102 results on '"L. Bertelli"'
Search Results
2. The arterial blood supply of the pancreas: a review II. The posterior superior pancreaticoduodenal artery. An anatomical and radiological study
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L Civeli, F Di Gregorio, L Bertelli, S Mosca, and Eugenio Bertelli
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Blood supply ,Arterial blood supply ,Duodenum ,Collateral Circulation ,Dorsal pancreatic artery ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Hepatic Artery ,Celiac Artery ,Mesenteric Artery, Superior ,Retroduodenal ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Posterior superior pancreaticoduodenal artery ,Angiography ,Arteries ,Pancreas ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,Collateral circulation ,Trunk ,Radiography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Radiological weapon ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
The present paper is the second part of a comprehensive review of the arterial blood supply of the pancreas and deals with the posterior superior pancreaticoduodenal artery. The aim of this review is to summarise the anatomical studies, starting from Haller's reports, and to supply as far as possible, with original material, angiographic evidences for the classic anatomical notions. For this purpose, the overall research was carried out by picking out and studying 1015 selective angiographies (celiac trunk and its branches, superior mesenteric a.) taken from the angiographic archives of the Institutes of Radiology of Siena, Rome (University of Sacro Cuore, Catholic University), and Perugia. Angiographically, many possible different sources of the posterior superior pancreaticoduodenal a. (superior pancreaticoduodenal a., proper hepatic a., right hepatic a., left hepatic a., superior mesenteric a., accessory and replaced right hepatic a. coming from the superior mesenteric a.) have been demonstrated, as have rare variations of the course and a small number of collateral branches (retroduodenal a. and ventral commissural a.). Moreover, the authors underline the discordant opinions still existing regarding the incidence of the different ways the posterior superior pancreaticoduodenal a. arises.
- Published
- 1996
3. The arterial blood supply of the pancreas: a review I. the superior pancreaticoduodenal and the anterior superior pancreaticoduodenal arteries. An anatomical and radiological study
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Eugenio Bertelli, F Di Gregorio, L Bertelli, and S Mosca
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Arterial blood supply ,medicine.medical_specialty ,PANCREAS ,BLOOD SUPPLY ,ARTERIES ,Dorsal pancreatic artery ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Hepatic Artery ,Celiac Artery ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aorta, Abdominal ,Confusion ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,Mesenteric Arteries ,Radiography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Radiological weapon ,Angiography ,Gross anatomy ,Surgery ,Blood supply ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Pancreas ,Splenic Artery - Abstract
The gross anatomy of the pancreatic blood supply has been subjected to numerous studies. The results of such studies, however, have never been summarized in detail, even in the most important textbooks. For this reason, a certain confusion was generated, especially regarding the interpretation of the nomenclature used to identify pancreatic arteries. This review summarizes more than two centuries of studies of the gross anatomy of the pancreatic blood supply, clarifies the arterial nomenclature, and underlines the aspects about which anatomists are not in agreement. Moreover, it supplies, as far as possible, documentary evidence for numerous observations previously reported only verbally. For this purpose, more than 200 references were directly consulted to provide the anatomical background of the topic, and more than 1000 angiograms were studied to support the review with original figures. The present paper, on the superior pancreaticoduodenal and anterior superior pancreaticoduodenal arteries, is the first of a series of articles dealing with the pancreatic blood supply.
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- 1995
4. Applied Modeling and Computations in Nuclear Science
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Thomas M. Semkow, Stefaan Pommé, Simon M. Jerome, Daniel J. Strom, John E. Till, Helen A. Grogan, P. Obložinský, L. A. Currie, Charley Yu, Jill W. Aanenson, Patricia D. McGavran, Kathleen R. Meyer, H. Justin Mohler, S. Shawn Mohler, James R. Rocco, Arthur S. Rood, Lesley H. Wilson, G. Miller, L. Bertelli, T. Little, R. Guilmette, P. Vojtyla, X. George Xu, Jason C. Viggato, William G. Culbreth, Pravin P. Parekh, Douglas K. Haines, Alireza Haghighat, Glenn E. Sjoden, Andrey N. Berlizov, S. M. Robinson, R. Kouzes, R. J. McConn, R. Pagh, J. E. Schweppe, E. R. Siciliano, Keran O'Brien, S. Pommé, J. D. Keightley, Phillip H. Jenkins, James F. Burkhart, Carl J. Kershner, Willy Brüchle, A. N. Berlizov, M. O. Grygorenko, V. V. Tryshyn, W. E. Potter, J. Keightley, Thomas M. Semkow, Stefaan Pommé, Simon M. Jerome, Daniel J. Strom, John E. Till, Helen A. Grogan, P. Obložinský, L. A. Currie, Charley Yu, Jill W. Aanenson, Patricia D. McGavran, Kathleen R. Meyer, H. Justin Mohler, S. Shawn Mohler, James R. Rocco, Arthur S. Rood, Lesley H. Wilson, G. Miller, L. Bertelli, T. Little, R. Guilmette, P. Vojtyla, X. George Xu, Jason C. Viggato, William G. Culbreth, Pravin P. Parekh, Douglas K. Haines, Alireza Haghighat, Glenn E. Sjoden, Andrey N. Berlizov, S. M. Robinson, R. Kouzes, R. J. McConn, R. Pagh, J. E. Schweppe, E. R. Siciliano, Keran O'Brien, S. Pommé, J. D. Keightley, Phillip H. Jenkins, James F. Burkhart, Carl J. Kershner, Willy Brüchle, A. N. Berlizov, M. O. Grygorenko, V. V. Tryshyn, W. E. Potter, and J. Keightley
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- Radiation--Congresses, Radiochemistry--Mathematical models--Congresse, Radiation--Measurement--Congresses, Nuclear chemistry--Congresses
- Published
- 2006
5. Anterior Mediastinal Tumors
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Andrea Pession, Tamara Belotti, Luca Bertelli, Daniele Zama, Riccardo Masetti, Mario Lima, R. Masetti, T. Belotti, L. Bertelli, D. Zama, and A. Pession
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medicine.medical_specialty ,anterior mediastinal tumor ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Mediastinum ,pediatric oncology ,medicine.disease ,Malignancy ,Asymptomatic ,Lymphoma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,Differential diagnosis ,business ,Thymic carcinoma ,Pediatric population - Abstract
The mediastinum is the most common site of chest masses in children. Mediastinal masses are placed in one of three mediastinal compartments (anterior, middle, posterior) on the basis of a lateral chest radiograph [1] They comprise a wide spectrum of disease, and around 40% occur in children aged
- Published
- 2013
6. Key topics for making decisions on decorporation terapies.
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Reis A, Sampaio C, Sousa W, Aguiar L, and Bertelli L
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- Humans, Decision Making, Radioisotopes analysis, Risk Assessment methods, Decontamination methods
- Abstract
Decorporation therapies increase the excretion of the incorporated material and therefore may reduce the probability of the occurrence of stochastic effects and may avoid deterministic effects in persons internally contaminated with radionuclides. The decision to initiate decorporation therapy should consider the effects of treatment in relation to the benefit provided. The literature presents threshold values above which treatment is recommended. The objective of this work is to collect and summarize recommendations on decorporation therapy. Ten key topics are presented for consideration by a multidisciplinary team when assessing the risk-benefit balance for performing decorporation therapy., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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7. Introducing DEPDOSE, a Tool to Calculate Dose Coefficients to Members of the Public for Radioactive Aerosols.
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Klumpp J, Bertelli L, Eckerman K, Nelson M, Wedell L, Deshler M, Brambilla S, and Brown M
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- Humans, Radiation Dosage, Software, Aerosols, Respiratory System, Radioactivity
- Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents DEPDOSE, an open-source computer application that combines the KDEP respiratory tract deposition fractions for inhaled aerosols with DC_PAK committed equivalent dose coefficients for a unit deposition in each region of the respiratory tract. DEPDOSE allows the user to rapidly produce tables of dose coefficients for workers and members of the public inhaling precisely defined, user-specified aerosols using the ICRP Publication 60 methodology. Combined with a plume dispersion modeling system, such as the Quick Urban & Industrial Complex (QUIC) Dispersion Modeling System, this makes it possible to predict radiation doses downstream from an accidental or intentional release of radioactive materials. For this work, a radioactive plume was calculated to members of the public downstream from a dirty bomb in Chicago. DEPDOSE is published under an open source license, and can be downloaded at https://github.com/lanl/DEPDOSE ., (Copyright © 2023 Health Physics Society.)
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- 2024
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8. Chelation Modeling of a Plutonium-238 Inhalation Incident Treated with Delayed DTPA.
