6 results on '"Comuzzi, M."'
Search Results
2. Lectin histochemical studies on <em>Sphaerospora</em> sp. (Myxosporea) from Italian brown trout, <em>Salmo trutta</em> L.
- Author
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de Mateo, M. Marin, Bovo, G., Comuzzi, M., and Adams, A.
- Subjects
TROUT ,FISH parasites ,MYXOSPOREA ,LECTINS ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY ,MICROBIOLOGICAL assay - Abstract
A Sphaerospora sp. (Myxosporea) infection (presumably S. truttae) was identified on a trout farm in northeastern Italy. Parasites were detected in kidneys from infected brown trout, Salmo trutta L., over a 2-year period. Extrasporogonic, sporogonic stages and mature spores were simultaneously detected in the same fish. Traditional diagnostic methods for Sphaerospora spp. rely on the detection of the myxosporean developmental stages in Giemsa-stained kidney smears or haematoxylin-eosin stained tissue sections. A histochemical method was employed where 10 biotinylated lectins (Con-A, DBA, SBA, GS4, PHAP, LEA, PWM, RCA
1 , WGA and UEA-I) and the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC) were used on Sphaerospora-infected brown trout renal tissues and kidney imprints. Five monoclonal antibodies against PKX (Mab12, MabA3, MabC5, MabD4 and MabB4) were also tested. A lectin glycoconjugate binding pattern for Sphaerospora spp. is presented. This staining method shows that SBA lectin (Glycine max agglutinin) is a useful tool for the detection of the Sphaerospora spp. Only MabB4 bound some of the most mature sporogonic stages. In contrast Mabs12, A3, C5 and D4, and GS-I lectin (Griffonia simplicifolia agglutinin) did not stain any of the Sphaerospora spp. stages, but did bind very specifically to the sporogonic and extrasporogonic stages of PKX, the causative agent of proliferative kidney disease (PKD). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Pediatric ultrasound-guided dorsal penile nerve block and sedation in spontaneous breathing: a prospective observational study.
- Author
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Dottore B, Meroi F, Tomasino S, Orso D, Comuzzi M, Vernaccini N, Vetrugno L, Intini S, and Bove T
- Abstract
Background: Worldwide, one of the most common surgical procedures in the pediatric population is circumcision. There is no consent on the best anesthesiologic approach. This study aimed to investigate ultrasound-guided dorsal penile nerve block (DPNB) plus sedation in spontaneous breathing as a time-saving, safe, effective, and opioid-sparing technique., Aims: The primary outcome was the assessment of the time from the end of surgery and the discharge to the post-anesthesia care unit. Secondary outcomes were to evaluate the cumulative dosages of opioids, differences in pain levels between the two groups, and complications at the awakening, 4 h and 72 h after surgery, respectively., Methods: This was a prospective study with a retrospective control group, approved by the Friuli-Venezia Giulia Ethics Committee. Children in the intervention group received an ultrasound-guided DPNB under sedation and spontaneous breathing. With the probe positioned transversally at the base of the penis using an in-plane approach with a modified technique, local anesthetic was injected under the deep fascia of the penis., Results: We recruited 70 children who underwent circumcision at the University Hospital of Udine, Italy, from 1 January 2016 to 1 October 2021: 35 children in the ultrasound-guided DPNB group and 35 children in the control group. Children who received ultrasound-guided DPNB had a statistically significant lower time to discharge from the operating room, did not require mechanical ventilation, maintained spontaneous breathing at all times, received fewer opioids, had lower mean intraoperative arterial pressures, and lower pain levels immediately after surgery., Conclusion: Ultrasound-guided DPNB associated with sedation and spontaneous breathing is a time-saving, opioid-sparing, safe, and effective strategy for the management of intraoperative and postoperative pain in children undergoing circumcision. Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrial.gov (NCT04475458, 17 July 2020)., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (Copyright © 2023 Dottore, Meroi, Tomasino, Orso, Comuzzi, Vernaccini, Vetrugno, Intini and Bove.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Process mining for healthcare: Characteristics and challenges.
