosphorus and urea as indices of their plasma levels in nephropathic patients.
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Bilancio G, Cavallo P, Lombardi C, Guarino E, Cozza V, Giordano F, Palladino G, and Cirillo M
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Limit of Detection, Linear Models, Male, Phosphorus blood, Reference Values, Urea blood, Kidney Diseases blood, Kidney Diseases epidemiology, Kidney Diseases metabolism, Phosphorus analysis, Saliva chemistry, Urea analysis
- Abstract
Background: Phosphorus and urea are measurable in saliva. Measurements of saliva phosphorus (S-Pho) and saliva urea (S-Urea) could be useful because of low invasivity. Data are limited to saliva tests methodology and to correlations between plasma and saliva compositions. S-Pho and S-Urea were investigated focusing on blind duplicates, differences between collection sites, differences between collection times, freezing-thawing effects, and plasma-saliva correlations., Methods: Tests were performed using fresh saliva collected by synthetic swap early morning after overnight fast (standard). Methodology was investigated in fifteen healthy volunteers. Plasma-saliva correlations were investigated in thirty nephropathic outpatients., Results: S-Pho and S-Urea in all measurements ranged above detection limits (0.3 mmol/L). In healthy volunteers, S-Pho and S-Urea were similar in duplicates (results for S-Pho and S-Urea: % difference between samples ≤ 4.85%; R between samples ≥ .976, P < .001), in samples from different mouth sites (≤4.24%; R ≥ .887, P < .001), and in samples of different days (≤5.61%; R ≥ .606, P < .01) but, compared to standard, were substantially lower in after-breakfast samples (-28.0% and -21.3%; R ≥ .786, P < .001) and slightly lower in frozen-thawed samples (-12.4% and -5.92%; R ≥ .742, P < .001). In nephropathic patients, S-Pho was higher than but correlated with plasma phosphorus (saliva/plasma ratio 4.80; R = .686, P < .001), whereas S-Urea and plasma urea were similar and correlated with each other (saliva/plasma ratio 0.96; R = .944, P < .001). Post-dialysis changes in S-Pho and S-Urea paralleled post-dialysis changes in plasma phosphorus and urea., Conclusion: S-Pho and S-Urea reflect plasma phosphorus and plasma urea. Early morning fasting fresh samples are advisable because collection time and freezing-thawing affect saliva tests., (© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2018
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46. Low Protein Intake in the Population: Low Risk of Kidney Function Decline but High Risk of Mortality.
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Cirillo M, Cavallo P, Bilancio G, Lombardi C, Terradura Vagnarelli O, and Laurenzi M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Kidney physiopathology, Kidney Function Tests statistics & numerical data, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic prevention & control, Risk, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Diet, Protein-Restricted mortality, Diet, Protein-Restricted statistics & numerical data, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: This population-based study investigated low protein intake, mortality, and kidney function decline., Design: Observational longitudinal cohort study., Subjects: Target cohort consisted of 4,679 adults participating in 1988-1992 and 2001-2007 examinations of the Gubbio Study (baseline and follow-up). Data collection included overnight urine urea nitrogen (UUN) and other variables at baseline, serum creatinine at baseline and follow-up, and mortality from baseline to follow-up. Three hundred seventy-two persons were excluded for missing data. UUN in the lowest 20% of the distribution was defined as low and used as index of low protein intake. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR, mL/minute × 1.73 m
2 ) was used as kidney function index., Intervention: None (observational study)., Main Outcome Measure: Mortality and eGFR decline are the main outcome measures, and eGFR decline was defined as eGFR change from baseline to follow-up ≤ mean-1 standard deviation (Z-score ≤ -1)., Results: Eight hundred seventy-one deaths occurred over 15.9 ± 4.0 years of observation (417 from cardiovascular disease and 276 from neoplastic disease). Low UUN associated with mortality (hazard ratio, HR = 1.31, 95% confidence interval, CI = 1.12/1.53) due to association with mortality from neoplastic disease (HR = 1.33, 95% CI = 1.02/1.76). Mortality-corrected follow-up response rate was 79.9% (n = 2845). Baseline to follow-up eGFR change was -9.9 ± 10.1, and eGFR decline was found in 454 examinees. Low UUN associated with eGFR decline only in subgroup with baseline eGFR <90 (n = 1441, odds ratio = 0.44, 95% CI = 0.22/0.85). Low baseline eGFR interacted with the association between low UUN and eGFR decline (P = .024)., Conclusion: Low protein intake predicted higher mortality in the whole population and lower incidence of eGFR decline only in subgroup with reduced kidney function., (Copyright © 2017 National Kidney Foundation, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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47. Osmotic indices and kidney concentrating activity: population-based data on correlates and prognostic power.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, Lombardi C, Cavallo P, Terradura Vagnarelli O, Zanchetti A, and Laurenzi M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Kidney Function Tests, Male, Middle Aged, Osmolar Concentration, Prognosis, Young Adult, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Kidney physiopathology, Population Surveillance