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Dumit S, Miller G, Grémy O, Poudel D, Bertelli L, and Klumpp JA
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- Humans, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Chelating Agents pharmacology, Pentetic Acid, Plutonium urine, Radiation Injuries drug therapy, Radiation Injuries etiology
- Abstract
This work describes an analysis, using a previously established chelation model, of the bioassay data collected from a worker who received delayed chelation therapy following a plutonium-238 inhalation. The details of the case have already been described in two publications. The individual was treated with Ca-DTPA via multiple intravenous injections and then nebulizations beginning several months after the intake and continuing for four years. The exact date and circumstances of the intake are unknown. However, interviews with the worker suggested that the intake occurred via inhalation of a soluble plutonium compound. The worker provided daily urine and fecal bioassay samples throughout the chelation treatment protocol, including samples collected before, during, and after the administration of Ca-DTPA. Unlike the previous two publications presenting this case, the current analysis explicitly models the combined biokinetics of the plutonium-DTPA chelate. Using the previously established chelation model, it was possible to fit the data through optimizing only the intake (day and magnitude), solubility, and absorbed fraction of nebulized Ca-DTPA. This work supports the hypothesis that the efficacy of the delayed chelation treatment observed in this case results mainly from chelation of cell-internalized plutonium by Ca-DTPA (intracellular chelation). It also demonstrates the validity of the previously established chelation model. As the bioassay data were modified to ensure data anonymization, the calculation of the "true" committed effective dose was not possible. However, the treatment-induced dose inhibition (in percentage) was calculated., (©2023 by Radiation Research Society. All rights of reproduction in any form reserved.)
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- 2023
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9. Modified human respiratory tract model to describe the retention of plutonium in scar tissues.
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Tolmachev SY
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- Animals, Humans, United States, Radiation Dosage, Cicatrix metabolism, Models, Biological, Respiratory System metabolism, Plutonium analysis
- Abstract
The Human Respiratory Tract Model described in Publication 130 of the International Commission on Radiological Protection provides some mechanisms to account for retention of material that can be subject to little to no mechanical transport or absorption into the blood. One of these mechanisms is 'binding', which refers to a process by which a fraction ('bound fraction') of the dissolved material chemically binds to the tissue of the airway wall. The value of the bound fraction can have a significant impact on the radiation doses imparted to different parts of the respiratory tract. To properly evaluate-and quantify-bound fraction for an element, one would need information on long-term retention of the element in individual compartments of the respiratory tract. Such data on regional retention of plutonium in the respiratory tract of four workers-who had inhaled materials with solubility ranging from soluble nitrate to very insoluble high-fired oxides-were obtained at the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries. An assumption of bound fraction alone was found to be inconsistent with this dataset and also with a review of the literature. Several studies show evidence of retention of a large amount of Pu activity in the scar tissues of humans and experimental animals, and accordingly, a model structure with scar-tissue compartments was proposed. The transfer rates to these compartments were determined using Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis of the bioassay and post-mortem data, considering the uncertainties associated with deposition, dissolution and particle clearance parameters. The models predicted that a significant amount-between 20 and 100% for the cases analyzed-of plutonium retained in the respiratory tract was sequestered in the scar tissues. Unlike chemically-bound Pu that irradiates sensitive epithelial cells, Pu in scar tissues may not be dosimetrically significant because the scar tissues absorb most, if not all, of the energy from alpha emissions., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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10. Maintenance Therapy for Children and Adolescents with Asthma: Guidelines and Recommendations from the Emilia-Romagna Asthma (ERA) Study Group.
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Fainardi V, Caffarelli C, Deolmi M, Zambelli G, Palazzolo E, Scavone S, Bergamini BM, Bertelli L, Biserna L, Bottau P, Corinaldesi E, De Paulis N, Di Palmo E, Dondi A, Gallucci M, Guidi B, Lombardi F, Magistrali MS, Marastoni E, Pastorelli S, Piccorossi A, Poloni M, Tagliati S, Vaienti F, Gregori G, Sacchetti R, Antodaro F, Bergomi A, Reggiani L, De Fanti A, Marchetti F, Grandinetti R, Mussi N, Ricci G, and Esposito S
- Abstract
Asthma is the most frequent chronic disease of childhood, affecting up to 20% of children worldwide. The main guidelines on asthma maintenance therapy in pediatrics suggest different approaches and describe different stages of asthma to determine the most appropriate treatment. This project aims to summarize the most recent evidence regarding maintenance therapy for asthma in children and adolescents. A multidisciplinary panel of experts was asked clinical questions regarding the treatment of children and adolescents with asthma. Overall, 10 clinical questions were addressed, and the search strategy included accessing electronic databases and a manual search of gray literature published in the last 25 years. After data extraction and narrative synthesis of results, recommendations were developed using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations (GRADE) methodology. Results showed that the choice of medication depends on the severity of the child's asthma, phenotype, age, preference, and individual factors. In addition to medications, the identification of comorbidities and modifiable factors is crucial to obtaining good control. Asthma in children is heterogeneous, and its evolution varies over time. Since most recommendations for asthma management in childhood are extrapolated from clinical studies performed in adults, more clinical trials specifically designed for young children should be conducted.
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- 2023
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11. Dose Assessment Following a 238 Pu Inhalation Incident at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
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Poudel D, Dumit S, Bertelli L, Miller G, Macsik Z, and Klumpp J
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- Humans, Respiratory Aerosols and Droplets, Chelating Agents, Plutonium urine, COVID-19
- Abstract
Abstract: A glovebox breach at the plutonium facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory potentially exposed 15 individuals to 238 Pu aerosols. One of the individuals (P0) received two 1-g intravenous DTPA treatments, one on the day of the intake and another the following day. Several urine samples were collected from the individuals involved in the incident. Particle size analysis on the PPE and solubility analysis of the particles on a filter sample were conducted in vitro. The applicability of the results from the in vitro studies for dose assessment was questionable because of the effect of the cloth mask the workers were wearing for COVID-related protection. Based on several considerations, including the effect of cloth masks on the "effective" particle size inhaled and the analysis of fecal-to-urine ratio, the default Type M 1 μm AMAD model was used to estimate intakes and doses. Using the urinary excretion data collected after 100 d post last chelation treatment, the committed effective dose, E(50), for P0 was calculated to be 5.2 mSv. For all others, the bioassay data were consistent with no intakes or very small intakes [corresponding to E(50) less than 0.1 mSv]., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Health Physics Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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12. Chelation Model Validation: Modeling of a Plutonium-238 Inhalation Incident Treated with DTPA at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
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Dumit S, Miller G, Poudel D, Bertelli L, and Klumpp J
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- Humans, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Pentetic Acid, Plutonium analysis, Radiation Injuries etiology, Radiation Injuries prevention & control, Radiation Injuries drug therapy
- Abstract
Abstract: Accidental inhalation of plutonium at the workplace is a non-negligible risk, even when rigorous safety standards are in place. The intake and retention of plutonium in the human body may be a source of concern. Thus, if there is a suspicion of a significant intake of plutonium, medical countermeasures such as chelation treatment may be administered to the worker. The present work aimed to interpret the bioassay data of a worker involved in an inhalation incident due to a glovebox breach at Los Alamos National Laboratory's plutonium facility. The worker was treated with intravenous injections of calcium salts of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) in an attempt to reduce the amount of plutonium from the body and therefore reduce the internal radiation dose. It is well known in the internal dosimetry field that the administration of chelation treatment poses additional challenges to the dose assessment. Hence, a recently developed chelation model was used for the modeling of the bioassay data. The objectives of this work are to describe the incident, model the chelation-affected and non-affected bioassay data, estimate the plutonium intake, and assess the internal radiation dose., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Health Physics Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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13. Risk Factors Affecting Development and Persistence of Preschool Wheezing: Consensus Document of the Emilia-Romagna Asthma (ERA) Study Group.
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Grandinetti R, Fainardi V, Caffarelli C, Capoferri G, Lazzara A, Tornesello M, Meoli A, Bergamini BM, Bertelli L, Biserna L, Bottau P, Corinaldesi E, De Paulis N, Dondi A, Guidi B, Lombardi F, Magistrali MS, Marastoni E, Pastorelli S, Piccorossi A, Poloni M, Tagliati S, Vaienti F, Gregori G, Sacchetti R, Mari S, Musetti M, Antodaro F, Bergomi A, Reggiani L, Caramelli F, De Fanti A, Marchetti F, Ricci G, Esposito S, and On Behalf Of The Emilia-Romagna Asthma Era Study Group
- Abstract
Wheezing at preschool age (i.e., before the age of six) is common, occurring in about 30% of children before the age of three. In terms of health care burden, preschool children with wheeze show double the rate of access to the emergency department and five times the rate of hospital admissions compared with school-age asthmatics. The consensus document aims to analyse the underlying mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of preschool wheezing and define the risk factors (i.e., allergy, atopy, infection, bronchiolitis, genetics, indoor and outdoor pollution, tobacco smoke exposure, obesity, prematurity) and the protective factors (i.e., probiotics, breastfeeding, vitamin D, influenza vaccination, non-specific immunomodulators) associated with the development of the disease in the young child. A multidisciplinary panel of experts from the Emilia-Romagna Region, Italy, addressed twelve key questions regarding managing preschool wheezing. Clinical questions have been formulated by the expert panel using the PICO format (Patients, Intervention, Comparison, Outcomes). Systematic reviews have been conducted on PubMed to answer these specific questions and formulate recommendations. The GRADE approach has been used for each selected paper to assess the quality of the evidence and the degree of recommendations. Based on a panel of experts and extensive updated literature, this consensus document provides insight into the pathogenesis, risk and protective factors associated with the development and persistence of preschool wheezing. Undoubtedly, more research is needed to improve our understanding of the disease and confirm the associations between certain factors and the risk of wheezing in early life. In addition, preventive strategies must be promoted to avoid children's exposure to risk factors that may permanently affect respiratory health., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2022
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14. Side Effects and Complications Associated with Treating Plutonium Intakes: A Retrospective Review of the Medical Records of LANL Employees Treated for Plutonium Intakes, with Supplementary Interviews.