- Author
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Munoz-Gama J, Martin N, Fernandez-Llatas C, Johnson OA, Sepúlveda M, Helm E, Galvez-Yanjari V, Rojas E, Martinez-Millana A, Aloini D, Amantea IA, Andrews R, Arias M, Beerepoot I, Benevento E, Burattin A, Capurro D, Carmona J, Comuzzi M, Dalmas B, de la Fuente R, Di Francescomarino C, Di Ciccio C, Gatta R, Ghidini C, Gonzalez-Lopez F, Ibanez-Sanchez G, Klasky HB, Prima Kurniati A, Lu X, Mannhardt F, Mans R, Marcos M, Medeiros de Carvalho R, Pegoraro M, Poon SK, Pufahl L, Reijers HA, Remy S, Rinderle-Ma S, Sacchi L, Seoane F, Song M, Stefanini A, Sulis E, Ter Hofstede AHM, Toussaint PJ, Traver V, Valero-Ramon Z, Weerd IV, van der Aalst WMP, Vanwersch R, Weske M, Wynn MT, and Zerbato F
- Subjects
- Humans, Delivery of Health Care, Hospitals
- Abstract
Process mining techniques can be used to analyse business processes using the data logged during their execution. These techniques are leveraged in a wide range of domains, including healthcare, where it focuses mainly on the analysis of diagnostic, treatment, and organisational processes. Despite the huge amount of data generated in hospitals by staff and machinery involved in healthcare processes, there is no evidence of a systematic uptake of process mining beyond targeted case studies in a research context. When developing and using process mining in healthcare, distinguishing characteristics of healthcare processes such as their variability and patient-centred focus require targeted attention. Against this background, the Process-Oriented Data Science in Healthcare Alliance has been established to propagate the research and application of techniques targeting the data-driven improvement of healthcare processes. This paper, an initiative of the alliance, presents the distinguishing characteristics of the healthcare domain that need to be considered to successfully use process mining, as well as open challenges that need to be addressed by the community in the future., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. Lifelong personal health data and application software via virtual machines in the cloud.
- Author
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Van Gorp P and Comuzzi M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Young Adult, Database Management Systems, Electronic Health Records, Internet, Medical Informatics Applications, Software
- Abstract
Personal Health Records (PHRs) should remain the lifelong property of patients, who should be able to show them conveniently and securely to selected caregivers and institutions. In this paper, we present MyPHRMachines, a cloud-based PHR system taking a radically new architectural solution to health record portability. In MyPHRMachines, health-related data and the application software to view and/or analyze it are separately deployed in the PHR system. After uploading their medical data to MyPHRMachines, patients can access them again from remote virtual machines that contain the right software to visualize and analyze them without any need for conversion. Patients can share their remote virtual machine session with selected caregivers, who will need only a Web browser to access the pre-loaded fragments of their lifelong PHR. We discuss a prototype of MyPHRMachines applied to two use cases, i.e., radiology image sharing and personalized medicine.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. [Diet therapy of severe obesity].
- Author
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Migliaccio PA, Comuzzi M, and Riefoli ML
- Subjects
- Bariatric Surgery, Body Composition, Body Fat Distribution, Body Mass Index, Body Weight, Electric Impedance, Global Health, Humans, Obesity, Morbid complications, Obesity, Morbid epidemiology, Obesity, Morbid surgery, Severity of Illness Index, Skinfold Thickness, Waist-Hip Ratio, Caloric Restriction, Diet, Reducing methods, Obesity, Morbid diagnosis, Obesity, Morbid diet therapy
- Abstract
In the last decades there has been a dramatic increase of obese subjects in many countries with the subsequent increase of health related problems, such as diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases. Even though several differential approaches, as media communication, guidelines formulation, have been performed in many different countries to solve this burden global health problem, no satisfactory results have been obtained. Personalized nutritional programs have been selected by obese subjects. Thus the correct approach would be to prescribe a caloric restricted diet in order to achieve long term weight loss in overweight or obese people. The aim in planning weight-reduction diets is that total food intake should meet recommended dietary allowance/adequate intake levels with the maintenance of the equilibrium among nutrients. If the nutritional approach fails or it is not sufficient to obtain significant weight loss, bariatric surgical intervention has been developed for the treatment of morbid-obese patients or severe obese patients with comorbidities as recommended by the American Society for Bariatric Surgery (A.S.B.S.) guidelines.
- Published
- 2005
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