- Abstract
Background: Research data are limited on indices of osmotic equilibrium and of kidney concentrating activity (KCA). This study investigated correlates and prognostic power of these indices in a sample of the general population., Methods: Urine osmolality (U-osm), plasma osmolality (P-osm), plasma creatinine and other variables were measured by the Gubbio Study for the 1988-92 exam (baseline). Plasma creatinine and other variables were re-measured in the 2001-07 exam (follow-up). KCA was assessed as the U-osm/P-osm ratio and kidney function as estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)., Results: Baseline data were complete in 4220 adults, of whom 852 died before follow-up and 2795 participated in the follow-up. At baseline, the following independent cross-sectional associations were identified: female sex and higher urine flow with lower values of U-osm, P-osm and U-osm/P-osm ratio (P < 0.01); obesity with higher values of U-osm, P-osm and U-osm/P-osm ratio (P < 0.01); older age and lower eGFR with lower U-osm, lower U-osm/P-osm ratio and higher P-osm (P < 0.05); hypertension and smoking with lower U-osm and lower U-osm/P-osm ratio (P < 0.05) but not with P-osm. From baseline to follow-up, the annualized rate was 1.26% for mortality and -0.74 ± 0.76 mL/min × 1.73 m2 for eGFR change. Mortality was independently predicted by baseline U-osm and baseline U-osm/P-osm ratio (hazard ratio for one higher standard deviation was ≤0.91, 95% confidence interval was ≤0.97, P < 0.01), but not by baseline P-osm. The eGFR change was not independently predicted by baseline values of U-osm, P-osm and U-osm/P-osm ratio (P ≥ 0.4)., Conclusions: Sex, age, obesity, eGFR, urine flow, hypertension and smoking independently associated with U-osm and KCA. U-osm and KCA independently predicted mortality, but not kidney function change over time., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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48. Cardiovascular calcification and subcortical bone demineralization in hypertension.
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Cirillo C, Bilancio G, Natale F, Concilio C, Russo MG, Calabrò P, and Cirillo M
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- Aged, Bone Density, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Hypertension complications, Hypertension physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Bone Demineralization, Pathologic, Hypertension metabolism, Vascular Calcification
- Abstract
The present study investigated cardiovascular calcification, peripheral bone mineral density (BMD), and lab indices in hypertensive patients aged 55-74 years without severe kidney dysfunction. Cardiovascular calcification was investigated by ultrasound examinations at eight sites: aortic valve, left and right common carotid artery, left and right carotid artery bifurcation, left and right internal carotid artery, and abdominal aorta. The presence/absence of calcification at each site was coded as 1/0, respectively, for the calculation of a cumulative score. Peripheral bone mineral density was assessed by forearm quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) and was defined as low if the T-score was <-1. Lab work-up included plasma creatinine, calcium, phosphorus, parathyroid hormone and 25-(OH) vitamin D measurements. Ninety-one patients were studied. The range was 2-8 for the calcification score and 229-492 mg cm
-3 for bone mineral density. The prevalence of low bone densitometry was 83.5%. The calcification score and bone densitometry were inversely correlated in a non-adjusted analysis (R=-0.297, P=0.004) and in multivariable regression (beta=-0.335, P=0.003). The association was significant for subcortical bone (beta=-0.302, P=0.007) but not for cortical bone or trabecular bone (P⩾0.194 in both cases). The calcification score was associated with a low prevalence of bone densitometry in the non-adjusted analysis (odds ratio=2.53, 95% CI=1.41/4.54, P=0.002) and in the multivariable logistic regression (odds ratio=2.46, 95% CI=1.25/4.81, P=0.009). Cardiovascular calcification was independently associated with peripheral bone densitometry in hypertensive patients. The data support the hypothesis that vascular calcification and low bone densitometry share some determinants in hypertensive patients.- Published
- 2017
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49. Reversible vascular calcifications associated with hypervitaminosis D.