- Author
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Glover L, Bertelli L, Dumit S, Poudel D, Smith L, Waters T, and Klumpp J
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- Biological Assay, Chelation Therapy, Humans, Medical Records, Retrospective Studies, Plutonium adverse effects, Plutonium analysis
- Abstract
Abstract: Anecdotal evidence indicates there may be unpublished physical and psychological events associated with the medical treatment of plutonium intakes. A thorough review was conducted of the medical and bioassay records of current and previous Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) employees who had experienced plutonium intakes via wound or inhalation. After finding relatively incomplete information in the medical records, the research team interviewed current LANL employees who had undergone chelation therapy and/or surgical excision. Although the dataset is not large enough to reach statistically significant conclusions, it was observed that adverse events associated with treatment appear to be more frequent and more severe than previously reported., Competing Interests: # The authors declare no conflicts of interest. ( Manuscript accepted 25 May 2022), (Copyright © 2022 Health Physics Society.)
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- 2022
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15. Management of Preschool Wheezing: Guideline from the Emilia-Romagna Asthma (ERA) Study Group.
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Fainardi V, Caffarelli C, Deolmi M, Skenderaj K, Meoli A, Morini R, Bergamini BM, Bertelli L, Biserna L, Bottau P, Corinaldesi E, De Paulis N, Dondi A, Guidi B, Lombardi F, Magistrali MS, Marastoni E, Pastorelli S, Piccorossi A, Poloni M, Tagliati S, Vaienti F, Gregori G, Sacchetti R, Mari S, Musetti M, Antodaro F, Bergomi A, Reggiani L, Caramelli F, De Fanti A, Marchetti F, Ricci G, and Esposito S
- Abstract
Preschool wheezing should be considered an umbrella term for distinctive diseases with different observable and measurable phenotypes. Despite many efforts, there is a large gap in knowledge regarding management of preschool wheezing. In order to fill this lack of knowledge, the aim of these guidelines was to define management of wheezing disorders in preschool children (aged up to 5 years). A multidisciplinary panel of experts of the Emilia-Romagna Region, Italy, addressed twelve different key questions regarding the management of preschool wheezing. Clinical questions have been formulated by the expert panel using the PICO format (Patients, Intervention, Comparison, Outcomes) and systematic reviews have been conducted on PubMed to answer these specific questions, with the aim of formulating recommendations. The GRADE approach has been used for each selected paper, to assess the quality of the evidence and the degree of recommendations. These guidelines represent, in our opinion, the most complete and up-to-date collection of recommendations on preschool wheezing to guide pediatricians in the management of their patients, standardizing approaches. Undoubtedly, more research is needed to find objective biomarkers and understand underlying mechanisms to assess phenotype and endotype and to personalize targeted treatment., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2022
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16. Public health response and medical management of internal contamination in past radiological or nuclear incidents: A narrative review.
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Li C, Alves Dos Reis A, Ansari A, Bertelli L, Carr Z, Dainiak N, Degteva M, Efimov A, Kalinich J, Kryuchkov V, Kukhta B, Kurihara O, Antonia Lopez M, Port M, Riddell T, Rump A, Sun Q, Tuo F, Youngman M, and Zhang J
- Subjects
- Humans, Disaster Planning, Public Health
- Abstract
Following a radiological or nuclear emergency, workers, responders and the public may be internally contaminated with radionuclides. Screening, monitoring and assessing any internal contamination and providing necessary medical treatment, especially when a large number of individuals are involved, is challenging. Experience gained and lessons learned from the management of previous incidents would help to identify gaps in knowledge and capabilities on preparedness for and response to radiation emergencies. In this paper, eight large-scale and five workplace radiological and nuclear incidents are reviewed cross 14 technical areas, under the broader topics of emergency preparedness, emergency response and recovery processes. The review findings suggest that 1) new strategies, algorithms and technologies are explored for rapid screening of large populations; 2) exposure assessment and dose estimation in emergency response and dose reconstruction in recovery process are supported by complementary sources of information, including 'citizen science'; 3) surge capacity for monitoring and dose assessment is coordinated through national and international laboratory networks; 4) evidence-based guidelines for medical management and follow-up of internal contamination are urgently needed; 5) mechanisms for international and regional access to medical countermeasures are investigated and implemented; 6) long-term health and medical follow up programs are designed and justified; and 7) capabilities and capacity developed for emergency response are sustained through adequate resource allocation, routine non-emergency use of technical skills in regular exercises, training, and continuous improvement., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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17. C5 and SRGAP3 Polymorphisms Are Linked to Paediatric Allergic Asthma in the Italian Population.
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Messelodi D, Giuliani C, Cipriani F, Armuzzi S, di Palmo E, Garagnani P, Bertelli L, Astolfi A, Luiselli D, Ricci G, and Pession A
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- Child, Gene Frequency, Genotype, Humans, Italy, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Asthma epidemiology, Asthma genetics, Complement C5 genetics, GTPase-Activating Proteins genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease
- Abstract
Asthma is a complex and heterogeneous disease, caused by the interaction between genetic and environmental factors with a predominant allergic background in children. The role of specific genes in asthmatic bronchial reactivity is still not clear, probably because of the many common pathways shared with other allergic disorders. This study is focused on 11 SNPs possibly related to asthma that were previously identified in a GWAS study. The genetic variability of these SNPs has been analysed in a population of 773 Italian healthy controls, and the presence of an association between the polymorphisms and the asthma onset was evaluated performing genotyping analysis on 108 children affected with asthma compared with the controls. Moreover, a pool of 171 patients with only allergic rhinoconjunctivitis has been included in the case-control analysis. The comparison of allele frequencies in asthmatic patients versus healthy controls identified two SNPs-rs1162394 ( p = 0.019) and rs25681 ( p = 0.044)-associated with the asthmatic condition, which were not differentially distributed in the rhinoconjunctivitis group. The rs25681 SNP, together with three other SNPs, also resulted in not being homogenously distributed in the Italian population. The significantly higher frequency of the rs25681 and rs1162394 SNPs (located, respectively, in the C5 and SRGAP3 genes) in the asthmatic population suggests an involvement of these genes in the asthmatic context, playing a role in increasing the inflammatory condition that may influence asthma onset and clinical course.
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- 2022
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18. Dose Coefficients for Internal Dose Assessments for Exposure to Radioactive Fallout.
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Melo DR, Bertelli L, Ibrahim SA, Anspaugh LR, Bouville A, and Simon SL
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- Humans, Infant, Radiation Dosage, Risk Assessment methods, Radiation Monitoring, Radiation Protection, Radioactive Fallout analysis
- Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents values as well as the bases for calculating internal dose coefficients suitable for estimating organ doses from the exposure to radioactive fallout that could result from the detonation of a nuclear fission device. The 34 radionuclides discussed are the same as those given in a priority list of radionuclides for fallout dose assessments presented in a companion overview paper. The radionuclides discussed are those that are believed to account for a preponderance of the organ doses that might be received by intake by persons of all ages (including in utero and via breast feeding for infants) following exposure to radioactive fallout. The presented dose coefficients for ingestion account for age and include modifications for variations in solubility with distance as discussed previously in the literature, and those for inhalation similarly account for age, solubility, and particle sizes that would be relevant at various distances of exposure as discussed in a companion paper on ingestion dose methods. The proposed modifications peculiar to radioactive fallout account for systematic changes in solubility and particle sizes with distance from the site of detonation, termed here as the region of "local fallout" and the region "beyond local fallout." Brief definitions of these regions are provided here with more detailed discussion in a companion paper on estimating deposition of fallout radionuclides. This paper provides the dose coefficients for ingestion and inhalation (for particle sizes of 1 μm, 5 μm, 10 μm, and 20 μm) for the region "local fallout." These dose coefficients for "local fallout" are specific for particles formed in a nuclear explosion that can be large and have radionuclides, particularly the more refractory ones, distributed throughout the volume where the radionuclide has reduced solubility. The dose coefficients for the region "beyond local fallout" are assumed to be the ones published by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) in 1995. Comparisons of the presented dose coefficients are made with values published by the ICRP., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Written work prepared by employees of the Federal Government as part of their official duties is, under the U.S. Copyright Act, a “work of the United States Government” for which copyright protection under Title 17 of the United States Code is not available. As such, copyright does not extend to the contributions of employees of the Federal Government.)
