32 results on '"Baratti, M"'
Search Results
2. Veterinary fluoroquinolones as emerging contaminants in marine environments: In vitro study of biochemical responses in subcellular fractions of the Mediterranean mussel (Mytilus galloprovincialis)
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Giannessi, J., De Marchi, L., Meucci, V., Intorre, L., Monni, G., Baratti, M., and Pretti, C.
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- 2024
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3. Four scenarios of environmental risk of diclofenac in European groundwater ecosystems
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Di Lorenzo, T., Cifoni, M., Baratti, M., Pieraccini, G., Di Marzio, W.D., and Galassi, D.M.P.
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- 2021
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4. Atlantic and Mediterranean populations of the widespread serpulid Ficopomatus enigmaticus: Developmental responses to carbon nanotubes
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Oliva, M., De Marchi, L., Vieira Sanches, M., Pires, A., Cuccaro, A., Baratti, M., Chiellini, F., Morelli, A., Freitas, R., and Pretti, C.
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- 2020
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5. Effects of copper on larvae of the marbled crab Pachygrapsus marmoratus (Decapoda, Grapsidae): Toxicity test and biochemical marker responses
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Oliva, M., De Marchi, L., Cuccaro, A., Casu, V., Tardelli, F., Monni, G., Freitas, R., Caliani, I., Fossi, M.C., Fratini, S., Baratti, M., and Pretti, C.
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- 2019
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6. Investigation of mechanisms underlying chaotic genetic patchiness in the intertidal marbled crab Pachygrapsus marmoratus (Brachyura: Grapsidae) across the Ligurian Sea
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Iannucci, A., Cannicci, S., Caliani, I., Baratti, M., Pretti, C., and Fratini, S.
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- 2020
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- View/download PDF
7. Effect of music and time of day on cardiorespiratory responses during aerobic exercise
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Vukaj, X., Signori, C., Grignani, L., Figini, A., Baratti, M., Cantarelli, D., Ghirardi, P., Gallazzi, M., Andriolo, G., Bruseghini, Paolo, Annoni, I., Bertozzi, F., Galvani, Christel, X. Vukaj, C. Signori, L. Grignani, A. Figini, M. Baratti, D. Cantarelli, P. Ghirardi, M. Gallazzi, G. Andriolo, P. Bruseghini (ORCID:0000-0003-0285-5443), I. Annoni, F. Bertozzi, C. Galvani (ORCID:0000-0002-0126-6033), Vukaj, X., Signori, C., Grignani, L., Figini, A., Baratti, M., Cantarelli, D., Ghirardi, P., Gallazzi, M., Andriolo, G., Bruseghini, Paolo, Annoni, I., Bertozzi, F., Galvani, Christel, X. Vukaj, C. Signori, L. Grignani, A. Figini, M. Baratti, D. Cantarelli, P. Ghirardi, M. Gallazzi, G. Andriolo, P. Bruseghini (ORCID:0000-0003-0285-5443), I. Annoni, F. Bertozzi, and C. Galvani (ORCID:0000-0002-0126-6033)
- Abstract
Purpose: For a proper exercise (EX) prescription, it is necessary to consider the individual needs, such as the effect of regular training at a specific time of day1 or of listening to music while exercising2. The evidence regarding the combined effect of music at different times of the day do not seem to be sufficiently investigated. The aim of the present study is to examine the effects induced by music listened during the aerobic exercise on oxygen consumption (mV_O2), in males and females, in two different intensity domains (moderate and vigorous), at two different times of day (morning and evening). Methods: Forty university students were recruited: 20 males and 20 females (age 22.7 ± 2.6 yrs; BMI 21.8 ± 2.5 kg m-2; mV_O2max 39.7 ± 7.9 mL kg-1 min-1). All subjects performed 4 training sessions at two different times of day, with and without self- selected motivational music3: 2 in the morning from 8:30 to 9:30 am (MO ? M, MO-M) and 2 in the evening from 17:30 to 18:30 pm (EV ? M, EV-M). Each training session included 6 min of cycling at constant load corresponding to 60% (MOD) and 90% (VIG) of mV_O2max, interspersed with 10 min of recovery. The mV_O2 was continuously monitored, obtaining data averaged every 30 s (Fitmate, Cosmed, Italy). Results: At the end of MOD EX, females, regardless of listening to music, obtained lower mV_O2 in the evening (p = 0.03) (EV ? M 1192.0 ± 236.6 and EV-M 1203.4 ± 252.5 vs MO ? M 1232.1 ± 284.3 and MO-M 1216.5 ± 249.5 mL min-1, respectively); males attained lower VO2 while listening to music only in the evening (p = 0.04) (EV ? M 1876.7 ± 283.5 and EV-M 1915,7 ± 313,4 vs MO ? M 1896.8 ± 302.7 and MO-M 1867.7±316.7 mL min-1, respectively). At the end of VIG EX, regardless of listening to music, only females showed lower mV_O2 in the evening (p = 0.02) (EV ? M 1946.2 ± 390.6 and EV-M 1980.7 ± 464.4 vs MO ? M 1985.9 ± 453.3 and MO-M 1985.7±422.8 mL min-1, respectively). Conclusions: Regardless of listening to music, during both MOD
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- 2023
8. Genetic insights into an Apennine population of the Italian red deer
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Giovannelli F., Mori E., Zaccaroni M., Dessì-Fulgheri F., and Baratti M.
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Reintroductions ,mtDNA ,Cervus elaphus Cervidae ,D-loop ,Italian red deer - Abstract
The red deer Cervus elephus has been a common species in Italy until the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, when its distribu- tion range started to considerably decrease, due to gradual deforestation and hunting pressure. Afterwards, the red deer has been reintroduced to many regions of the world, including Italy. In the Italian Apennines, the Acquerino-Cantagallo Natural Reserve (ACQUERINO) hosts one of the largest peninsular red deer populations, originated from a series of successful reintroductions. In this study, we meant to detect the level of genetic variability of Acquerino-Cantagallo Natural Reserve deer population and to investigate the genetic relationships with the other Italian and European populations. We identified five mitochondrial DNA control region (D-loop) haplotypes, four falling in lineage A and one falling in lineage C, derived from at least two maternal lineages, confirming that ACQUERINO population should be the result of multiple reintroductions. Haplotype diversity (H = 0.50) and nucleotide (? = 0.004) diversity were low, but included into the deer range values. ACQUERINO population showed low levels of genetic diversity when compared to other European and Mediterranean populations, confirming that this expanding population may have been generated from a low number of founders.