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Cirillo M, Bilancio G, and Cirillo C
- Subjects
- Biomarkers blood, Calcium blood, Cholecalciferol administration & dosage, Diuretics administration & dosage, Fluid Therapy methods, Furosemide administration & dosage, Glucocorticoids therapeutic use, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Injections, Intramuscular, Male, Middle Aged, Nutrition Disorders diagnosis, Nutrition Disorders drug therapy, Omeprazole therapeutic use, Prednisone therapeutic use, Proton Pump Inhibitors therapeutic use, Remission Induction, Sodium Chloride administration & dosage, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Up-Regulation, Vascular Calcification diagnosis, Vascular Calcification drug therapy, Vitamin D blood, Cholecalciferol adverse effects, Nutrition Disorders chemically induced, Vascular Calcification chemically induced, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
A 64-year-old man was hospitalized in 2002 with symptoms of stupor, weakness, and renal colic. The clinical examination indicated borderline hypertension, small masses in the glutei, and polyuria. Laboratory tests evidenced high serum concentrations of creatinine, calcium, and phosphate. Imaging assessments disclosed widespread vascular calcifications, gluteal calcifications, and pelvic ectasia. Subsequent lab tests indicated suppressed serum parathyroid hormone, extremely high serum 25-hydroxy vitamin D, and normal serum 1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D. Treatment was started with intravenous infusion of saline and furosemide due to the evidence of hypercalcemia. Prednisone and omeprazole were added given the evidence of hypervitaminosis D. The treatment improved serum calcium, kidney function, and consciousness. The medical history disclosed recent treatment with exceptionally high doses of slow-release intra-muscular cholecalciferol and the recent excretion of urinary stones. The patient was discharged when it was possible to stop the intravenous treatment. The post-discharge treatment included oral hydration, furosemide, prednisone and omeprazole for approximately 6 months up to complete resolution of the hypercalcemia. The patient came back 12 years later because of microhematuria. Lab tests were normal for calcium/phosphorus homeostasis and kidney function. Imaging tests indicated only minor vascular calcifications. This is the first evidence of reversible vascular calcifications secondary to hypervitaminosis D.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Population-based dose-response curve of glomerular filtration rate to dietary protein intake.
- Author
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Cirillo M, Zingone F, Lombardi C, Cavallo P, Zanchetti A, and Bilancio G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Kidney Function Tests, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Risk Factors, Creatinine blood, Dietary Proteins administration & dosage, Dietary Proteins metabolism, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Kidney physiopathology, Urea urine
- Abstract
Background: Kidney function measured as estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) is a risk factor for mortality and severe diseases. Protein intake up-regulates kidney function. The dose-response curve of eGFR over protein intake is unknown. Urinary urea nitrogen is an objective index of protein intake., Methods: The study cross-sectionally analysed the relation between overnight urinary urea nitrogen ((on)U-ureaN) and eGFR with and without control for other variables in 4106 adults of the Gubbio population. Analyses were done for serum creatinine (S-cr) also to investigate the independency of results from eGFR calculation., Results: Higher (on)U-ureaN associated with higher eGFR, and lower S-cr independently of sex and age (simple and partial correlation coefficients >0.100, P < 0.001). Analyses by (on)U-ureaN decile indicated sigmoid curves of eGFR and S-cr over (on)U-ureaN with trend to flatness in the lowest 20% and the highest 20% of (on)U-ureaN (<5.19 and >10.12 mg/h, respectively). Multi-variable spline regression indicated that the relation of eGFR over (on)U-ureaN was non-significant for (on)U-ureaN <5.19 mg/h (coefficient = +0.27, 95% CI = -0.31/+0.84, P = 0.364), positive for (on)U-ureaN in the range 5.19-10.12 mg/h (coefficients = 1.35-1.64, lower 95% CI ≥ +0.48, P ≤ 0.002), and non-significant for (on)U-ureaN >10.12 mg/h (coefficient = +0.05, 95% CI = -0.06/ +0.16, P = 0.394). eGFR differed by ≈8 mL/min × 1.73 m(2) between the lowest and highest 20% of (on)U-ureaN distribution., Conclusions: Higher protein intake relates to higher eGFR. The relation is sigmoid with eGFR up-regulation for (on)U-ureaN >5.19 mg/h, a threshold approximately corresponding to the recommended daily allowance for protein intake (0.8 g/day per kg of ideal weight)., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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