145 results on '"Formenti, F"'
Search Results
2. Hookworm infection in infants: a case report and review of literature
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Umbrello, G., Pinzani, R., Bandera, A., Formenti, F., Zavarise, G., Arghittu, M., Girelli, D., Maraschini, A., Muscatello, A., Marchisio, P., and Bosis, S.
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- 2021
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- View/download PDF
3. Tidal changes in PaO2 and their relationship to cyclical lung recruitment/derecruitment in a porcine lung injury model
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Crockett, D.C., Cronin, J.N., Bommakanti, N., Chen, R., Hahn, C.E.W., Hedenstierna, G., Larsson, A., Farmery, A.D., and Formenti, F.
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- 2019
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- View/download PDF
4. Editorial: Physiological phenotyping in respiratory diseases: New approaches
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King, G. G., primary, Formenti, F., additional, and Petousi, N., additional
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- 2023
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5. Novel approaches to the diagnosis of Strongyloides stercoralis infection
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Buonfrate, D., Formenti, F., Perandin, F., and Bisoffi, Z.
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- 2015
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6. Intravascular oxygen sensors with novel applications for bedside respiratory monitoring
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Formenti, F. and Farmery, A. D.
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- 2017
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7. Evaluation of the new ImmunoCard STAT!® CGE test for the diagnosis of Amebiasis
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Formenti, F., Perandin, F., Bonafini, S., Degani, M., and Bisoffi, Z.
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- 2015
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- View/download PDF
8. Intra-breath arterial oxygen oscillations detected by a fast oxygen sensor in an animal model of acute respiratory distress syndrome
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Formenti, F., Chen, R., McPeak, H., Murison, P. J., Matejovic, M., Hahn, C. E. W., and Farmery, A. D.
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- 2015
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- View/download PDF
9. StrongNet: An International Network to Improve Diagnostics and Access to Treatment for Strongyloidiasis Control
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Albonico, M, Becker, SL, Odermatt, P, Angheben, A, Anselmi, M, Amor, A, Barda, B, Buonfrate, D, Cooper, P, Gétaz, L, Keiser, J, Khieu, V, Montresor, A, Muñoz, J, Requena-Méndez, A, Savioli, L, Speare, R, Steinmann, P, van Lieshout, L, Utzinger, J, Bisoffi, Z, Ault, S, Bartoloni, A, Bottazzi, ME, Bottieau, E, Bradbury, R, Brattig, N, Calleri, G, Castel, M, Caumes, E, Chiodini, PL, Colli, E, de los Santos, JJ, Einsiedel, L, Ferrero, L, Formenti, F, Forrer, A, Gobbi, F, Gombe-Goetz, S, Gomez, J, Gotuzzo, E, Guevara, A, Kearns, T, Knopp, S, Kotze, A, Krolewiecki, A, Lammie, P, Luchanez, A, Magnussen, P, Marcos, L, Marlais, T, Marti, H, McCarthy, J, Mejia, R, Mena, MA, Mertens, P, Miles, M, Molina, I, Mueller, A, Muth, S, Neumayr, A, Nickel, B, Nutman, T, Olsen, A, Page, W, Perandin, F, Periago, MV, Phongluxa, K, Polman, K, Raso, G, Saboya, M, Sayasone, S, Seixas, J, Sevcsik, AM, Schär, F, Sheorey, H, Shield, Jennifer, Arandes, AS, Steer, A, Streit, A, Tanaka, T, Vercruysse, J, Verdonck, K, Visser, L, Vonghachack, Y, Weber, C, Yajima, A, and Zammarchi, L
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Uncategorized - Abstract
No description supplied
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- 2021
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10. A global genotyping survey of Strongyloides stercoralis and Strongyloides fuelleborni using deep amplicon sequencing (vol 13, e0007609, 2019)
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Barratt, JLN, Lane, M, Talundzic, E, Richins, T, Robertson, G, Formenti, F, Pritt, B, Verocai, G, Nascimento de Souza, J, Soares, NM, Traub, R, Buonfrate, D, Bradbury, RS, Barratt, JLN, Lane, M, Talundzic, E, Richins, T, Robertson, G, Formenti, F, Pritt, B, Verocai, G, Nascimento de Souza, J, Soares, NM, Traub, R, Buonfrate, D, and Bradbury, RS
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[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007609.].
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- 2021
11. Lung heterogeneity and deadspace volume in acute respiratory distress syndrome animals using the inspired sinewave test
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Tran, MC, Crockett, DC, Formenti, F, Phan, PA, Hedenstierna, G, Larsson, A, Payne, SJ, and Farmery, AD
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Lung heterogeneity ,Anestesi och intensivvård ,Anesthesiology and Intensive Care ,IST ,ARDS ,respiratory system ,Lung Simulation ,respiratory tract diseases ,Inspired Sinewave Test - Abstract
The acute respiratory distress syndrome is associated with a high rate of morbidity and mortality, as patients undergoing mechanical ventilation are at risk of ventilator-induced lung injuries. OBJECTIVE: To measure the lung heterogeneity and deadspace volume to find safer ventilator strategies. Then, the ventilator settings could offer homogeneous ventilation and theoretically equalise and reduce tidal strain/stress in the lung parenchyma. APPROACH: The Inspired Sinewave Test (IST) is a non-invasive lung measurement tool, which does not require patients' cooperation. The IST can measure the effective lung volume, pulmonary blood flow and deadspace volume. We developed a computational simulation of the cardiopulmonary system to allow lung heterogeneity to be quantified using data solely derived from the IST. Then, the method to quantify lung heterogeneity using two IST tracer gas frequencies (180s and 60s) was introduced and experimented in the simulation lungs and in animal models. Thirteen anaesthetised pigs were studied with the IST, both before and after experimental lung injury (saline-lavage ARDS model). The deadspace volume is compared between IST and the SF_{6} Washout method. RESULTS: The IST could measure the lung heterogeneity using two frequencies tracer gases. Furthermore, the value of IST ventilation heterogeneity in ARDS lungs were higher than in control lungs at PEEP 10cmH_{2}O (AuC=0.85, p
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- 2020
12. A bug's life: Delving into the challenges of helminth microbiome studies
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Gilleard, JS, Formenti, F, Cortes, A, Brindley, PJ, Cantacessi, C, Rinaldi, G, Gilleard, JS, Formenti, F, Cortes, A, Brindley, PJ, Cantacessi, C, and Rinaldi, G
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- 2020
13. Noninvasive cardiac output monitoring in a porcine model using the inspired sinewave technique: a proof-of-concept study
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Bruce, R, Crockett, D, Morgan, A, Tran, M, Formenti, F, Phan, P, and Farmery, A
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haemodynamic ,monitoring ,nitrous oxide ,Swine ,noninvasive ,Models, Animal ,Thermodilution ,cardiac output ,Animals ,mechanical ventilation ,Cardiovascular ,respiration ,Monitoring, Physiologic - Abstract
Background Cardiac output monitoring can support the management of high-risk surgical patients, but the pulmonary artery catheterisation required by the current ‘gold standard’—bolus thermodilution —has the potential to cause life-threatening complications. We present a novel noninvasive and fully automated method that uses the inspired sinewave technique to continuously monitor cardiac output. Methods Over successive breaths the inspired nitrous oxide (N2O) concentration was forced to oscillate sinusoidally with a fixed mean (4%), amplitude (3%), and period (60 s). was determined in a single-compartment tidal ventilation lung model that used the resulting amplitude/phase of the expired N2O sinewave. The agreement and trending ability of were compared with during pharmacologically induced haemodynamic changes, before and after repeated lung lavages, in eight anaesthetised pigs. Results Before lung lavage, changes in and from baseline had a mean bias of –0.52 L min−1 (95% confidence interval [CI], –0.41 to –0.63). The concordance between and was 92.5% as assessed by four-quadrant analysis, and polar plot analysis revealed a mean angular bias of 5.98° (95% CI, –24.4°–36.3°). After lung lavage, concordance was slightly reduced (89.4%), and the mean angular bias widened to 21.8° (–4.2°, 47.6°). Impaired trending ability correlated with shunt fraction (r=0.79, P Conclusions The inspired sinewave technique provides continuous and noninvasive monitoring of cardiac output, with a ‘marginal–good’ trending ability compared with cardiac output based on thermodilution. However, the trending ability can be reduced with increasing shunt fraction, such as in acute lung injury.