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- 2022
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9. Strumenti e indicazioni di governance transfrontaliera. Piano d'azione e linee guida del progetto IMPACT. Instruments et indications pour la gouvernance transfrontalière. Plan d'action et lignes directrices du projet IMPACT
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Magaldi M. G., Barbieri L., Mantovani C., Baratti M., Bendoni M., Berta M., Berto D., Bigongiari N., Boccacci A., Bramanti L., Brandini C., Calace N., Caliani I., Cannicci S., Casini S., Connès C., Corgnati L. P., Costanza L., Coudray S., Cristofori S., Di Mento R., Doronzo B., Dumas D., Fattorini M., Femiano R., Fratini S., Galgani F., Galli T., Gozzini B., Gramoullé A., Grassini I., Griffa A., Guizien K., Guérin C.-A., Iozzelli M., Lapucci C., Lenoble V., Maltese S., Mario S., Mazoyer C., Mengoni A., Menonna V., Molcard A., Oliva M., Ortolani A., Ourmières Y., Padrón M., Piermarini R., Pretti C., Romanelli G., Ruberti G., Scarpato A., Sciascia R., Silvestri C., Taddei S., Ugolini A., Vanneste H., Vannucchi V., and Xu D
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linee guida ,italia ,HFR HF radar ,francia ,Interreg ,transfrontaliero ,modelli numerici - Abstract
Il presente documento restituisce una sintesi delle attività del progetto IMPACT ed è diviso in due parti. La prima parte evidenzia gli strumenti completati durante la durata del progetto, in particolare la rete di radar costieri per il monitoraggio delle correnti marine e la piattaforma webGIS per la consultazione dei dati raccolti ed elaborati dai partner di progetto. La seconda parte capitalizza sui suddetti strumenti per fornire sia indicazioni metodologiche che di governance. Nello specifico, la rete di radar costieri viene utilizzata per creare mappe di potenziale contaminazione e indicare in che condizioni le attività portuali possano essere più sostenibili. Le misure demografiche e i calcoli di ritenzione indicano il livello d'efficacia delle dimensioni attuali delle AMP mentre le misure di contaminazione suggeriscono di considerare un numero maggiore di stazioni nell'ottica di migliorare i piani di monitoraggio esistenti. In quest'ottica, le indicazioni rappresentano il piano d'azione e le linee guida del progetto. L'ulteriore espansione della rete di radar costieri prevista nei progetti SICOMAR plus e SINAPSI è la prova che la conclusione delle attività del progetto IMPACT sia in realtà solo un importante punto di partenza.
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- 2021
10. Strumenti e indicazioni di governance transfrontaliera. Piano d’azione e linee guida del progetto IMPACT [Instruments et indications pour la gouvernance transfrontalière. Plan d’action et lignes directrices du projet IMPACT]
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Magaldi, M. G., Barbieri, L., Mantovani, C., Baratti, M., Bendoni, M., Berta, M., Berto, D., Bigongiari, N., Boccacci, A., Bramanti, L., Brandini, C., Calace, N., Caliani, I., Cannicci, S., Casini, S., Connès, C., Corgnati, L. P., Costanza, L., Coudray, S., Cristofori, S., Di Mento, R., Doronzo, B., Dumas, D., Fattorini, M., Femiano, R., Fratini, S., Galgani, F., Galli, T., Gozzini, B., Gramoullé, A., Grassini, I., Griffa, A., Guizien, K., Guérin, C. A., Iozzelli, M., Lapucci, C., Lenoble, V., Maltese, S., Mario, S., Mazoyer, C., Mengoni, A., Menonna, V., Molcard, A., Oliva, M., Ortolani, A., Ourmières, Y., Padrón, M., Piermarini, R., Pretti, C., Romanelli, G., Ruberti, G., Scarpato, A., Sciascia, R., Silvestri, C., Taddei, S., Ugolini, A., Vanneste, H., Vannucchi, V., and Xu, D.
- Published
- 2021
11. Development of an education campaign to reduce delays in pre-hospital response to stroke
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Caminiti, C., Schulz, P., Marcomini, B., Iezzi, E., Riva, Silvia, Scoditti, U., Zini, A., Malferrari, G., Zedde, M.L., Guidetti, D., Montanari, E., Baratti, M., Denti, L., Castellini, P., Zanferrari, C., Tanzi, A., Diodati, F., Olivato, S., Barbi, F., Bigliardi, G., Dell'Acqua, M.L., Vandelli, L., Rosafio, F., Pentore, R., Picchetto, L., Monaco, D., Perticaroli, E., Iafelice, I., Imovilli, P., Vaghi, L., and Guareschi, A.