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- 2022
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19. Modelling of long-term retention of high-fired plutonium oxide in the human respiratory tract: importance of scar-tissue compartments.
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Cicatrix, Humans, Lung chemistry, Oxides, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium analysis
- Abstract
The U.S. Transuranium and Uranium Registries whole-body tissue donor Case 0407 had an acute intake of 'high-fired' plutonium oxide resulting from a glove-box fire in a fabrication plant at a nuclear defence facility. The respiratory tract of this individual was dissected into five regions (larynx, bronchi, bronchioles, alveolar-interstitial, and thoracic lymph nodes) and analysed for plutonium content. The activities in certain compartments of the respiratory tract were found to be higher than expected from the default models described in publications of the International Commission on Radiological Protection. Because of the extremely slow rate of dissolution of the material inhaled, the presence of bound fraction is incapable of explaining the higher-than-expected retention. A plausible hypothesis-encapsulation of plutonium in scar tissues-is supported by the review of literature. Therefore, scar-tissue compartments corresponding to the larynx, bronchi, bronchioles and alveolar-interstitial regions were added to the existing human respiratory tract model structure. The transfer rates between these compartments were determined using Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis of data on urinary excretion, lung counts and post-mortem measurements of the liver, skeleton and regional retention in the respiratory tract. Modelling of the data showed that approximately 30% of plutonium activity in the lung was sequestered in scar tissues. The dose consequence of such sequestration is qualitatively compared against that of chemical binding., (© 2020 Society for Radiological Protection. Published on behalf of SRP by IOP Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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20. MODELING THE LONG-TERM RETENTION OF PLUTONIUM IN THE HUMAN RESPIRATORY TRACT USING SCAR-TISSUE COMPARTMENTS.
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Humans, Lung chemistry, United States, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium analysis, Radiation Protection
- Abstract
The respiratory tract tissues of four former nuclear workers with plutonium intakes were radiochemically analyzed post mortem by the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries. Plutonium activities in the upper respiratory tract of these individuals were found to be higher than those predicted using the most recent biokinetic models described in publications of the International Commission on Radiological Protection. Modification of the model parameters, including the bound fraction, was not able to explain the data in one of the four individuals who had inhaled insoluble form of plutonium. Literature review points to the presence of-and a significant retention of-plutonium in the scar tissues of the lungs. Accordingly, an alternate model with scar-tissue compartments corresponding to larynx, bronchi, bronchioles, alveolar-interstitium and thoracic lymph nodes was proposed. The rates of transfer to the scar tissue compartments were determined using Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis of data on urinary excretion, lung counts and post-mortem measurements of liver, skeleton and individual respiratory tract compartments, as available. The posterior models predicted that 20-100%-depending on the solubility of the material inhaled-of the activities retained in the respiratory tract were sequestered in the scar tissues., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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21. Cardiovascular issues in obstructive sleep apnoea in children: A brief review.
- Author
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Gallucci M, Gessaroli M, Bronzetti G, di Palmo E, Bertelli L, Giannetti A, and Ricci G
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Sleep, Sleep Apnea, Obstructive complications
- Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a very common disease with a prevalence that ranges from 1% to 6% in children. It is characterized by intermittent partial or complete occlusion of the upper airway during sleep, leading to recurrent arousals and disturbed sleep architecture, to neurocognitive disorders and alterations in homeostatic gas exchange. Cardiovascular complications may develop in children with OSA through various mechanisms including activation and dysregulation of the sympathetic nervous system, induction of pro-inflammatory and pro-oxidant status and increased risk of systemic hypertension. As the deleterious effects of OSA on the cardio-vascular system may start early in life, in this brief review we focused our attention both on early and late cardiological changes induced by apnoeic events in the paediatric population, by reviewing recent findings in the literature., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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22. Long-term Retention of Plutonium in the Respiratory Tracts of Two Acutely-exposed Workers: Estimation of Bound Fraction.
- Author
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Poudel D, Avtandilashvili M, Bertelli L, Klumpp JA, and Tolmachev SY
- Subjects
- Aerosols, Biological Assay, Humans, Occupational Exposure statistics & numerical data, Plutonium adverse effects, Plutonium analysis, Respiratory System chemistry
- Abstract
Abstract: Inhalation of plutonium is a significant contributor of occupational doses in plutonium production, nuclear fuel reprocessing, and cleanup operations. Accurate assessment of the residence time of plutonium in the lungs is important to properly characterize dose and, consequently, the risk from inhalation of plutonium aerosols. This paper discusses the long-term retention of plutonium in different parts of the respiratory tract of two workers who donated their bodies to the US Transuranium and Uranium Registries. The post-mortem tissue radiochemical analysis results, along with the urine bioassay data, were interpreted using Markov Chain Monte Carlo and the latest biokinetic models presented in the Occupational Intakes of Radionuclides series of ICRP publications. The materials inhaled by both workers were found to have solubility between that of plutonium nitrates and oxides. The long-term solubility was also confirmed by comparison of the activity concentration in the lungs and the thoracic lymph nodes. The data from the two individuals can be explained by assuming a bound fraction (fraction of plutonium deposited in the respiratory tract that becomes bound to lung tissue after dissolution) of 1% and 4%, respectively, without having to significantly alter the particle clearance parameters. Effects of different assumptions about the bound fraction on radiation doses to different target regions was also investigated. For inhalation of soluble materials, an assumption of fb of 1%, compared to the ICRP default of 0.2%, increases the dose to the most sensitive target region of the respiratory tract by 258% and that to the total lung by 116%. Some possible alternate methods of explaining higher-than-expected long-term retention of plutonium in the upper respiratory tract of these individuals-such as physical sequestration of material into the scar tissues and possible uptake by lungs-are also briefly discussed., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Health Physics Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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23. Is there a relationship between joint hypermobility and gastrointestinal disorders in children?
- Author
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Quitadamo P, Thapar N, Nardo GD, Pescarin M, Bertelli L, Tortora C, Borrelli O, Giorgio R, and Staiano A
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Prevalence, Colitis, Ulcerative complications, Colitis, Ulcerative diagnosis, Colitis, Ulcerative epidemiology, Crohn Disease, Gastrointestinal Diseases diagnosis, Gastrointestinal Diseases epidemiology, Gastrointestinal Diseases etiology, Joint Instability diagnosis, Joint Instability epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: The main aim of the study was to assess the association between joint hypermobility (JH) and gastrointestinal (GI) disorders in children., Methods: All children aged 4-17 years attending the clinics of the participating Pediatric Gastroenterology Centres for functional GI disorders (FGIDs) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) were screened for joint laxity. JH diagnosis was inferred using the Beighton Score. JHS diagnosis was inferred based on the Brighton Criteria. Rome III Diagnostic Criteria were used to diagnose possible FGIDs. Ulcerative colitis and Crohn`s disease diagnoses were made according to the Porto Criteria. Age and sex- matched healthy children were enrolled as controls., Results: One-hundred-seventy children with GI disorders (70 with FGIDs, 50 with Crohn`s disease, and 50 with ulcerative colitis) and 100 healthy controls were enrolled in the study. JH was reported in 7/70 (10%) children with FGIDs (p=0.26 compared to controls), 4/50 (8%) children with Crohn`s disease (p=0.21 compared to controls) and 15/50 (30%) children with ulcerative colitis (p=0.09 compared to controls; p=0.01 compared to FGIDs; p=0.01 compared to Crohn`s)., Conclusions: JH is more prevalent in patients suffering from ulcerative colitis compared to the healthy general population, yet the difference did not reach statistical significance. Likely, a proportion of children with ulcerative colitis and JH may show connective tissue abnormalities. However, whether JH can be considered a possible feature of pediatric GI disorders deserves further investigation.
- Published
- 2021
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24. Response to a Skin Puncture Contaminated with 238Pu at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
- Author
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Klumpp J, Bertelli L, Dumit S, Gadd M, Poudel D, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation, Humans, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Plutonium adverse effects, Radiation Injuries etiology, Radiation Injuries urine, Radiation Monitoring methods, Skin radiation effects, Biological Assay methods, Laboratories statistics & numerical data, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium urine, Punctures methods, Radiation Injuries diagnosis, Skin pathology
- Abstract
The three principal pathways for intakes of plutonium are ingestion, inhalation, and contaminated wounds. In August 2018, a glovebox worker at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) sustained a puncture from a thread of a braided steel cable contaminated with Pu. The puncture produced no pain, no blood, and little or no visible mark. As a result, the potential for a contaminated wound was not immediately recognized, and a wound count was not conducted until elevated urine bioassay results were received 12 d after the incident. This paper discusses the circumstances of the incident, along with the medical response and dose assessment, and a discussion of the risks and benefits of the medical interventions.