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- 2019
14. Tidal changes in PaO2 and their relationship to cyclical lung recruitment/derecruitment in a porcine lung injury model
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Crockett, D. C., Cronin, J. N., Bommakanti, N., Chen, R., Hahn, C. E. W., Hedenstierna, Göran, Larsson, Anders, Farmery, A. D., Formenti, F., Crockett, D. C., Cronin, J. N., Bommakanti, N., Chen, R., Hahn, C. E. W., Hedenstierna, Göran, Larsson, Anders, Farmery, A. D., and Formenti, F.
- Abstract
Background: Tidal recruitment/derecruitment (R/D) of collapsed regions in lung injury has been presumed to cause respiratory oscillations in the partial pressure of arterial oxygen (PaO2). These phenomena have not yet been studied simultaneously. We examined the relationship between R/D and PaO2 oscillations by contemporaneous measurement of lung-density changes and PaO2. Methods: Five anaesthetised pigs were studied after surfactant depletion via a saline-lavage model of R/D. The animals were ventilated with a mean fraction of inspired O-2 (FiO(2)) of 0.7 and a tidal volume of 10 ml kg(-1) Protocolised changes in pressure-and volume-controlled modes, inspiratory: expiratory ratio (I:E), and three types of breath-hold manoeuvres were undertaken. Lung collapse and PaO2 were recorded using dynamic computed tomography (dCT) and a rapid PaO2 sensor. Results: During tidal ventilation, the expiratory lung collapse increased when I: E <1 [mean (standard deviation) lung collapse = .7 (8.7)%; P<0.05], but the amplitude of respiratory PaO2 oscillations [ 2.2 (0.8) kPa] did not change during the respiratory cycle. The expected relationship between respiratory PaO2 oscillation amplitude and R/D was therefore not clear. Lung collapse increased during breath-hold manoeuvres at end-expiration and end-inspiration (14% vs 0.9-2.1%; P<0.0001). The mean change in PaO2 from beginning to end of breath-hold manoeuvres was significantly different with each type of breath-hold manoeuvre (P<0.0001). Conclusions: This study in a porcine model of collapse-prone lungs did not demonstrate the expected association between PaO2 oscillation amplitude and the degree of recruitment/derecruitment. The results suggest that changes in pulmonary ventilation are not the sole determinant of changes in PaO2 during mechanical ventilation in lung injury.
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- 2019
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15. Author Correction: A comprehensive analysis of the faecal microbiome and metabolome of Strongyloides stercoralis infected volunteers from a non-endemic area.
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Jenkins, TP, Formenti, F, Castro, C, Piubelli, C, Perandin, F, Buonfrate, D, Otranto, D, Griffin, JL, Krause, L, Bisoffi, Z, Cantacessi, C, Jenkins, TP, Formenti, F, Castro, C, Piubelli, C, Perandin, F, Buonfrate, D, Otranto, D, Griffin, JL, Krause, L, Bisoffi, Z, and Cantacessi, C
- Abstract
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.
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- 2019
16. A global genotyping survey of Strongyloides stercoralis and Strongyloides fuelleborni using deep amplicon sequencing
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Periago, MV, Barratt, JLN, Lane, M, Talundzic, E, Richins, T, Robertson, G, Formenti, F, Pritt, B, Verocai, G, Nascimento de Souza, J, Mato Soares, N, Traub, R, Buonfrate, D, Bradbury, RS, Periago, MV, Barratt, JLN, Lane, M, Talundzic, E, Richins, T, Robertson, G, Formenti, F, Pritt, B, Verocai, G, Nascimento de Souza, J, Mato Soares, N, Traub, R, Buonfrate, D, and Bradbury, RS
- Abstract
Strongyloidiasis is a neglected tropical disease caused by the human infective nematodes Strongyloides stercoralis, Strongyloides fuelleborni fuelleborni and Strongyloides fuelleborni kellyi. Previous large-scale studies exploring the genetic diversity of this important genus have focused on Southeast Asia, with a small number of isolates from the USA, Switzerland, Australia and several African countries having been genotyped. Consequently, little is known about the global distribution of geographic sub-variants of these nematodes and the genetic diversity that exists within the genus Strongyloides generally. We extracted DNA from human, dog and primate feces containing Strongyloides, collected from several countries representing all inhabited continents. Using a genotyping assay adapted for deep amplicon sequencing on the Illumina MiSeq platform, we sequenced the hyper-variable I and hyper-variable IV regions of the Strongyloides 18S rRNA gene and a fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) gene from these specimens. We report several novel findings including unique S. stercoralis and S. fuelleborni genotypes, and the first identifications of a previously unknown S. fuelleborni infecting humans within Australia. We expand on an existing Strongyloides genotyping scheme to accommodate S. fuelleborni and these novel genotypes. In doing so, we compare our data to all 18S and cox1 sequences of S. fuelleborni and S. stercoralis available in GenBank (to our knowledge), that overlap with the sequences generated using our approach. As this analysis represents more than 1,000 sequences collected from diverse hosts and locations, representing all inhabited continents, it allows a truly global understanding of the population genetic structure of the Strongyloides species infecting humans, non-human primates, and domestic dogs.