- Abstract
Background: Systematic reviews call for well-designed trials with clearly described intervention components to\ud support the effectiveness of educational campaigns to reduce patient delay in stroke presentation. We herein\ud describe the systematic development process of a campaign aimed to increase stroke awareness and preparedness.\ud Methods: Campaign development followed Intervention Mapping (IM), a theory- and evidence-based tool, and was\ud articulated in two phases: needs assessment and intervention development. In phase 1, two cross-sectional surveys\ud were performed, one aiming to measure stroke awareness in the target population and the other to analyze the\ud behavioral determinants of prehospital delay. In phase 2, a matrix of proximal program objectives was developed,\ud theory-based intervention methods and practical strategies were selected and program components and materials\ud produced.\ud Results: In phase 1, the survey on 202 citizens highlighted underestimation of symptom severity, as in only 44% of\ud stroke situations respondents would choose to call the emergency service (EMS). In the survey on 393 consecutive\ud patients, 55% presented over 2 hours after symptom onset; major determinants were deciding to call the general\ud practitioner first and the reaction of the first person the patient called. In phase 2, adult individuals were identified\ud as the target of the intervention, both as potential “patients” and witnesses of stroke. The low educational level\ud found in the patient survey called for a narrative approach in cartoon form. The family setting was chosen for the\ud message because 42% of patients who presented within 2 hours had been advised by a family member to call\ud EMS. To act on people’s tendency to view stroke as an untreatable disease, it was decided to avoid fear-arousal\ud appeals and use a positive message providing instructions and hope. Focus groups were used to test educational\ud products and identify the most suitable sites for message dissemination.\ud Conclusions: The IM approach allowed to develop a stroke campaign integrating theories, scientific evidence and\ud information collected from the target population, and enabled to provide clear explanations for the reasons behind\ud key decisions during the intervention development process.\ud Trial registration: NCT01881152. Retrospectively registered June 7 2013\ud Keywords: Stroke, Public campaign, Pre-hospital delay, Media, Cartoon, Intervention mapping
- Published
- 2017
12. Multimodal and non-linear optical microscopy applications in reproductive biology
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Adur, Javier Fernando, Barbosa, G.O., Pelegati, V. B., Baratti, M. O., Cesar, C. L., Casco, Victor Hugo, and Carvalho, H. F.
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Astronomía ,CONFOCAL PLATFORM ,Ciencias Físicas ,OPTICAL WORKSTATION ,MULTIFOTON MICROSCOPY ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,NONLINEAR MICROSCOPY - Abstract
A plethora of optical techniques is currently available to obtain non-destructive, contactless, real time information with subcellular spatial resolution to observe cell processes. Each technique has its own unique features for imaging and for obtaining certain biological information. However none of the available techniques can be of universal use. For a comprehensive investigation of biological specimens and events, one needs to use a combination of bioimaging methods, often at the same time. Some modern confocal/multiphoton microscopes provide simultaneous fluorescence, fluorescence lifetime imaging, and four-dimensional imaging. Some of them can also easily be adapted for harmonic generation imaging, and to permit cell manipulation technique. In this work we present a multimodal optical workstation that extends a commercially available confocal microscope to include nonlinear/multiphoton microscopy and optical manipulation/stimulation tools. The nonlinear microscopy capabilities were added to the commercial confocal microscope by exploiting all the flexibility offered by the manufacturer. The various capabilities of this workstation as applied directly to reproductive biology are discussed. Fil: Adur, Javier Fernando. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; Brasil. Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos. Facultad de Ingeniería; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro de Investigaciones y Transferencia de Entre Ríos. Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos. Centro de Investigaciones y Transferencia de Entre Ríos; Argentina Fil: Barbosa, G.O.. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; Brasil Fil: Pelegati, V. B.. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; Brasil. Instituto Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología sobre Fotónica Aplicada a la Biología Celular; Brasil Fil: Baratti, M. O.. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; Brasil Fil: Cesar, C. L.. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; Brasil. Universidade Estadual do Ceará; Brasil. Instituto Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología sobre Fotónica Aplicada a la Biología Celular; Brasil Fil: Casco, Victor Hugo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro de Investigaciones y Transferencia de Entre Ríos. Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos. Centro de Investigaciones y Transferencia de Entre Ríos; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos. Facultad de Ingeniería; Argentina Fil: Carvalho, H. F.. Instituto Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología sobre Fotónica Aplicada a la Biología Celular; Brasil. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; Brasil
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- 2016
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13. Temperature effect on the sensitivity of the copepod Eucyclops serrulatus (Crustacea, Copepoda, Cyclopoida) to agricultural pollutants in the hyporheic zone
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Lorenzo, Tiziana DI, primary, Di Marzio, Walter D., primary, Cifoni, Marco, primary, Fiasca, Barbara, primary, Baratti, M., primary, Sáenz, Maria E., primary, and Galassi, Diana M.P., primary
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- 2015
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14. Temperature effect on the sensitivity of the copepod Eucyclops serrulatus (Crustacea, Copepoda, Cyclopoida) to agricultural pollutants in the hyporheic zone.
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DI LORENZO, Tiziana, DI MARZIO, Walter D., CIFONI, Marco, FIASCA, Barbara, BARATTI, M., SÁENZ, Maria E., and GALASSI, Diana M. P.
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INVERTEBRATES ,CRUSTACEA ,COPEPODA ,CYCLOPOIDA ,POLLUTANTS - Abstract
The sensitivity of freshwater invertebrates to agricultural pollutants is supposed to increase with rising temperature due to global warming. The aim of this study was to measure the effect of temperature on the lethal toxicity of ammonia-N, the herbicide Imazamox and the mixture of the two chemicals, in the adults and the juveniles of a population of the copepod Eucyclops serrulatus. This is a widely distributed species found in surface waters, in transitional habitats between surface water and groundwater, and in genuine groundwater environments. We tested the sensitivity by short-term bioassays (96 h) at 15°C and 18°C, respectively. Our results highlighted the following: (1) increasing temperature affected the sensitivity of the adults to ammonia-N and of the juveniles to the mixture, all of which were more sensitive to its detrimental effects at 18°C; (2) the juvenile stages were more sensitive than the adults to all toxicants, and (3) for all combinations of chemicals and temperatures, the effects were synergistic and approximately one order of magnitude greater than those expected according to a concentration addition model when comparing the LC50 for each chemical in the mixture with the LC50s of chemicals individually assayed. Overall, in a context of global change, ammonia-N and mixtures of agricultural pollutants may affect the survival rate of species that spend a part or the whole life-cycle in the hyporheic habitat, with detrimental effects to biodiversity and ecosystem services provided by the hyporheic biota. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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15. Metabolic rates of a hypogean and an epigean species of copepod in an alluvial aquifer.
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Di Lorenzo, T., Di Marzio, Walter D., Spigoli, D., Baratti, M., Messana, G., Cannicci, S., and Galassi, Diana M. P.