- Published
- 2020
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25. Development of a New Chelation Model: Bioassay Data Interpretation and Dose Assessment after Plutonium Intake via Wound and Treatment with DTPA.
- Author
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Dumit S, Miller G, Klumpp JA, Poudel D, Bertelli L, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Bone and Bones metabolism, Chelation Therapy methods, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Feces chemistry, Humans, Liver metabolism, Male, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Plutonium adverse effects, Radiation Dosage, Radiation Injuries diagnosis, Radiation Injuries urine, Urinalysis, Wounds, Penetrating etiology, Biological Assay methods, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Occupational Exposure analysis, Pentetic Acid therapeutic use, Plutonium analysis, Radiation Injuries prevention & control, Wounds, Penetrating drug therapy
- Abstract
The administration of chelation therapy to treat significant intakes of actinides, such as plutonium, affects the actinide's normal biokinetics. In particular, it enhances the actinide's rate of excretion, such that the standard biokinetic models cannot be applied directly to the chelation-affected bioassay data in order to estimate the intake and assess the radiation dose. The present study proposes a new chelation model that can be applied to the chelation-affected bioassay data after plutonium intake via wound and treatment with DTPA. In the proposed model, chelation is assumed to occur in the blood, liver, and parts of the skeleton. Ten datasets, consisting of measurements of C-DTPA, Pu, and Pu involving humans given radiolabeled DTPA and humans occupationally exposed to plutonium via wound and treated with chelation therapy, were used for model development. The combined dataset consisted of daily and cumulative excretion (urine and feces), wound counts, measurements of excised tissue, blood, and post-mortem tissue analyses of liver and skeleton. The combined data were simultaneously fit using the chelation model linked with a plutonium systemic model, which was linked to an ad hoc wound model. The proposed chelation model was used for dose assessment of the wound cases used in this study.
- Published
- 2020
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26. Dose Assessment Following a 238Pu-contaminated Wound Case with Chelation and Excision.
- Author
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Poudel D, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, Dumit S, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Biological Assay, Humans, Models, Biological, Plutonium adverse effects, Radiation Injuries diagnosis, Radiation Injuries urine, Wounds, Penetrating etiology, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Chelation Therapy methods, Plutonium urine, Radiation Injuries prevention & control, Wounds, Penetrating drug therapy, Wounds, Penetrating surgery
- Abstract
The urinary excretion and wound retention data collected after a Pu-contaminated wound were analyzed using Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) to obtain the posterior distribution of the intakes and doses. An empirical approach was used to model the effects of medical treatments (chelation and excision) on the reduction of doses. It was calculated that DTPA enhanced the urinary excretion, on average, by a factor of 17. The empirical analysis also allowed calculation of the efficacies of the medical treatments-excision and chelation averted approximately 76% and 5.5%, respectively, of the doses that would have been if there were no medical treatment. All bioassay data are provided in the appendix for independent analysis and to facilitate the compartmental modeling approaches being developed by the health physics community.
- Published
- 2020
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27. When the Cough Does Not Improve: A Review on Protracted Bacterial Bronchitis in Children.
- Author
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Gallucci M, Pedretti M, Giannetti A, di Palmo E, Bertelli L, Pession A, and Ricci G
- Abstract
Chronic cough is defined as a daily cough that persists longer than 4 weeks. Protracted bacterial bronchitis (PBB) is a common cause of chronic wet cough in preschool children with no symptoms or signs of other specific causes, and resolution usually follows a 2-week course of an appropriate oral antibiotic. The diagnosis is mainly clinical; generally, no instrumental examinations are necessary. The most common bacteria found in the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) of subjects with PBB include Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae , and Moraxella catarrhalis . Nowadays, there is no certain evidence of the role of viruses in PBB pathogenesis even though different types of viruses have been detected in BAL from children with PBB. Airway malacia is commonly found in children with PBB; conversely, there is no correlation with any type of immunodeficiency. Amoxicillin-clavulanate acid is the most commonly used antibiotic, as first-line, prolonged therapy (longer than 2 weeks) is sometimes required to cough resolution. When the wet cough does not improve despite prolonged antibiotic treatment, an underlying disease should be considered. Moreover, there are several hypotheses of a link between PBB and bronchiectasis, as recent evidences show that recurrent PBB (>3 episodes/years) and the presence of H. influenzae infection in the lower airways seem to be significant risk factors to develop bronchiectasis. This underlines the importance of a close follow-up among children with PBB and the need to consider chest computerized tomography (CT) in patients with risk factors for bronchiectasis. In this brief review, we summarize the main clinical and pathogenetic findings of PBB, a disease that may be related to a relevant morbidity and decreased quality of life during the pediatric age., (Copyright © 2020 Gallucci, Pedretti, Giannetti, di Palmo, Bertelli, Pession and Ricci.)
- Published
- 2020
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28. Chelation Modeling: The Use of Ad Hoc Models and Approaches to Overcome a Dose Assessment Challenge.
- Author
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Dumit S, Bertelli L, Klumpp JA, Poudel D, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Americium chemistry, Americium pharmacokinetics, Animals, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Humans, Models, Animal, Models, Biological, Plutonium chemistry, Plutonium pharmacokinetics, Chelation Therapy methods, Radiation Dosage, Radiation Injuries drug therapy
- Abstract
Chelating agents are administered to treat significant intakes of radioactive elements such as plutonium, americium, and curium. These drugs may be used as a medical countermeasure after radiological accidents and terrorist acts. The administration of a chelating agent, such as Ca-DTPA or Zn-DTPA, affects the actinide's normal biokinetics. It enhances the actinide's rate of excretion, posing a dose assessment challenge. Thus, the standard biokinetic models cannot be directly applied to the chelation-affected bioassay data in order to assess the radiation dose. The present study reviews the scientific literature, from the early 1970s until the present, on the different studies that focused on developing new chelation models and/or modeling of bioassay data affected by chelation treatment. Although scientific progress has been achieved, there is currently no consensus chelation model available, even after almost 50 y of research. This review acknowledges the efforts made by different research groups, highlighting the different methodology used in some of these studies. Finally, this study puts into perspective where we were, where we are, and where we are heading in regards to chelation modeling.
- Published
- 2020
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29. Asthma and Food Allergy: Which Risks?
- Author
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di Palmo E, Gallucci M, Cipriani F, Bertelli L, Giannetti A, and Ricci G
- Subjects
- Asthma immunology, Asthma prevention & control, Dermatitis, Atopic immunology, Food Hypersensitivity diagnosis, Food Hypersensitivity immunology, Food Hypersensitivity prevention & control, Humans, Phenotype, Risk Factors, Asthma complications, Dermatitis, Atopic complications, Food Hypersensitivity complications
- Abstract
Over the past few decades, an increase in the prevalence of asthma and food allergy has been observed in the pediatric population. In infants, food sensitization, particularly to egg, has increased the risk of developing allergic asthma. This is even more likely if sensitization to food allergens occurs early within the first few years of life. It is indeed known that both diseases may be present simultaneously in the pediatric population, but coexistence may negatively influence the severity of both conditions by increasing the risk of life-threatening asthmatic episodes as well as food-related anaphylaxis. Therefore, an accurate clinical and phenotype characterization of this high-risk group of children with both asthma and food allergy and a more aggressive management might lead to reducing related morbidity and mortality. The aim of this review is to provide an updated overview on the close link between food allergy and asthma and their negative mutual influence.
- Published
- 2019
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30. Airway Clearance Management with Vaküm Technology in Subjects with Ineffective Cough: A Pilot Study on the Efficacy, Acceptability Evaluation, and Perception in Children with Cerebral Palsy.
- Author
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Bertelli L, Bardasi G, Cazzato S, Di Palmo E, Gallucci M, Ricci G, and Pession A
- Abstract
Background: In the medical complexity of a children with cerebral palsy, impaired airway clearance represents a major problem, leading to significative respiratory morbidity and mortality. Its management is difficult because of limited cooperation and poor tolerance to invasive treatments. Free Aspire
® (FA) is a device designed to remove bronchial secretions noninvasively, without generating cough. Methods: The aim of our pilot prospective study is to assess the efficacy and acceptability of FA in removing airway obstruction in subjects with cerebral palsy and ineffective cough. We enrolled 11 subjects. At enrollment and after 3, 6, and 12 months, we collected data regarding health care resources use for respiratory exacerbations, perceived efficacy, and acceptability of treatment. Results: We observed a reduction in emergency room (ER) accesses, home pharmacological treatment, hospitalizations number, and hospital stay length. In particular after 12 months we observed a reduction of 74% in ER accesses and home pharmacological treatment, 38% in hospitalizations number, and 17% in hospital stay length for respiratory exacerbations. The 100% of caregivers considered the treatment effective and simple to use and noted an improvement in subjects' general condition. They also reported good treatment tolerance of subjects, with an overall good compliance. Conclusion: The study demonstrates that FA is an effective device for the removal of bronchial secretions, with a positive caregivers' perception, that favored a good long-term compliance., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.- Published
- 2019
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31. Biokinetics of 238 Pu oxides: inferences from bioassay data.