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- 2019
17. A global genotyping survey of Strongyloides stercoralis and Strongyloides fuelleborni using deep amplicon sequencing
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Barratt, JLN, Lane, M, Talundzic, E, Richins, T, Robertson, G, Formenti, F, Pritt, B, Verocai, G, De Souza, JN, Soares, NM, Traub, R, Buonfrate, D, Bradbury, RS, Barratt, JLN, Lane, M, Talundzic, E, Richins, T, Robertson, G, Formenti, F, Pritt, B, Verocai, G, De Souza, JN, Soares, NM, Traub, R, Buonfrate, D, and Bradbury, RS
- Abstract
© 2019 This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. Strongyloidiasis is a neglected tropical disease caused by the human infective nematodes Strongyloides stercoralis, Strongyloides fuelleborni fuelleborni and Strongyloides fuelleborni kellyi. Previous large-scale studies exploring the genetic diversity of this important genus have focused on Southeast Asia, with a small number of isolates from the USA, Switzerland, Australia and several African countries having been genotyped. Consequently, little is known about the global distribution of geographic sub-variants of these nematodes and the genetic diversity that exists within the genus Strongyloides generally. We extracted DNA from human, dog and primate feces containing Strongyloides, collected from several countries representing all inhabited continents. Using a genotyping assay adapted for deep amplicon sequencing on the Illumina MiSeq platform, we sequenced the hyper-variable I and hyper-variable IV regions of the Strongyloides 18S rRNA gene and a fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) gene from these specimens. We report several novel findings including unique S. stercoralis and S. fuelleborni genotypes, and the first identifications of a previously unknown S. fuelleborni infecting humans within Australia. We expand on an existing Strongyloides genotyping scheme to accommodate S. fuelleborni and these novel genotypes. In doing so, we compare our data to all 18S and cox1 sequences of S. fuelleborni and S. stercoralis available in GenBank (to our knowledge), that overlap with the sequences generated using our approach. As this analysis represents more than 1,000 sequences collected from diverse hosts and locations, representing all inhabited continents, it allows a
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- 2019
18. Respiratory PaO2 oscillations and their relationship to dynamic atelectasis measured by CT during tidal ventilation in a surfactant depletion model of ARDS
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Crockett, D, Cronin, J, Bommakanti, N, Chen, R, Hahn, C, Hedenstierna, G, Larsson, A, Farmery, A, and Formenti, F
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- 2018
19. Intra-tidal PaO2, PaCO2 and pH oscillations in lung-lavaged pigs: implications for clinical arterial blood gas sampling
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Cronin, J, Chen, R, Crockett, D, Farmery, A, Hedenstierna, G, Larsson, A, Camporota, L, and Formenti, F
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- 2018
20. Tidal changes in PaO2 and their relationship to cyclical lung recruitment/derecruitment in a porcine lung injury model
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Crockett, D. C., Cronin, J. N., Bommakanti, N., Chen, R., Hahn, C. E. W., Hedenstierna, Göran, Larsson, Anders, Farmery, A. D., and Formenti, F.
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Male ,Recruitment, Neurophysiological ,Pulmonary Atelectasis ,Anestesi och intensivvård ,Swine ,diagnostic imaging ,Acute Lung Injury ,Oxygen Consumption ,Tidal Volume ,Animals ,pulmonary atelectasis ,lung injury ,Therapeutic Irrigation ,dynamic computed tomorgraphy ,Anesthesiology and Intensive Care ,ventilation ,respiratory system ,Respiration, Artificial ,respiratory tract diseases ,Respiratory Mechanics ,Female ,Respiration and the airway ,Blood Gas Analysis ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,respiration ,circulatory and respiratory physiology - Abstract
Background: Tidal recruitment/derecruitment (R/D) of collapsed regions in lung injury has been presumed to cause respiratory oscillations in the partial pressure of arterial oxygen (PaO 2 ). These phenomena have not yet been studied simultaneously. We examined the relationship between R/D and PaO 2 oscillations by contemporaneous measurement of lung-density changes and PaO 2 . Methods: Five anaesthetised pigs were studied after surfactant depletion via a saline-lavage model of R/D. The animals were ventilated with a mean fraction of inspired O 2 (FiO 2 ) of 0.7 and a tidal volume of 10 ml kg −1 . Protocolised changes in pressure- and volume-controlled modes, inspiratory:expiratory ratio (I:E), and three types of breath-hold manoeuvres were undertaken. Lung collapse and PaO 2 were recorded using dynamic computed tomography (dCT) and a rapid PaO 2 sensor. Results: During tidal ventilation, the expiratory lung collapse increased when I:E 2 oscillations [2.2 (0.8) kPa] did not change during the respiratory cycle. The expected relationship between respiratory PaO 2 oscillation amplitude and R/D was therefore not clear. Lung collapse increased during breath-hold manoeuvres at end-expiration and end-inspiration (14% vs 0.9–2.1%; P2 from beginning to end of breath-hold manoeuvres was significantly different with each type of breath-hold manoeuvre (P2 oscillation amplitude and the degree of recruitment/derecruitment. The results suggest that changes in pulmonary ventilation are not the sole determinant of changes in PaO 2 during mechanical ventilation in lung injury.
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- 2018
21. A comprehensive analysis of the faecal microbiome and metabolome of Strongyloides stercoralis infected volunteers from a non-endemic area.
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Jenkins, TP, Formenti, F, Castro, C, Piubelli, C, Perandin, F, Buonfrate, D, Otranto, D, Griffin, JL, Krause, L, Bisoffi, Z, Cantacessi, C, Jenkins, TP, Formenti, F, Castro, C, Piubelli, C, Perandin, F, Buonfrate, D, Otranto, D, Griffin, JL, Krause, L, Bisoffi, Z, and Cantacessi, C
- Abstract
Data from recent studies support the hypothesis that infections by human gastrointestinal (GI) helminths impact, directly and/or indirectly, on the composition of the host gut microbial flora. However, to the best of our knowledge, these studies have been conducted in helminth-endemic areas with multi-helminth infections and/or in volunteers with underlying gut disorders. Therefore, in this study, we explore the impact of natural mono-infections by the human parasite Strongyloides stercoralis on the faecal microbiota and metabolic profiles of a cohort of human volunteers from a non-endemic area of northern Italy (S+), pre- and post-anthelmintic treatment, and compare the findings with data obtained from a cohort of uninfected controls from the same geographical area (S-). Analyses of bacterial 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing data revealed increased microbial alpha diversity and decreased beta diversity in the faecal microbial profiles of S+ subjects compared to S-. Furthermore, significant differences in the abundance of several bacterial taxa were observed between samples from S+ and S- subjects, and between S+ samples collected pre- and post-anthelmintic treatment. Faecal metabolite analysis detected marked increases in the abundance of selected amino acids in S+ subjects, and of short chain fatty acids in S- subjects. Overall, our work adds valuable knowledge to current understanding of parasite-microbiota associations and will assist future mechanistic studies aimed to unravel the causality of these relationships.
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- 2018
22. The effects of work rate and pedalling cadence on skeletal muscle oxygenation during cycling.
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Dockerill, C., Shastri, L., Alkhalil, M., Forbes, C., Rafferty, G., Takaishi, T., Zhang, L., Ishida, K., and Formenti, F.
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SKELETAL muscle ,RATE of perceived exertion ,CYCLING ,OXYGEN in the body ,EXERCISE intensity - Published
- 2019
23. Alveolar oxygen respiratory oscillations measured in arterial blood
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Formenti, F., Bommakanti, N., Chen, R., Cronin, J., McPeak, H., Holopherne-Doran, D., Hedenstierna, Göran, Hahn, C., Larsson, Anders, Farmery, A., Formenti, F., Bommakanti, N., Chen, R., Cronin, J., McPeak, H., Holopherne-Doran, D., Hedenstierna, Göran, Hahn, C., Larsson, Anders, and Farmery, A.