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COPEPODA physiology ,INVERTEBRATE metabolism ,GROUNDWATER ecology ,SPECIES ,AQUIFERS - Abstract
Reduced metabolic rates of groundwater taxa, compared to those of surface water species, have long been inferred to be an adaptive trait where there is a low and discontinuous food supply and unpredictable shifts between hypoxic and normoxic conditions. However, there have been neither measurements of the respiratory rate of groundwater copepods nor a comparison of rates between closely related groundwater and surface water species., We measured the metabolic rates of two species of Cyclopoida: Cyclopidae, the stygobiotic (hypogean) copepod Diacyclops belgicus and the epigean Eucyclops serrulatus, which co-occur in the same alluvial aquifer. We expected the metabolic rate of the hypogean to be lower than that of the epigean species, irrespective of the ontogenetic stage, which would be consistent with the hypothesis that there is a generally lower metabolic rate in groundwater species., The metabolic rate of D. belgicus was significantly lower than that of the epigean E. serrulatus irrespective of the ontogenetic stage. We found an allometric relationship between oxygen consumption and body mass for E. serrulatus, an isometric one for D. belgicus juveniles and a rate of oxygen consumption that apparently does not change systematically with body mass for D. belgicus adults., The low metabolic rate of D. belgicus may be advantageous in oligotrophic groundwater habitats, where large fluctuations in oxygen availability occur. However, these physiological adaptations can put hypogean species at risk of replacement by more metabolically active epigean taxa, whenever the availability of organic matter increases, as happens with organic pollution. Moreover, the low metabolic rate of the hypogean species may entail an inability to cope with toxicants, rendering them more sensitive to pollutants. A higher metabolic rate in juvenile D. belgicus compared to that of adults allows copepodids to mature quickly when food is briefly abundant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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16. The PRIAMO study: age- and sex-related relationship between prodromal constipation and disease phenotype in early Parkinson’s disease
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L Grasso, Silvia Ramat, Simone Gallerini, Paolo Barone, G. Di Brigida, D. Fogli, Tommaso Scaravilli, M. Braga, Alessandra Nicoletti, M. Romeno, Paolo Martinelli, G. Gurgone, Cesare Colosimo, E. Pilleri, V. Sorbello, S. Amidei, F. Pennisi, Francesco Iemolo, Giorgio Trianni, Vincenzo Toni, E. Milan, Raffaele Palladino, D. Benincasa, Giovanni Pezzoli, M. G. Randisi, Alfredo Petrone, Arianna Guidubaldi, R. Alfano, Tania P. Avarello, A. Scaglioni, Anna Rita Bentivoglio, C. Modica, L. Ferigo, M. Manfredi, Domenico Consoli, Giuseppe Meco, Giampiero Volpe, S. Griffini, Francesca Morgante, R. Scala, G. Nordera, Angelo Antonini, G. Floris, Roberto Erro, R. Muoio, Salvatore Zappulla, Luigi Bartolomei, Edo Bottacchi, Antonio Pisani, V. Petretta, Giovanni Fabbrini, G. Ciacci, L. Maiello, G. Ceravolo, M. Di Giovanni, V. Nastasi, Rocco Quatrale, D. Tiple, Marcello Deriu, S. Lanfranchi, Marianna Capecci, Alberto Albanese, T. Cuomo, Francesco E. Pontieri, Vincenzo Moschella, G. Sciortino, F. A. De Falco, S. Biguzzi, Leonardo Lopiano, Marina Picillo, C. Alesi, D. De Gaspari, Michele Abrignani, Gabriella Santangelo, Fabrizio Stocchi, R. Luciano, M. Baratti, R. M. Giglia, Cesa Scaglione, B. Troianiello, Giovanni Abbruzzese, M. Mucchiut, F. Pepe, S. Zanini, L. Capus, N. Caravona, Giovanni Cossu, V. Agnetti, G. Albani, L. Kiferle, E. Giaccaglini, Roberto Marconi, M. Iellamo, R. Marano, D. Medici, Monica Ulivelli, G. A. Cocco, M. Perini, P. Del Dotto, Rosa M. Gaglio, Rodolfo Savica, C. Logi, G. Ciccarelli, P. Massimo, M. Pesare, Antonino Cannas, Roberto Ceravolo, P. Simone, Letterio Morgante, P. Soliveri, S. Meoni, Picillo, M., Palladino, R., Erro, R., Alfano, R., Colosimo, C., Marconi, R., Antonini, A., Barone, P., Morgante, L., Benincasa, D., Quatrale, R., Biguzzi, S., Braga, M., Ceravolo, G., Capecci, M., Meco, G., Caravona, N., Scala, R., De Falco, F. A., Pezzoli, G., De Gaspari, D., Bottacchi, E., Di Giovanni, M., Cannas, A., Floris, G., Gallerini, S., Grasso, L., Gaglio, R. M., Gurgone, G., Volpe, G., Zappulla, S., Ceravolo, R., Kiferle, L., Ramat, S., Meoni, S., Pisani, A., Moschella, V., Morgante, F., Savica, R., Pepe, F., Ciccarelli, G., Petretta, V., Giglia, R. M., Randisi, M. G., Iemolo, F., Avarello, T. P., Romeno, M., Santangelo, G., Stocchi, F., Sciortino, G., Sorbello, V., Nicoletti, A., Tiple, D., Fabbrini, G., Bentivoglio, A., Pontieri, F. E., Guidubaldi, A., Muoio, R., Toni, V., Del Dotto, P., Logi, C., Ciacci, G., Ulivelli, M., Perini, M., Lanfranchi, S., Griffini, S., Troianiello, B., Baratti, M., Amidei, S., Consoli, D., Iellamo, M., Cuomo, T., Scaglioni, A., Medici, D., Manfredi, M., Abbruzzese, G., Di Brigida, G., Cocco, G. A., Agnetti, V., Cossu, G., Deriu, M., Abrignani, M., Modica, C., Albani, G., Milan, E., Martinelli, P., Scaglione, C., Mucchiut, M., Zanini, S., Pennisi, F., Soliveri, P., Albanese, A., Massimo, P., Bartolomei, L., Capus, L., Ferigo, L., Marano, R., Nastasi, V., Luciano, R., Maiello, L., Simone, P., Fogli, D., Lopiano, L., Pesare, M., Nordera, G., Pilleri, E., Scaravilli, T., Giaccaglini, E., Alesi, C., Petrone, A., and Trianni, G.