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Poudel D, Bertelli L, Klumpp JA, Dumit S, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Biological Assay, Humans, Urinalysis, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
The bioassay data collected from several workers involved in
238 Pu inhalation incidents have been analysed using the most recent biokinetic models described in the Occupational Intakes of Radionuclides (OIR) series of publications. Although all exposures were thought to be to238 Pu oxides, the observed urinary excretion patterns differed in different inhalation incidents. The urinary excretion from individuals involved in one of the incidents increased steadily with time, peaking around two to three years before decreasing. This pattern is described in Part 4 of the OIR series using the '238 PuO2 , ceramic' model. This non-monotonic behaviour, explained as being due to fragmentation and dissolution, was not specific to the incident, but observed in other incidents. The urinary excretion data collected from individuals involved in another incident showed dissolution behaviour between Type M and Type S. Finally, the bioassay data from yet another incident showed a pattern that appears to represent behaviour more insoluble than Type S, which is possibly a result of self-heating due to the decay heat from238 Pu. The urinary excretion patterns and corresponding dose coefficients have been calculated and compared.- Published
- 2019
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32. Bayesian Analysis of Plutonium Bioassay Data at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
- Author
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Poudel D, Miller G, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Waters TL
- Abstract
The main concern of operational internal dosimetry is to detect intakes and estimate doses to the worker from a series of bioassay measurements. Although several methods are available, the inverse problem of internal dosimetry-i.e., determination of time, amount, and types of intake given a set of bioassay data-is well suited to a Bayesian approach. This paper summarizes the Bayesian methodology used at Los Alamos National Laboratory to detect intakes and estimate doses from plutonium bioassay measurements. Some advantages and disadvantages of the method are also discussed. The successful application of Bayesian methods for several years at Los Alamos National Laboratory, which monitors thousands of workers annually for plutonium, indicates that the methods can be extended to other facilities.
- Published
- 2018
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33. Mitigating the Psychological Harm from Actinide Intakes.
- Author
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Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, Hoffman J, Poudel D, and Waters T
- Subjects
- Humans, Radiation Dosage, Radiation Protection, Risk, Actinoid Series Elements metabolism, Actinoid Series Elements toxicity, Occupational Exposure, Stress, Psychological etiology, Stress, Psychological prevention & control
- Abstract
Investigations into possible actinide intakes, as well as the intakes themselves, may result in significant psychological harm that should be mitigated by the internal dosimetrist. Many aspects of this psychological impact are unique to actinide intakes and have not been discussed in the literature. This paper discusses some of these unique considerations and describes how the Internal Dosimetry Team at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) has, with input and guidance from LANL psychologists, tried to address them. We feel that much of the psychological harm can be mitigated by educating employees specifically about internal dosimetry and internal doses, and by improving communication with radiation workers.
- Published
- 2018
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34. Gamma and Beta Absorbed Dose Conversion Coefficients in the Range from 10 keV to 10 MeV for Accidental Exposures From Point Sources Placed in Clothing in Proximity to the Body.
- Author
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Owens A, Bertelli L, and Brandl A
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Radiation Dosage, Radiometry, Retrospective Studies, Beta Particles adverse effects, Gamma Rays adverse effects, Phantoms, Imaging, Protective Clothing standards, Radiation Exposure analysis, Radiation Protection methods, Whole-Body Irradiation adverse effects
- Abstract
Retrospective dose assessment following acute radiation exposures during radiological incidents can be difficult and inaccurate due to the large uncertainties associated with dose estimation. However, rapid and accurate dose assessment is critical following an incident so that appropriate treatment can be provided to the patient as early as possible. Incident dose assessment relies heavily on biological dosimetry with corresponding large uncertainties for inhomogeneous exposures, resulting from the estimates of whole-body doses, while the assessment of absorbed doses to individual tissues might actually be more appropriate for acute radiation exposures. Incident exposure scenarios for orphan sources placed in a breast or back pants pocket were modeled using the International Commission on Radiological Protection computational reference male and female and the Monte Carlo N-particle code MCNP6 to compute absorbed dose conversion coefficients for organs of interest for monoenergetic photon and beta sources. The absorbed dose conversion coefficients are intended for use in conjunction with source information to rapidly estimate absorbed doses to organs of interest from radiological sources in one of the two pocket geometries. Absorbed dose conversion coefficients also have been calculated specifically for Co, Cs, and Ir. Those absorbed dose conversion coefficients were applied to data from a radiological incident in Yanango, Peru, for comparison with published dose assessments; the results agree within 20%. The conversion coefficients are expected to provide an accurate tool for assessing doses for the modeled geometries, provided uncertainties due to the exact source-body geometry and exposure time are considered.
- Published
- 2018
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35. Some Considerations for Chelation Treatment and Surgical Excision Following Incorporation of Plutonium in Wounds.
- Author
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Poudel D, Bertelli L, Klumpp JA, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Humans, Models, Biological, Wounds and Injuries etiology, Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Plutonium adverse effects, Radiation Injuries prevention & control, Wounds and Injuries drug therapy, Wounds and Injuries surgery
- Abstract
After a plutonium-contaminated wound, the role of an internal dosimetrist is to inform the patient and the physician of the dosimetric considerations. The doses averted due to medical treatments (excision or chelation) are higher if the treatments are administered early; therefore, the internal dosimetrist needs to rely on limited information on wound counts and process knowledge for advising the physician. Several wound cases in the literature were reviewed to obtain estimates of the efficacies of surgical excision and chelation treatment after plutonium-contaminated wounds. The dose coefficients calculated by coupling the NCRP 156 wound model with the systemic model were used to derive the decision guidelines that may indicate medical treatment based on 1) the concept of saved doses proposed by the NCRP 156 wound model, 2) the limits recommended by the CEC/DOE guidebook, and 3) the Clinical Decision Guidelines proposed in NCRP Report No. 161. These guidelines by themselves, however, are of limited use for several reasons, including 1) large uncertainties associated with wound measurements, 2) exposure to forms of radionuclides that cannot be assigned to a single category in the NCRP 156 framework, 3) inability of the NCRP 156 model to explain some of the wound cases in the literature, 4) neglect of the local doses to the wound site and the pathophysiological response of the tissue, 5) poorly understood relationship between effective doses and risks of late health effects, and 6) disregard of the psychological aspects of radionuclide intake.
- Published
- 2018
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36. A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF COMPARTMENTAL MODELING FOR INTAKE OF PLUTONIUM VIA WOUNDS.
- Author
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Poudel D, Klumpp JA, Waters TL, Bertelli L, and Guilmette RA
- Subjects
- Accidents, Occupational, Biological Assay, Humans, Models, Biological, Occupational Exposure analysis, Radioactive Hazard Release, Plutonium pharmacokinetics, Plutonium poisoning, Radiation Injuries blood, Wounds, Penetrating blood
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to present several approaches that have been used to model the behavior of radioactive materials (specifically Pu) in contaminated wounds. We also review some attempts by the health physics community to validate and revise the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP) 156 biokinetic model for wounds, and present some general recommendations based on the review. Modeling of intake via the wound pathway is complicated because of a large array of wound characteristics (e.g. solubility and chemistry of the material, type and depth of the tissue injury, anatomical location of injury). Moreover, because a majority of the documented wound cases in humans are medically treated (excised or treated with chelation), the data to develop biokinetic models for unperturbed wound exposures are limited. Since the NCRP wound model was largely developed from animal data, it is important to continue to validate and improve the model using human data whenever plausible., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. ANALYSIS OF URINARY EXCRETION DATA FROM THREE PLUTONIUM-CONTAMINATED WOUNDS AT LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY.
- Author
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Poudel D, Klumpp JA, Waters TL, and Bertelli L
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Biological Assay methods, Occupational Exposure analysis, Plutonium analysis, Plutonium urine, Radiation Injuries urine
- Abstract
The National Council on Radiation Protection (NCRP)-156 Report proposes seven different biokinetic models for wound cases depending on the physicochemistry of the contaminant. Because the models were heavily based on experimental animal data, the authors of the report encouraged application and validation of the models using bioassay data from actual human exposures. Each of the wound models was applied to three plutonium-contaminated wounds, and the models resulted in a good agreement to only one of the cases. We then applied a simpler biokinetic model structure to the bioassay data and showed that fitting the transfer rates from this model structure yielded better agreement with the data than does the best-fitting NCRP-156 model. Because the biokinetics of radioactive material in each wound is different, it is impractical to propose a discrete set of model parameters to describe the biokinetics of radionuclides in all wounds, and thus each wound should be treated empirically., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A pediatric disease to keep in mind: diagnostic tools and management of bronchiectasis in pediatric age.