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- 2017
24. L'occhio pratico. Stefano Antonio Morcelli, l'arte e gli artisti
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Belotti, I, Formenti, F, Vavassori, G, Gobbi, E, Bocchi, G, Fusari, G, Lang, G, Ferraglio, E, Bausi, A, Gualina, C, Scaglia, B, Ferrari, M, Rota, L, Bellini, M, Cazzali, S, Gallotti, R, Baroni, C, Facchetti, M, Fusari, Giuseppe, Fusari, G (ORCID:0000-0003-3756-1605), Belotti, I, Formenti, F, Vavassori, G, Gobbi, E, Bocchi, G, Fusari, G, Lang, G, Ferraglio, E, Bausi, A, Gualina, C, Scaglia, B, Ferrari, M, Rota, L, Bellini, M, Cazzali, S, Gallotti, R, Baroni, C, Facchetti, M, Fusari, Giuseppe, and Fusari, G (ORCID:0000-0003-3756-1605)
- Abstract
L'articolo intende sondare i gusti artistici di Stefano Antonio Morcelli, epigrafista e latinista della fine del Settecento, e i suoi collegamenti con la cultura del Neoclassicismo
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- 2017
25. StrongNet: An International Network to Improve Diagnostics and Access to Treatment for Strongyloidiasis Control
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Albonico, M, Becker, Sl, Odermatt, P, Angheben, A, Anselmi, M, Amor, A, Barda, B, Buonfrate, D, Cooper, P, Getaz, L, Keiser, J, Khieu, V, Montresor, A, Munoz, J, Requena-Mendez, A, Savioli, L, Speare, R, Steinmann, P, van Lieshout, L, Utzinger, J, Bisoffi, Z, StrongNet Working Group: Ault, S, Bartoloni, A, Bottazzi, Me, Bottieau, E, Bradbury, R, Brattig, N, Calleri, G, Castel, M, Caumes, E, Chiodini, Pl, Colli, E, de los Santos JJ, Einsiedel, L, Ferrero, L, Formenti, F, Forrer, A, Gétaz, L, Gobbi, F, Gombe-Goetz, S, Gomez, J, Gotuzzo, E, Guevara, A, Kearns, T, Knopp, S, Kotze, A, Krolewiecki, A, Lammie, P, Luchanez, A, Magnussen, P, Marcos, L, Marlais, T, Marti, H, Mccarthy, J, Mejia, R, Mena, Ma, Mertens, P, Miles, M, Molina, I, Mueller, A, Muñoz, J, Muth, S, Neumayr, A, Nickel, B, Nutman, T, Olsen, A, Page, W, Perandin, F, Periago, Mv, Phongluxa, K, Polman, K, Raso, G, Requena-Méndez, A, Saboya, M, Sayasone, S, Seixas, J, Sevcsik, A-M, Schär, F, Sheorey, H, Shield, J, Arandes, As, Steer, A, Streit, A, Tanaka, T, Vercruysse, J, Verdonck, K, Visser, L, Vonghachack, Y, Weber, C, Yajima, A, and Zammarchi, L
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Internationality ,Nematoda ,Nematodes ,Ectoparasitic Infections ,Communicable diseases ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Health Services Accessibility ,Scabies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ivermectin ,Risk Factors ,Strongyloides ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Anthelmintics ,biology ,Communication ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Strongyloides Stercoralis ,Rash ,Serology ,Infectious Diseases ,Strongyloidiasis ,Helminth Infections ,Strongyloidiasis, Feces Analysis, Ivermectin ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Neglected Tropical Diseases ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Infectious Disease Control ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,030231 tropical medicine ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,Strongyloides stercoralis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Parasitic Diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,Disease burden ,Policy Platform ,business.industry ,Public health ,Organisms ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Tropical disease ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Malalties infeccioses ,Tropical Diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Invertebrates ,Malaria ,Surgery ,Soil-Transmitted Helminthiases ,business ,Feces Analysis - Abstract
Strongyloidiasis is a disease caused by an infection with a soil-transmitted helminth that affects, according to largely varying estimates, between 30 million and 370 million people worldwide [1,2]. Not officially listed as a neglected tropical disease (NTD), strongyloidiasis stands out as particularly overlooked [3]. Indeed, there is a paucity of research and public health efforts pertaining to strongyloidiasis. Hence, clinical, diagnostic, epidemiologic, treatment, and control aspects are not adequately addressed to allow for an effective management of the disease, both in clinical medicine and in public health programs [4]. The manifold signs and symptoms caused by Strongyloides stercoralis infection, coupled with the helminth’s unique potential to cause lifelong, persistent infection, make strongyloidiasis relevant beyond tropical and subtropical geographic regions, where, however, most of the disease burden is concentrated. Indeed, strongyloidiasis is acquired through contact with contaminated soil, and the infection is, thus, primarily transmitted in areas with poor sanitation, inadequate access to clean water, and lack of hygiene. While the actual morbidity of chronically infected, immunocompetent individuals is subtle and difficult to appreciate [5], the particular importance of this parasitic worm is linked to its potential for maintaining lifelong autoinfections and causing a life-threatening hyperinfection syndrome in immunocompromised individuals [6]. Lack of point-of-care (POC) diagnostics and poor availability of, and access to, ivermectin (the current treatment of choice) are the two most significant bottlenecks that hinder effective management of the disease both in clinical and in public health settings. Examples of the management and importance of strongyloidiasis in two clinical contexts (in a tropical setting and a high-income country) and from a public health perspective are given in Boxes 1–3. Box 1. Individual Living in an Endemic Area with Diarrhea, Abdominal Pain, Pruritus, and Significant Dermatological Manifestations [10] A 43-year-old male farmer, living in the rural eastern part of Preah Vihear province, northern Cambodia, was diagnosed with a heavy Strongyloides stercoralis infection (924 and 478 larvae present in two Baermann examinations). Additionally, larvae and adult S. stercoralis were detected in Koga agar plate culture examinations of the stools. The patient was co-infected with hookworm and presented with abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, fever, and a pronounced and persistent skin rash, which had been present with extensive itching for more than two years. The rash was observed on the back, chest, abdomen, and extremities and, due to frequent and intense scratching, showed signs of focal infection. Three weeks after treatment with a single oral dose of ivermectin (200 μg/kg) and a single oral dose of mebendazole, the patient’s rash had almost disappeared, and he was free of episodes of intensive itching.