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Male ,Neurology ,Parkinson's disease ,Constipation ,Heterogeneity ,Parkinson ,Phenotype ,Prodromal ,Sex ,PROGRESSION ,Disease ,0302 clinical medicine ,Apathy ,Neuroradiology ,Original Communication ,Cognition ,Parkinson Disease ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,NONMOTOR SYMPTOMS ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,PRIAMO study group ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Neurology ,Prodromal Symptoms ,Prodromal Symptom ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Clinical phenotype ,Aged ,Science & Technology ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,business.industry ,1103 Clinical Sciences ,Biomarker ,medicine.disease ,DYSFUNCTION ,Biomarkers ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,business ,1109 Neurosciences ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objectives To explore the impact of sex and age on relationship between prodromal constipation and disease phenotype in Parkinson’s disease at early stages. Methods A total of 385 Parkinson’s disease patients from the PRIAMO study were classified according to the presence of prodromal constipation and followed for 24 months. Multivariable mixed-effect models were applied. All analyses were performed separately for sex (64.1% men) and median age (different by sex: 67 years-old in men and 68 years-old in women). Results As for sex, prodromal constipation was associated with greater odds of attention/memory complaints and apathy symptoms in women only. As for age, prodromal constipation was associated with lower cognitive and higher apathy scores in older patients only. Conclusions Prodromal constipation anticipates lower cognitive performances and more severe apathy since the earliest stages in women and older patients. Sex- and age-related heterogeneity of prodromal markers of Parkinson’s disease may impact disease phenotype.
- Published
- 2021
17. Miglioramento geostatistico di previsioni idrologiche a scala pan-europea
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PUGLIESE, ALESSIO, PERSIANO, SIMONE, CASTELLARIN, ATTILIO, MONTANARI, ALBERTO, Bagli, S., Mazzoli, P., Parajka, D., Arheimer, B., Blöschl, G., A. Castellarin, R. Archetti, E. Baratti, M. Cappelletti, F. Carisi, A. Domeneghetti, M.G. Gaeta, A. Paci, S. Persiano, A. Pugliese, A.G. Samaras, Pugliese, A., Persiano, S., Castellarin, A., Bagli, S., Mazzoli, P., Parajka, D., Arheimer, B., Montanari, A., and Blöschl, G.
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geostatistica, EHYPE, bacini non strumentati, stima, scala europea - Published
- 2016
18. Genetic Assessment of a Captive Population of Eurasian Stone-Curlew ( Burhinus oedicnemus ), Source for the Reinforcement of Wild Populations.
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Lesobre L, Ostolani A, Abi Hussein H, Giunchi D, Aourir M, Teyar Y, and Baratti M
- Abstract
Although ex situ conservation programs are increasingly valuable support tools for in situ conservation measures, success depends on these captive individuals to be genetically representative of the recipient population. The Eurasian stone-curlew ( Burhinus oedicnemus ) inhabit steppes that represent some of the most degraded and exploited habitats worldwide. A captive breeding program was implemented in Morocco as a pre-emptive effort for the conservation of the North African subspecies Burhinus oedicnemus saharae . However, the genetic origins of the founders of the captive flock were unknown. We applied a multi-locus approach to characterize the genetic ancestry of the current captive breeding flock by comparing it to wild populations from both Western and Eastern Morocco. Mitochondrial DNA and microsatellite markers were employed to assess levels of genetic diversity and relatedness within each sample, as well as potential genetic differentiation between wild and captive samples through PCA and admixture analyses. We recovered similar genetic diversity estimates, low levels of relatedness, and little differentiation between captive and wild samples. These results confirmed the Moroccan origin of the founders. We provide recommendations for the optimization of the Eurasian Stone Curlew conservation breeding program but also for future conservation breeding programs to ensure the effective conservation of genetic diversity and wild populations.
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- 2024
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19. Influence of hyaluronic acid and chitosan molecular weight on the adhesion of circulating tumor cell on multilayer films.
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Santiago TSA, Delezuk JAM, Bataglioli RA, Baratti MO, Carvalho HF, and Beppu MM
- Subjects
- Humans, Hyaluronan Receptors metabolism, Surface Properties, Cell Line, Tumor, Polyelectrolytes chemistry, Hyaluronic Acid chemistry, Hyaluronic Acid pharmacology, Chitosan chemistry, Chitosan pharmacology, Molecular Weight, Neoplastic Cells, Circulating drug effects, Neoplastic Cells, Circulating pathology, Cell Adhesion drug effects
- Abstract
CD44 is a cell receptor glycoprotein overexpressed in circulating tumor cells (CTCs), with levels linked to an increase in metastatic capacity of several tumors. Hyaluronic acid (HA), the natural ligand of CD44, has primarily been investigated for tumor cell interaction in self-assembled polyelectrolyte multilayer films, with little attention given to the complementary polycation. In this study, we screened sixteen different polyelectrolyte multilayer assemblies of HA and chitosan (CHI) to identify key assembly parameters and surface properties that control and govern CTCs adhesion. Statistics analysis revealed a major role of CHI molecular weight in the adhesion, followed by its combinatorial response either with HA ionization degree or ionic strength. PM-IRRAS analysis demonstrated a correlation between the orientation of HA carboxyl groups on the film surface and CTCs adhesion, directly impacted by CHI molecular weight. Overall, although CTCs binding onto the surface of multilayer films is primarily driven by HA-CD44 interaction, both chitosan properties and film assembly conditions modulate this interaction. These findings illustrate an alternative to modifying the performance of biomaterials with minimal changes in the composition of multilayer films., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2024
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20. Subcellular tissues-specific responses of Mytilus galloprovincialis to fluoroquinolone antibiotics.