- Author
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Gallucci M, di Palmo E, Bertelli L, Camela F, Ricci G, and Pession A
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Bronchiectasis diagnostic imaging, Child, Child, Preschool, Chronic Disease, Cough diagnostic imaging, Cough epidemiology, Disease Management, Female, Global Health, Humans, Infant, Male, Pneumonia diagnostic imaging, Pneumonia epidemiology, Prognosis, Risk Assessment, Bronchiectasis complications, Cough etiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Pneumonia etiology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Bronchiectasis in pediatric age is a heterogeneous disease associated with significant morbidity.The most common medical conditions leading to bronchial damage are previous pneumonia and recurrent lower airway infections followed by underlying diseases such as immune-deficiencies, congenital airway defects, recurrent aspirations and mucociliary clearance disorders.The most frequent symptom is chronic wet cough. The introduction of high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) has improved the time of diagnosis allowing earlier treatment.However, the term "bronchiectasis" in pediatric age should be used with caution, since some lesions highlighted with HRCT may improve or regress. The use of chest magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a radiation-free technique for the assessment and follow-up of lung abnormalities in non-Cystic Fibrosis chronic lung disease is promising.Non-Cystic Fibrosis Bronchiectasis management needs a multi-disciplinary team. Antibiotics and airway clearance techniques (ACT) represent the pillars of treatment even though guidelines in children are lacking. The Azithromycin thanks to its antinflammatory and direct antimicrobial effect could be a new strategy to prevent exacerbations.
- Published
- 2017
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39. Free-Aspire: A new device for the management of airways clearance in patient with ineffective cough.
- Author
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Bertelli L, Nardo GD, Cazzato S, Ricci G, and Pession A
- Abstract
A 3-year-old girl with Spinal Muscular Atrophy type I presented with a right pneumonia. On physical examination pulmonary auscultation revealed an asymmetry of breath sounds between the 2 hemithoraces, owing to decreased breath sounds in the right hemithorax. Blood tests were normal. The initial working diagnosis was a suspected area of mucus accumulation. A treatment with Free Aspire was started. Within a few days, the girl was discharged with a normal physical examination and X-ray study result. Spinal Muscular Atrophy is a rare neuromuscular disorder characterized by loss of motor neurons and progressive muscle wasting. Cough in these patients result ineffective. Free-Aspire is an electromedical machine for removing bronchoalveolar secretions. The case show that Free Aspire in patients with ineffective cough and impaired removal of secretions is a safe and effective device for the removal of bronchial secretions and could be an another help in the management of airway clearance., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: the authors declare no potential conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2017
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40. Considerations for Bioassay Monitoring of Mixtures of Radionuclides.
- Author
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Klumpp J, Waters T, and Bertelli L
- Subjects
- Humans, Radiation Dosimeters, Radiation Exposure analysis, Biological Assay methods, Radiation Monitoring methods, Radioisotopes analysis
- Abstract
Complying with regulations for bioassay monitoring of radionuclide intakes is significantly more complex for mixtures than it is for pure radionuclides. Different constituents will naturally have different dose coefficients, be detectable at significantly different levels, and may require very different amounts of effort to bioassay. The ability to use certain constituents as surrogates for others will depend on how well characterized the mixture is, as well as whether the employee is also working with other radionuclides. This is further compounded by the fact that the composition of a mixture (or even of a pure radionuclide) is likely to change over time. Internal dosimetrists must decide how best to monitor employees who work with radionuclide mixtures. In particular, they must decide which constituents should be monitored routinely, which constituents only need to be monitored in the case of an intake, and how to estimate doses based on intakes of monitored and unmonitored constituents.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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41. Application of NCRP 156 Wound Models for the Analysis of Bioassay Data from Plutonium Wound Cases.
- Author
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Poudel D, Guilmette RA, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Kinetics, Biological Assay, Models, Biological, Plutonium adverse effects, Radiation Injuries etiology
- Abstract
The NCRP 156 wound model was heavily based on data from animal experiments. The authors of the report acknowledged this limitation and encouraged validation of the models using data from human wound exposures. The objective of this paper was to apply the NCRP 156 wound models to the bioassay data from four plutonium-contaminated wound cases reported in the literature. Because a wide variety of forms of plutonium can be expected at a nuclear facility, a combination of the wound models-rather than a single model-was used to successfully explain both the urinary excretion data and wound retention data in three cases. The data for the fourth case could not be explained by any combination of the default wound models. While this may possibly be attributed to the existence of a category of plutonium whose solubility and chemistry are different than those described by the NCRP 156 default categories, the differences may also be the result of differences in systemic biokinetics. The concept of using a combination of biokinetic models may be extended to inhalation exposures as well, where more than one form of radionuclide-particles of different solubility or different sizes-may exist in a workplace.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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42. KDEP: A Resource for Calculating Particle Deposition in the Respiratory Tract.
- Author
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Klumpp J and Bertelli L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aerosols chemistry, Aerosols pharmacokinetics, Air Pollutants, Radioactive chemistry, Algorithms, Child, Computer Simulation, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Models, Statistical, Occupational Exposure analysis, Particle Size, Respiratory System chemistry, Software, Absorption, Radiation physiology, Air Pollutants, Radioactive pharmacokinetics, Inhalation physiology, Models, Biological, Radiation Exposure analysis, Respiratory System metabolism, Respiratory Tract Absorption physiology
- Abstract
This paper presents KDEP, an open-source implementation of the ICRP lung deposition model developed by the authors. KDEP, which is freely available to the public, can be used to calculate lung deposition values under a variety of different conditions using the ICRP methodology. The paper describes how KDEP implements this model and discusses some key points of the implementation. The published lung deposition values for intakes by workers were reproduced, and new deposition values were calculated for intakes by members of the public. KDEP can be obtained for free at github.com or by emailing the authors directly.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Plasma Retention and Systemic Kinetics of 90Sr Intramuscularly Injected in Female Nonhuman Primates.
- Author
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Poudel D, Klumpp JA, Bertelli L, Guilmette RA, and Brey RR
- Subjects
- Animals, Computer Simulation, Female, Humans, Injections, Intramuscular, Kinetics, Macaca mulatta, Metabolic Clearance Rate, Organ Specificity physiology, Strontium Radioisotopes administration & dosage, Tissue Distribution, Absorption, Radiation physiology, Biological Assay methods, Models, Biological, Strontium Radioisotopes blood, Strontium Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Thirteen female Rhesus macaques were intramuscularly injected with Sr(NO3)2 diluted in sodium citrate solution. The biokinetic data from these animals were compared against the predictions of the NCRP 156 wound models combined with the ICRP systemic models. It was observed that the activities measured in plasma of these nonhuman primates (NHPs) were consistently lower than those predicted by the default human biokinetic models. The urinary excretion from the NHPs at times immediately after injection was much greater than that in humans. The fecal excretion rates were found to be in relatively better agreement with humans. Similarly, the activities retained in the skeleton of the NHPs were lower than those in humans. These differences were attributed to the higher calcium diet of the NHPs (0.03 to 0.12 g d kg body weight) compared to that of humans. These observations were consistent with the early animal and human studies that showed the effect of calcium on strontium metabolism, specifically urinary excretion. Strontium is preferentially filtered at a much higher rate in kidneys than calcium because it is less completely bound to protein than is calcium. These differences, along with large inter-animal variability, should be considered when estimating the behavior of strontium in humans from the metabolic data in animals or vice versa.
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
44. Association of autoimmune thyroiditis and celiac disease with Juvenile Polyposis due to 10q23.1q23.31 deletion: Potential role of PI3K/Akt pathway dysregulation.
- Author
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Guaraldi F, Di Nardo G, Tarani L, Bertelli L, Susca FC, Bagnulo R, and Resta N
- Subjects
- Celiac Disease diagnosis, Child, Female, Humans, Intestinal Polyposis diagnosis, Intestinal Polyposis genetics, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary diagnosis, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases genetics, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt metabolism, Signal Transduction, Thyroiditis, Autoimmune diagnosis, Celiac Disease genetics, Chromosome Deletion, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 10 genetics, Intestinal Polyposis congenital, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary genetics, Thyroiditis, Autoimmune genetics
- Abstract
Juvenile Polyposis (JP) is a rare hereditary condition characterized by diffuse hamartomatous gastrointestinal polyposis, associated with a significantly increased risk of neoplastic transformation. Most of the cases are caused by SMAD and BMPR1A mutations, while 10q23 microdeletions, encompassing both PTEN and BMPR1A oncogenes, are extremely rare, typically associated with more aggressive JP, and extraintestinal features overlapping with PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome. We present the first case of a young female with multiple autoimmune disorders (i.e. thyroiditis and celiac disease), associated with JP, cardiac defects and epilepsy, who carries a de novo heterozygous 10q23.1q23.31 deletion. The dysregulation of the PI3K/Akt pathway is advanced as the putative mechanism connecting autoimmune, malformative and neoplastic disorders. A literature review of clinical manifestation, gene alterations and the treatment of patients with 10q23 deletion is also provided, highlighting the importance of comprehensive, long-term, multi-disciplinary management, aimed at early identification and treatment of both intestinal and extraintestinal disorders., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Interpretation of Urinary Excretion Data From Plutonium Wound Cases Treated With DTPA: Application of Different Models and Approaches.