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- 2016
26. Measurement of inclusive K*(0)(892), phi(1020) and K-2*(0)(1430) production in hadronic Z decays
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Abreu, P., Adam, W., Adye, T., Agasi, E., Ajinenko, I., Aleksan, R., Alekseev, G., Alemany, R., Allport, P., Almehed, S., Amaldi, U., Amato, S., Andreazza, A., Andrieux, M., Antilogus, P., Apel, W., Arnoud, Y., Asman, B., Augustin, J., Augustinus, A., Baillon, P., Bambade, P., Barate, R., Barbi, M., Bardin, D., Baroncelli, A., Barring, O., Barrio, J., Bartl, W., Bates, M., Battaglia, M., Baubillier, M., Baudot, J., Becks, K., Begalli, M., Beilliere, P., Belokopytov, Y., Belous, K., Benvenuti, A., Berggren, M., Bertini, D., Bertrand, D., Bianchi, F., Bigi, M., Bilenky, M., Billoir, P., Bloch, D., Blume, M., Bolognese, T., Bonesini, M., Bonivento, W., Booth, P., Bosio, C., Botner, O., Boudinov, E., Bouquet, B., Bourdarios, C., Bowcock, T., Bozzo, Marco, Branchini, P., Brand, K., Brenke, T., Brenner, R., Bricman, C., Brown, R., Bruckman, P., Brunet, J., Bugge, L., Buran, T., Burgsmueller, T., Buschmann, P., Buys, A., Cabrera, S., Caccia, M., Calvi, M., Rozas, A., Camporesi, T., Canale, V., Canepa, M., Cankocak, K., Cao, F., Carena, F., Carroll, L., Caso, C., Gimenez, M., Cattai, A., Cavallo, F., Chabaud, V., Chapkin, M., Charpentier, P., Chaussard, L., Checchia, P., Chelkov, G., Chen, M., Chierici, R., Chliapnikov, P., Chochula, P., Chorowicz, V., Cindro, V., Collins, P., Contreras, J., Contri, R., Cortina, E., Cosme, G., Cossutti, F., Crawley, H., Crennell, D., Crosetti, G., Maestro, J., Czellar, S., Dahljensen, E., Dahm, J., Dalmagne, B., Dam, M., Damgaard, G., Dauncey, P., Davenport, M., Dasilva, W., Defoix, C., Deghorain, A., Dellaricca, G., Delpierre, P., Demaria, N., Deangelis, A., Deboer, W., Debrabandere, S., Declercq, C., Delavassiere, C., Delotto, B., Demin, A., Depaula, L., Desaintjean, C., Dijkstra, H., Diciaccio, L., Djama, F., Dolbeau, J., Donszelmann, M., Doroba, K., Dracos, M., Drees, J., Drees, K., Dris, M., Durand, J., Edsall, D., Ehret, R., Eigen, G., Ekelof, T., Ekspong, G., Elsing, M., Engel, J., Erzen, B., Santo, M., Falk, E., Fassouliotis, D., Feindt, M., Ferrer, A., Fichet, S., Filippas, T., Firestone, A., Fischer, P., Foeth, H., Fokitis, E., Fontanelli, Flavio, Formenti, F., Franek, B., Frenkiel, P., Fries, D., Frodesen, A., Fruhwirth, R., Fuldaquenzer, F., Fuster, J., Galloni, A., Gamba, D., Gandelman, M., Garcia, C., Garcia, J., Gaspar, C., Gasparini, U., Gavillet, P., Gazis, E., Gele, D., Gerberg, J., Gerdyukov, L., Gibbs, M., Gokieli, R., Golob, B., Gopal, G., Gorn, L., Gorski, M., Gouz, Y., Gracco, V., Graziani, E., Gresdidier, G., Grzelak, K., Gumenyuk, S., Gunnarsson, P., Gunther, M., Guy, J., Hahn, F., Hahn, S., Hajduk, Z., Hallgren, A., Hamacher, K., Hao, W., Harris, F., Hedberg, V., Henriques, R., Hernandez, J., Herquet, P., Herr, H., Hessing, T., Higon, E., Hilke, H., Hill, T., Holmgren, S., Holt, P., Holthuizen, D., Hoorelbeke, S., Houlden, M., Hrubec, J., Huet, K., Hultqvist, K., Jackson, J., Jacobsson, R., Jalocha, P., Janik, R., Jarlskog, G., Jarry, P., Jeanmarie, B., Johansson, E., Jonsson, L., Jonsson, P., Joram, C., Juillot, P., Kaiser, M., Kapusta, F., Karafasoulis, K., Karlsson, M., Karvelas, E., Katsanevas, S., Katsoufis, E., Keranen, R., Khokhlov, Y., Khomenko, B., Khovanski, N., King, B., Kjaer, N., Klein, H., Klovning, A., Kluit, P., Koene, B., Kokkinias, P., Koratzinos, M., Korcyl, K., Kostioukhine, V., Kourkoumelis, C., Kouznetsov, O., Kramer, P., Krammer, M., Kreuter, C., Kronkvist, I., Krumstein, Z., Krupinski, W., Kubinec, P., Kucewicz, W., Kurvinen, K., Lacasta, C., Laktineh, I., Lamsa, J., Lanceri, L., Lane, D., Langefeld, P., Lapin, V., Last, I., Laugier, J., Lauhakangas, R., Leder, G., Ledroit, F., Lefebure, V., Legan, C., Leitner, R., Lemoigne, Y., Lemonne, J., Lenzen, G., Lepeltier, V., Lesiak, T., Libby, J., Liko, D., Lindner, R., Lipniacka, A., Lippi, I., Loerstad, B., Loken, J., Lopez, J., Loukas, D., Lutz, P., Lyons, L., Maehlum, G., Maio, A., Malmgren, T., Malychev, V., Mandl, F., Marco, J., Marco, R., Marechal, B., Margoni, M., Marin, J., Mariotti, C., Markou, A., Maron, T., Martinezrivero, C., Martinezvidal, F., Garvia, S., Matorras, F., Matteuzzi, C., Matthiae, G., Mazzucato, M., Mccubbin, M., Mckay, R., Mcnulty, R., Medbo, J., Merk, M., Meroni, C., Meyer, S., Meyer, W., Michelotto, M., Migliore, E., Mirabito, L., Mitaroff, W., Mjoernmark, U., Moa, T., Moeller, R., Moenig, K., Monge, MARIA ROBERTA, Morettini, P., Mueller, H., Muenich, K., Mundim, L., Murray, W., Muryn, B., Myatt, G., Naraghi, F., Navarria, F., Navas, S., Nawrocki, K., Negri, P., Nemecek, S., Neumann, W., Neumeister, N., Nicolaidou, R., Nielsen, B., Niewenhuizen, M., Nikolaenko, V., Niss, P., Nomerotski, A., Normand, A., Novak, M., Oberschultebeckmann, W., Obraztsov, V., Olshevski, A., Onofre, A., Orava, R., Osterberg, K., Ouraou, A., Paganini, P., Paganoni, M., Pages, P., Pain, R., Palka, H., Papadopoulou, T., Papageorgiou, K., Pape, L., Parkes, C., Parodi, Fabrizio, Passeri, A., Pegoraro, M., Peralta, L., Pernegger, H., Pernicka, M., Perrotta, A., Petridou, C., Petrolini, Alessandro, Petrovyck, M., Phillips, H., Piana, G., Pierre, F., Pimenta, M., Plaszczynski, S., Podobrin, O., Pol, M., Polok, G., Poropat, P., Pozdniakov, V., Prest, M., Privitera, P., Pukhaeva, N., Pullia, A., Radojicic, D., Ragazzi, S., Rahmani, H., Rames, J., Ratoff, P., Read, A., Reale, M., Rebecchi, P., Redaelli, N., Regler, M., Reid, D., Renton, P., Resvanis, L., Richard, F., Richardson, J., Ridky, J., Rinaudo, G., Ripp, I., Romero, A., Roncagliolo, I., Ronchese, P., Roos, L., Rosenberg, E., Rosso, E., Roudeau, P., Rovelli, T., Ruckstuhl, W., Ruhlmannkleider, V., Ruiz, A., Rybicki, K., Saarikko, H., Sacquin, Y., Sadovsky, A., Sahr, O., Sajot, G., Salt, J., Sanchez, J., Sannino, Mario, Schimmelpfennig, M., Schneider, H., Schwickerath, U., Schyns, M., Sciolla, G., Scuri, F., Seager, P., Sedykh, Y., Segar, A., Seitz, A., Sekulin, R., Serbelloni, L., Shellard, R., Siccama, I., Siegrist, P., Simonetti, S., Simenetto, F., Sisakian, A., Sitar, B., Skaali, T., Smadja, G., Smirnov, N., Smirnova, O., Smith, G., Sosnowski, R., Souzasantos, D., Spassov, T., Spiriti, E., Sponholz, P., Squarcia, Sandro, Stanescu, C., Stapnes, S., Stavitski, I., Stevenson, K., Stichelbaut, F., Stocchi, A., Strauss, J., Strub, R., Stugu, B., Szczekowski, M., Szeptycka, M., Tabarelli, T., Tavernet, J., Tchikilev, O., Thomas, J., Tilquin, A., Timmermans, J., Tkatchev, L., Todorov, T., Todorova, S., Toet, D., Tomaradze, A., Tome, B., Tonazzo, A., Tortora, L., Transtromer, G., Treille, D., Trischuk, W., Tristram, G., Trombini, A., Troncon, C., Tsirou, A., Turluer, M., Tyapkin, I., Tyndel, M., Tzamarias, S., Ueberschaer, B., Ullaland, O., Uvarov, V., Valenti, G., Vallazza, E., Vanapeldoorn, G., Vandam, P., Vaneldik, J., Vassilopoulos, N., Vegni, G., Ventura, L., Venus, W., Verbeure, F., Verlato, M., Vertogradov, L., Vilanova, D., Vincent, P., Vitale, L., Vlasov, E., Vodopyanov, A., Vrba, V., Wahlen, H., Walck, C., Waldner, F., Weierstall, M., Weilhammer, P., Weiser, C., Wetherell, A., Wicke, D., Wickens, J., Wielers, M., Wilkinson, G., Williams, W., Winter, M., Witek, M., Woschnagg, K., Yip, K., Yushchenko, O., Zach, F., Zaitsev, A., Zalewska, A., Zalewski, P., Zavrtanik, D., Zevgolatakos, E., Zimin, N., Zito, M., Zontar, D., Zucchelli, G., Zumerle, G., Laboratoire