- Author
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Giannessi J, De Marchi L, Meucci V, Intorre L, Monni G, Baratti M, and Pretti C
- Abstract
The study aimed to investigate the in vitro effects of the fluoroquinolone antibiotics (FQs) Ciprofloxacin (CIP), Enrofloxacin (ENR) and Danofloxacin (DAN) on the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis exposed to environmentally relevant concentrations. In vitro exposure was performed on subcellular fractions of the digestive gland and gills through a multi-biomarker approach, which included the assessment of cellular damage, antioxidant and biotransformation enzyme activities, neurotoxicity, and DNA single-strand breaks (DNAssb). Results showed a decrease in protein carbonyl content in the gills when exposed to all concentrations of ENR. A significant overall decrease in the enzymatic activity of antioxidant defences was observed in the digestive gland exposed to the highest concentration of DAN and CIP, with a similar trend observed in the gills. Neurotoxicity was observed in the digestive gland at all tested concentrations of all FQs, but no effects were detected in the gills. DNAssb was evident in both tissues at all higher FQ concentrations., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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21. A multidisciplinary integrated approach using Pachygrapsus marmoratus to assess the impact of port activities on mediterranean marine protected areas.
- Author
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Caliani I, Cannicci S, Pretti C, Baratti M, Contini G, Vitale M, Casini S, Fossi MC, Iannucci A, and Fratini S
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Environmental Pollution, Environmental Biomarkers, Mediterranean Sea, Brachyura
- Abstract
The establishment of marine protected areas is considered the main global strategy to halt the loss of marine biodiversity. Since most of marine areas are open systems, this form of habitat protection cannot prevent their contamination due to human activities performed outside of their borders. Innovative approaches to assess the health status of protected marine habitats are therefore needed. Here we developed a multidisciplinary approach that combines ecological characteristics, bioaccumulation of inorganic and organic pollutants, cell damage (micronuclei frequency, nuclear alterations and LPO) and enzymatic (AChE, CAT, IDH, LDH, GST and CAT) markers focused on an intertidal brachyuran crab, Pachygrapsus marmoratus, to assess the impacts of contaminant exposure on Mediterranean coastal habitats. As study sites we selected two protected areas and two sites within industrial ports of the Ligurian Sea. Our results showed that the selected crab species is an excellent bioindicator. Individuals collected in sites with the highest levels of heavy metal pollution showed the highest signals of stress responses at both cellular and enzymatic levels, coupled with a high incidence of the parasite Sacculina carcini, a signal of impairment of their standard development and reproduction cycle. We could also prove that one of the selected marine protected areas showed the same intensity of impact as its adjacent port site. Our multidisciplinary approach proved to be a valuable tool to assess the environmental quality and health of protected and disturbed Mediterranean coastal environments and to inform efficient management and protection schemes for such habitats., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Gene expression and biochemical patterns in the digestive gland of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis (Lamarck, 1819) exposed to 17α-ethinylestradiol.
- Author
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Pretti C, Aretini P, Lessi F, Freitas R, Barata C, De Marchi L, Cuccaro A, Oliva M, Meucci V, and Baratti M
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Ethinyl Estradiol toxicity, Ethinyl Estradiol metabolism, Gene Expression, Pharmaceutical Preparations metabolism, Mytilus, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
Contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) are a class of chemicals that can spread throughout the environment and may cause adverse biological and ecological effects. While there are many different classes of CECs, one of the most well documented in the aquatic environment are pharmaceutical drugs, such as natural and synthetic estrogens. In particular, the widespread presence of the synthetic estrogen 17 α-Ethinylestradiol (EE2) in water may lead to bioaccumulation in sediment and biota. EE2 is the primary component in contraceptive pills, and is a derivative of the natural hormone estradiol (E2). In this study, the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis was exposed to EE2 in a semi-static and time-dependent experiment, for a total exposure period of 28 days. Biochemical and transcriptomics analyses were performed on mussel digestive glands after exposure for 14 (T14) and 28 (T28) days. Metabolic and DNA impairments, as well as activation of antioxidant and biotransformation enzymes activation, were detected in T28 exposed mussels. RNA-Seq analysis showed significant differential expression of 160 (T14 compared to controls), 33 (T28 compared to controls) and 79 (T14 compared to T28) genes. Signs of stress after EE2 treatment included up-regulation of gene/proteins involved with immune function, lipid transport, and metabolic and antibacterial properties. This study elucidates the underlying mechanisms of EE2 in a filter feeding organisms to elucidate the effects of this human pharmaceutical on aquatic biota., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Aliens Coming by Ships: Distribution and Origins of the Ocellated Skink Populations in Peninsular Italy.
- Author
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Mori E, Andreone F, Viviano A, Faraone FP, Di Nicola MR, Borri B, Bruni G, Mazza G, Banchi R, Zaccaroni M, Mezzadri S, and Baratti M
- Abstract
The ocellated skink ( Chalcides ocellatus ) is a widespread lizard, naturally distributed between the Maghreb and coastal Pakistan, with few insular populations in the Mediterranean coastal area. Some populations of this species have also been recorded in peninsular Italy, Campania and Southern Tuscany due to accidental introductions via touristic and commercial routes. In this work, we conducted genetic analyses on mitochondrial DNA COXI, cytb and 16S mtDNA genes on a sample of Italian insular and peninsular populations. Differently from what previously suggested, the nucleus in Portici (Southern Italy) may have originated from Sardinia. The intense trade and touristic traffic between Sardinia and Southern Tuscany may have been responsible for the introduction of this lizard also to Central Italy.
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
24. Differential gene expression and chemical patterns of an intertidal crab inhabiting a polluted port and an adjacent marine protected area.