- Author
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Poudel D, Bertelli L, Klumpp JA, and Waters TL
- Subjects
- Chelation Therapy methods, Computer Simulation, Humans, Male, Metabolic Clearance Rate, Plutonium pharmacokinetics, Radiation Dosage, Radiation Monitoring methods, Treatment Outcome, Wounds, Penetrating metabolism, Wounds, Penetrating therapy, Models, Biological, Pentetic Acid therapeutic use, Plutonium urine, Radiation Injuries prevention & control, Radiation Injuries urine, Urination
- Abstract
After a chelation treatment, assessment of intake and doses is the primary concern of an internal dosimetrist. Using the urinary excretion data from two actual wound cases encountered at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), this paper discusses several methods that can be used to interpret intakes from the urinary data collected after one or multiple chelation treatments. One of the methods uses only the data assumed to be unaffected by chelation (data collected beyond 100 d after the last treatment). This method, used by many facilities for official dose records, was implemented by employing maximum likelihood analysis and Bayesian analysis methods. The impacts of an improper assumption about the physicochemical behavior of a radioactive material and the importance of the use of a facility-specific biokinetic model when available have also been demonstrated. Another method analyzed both the affected and unaffected urinary data using an empirical urinary excretion model. This method, although case-specific, was useful in determining the actual intakes and the doses averted or the reduction in body burdens due to chelation treatments. This approach was important in determining the enhancement factors, the behavior of the chelate, and other observations that may be pertinent to several DTPA compartmental modeling approaches being conducted by the health physics community.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Evaluation of Reference Urinary Excretion Concentrations of Selected Radionuclides Corresponding to Clinical Decision Guides for Application in Radiological and in Nuclear Emergencies.
- Author
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Dos Reis AA, Bertelli L, and Sousa WO
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Plutonium, Strontium Radioisotopes, Emergencies, Radiation Protection, Radioisotopes
- Abstract
Radiological or nuclear emergency situations could lead to incorporation of radionuclides by the population. Intakes of radionuclides can be evaluated through measurements of radionuclides present in organs and tissues, or in urinary and/or fecal excretion. In an emergency situation involving a large number of people, the decision to provide medical treatment to an individual will likely be based on a single measurement. For that purpose, the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP) has presented the Clinical Decision Guide (CDG) quantity, which corresponds to an intake amount of a radionuclide by an individual for which treatment is recommended. However, the NCRP recommends using one-fifth of the CDG for pregnant women and children which could result in an effective or equivalent dose in excess of the dose constraint. Tables of reference urinary excretion concentrations which are associated with an intake of one CDG for inhalation and ingestion intake scenarios of several forms of 60Co, 90Sr, 137Cs, 192Ir, 238Pu, 239Pu and 241Am have been calculated and are presented for the following categories of members of the public: 3 months old, 1 y, 5 y, 10 y, 15 y, adult and pregnant woman., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Behavior of Americium in Simulated Wounds in Nonhuman Primates.
- Author
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Poudel D, Guilmette RA, Bertelli L, Klumpp JA, and Brey RR
- Subjects
- Americium administration & dosage, Americium urine, Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Injections, Intramuscular veterinary, Injections, Intravenous veterinary, Likelihood Functions, Macaca, Macaca fascicularis, Male, Americium pharmacokinetics, Wounds and Injuries metabolism
- Abstract
An americium solution injected intramuscularly into several nonhuman primates (NHPs) was found to behave differently than predicted by the wound models described in the NCRP Report 156. This was because the injection was made along with a citrate solution, which is known to be more soluble than chlorides, oxides, or nitrates on which the NCRP Report was based. A multi-exponential wound model specific to the injected americium solution was developed based on the retention in the intramuscular sites. The model was coupled with the americium systemic model to interpret the urinary excretion data and assess the intake, and it was determined that the models were adequate to predict early urinary excretion in most cases but unable to predict late urinary excretion. This was attributed to the differences in the systemic handling of americium between humans and nonhuman primates. Information on the type of wounds, solubility, particle size, mass, chemical form, etc., should always be considered when performing wound dosimetry.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Interpretation of Nasal Swab Measurements Following Suspected Releases of Actinide Aerosols.
- Author
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Klumpp J, Bertelli L, and Waters T
- Subjects
- Humans, Radiation Dosage, Radiation Exposure analysis, Radioactive Hazard Release, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Aerosols analysis, Air Pollutants, Radioactive analysis, Americium analysis, Biological Assay methods, Nasal Mucosa chemistry, Plutonium analysis, Radiation Monitoring methods
- Abstract
For radionuclides such as plutonium and americium, detection of removable activity in the nose (i.e., nasal swab measurements) are frequently used to determine whether follow-up bioassay measurements are warranted following a potential intake. For this paper, the authors analyzed 429 nasal swab measurements taken following incidents or suspicious circumstances (such as an air monitor alarming) at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) for which the dose was later evaluated using in vitro bioassay. Nasal swab measurements were found to be very poor predictors of dose and should not be used as such in the field. However, nasal swab measurements can be indicative of whether a reliably detectable committed effective dose (CED) occurred. About 14% of nasal swab measurements between 1.25 and 16.7 Bq corresponded to CEDs greater than 1 mSv, so in general, positive nasal swabs always indicate that follow-up bioassay should be performed (positive nasal swabs less than 1.25 Bq are considered separately). This probability increased significantly for nasal swabs greater than 16.7 Bq. Only about 3% of nasal swabs with no detectable activity (NDA) corresponded to reliably detectable CEDs. A nasal swab with NDA is therefore necessary, but not sufficient, to negate the need for a follow-up bioassay if it was collected following other workplace indicators of a potential intake.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. SPECIFIC BLOOD ABSORPTION PARAMETERS FOR 239PUO2 AND 238PUO2 NANOPARTICLES AND IMPACTS ON BIOASSAY INTERPRETATION.
- Author
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Cash LJ, Hoover MD, Guilmette RA, Breysse PN, and Bertelli L
- Subjects
- Biological Assay, Humans, Models, Biological, Nanoparticles, Plutonium, Radiation Dosage
- Abstract
Specific absorption parameters for 239PuO2 and 238PuO2 have been determined based on available biokinetic data from studies in rodents, and the impacts of these parameters on bioassay interpretation and dosimetry after inhalation of nanoPuO2 materials have been evaluated. Calculations of activities after an acute intake of nanoparticles of 239PuO2 and 238PuO2 are compared with the corresponding calculations using standard default absorption parameters using the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) 66 respiratory tract model. Committed effective doses are also evaluated and compared. In this case, it was found that interpretation of bioassay measurements with the assumption that the biokinetic behaviour of PuO2 nanoparticles is the same as that of micrometre-sized particles can result in an overprediction of the committed effective dose by two orders of magnitude. Although in this case the use of the default assumptions (5 µm AMAD, Type S) for assessing dose following inhalation exposure to airborne PuO2 nanoparticles appears to be conservative, the evaluation of situations involving PuO2 nanoparticles that may have different particle size and solubility properties should prudently follow the ICRP recommendation to obtain and use additional, material-specific information whenever possible., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A New Formulation of an Old Drug: A Potential New Therapy in the Management of Oral cGvHD.
- Author
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Bertelli L, Di Nardo G, Zama D, Bardasi G, Morello W, Masetti R, Belotti T, Forchielli ML, Prete A, and Pession A
- Subjects
- Administration, Topical, Budesonide pharmacokinetics, Child, Chronic Disease, Female, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation adverse effects, Humans, Mouth Diseases, Mouth Mucosa pathology, Oral Ulcer, Budesonide administration & dosage, Graft vs Host Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Oral chronic graft versus host disease (cGVHD) is often refractory to systemic therapies. Additional topical treatment is commonly required. The potency of the agent, the vehicle and formulation in which it is delivered are all critical factors in determining the effectiveness of topical therapies. High potency of budesonide, combined with its very low bioavailability when absorbed through mucosal surfaces, increased the potential role in topical application for oral cGVHD. Viscous formulation increases mucosal contact time resulting in a greater decrease in mucosal inflammation. This short communication suggests that oral viscous budesonide should be considered as a potential new therapy in the management of oral cGVHD.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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