de Physique Subatomique et de Cosmologie (LPSC), Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble 1 (UJF)-Institut polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology (Grenoble INP)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA), Institut de Physique Nucléaire de Lyon (IPNL), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire de l'Accélérateur Linéaire (LAL), Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et de Hautes Énergies (LPNHE), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Physique Corpusculaire et Cosmologie - Collège de France (PCC), Collège de France (CdF)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Recherches Subatomiques (IReS), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Cancéropôle du Grand Est-Université Louis Pasteur - Strasbourg I-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre de Physique des Particules de Marseille (CPPM), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU), DELPHI, Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble 1 (UJF)-Institut polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology (Grenoble INP )-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Collège de France (CdF (institution))-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Delphi, Collaboration, Abreu, P., Adam, W., Canale, Vincenzo, Institut polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology (Grenoble INP )-Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble 1 (UJF)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC), and UCL - SST/IRMP - Institut de recherche en mathématique et physique
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Particle physics ,Meson production ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Meson ,Electron–positron annihilation ,Hadron ,VECTOR ,production rate ,01 natural sciences ,Partícules (Física nuclear) ,DELPHI ,neutral vector meson ,tensor meson ,Nuclear physics ,0103 physical sciences ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,MESON ,GEV/C ,Tensor ,Neutral vector ,010306 general physics ,Detectors de radiació ,Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Mass spectrum ,Production (computer science) - Abstract
The inclusive production of the neutral vector mesons K-*0(892) and phi(1020), and of the tensor meson K-2(*0)(1430), in hadronic decays of the Z has been mea sured by the DELPHI detector at LEP. The average production rates per hadronic Z decay have been determined to be 0.77 +/- 0.08 K-2(*0)(892), 0.104 +/- 0.008 phi(1020) and 0.079 +/- 0.040 K-2(*0)(1430). The ratio of the tensor-to-vector meson production yields, [K-2(*0)(1430)]/[K-*0(892)] = 0.10 +/- 0.05, is smaller than the [f(2)(1270)]/[rho(0)(770)] and [f'(2)(1525)]/[phi(1020)] ratios measured by DELPHI. The production rates and differential cross sections are compared with the predictions of JETSET 7.4 tuned to the DELPHI data and of HERWIG 5.8. The K-*0(892) and phi(1020) data are compatible with model predictions, but a large disagreement is observed for the K-2(*0)(1430).
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- 2016
27. HYPOXIA-INDUCIBLE FACTOR 2 alpha REGULATES NEUTROPHILIC INFLAMMATION IN HUMANS, MICE AND ZEBRAFISH
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Thompson, AAR, Elks, PM, Marriott, HM, Higgins, KR, Parmar, S, Shaw, G, Eamsamarng, S, McGrath, EE, Formenti, F, Van Eeden, FJ, Kinnula, VL, Pugh, CW, Sabroe, I, Dockrell, DH, Chilvers, ER, Robbins, PA, Simon, MC, Johnson, RS, Renshaw, SA, Whyte, MKB, and Walmsley, SR
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- 2016
28. A 40 MHz pipelined trigger for K-0 -> 2 pi(0) decays for the CERN NA48 experiment
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Gorini, B, Avanzini, C, Barr, G, Calafiura, P, Cirilli, M, Costantini, F, Cundy, D, Dibon, H, Fischer, G, Formenti, F, Hallgren, B, Iwanski, W, Jeitler, M, Kapusta, P, Laico, F, Laverriere, G, Magazzu, G, Markytan, M, Mikulec, I, Morsani, F, Neuhofer, G, Pernicka, M, Pierazzini, G, Porcu, M, and Rizzi, D
- Abstract
A first level trigger system based on a 40 MHz digital pipeline has been developed for the CERN NA48 [1] experiment, aiming at measuring CP violation in K-0 --> 2 pi decays.The outputs of the 13340 cells of the 10 m(3) liquid krypton calorimeter are summed into 64 X and 64 Y projection strips and continuously digitised with 40 MHz FADCs.This information is used to reconstruct at each clock cycle and for the two calorimeter projections, the number of clusters, the impact time of each of them (with a precision of about 3 ns), their total energy and the first and second moments of the energy distribution.Based on the quantities listed above, a programmable look-up table system subsequently computes online the longitudinal position of the kaon decay vertex and performs an event selection.The system is described.
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- 2016
29. The NA48(1) LKr calorimeter readout electronics
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Gianoli, A, Bal, F, Barr, G, Brodier-Yourstone, P, Buchholz, P, Ceccucci, A, Cerri, C, Chlopik, A, Costantini, F, Fantechi, R, Formenti, F, Funk, W, Giudici, S, Gorini, B, Guzik, Z, Hallgren, B, Kozhevnikov, Y, Iwansky, W, de la Taille, C, Lacourt, A, Laverriere, G, Ljuslin, C, Mannelli, I, Martin-Chassard, G, and Martini, M
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The NA48 experiment at the CERN SPS accelerator is making a measurement of the direct CP violation parameter epsilon'/epsilon by comparing the four rates of decay of K-S and K-L into 2(pi)(0) and pi(+)pi(-). To reconstruct the decays into 2 pi(0) the information from the almost 13500 channels of a quasi-homogeneous liquid krypton electromagnetic calorimeter is used. The readout electronics of the calorimeter has been designed to provide a dynamic range from a few MeV to about 50 GeV energy deposition per cell, and to sustain a high rate of incident particles. The system is made by cold charge preamplifiers (working at 120 degrees K), low-noise fast shapers followed by digitizer electronics at 40 MHz sampling rate that employs a gain switching technique to expand the dynamic range, where the gain can be selected for each sample individually (i.e. every 25 ns). To reduce the amount of data collected the system contains a zero suppression circuit based on halo expansion.