- Author
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Baratti M, Pinosio S, Gori M, Biricolti S, Chini G, Fratini S, Cannicci S, Caliani I, Oliva M, De Marchi L, and Pretti C
- Subjects
- Animals, Seafood, Transcriptome, Brachyura genetics, Water Pollutants, Chemical metabolism
- Abstract
The acquisition of data to safeguard marine protected areas located close to ports is important in order to develop plans that allow effective protection from pollution as well as sustainable development of the port. The area Secche della Meloria is a Marine Protected Area (MPA-MEL) three miles from Livorno Harbour (LH), which is characterized by a long history of pollution. Here we studied the bioaccumulation and transcriptomic patterns of the marbled crab, Pachygrapsus marmoratus (Fabricius, 1787) (Crustacea; Brachyura, Grapsidae), inhabiting the two selected sites. Results showed that the two crab populations are significantly different in their chemical composition of trace elements and Polyciclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs), and gene expression patterns (1280 DEGs). Enrichment analysis indicated that crabs at LH had the highest stress response genes, and they were associated with higher levels of bioaccumulation detected in body tissues. We are confident that the significant differential gene expression profiles observed between crabs, characterized by significant chemical differences, is associated with responses to contaminant exposure., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
25. De novo transcriptome assembly for Pachygrapsus marmoratus, an intertidal brachyuran crab.
- Author
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Pinosio S, Fratini S, Cannicci S, Oliva M, Pretti C, and Baratti M
- Subjects
- Animals, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Brachyura genetics, Genetic Markers, Transcriptome
- Abstract
The marble crab Pachygrapsus marmoratus inhabits the rocky shores of the Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea and East Atlantic Ocean. As other intertidal species, it is considered a model species to study the effects of environmental stressors on natural populations. In this study, we performed Illumina next-generation sequencing on eleven P. marmoratus specimens with the aims to (i) reconstruct their whole transcriptome, (ii) perform a functional annotation of the assembled transcriptome and (iii) develop gene-based markers for future genetic and genomic studies on this as well as other brachyuran species. We obtained a transcriptome assembly constituted by 56,308 unigenes and covering about 60.3 Mbp. We detected 43,915 Simple Sequence Repeats (SSRs) and 192,631 high-quality Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs). Due to the scarcity of genomic resources in decapods, and crabs in particular, our results constitute a valuable resource for future studies on brachyuran crabs. The present data also represent a sound resource to investigate biological responses to pollution in intertidal and marine populations., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Relationship between wild-caught organisms for bioassays and sampling areas: Widespread serpulid early-development comparison between two distinct populations after trace element exposure.
- Author
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Sanches MV, Oliva M, Pires A, De Marchi L, Cuccaro A, Freitas R, Baratti M, and Pretti C
- Subjects
- Animals, Arsenic analysis, Cadmium analysis, Ecotoxicology, Hazardous Substances analysis, Italy, Larva drug effects, Mercury analysis, Polychaeta drug effects, Portugal, Trace Elements analysis, Biological Assay methods, Environmental Monitoring methods, Trace Elements metabolism
- Abstract
Previous studies suggested the suitability of the brackish-water serpulid (Ficopomatus enigmaticus) to be used as model organism for both marine and brackish waters monitoring, by the performance of sperm toxicity and larval development assays. The present study focused on larval development after the exposure of two F. enigmaticus populations (Mediterranean and Atlantic, collected in Italy and Portugal, respectively) to different trace elements (copper, mercury, arsenic, cadmium, and lead) at different concentrations. Results of larval development assays were presented as the percentage of abnormal developed larvae. The effect, measured in terms of EC
50 for all toxicants tested, showed that mercury was the most toxic metal for larvae of both populations. Specifically, the tested trace elements may be racked in the following order from the highest to the lowest toxicity: Mediterranean: mercury > copper > lead > arsenic > cadmium; Atlantic: mercury > copper > cadmium > arsenic > lead. Responses of both populations were similar for arsenic. Lead was the least toxic element for the Atlantic population, while cadmium showed the least toxicity for the Mediterranean population. These preliminary results demonstrate the sensitivity and suitability of the organisms to be used in ecotoxicological bioassays and monitoring protocols. Moreover, chemical analyses on soft tissues and calcareous tubes of collected test organisms and their sampling site water were performed, to identify and quantify the concentration of the tested trace elements in these 3 matrices. Populations exhibited less sensitivity to a certain element together with a relevantly higher concentration of the same element in soft tissues. This may indicate a certain resistance to particular contaminant toxic effects by organisms that tend to accumulate the same toxicant. This highlights the potential correlation between wild-caught test organisms' responses and a deep characterization of the sampling site to identify putative abnormalities or differences in model organism response during bioassay execution., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
27. Engineering the surface of prostate tumor cells and hyaluronan/chitosan multilayer films to modulate cell-substrate adhesion properties.
- Author
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Rocha Neto JBM, Gomes Neto RJ, Bataglioli RA, Taketa TB, Pimentel SB, Baratti MO, Costa CAR, Carvalho HF, and Beppu MM
- Abstract
This paper explores different film assembly conditions of the polyelectrolyte solutions of hyaluronan (HA) and chitosan (CHI), as well as both substrate and cell surface modifications, to investigate PC3 cells adhesion properties. UV-Visible, AFM-IR and Zeta potential techniques indicate that the solution ionic strength is a relevant parameter to modulate the free carboxylic groups of HA on the film surface. In addition, capacitive coupling measurements suggest that assembly conditions that favor surface charge mobility inhibit cell adhesion due to polymer rearrangements that support non-specific electrostatic interactions of positively charged CHI residues and the negatively charged cell moieties, rather than specific CD44-hyaluronan interactions. Moreover, the PC3 cells treatment with hyaluronidase and anti-CD44 antibody also highlighted the importance of CD44 binding site availability on the tumor cell adhesion properties. Finally, the conjugation of wheat germ agglutinin on the film surface proved to be a suitable strategy to boost the PC3 cell adhesion properties. Our results reveal the remarkable capacity of HA/CHI films to modulate cell-substrate properties, which pave the road for the development of surfaces suitable for several applications based on biosensing., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. [Working conditions among argentinean psychiatrists].
- Author
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Cesoni M, Peskin VA, Berrío Cuartas DM, Tenconi JC, Furman M, Pereyra W, Furman M, Ibañez B, Baratti M, Lagos D, García N, Mendieta M, and Sínchez F
- Subjects
- Argentina, Humans, Workload, Psychiatry
- Published
- 2018
29. Impact on Prehospital Delay of a Stroke Preparedness Campaign: A SW-RCT (Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial).