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- 2016
30. The role of hypoxia-inducible factor in systemic human physiology
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Formenti, F, Robbins, PA, and Dorrington, KL
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Physiology and anatomy - Abstract
This thesis summarizes a research programme on the role of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) and its 2alpha subunit in systemic human physiology. Experiments were performed to assess the role of HIF in the regulation of skeletal muscle metabolism, cardiac anatomy, function and energy metabolism, and in cardiopulmonary physiology. Patients with different genetic mutations affecting the HIF pathway were recruited for each main study. Chapter 1 presents an overview of human physiological responses to hypoxia in a historical perspective, with particular attention to the areas of human physiology that are relevant for the studies presented in the experimental chapters. Chapter 1 also presents a summary of the HIF pathway and the novel findings presented in this thesis. Chapter 2 illustrates the methods used to perform the experiments. Chapter 3 investigates skeletal muscle metabolism, cardiac anatomy, function and energy metabolism in patients with Chuvash polycythaemia, who have mildly elevated levels of HIF, associated with a mutation in von Hippel-Lindau gene, at whole body level. Chapter 3 shows major abnormalities associated with HIF pathway alterations in skeletal muscle energy metabolism, especially in conditions of metabolic stress such as during exercise and digestion of a meal. Chapter 4 shows that patients with Chuvash polycythaemia also have small hearts and reduced cardiac energy levels. Chapter 5 explores cardiopulmonary abnormalities in patients with gain-of-function mutations specifically in HIF-2alpha subunit; these patients are polycythaemic like patients with Chuvash polycythaemia. Observed abnormalities include pulmonary hypertension, elevated heart rate, cardiac output, ventilation, and the increment in pulmonary blood pressure in response to moderate hypoxia. Chapter 6 presents results from experiments in patients with classic von Hippel- Lindau disease, who are not usually polycythaemic. However, some degree of haploinsufficiency was observed in their neutrophils, suggesting a pseudo-hypoxic phenotype. Chapter 6 shows that von Hippel-Lindau disease is not associated with major cardiopulmonary abnormalities. Overall, the research reported in this thesis presents original experimental evidence for the effects of alterations in the HIF pathway on human physiology.
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- 2016
31. Determinants of ventilation and pulmonary artery pressure during early acclimatization to hypoxia in humans.
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Fatemian, M, Herigstad, M, Croft, Q, Formenti, F, Cardenas, R, Wheeler, C, Smith, T, Friedmannova, M, Dorrington, K, Robbins, P, Fatemian, M, Herigstad, M, Croft, Q, Formenti, F, Cardenas, R, Wheeler, C, Smith, T, Friedmannova, M, Dorrington, K, and Robbins, P
- Abstract
Pulmonary ventilation and pulmonary arterial pressure both rise progressively during the first few hours of human acclimatization to hypoxia. These responses are highly variable between individuals, but the origin of this variability is unknown. Here, we sought to determine whether the variabilities between different measures of response to sustained hypoxiawere related, which would suggest a common source of variability. Eighty volunteers individually underwent an 8-h isocapnic exposure to hypoxia (end-tidal PO2=55 Torr) in a purpose-built chamber. Measurements of ventilation and pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) assessed by Doppler echocardiography were made during the exposure. Before and after the exposure, measurements were made of the ventilatory sensitivities to acute isocapnic hypoxia (GpO2 ) and hyperoxic hypercapnia, the latter divided into peripheral (GpCO2 ) and central (GcCO2 ) components. Substantial acclimatization was observed in both ventilation and PASP, the latter being 40% greater in women than men. No correlation was found between the magnitudes of pulmonary ventilatory and pulmonary vascular responses. For GpO2 , GpCO2 and GcCO2 , but not the sensitivity of PASP to acute hypoxia, the magnitude of the increase during acclimatization was proportional to the pre-acclimatization value. Additionally, the change in GpO2 during acclimatization to hypoxia correlated well with most other measures of ventilatory acclimatization. Of the initial measurements prior to sustained hypoxia, only GpCO2 predicted the subsequent rise in ventilation and change in GpO2 during acclimatization. We conclude that the magnitudes of the ventilatory and pulmonary vascular responses to sustained hypoxia are predominantly determined by different factors and that the initial GpCO2 is a modest predictor of ventilatory acclimatization.
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- 2015
32. Giovanni Battista Rota e l'arte
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Formenti, F, Fusari, Giuseppe, Fusari, G (ORCID:0000-0003-3756-1605), Formenti, F, Fusari, Giuseppe, and Fusari, G (ORCID:0000-0003-3756-1605)
- Abstract
Il contributo, corredato di un'appendice documentaria contenente alcune lettere indirizzate ai fratelli su questioni artistiche, indaga la figura del Rota a partire dai suoi giudizi sugli artisti a lui contemporanei, impegnati nella realizzazione di opere per la parrocchiale di Chiari e per la diocesi di Lodi
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- 2015
33. Intra-breath arterial oxygen oscillations detected bya fast oxygen sensor in an animal model of acute respiratory distress syndrome.
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Formenti, F., Chen, R., McPeak, H., Murison, P. J., Matejovic, M., Hahn, C. E. W., and Farmery, A. D.
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- *
ADULT respiratory distress syndrome , *OXYGEN detectors , *ANIMAL models in research , *PARTIAL pressure , *ATELECTASIS , *BLOOD gases analysis - Abstract
Background. There is considerable interest in oxygen partial pressure (PO2) monitoring in physiology, and in tracking PO2 changes dynamically when it varies rapidly. For example, arterial PO2 (PaO2 ) can vary within the respiratory cycle in cyclical atelectasis (CA), where PaO2 is thought to increase and decrease during inspiration and expiration, respectively. A sensor that detects these PaO2 oscillations could become a useful diagnostic tool of CA during acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Methods.We developed a fibreoptic PO2 sensor (200 mmdiameter), suitable for human use, that has a fast response time, and can measure PO2 continuously in blood. By altering the inspired fraction of oxygen (FIO2 ) from 21 to 100% in four healthy animal models, we determined the linearity of the sensor's signal over a wide range of PaO2 values in vivo. We also hypothesized that the sensor could measure rapid intra-breath PaO2 oscillations in a large animal model of ARDS. Results. In the healthy animal models, PaO2 responses to changes in FIO2 were in agreement with conventional intermittent blood-gas analysis (n=39) for a wide range of PaO2 values, from 10 to 73 kPa. In the animal lavage model of CA, the sensor detected PaO2 oscillations, also at clinically relevant PaO2 levels close to 9 kPa. Conclusions. We conclude that these fibreoptic PaO2 sensors have the potential to become a diagnostic tool for CA in ARDS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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34. Tidal changes in PaO2 and their relationship to cyclical lung recruitment/derecruitment in a porcine lung injury model.
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Crockett, D.C., Cronin, J.N., Bommakanti, N., Chen, R., Hahn, C.E.W., Hedenstierna, G., Larsson, A., Farmery, A.D., and Formenti, F.