- Author
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Denti L, Caminiti C, Scoditti U, Zini A, Malferrari G, Zedde ML, Guidetti D, Baratti M, Vaghi L, Montanari E, Marcomini B, Riva S, Iezzi E, Castellini P, Olivato S, Barbi F, Perticaroli E, Monaco D, Iafelice I, Bigliardi G, Vandelli L, Guareschi A, Artoni A, Zanferrari C, and Schulz PJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Sectional Studies, Endpoint Determination, Female, Humans, Ischemic Attack, Transient therapy, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Statistical, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Thrombolytic Therapy statistics & numerical data, Time-to-Treatment, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Health Education statistics & numerical data, Stroke therapy
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Public campaigns to increase stroke preparedness have been tested in different contexts, showing contradictory results. We evaluated the effectiveness of a stroke campaign, designed specifically for the Italian population in reducing prehospital delay., Methods: According to an SW-RCT (Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial) design, the campaign was launched in 4 provinces in the northern part of the region Emilia Romagna at 3-month intervals in randomized sequence. The units of analysis were the patients admitted to hospital, with stroke and transient ischemic attack, over a time period of 15 months, beginning 3 months before the intervention was launched in the first province to allow for baseline data collection. The proportion of early arrivals (within 2 hours of symptom onset) was the primary outcome. Thrombolysis rate and some behavioral end points were the secondary outcomes. Data were analyzed using a fixed-effect model, adjusting for cluster and time trends., Results: We enrolled 1622 patients, 912 exposed and 710 nonexposed to the campaign. The proportion of early access was nonsignificantly lower in exposed patients (354 [38.8%] versus 315 [44.4%]; adjusted odds ratio, 0.81; 95% confidence interval, 0.60-1.08; P =0.15). As for secondary end points, an increase was found for stroke recognition, which approximated but did not reach statistical significance ( P =0.07)., Conclusions: Our campaign was not effective in reducing prehospital delay. Even if some limitations of the intervention, mainly in terms of duration, are taken into account, our study demonstrates that new communication strategies should be tested before large-scale implementation., Clinical Trial Registration: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01881152., (© 2017 American Heart Association, Inc.)
- Published
- 2017
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30. Development of an education campaign to reduce delays in pre-hospital response to stroke.
- Author
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Caminiti C, Schulz P, Marcomini B, Iezzi E, Riva S, Scoditti U, Zini A, Malferrari G, Zedde ML, Guidetti D, Montanari E, Baratti M, and Denti L
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Promotion organization & administration, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Needs Assessment, Quality Improvement, Severity of Illness Index, Stroke diagnosis, Time Factors, Young Adult, Emergency Medical Services, Health Education organization & administration, Stroke therapy
- Abstract
Background: Systematic reviews call for well-designed trials with clearly described intervention components to support the effectiveness of educational campaigns to reduce patient delay in stroke presentation. We herein describe the systematic development process of a campaign aimed to increase stroke awareness and preparedness., Methods: Campaign development followed Intervention Mapping (IM), a theory- and evidence-based tool, and was articulated in two phases: needs assessment and intervention development. In phase 1, two cross-sectional surveys were performed, one aiming to measure stroke awareness in the target population and the other to analyze the behavioral determinants of prehospital delay. In phase 2, a matrix of proximal program objectives was developed, theory-based intervention methods and practical strategies were selected and program components and materials produced., Results: In phase 1, the survey on 202 citizens highlighted underestimation of symptom severity, as in only 44% of stroke situations respondents would choose to call the emergency service (EMS). In the survey on 393 consecutive patients, 55% presented over 2 hours after symptom onset; major determinants were deciding to call the general practitioner first and the reaction of the first person the patient called. In phase 2, adult individuals were identified as the target of the intervention, both as potential "patients" and witnesses of stroke. The low educational level found in the patient survey called for a narrative approach in cartoon form. The family setting was chosen for the message because 42% of patients who presented within 2 hours had been advised by a family member to call EMS. To act on people's tendency to view stroke as an untreatable disease, it was decided to avoid fear-arousal appeals and use a positive message providing instructions and hope. Focus groups were used to test educational products and identify the most suitable sites for message dissemination., Conclusions: The IM approach allowed to develop a stroke campaign integrating theories, scientific evidence and information collected from the target population, and enabled to provide clear explanations for the reasons behind key decisions during the intervention development process., Trial Registration: NCT01881152 . Retrospectively registered June 7 2013.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Effect of ammonia on the gene expression levels of the freshwater cyclopoid Eucyclops serrulatus.
- Author
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Di Lorenzo T, Melita M, Cifoni M, Galassi DMP, Iannucci A, Biricolti S, Gori M, and Baratti M
- Subjects
- Animals, Catalase genetics, Copepoda genetics, Environmental Monitoring, HSP40 Heat-Shock Proteins genetics, HSP90 Heat-Shock Proteins genetics, Italy, Ammonia toxicity, Copepoda drug effects, Fresh Water chemistry, Gene Expression drug effects, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
Ammonia pollution is a critical issue in Europe, since more than half of the European freshwater bodies actually fail to meet EU quality standards for this chemical. In this study, the response of stress-related genes to a sublethal ammonia concentration has been investigated in the adults of the freshwater cyclopoid Eucyclops serrulatus. Two short-term exposures (12h and 24h) at 12mg/L NH
4 + have been tested. Results indicate that 12mg/L NH4 + causes a significant increase in the expression of some proteins, namely CAT, HSP90 and HSP40, suggesting an activation of the protecting antioxidant system after both 12h and 24h., (Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Genomic resources notes accepted 1 October 2014-30 November 2014.
- Author
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Baratti M, Cattonaro F, Di Lorenzo T, Galassi DM, Iannilli V, Iannucci A, Jensen J, Larsen PF, Nielsen RO, Pertoldi C, Postolache D, Pujolar JM, Randi E, Ruiz-Gonzalez A, Thirstrup JP, Vendramin GG, and Zalewski A
- Subjects
- Animals, Computational Biology, Genomics, Amphipoda genetics, Copepoda genetics, Mink genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Transcriptome
- Abstract
This article documents the public availability of (i) RAD sequencing data and validated SNPs for the American mink Neovison vison and (ii) Transcriptome resources for two nonmodel freshwater crustacean species, the copepod Eucyclops serrulatus and the amphipod Echinogammarus veneris., (© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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