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- *
ATELECTASIS , *LUNGS , *ACCIDENTS , *COMPUTED tomography - Abstract
Background: Tidal recruitment/derecruitment (R/D) of collapsed regions in lung injury has been presumed to cause respiratory oscillations in the partial pressure of arterial oxygen (PaO2). These phenomena have not yet been studied simultaneously. We examined the relationship between R/D and PaO2 oscillations by contemporaneous measurement of lung-density changes and PaO2.Methods: Five anaesthetised pigs were studied after surfactant depletion via a saline-lavage model of R/D. The animals were ventilated with a mean fraction of inspired O2 (FiO2) of 0.7 and a tidal volume of 10 ml kg-1. Protocolised changes in pressure- and volume-controlled modes, inspiratory:expiratory ratio (I:E), and three types of breath-hold manoeuvres were undertaken. Lung collapse and PaO2 were recorded using dynamic computed tomography (dCT) and a rapid PaO2 sensor.Results: During tidal ventilation, the expiratory lung collapse increased when I:E <1 [mean (standard deviation) lung collapse=15.7 (8.7)%; P<0.05], but the amplitude of respiratory PaO2 oscillations [2.2 (0.8) kPa] did not change during the respiratory cycle. The expected relationship between respiratory PaO2 oscillation amplitude and R/D was therefore not clear. Lung collapse increased during breath-hold manoeuvres at end-expiration and end-inspiration (14% vs 0.9-2.1%; P<0.0001). The mean change in PaO2 from beginning to end of breath-hold manoeuvres was significantly different with each type of breath-hold manoeuvre (P<0.0001).Conclusions: This study in a porcine model of collapse-prone lungs did not demonstrate the expected association between PaO2 oscillation amplitude and the degree of recruitment/derecruitment. The results suggest that changes in pulmonary ventilation are not the sole determinant of changes in PaO2 during mechanical ventilation in lung injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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35. A new technique for diagnosing pulmonary embolism based on respiratory exchange
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Magor-Elliott, S, Formenti, F, Whiteley, J, and Robbins, P
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Cardiovascular system ,COVID-19 (Disease) ,Physiology ,Pulmonary circulation ,Pulmonary gas exchange - Abstract
This thesis was primarily concerned with whether it would be possible to develop a technique for diagnosing pulmonary embolism without employing ionising radiation. Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic halted experimental work in this area, and so a second aim of this thesis became to determine whether any residual physiological abnormalities in cardiopulmonary function could be detected in patients who had recovered from acute COVID-19 infection. Chapter 1 provides a brief introduction to the hypotheses and goals of the research contained within the thesis. Chapter 2 outlines the key concepts explored by this thesis and reviews relevant literature relating to cardiopulmonary physiology, gas exchange, pulmonary embolism and COVID-19. Chapter 3 describes a pre-existing molecular flow sensing technology and model of the lungs that form the basis of the work in the following chapters. Chapter 4 covers development of a novel model of the circulation and body gas stores which gives estimates of blood gas states across the circulation (and allows recirculation when connected to a model of the lung). This model is validated in Chapter 5, with good reproduction of measured changes demonstrated using a number of experiments that perturb the storage of body gases. Chapter 6 presents a small study collecting gas exchange measurements from hospital patients with suspected pulmonary embolism. Significant differences are observed between pulmonary embolism positive and negative patients when circulatory model estimates of blood gas state are compared with measurements of blood gases from a venous cannula. Chapter 7 extracts data from a cohort of pulmonary embolism negative patients to further investigate the ability of the proposed method to correctly estimate blood gas states in health. In Chapter 8, data were collected from participants who had recovered from COVID-19 infection and several pathological changes to model lung parameters are shown to scale with the severity of initial COVID-19 infection. Chapter 9 presents validation work using enhanced gravity to induce changes in the distribution of lung compliance but not deadspace. The pre-existing lung model successfully disentangled these two sources of expired gas profile smearing. Finally, Chapter 10 concludes this thesis with a summary of my findings, their implications and potential future avenues of research.
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- 2022
36. Effects of Germline VHL Deficiency on Growth, Metabolism, and Mitochondria
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Julian L. Griffin, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Saverio Scianguetta, Domenico Roberti, Silverio Perrotta, Adriana Borriello, Fulvio Della Ragione, Katie A. O'Brien, Paola Antonia Corsetto, Roland A. Fleck, Martina Caiazza, Clara Franzini-Armstrong, Emanuela Stampone, Maddalena Casale, Angela Maria Rizzo, Andrew J. Murray, Immacolata Tartaglione, Peter A. Robbins, Leanne Allison, Debora Bencivenga, Federico Formenti, James A. West, Corsetto, Paola [0000-0003-3849-8548], Allison, Leanne [0000-0003-2954-9892], Tartaglione, Immacolata [0000-0003-1278-2372], Robbins, Peter A [0000-0002-4975-0609], Rizzo, Angela M [0000-0002-8582-0432], Formenti, Federico [0000-0003-4289-0761], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Perrotta, S., Roberti, D., Bencivenga, D., Corsetto, P., O'Brien, K. A., Caiazza, M., Stampone, E., Allison, L., Fleck, R. A., Scianguetta, S., Tartaglione, I., Robbins, P. A., Casale, M., West, J. A., Franzini-Armstrong, C., Griffin, J. L., Rizzo, A. M., Sinisi, A. A., Murray, A. J., Borriello, A., Formenti, F., Della Ragione, F, Medical Research Council, and Medical Research Council (MRC)
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Male ,Silent mutation ,endocrine system diseases ,Gene Expression ,Growth ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Mitochondrion ,Hypoglycemia ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Germline ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Germline mutation ,Growth Disorder ,General & Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Respiratory function ,030212 general & internal medicine ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Growth Disorders ,business.industry ,Lipid metabolism ,Syndrome ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Mitochondria ,Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Protein ,Metabolome ,Cancer research ,Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1 ,business ,Human - Abstract
Mutations in VHL, which encodes von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor (VHL), are associated with divergent diseases. We describe a patient with marked erythrocytosis and prominent mitochondrial alterations associated with a severe germline VHL deficiency due to homozygosity for a novel synonymous mutation (c.222C→A, p.V74V). The condition is characterized by early systemic onset and differs from Chuvash polycythemia (c.598C→T) in that it is associated with a strongly reduced growth rate, persistent hypoglycemia, and limited exercise capacity. We report changes in gene expression that reprogram carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, impair muscle mitochondrial respiratory function, and uncouple oxygen consumption from ATP production. Moreover, we identified unusual intermitochondrial connecting ducts. Our findings add unexpected information on the importance of the VHL-hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) axis to human phenotypes. (Funded by Associazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro and others.).
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- 2020
37. Novel techniques to study cardiopulmonary physiology in a preclinical, saline-lavage model of the acute respiratory distress syndrome
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Crockett, D, Farmery, A, and Formenti, F
- Abstract
The acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) affects 24.4% of all patients requiring mechanical ventilation and has an associated mortality of up to 46%. The complex pathophysiology of the cardiopulmonary system is difficult to study, particularly in the critically ill patient. Pre-clinical models of ARDS afford the possibility to investigate this complex physiology, which allows increased understanding of that physiology and the potential to develop tools which could be translated to clinical practice. This thesis presents experimental studies of two novel techniques to study cardiopulmonary physiology in a mechanically ventilated porcine saline-lavage model of ARDS. Using fluorescence quenching real-time measurement of PaO2 and dynamic computed tomography (CT), the cyclical recruitment/derecruitment of atelectasis (CA) is demonstrated and the previously accepted hypothesis that CA is the main determinant of cyclical oscillations in PaO2 is challenged. Real-time changes in PaO2 over the course of breath-hold manoeuvres are used to estimate the effective lung volume (ELV). PaO2 measured ELV is compared against ELV measured using whole lung CT scans. The PaO2 model follows the expected linear relationship with CT volumes and is able to track changes in lung volume with good concordance. The Inspired Sinewave Technique (IST) is a non-invasive technique which can provide measurements of ELV and cardiac output (Q˙). IST’s measurements of ELV compare well to those made with SF6 washout and CT. IST’s ability to track PEEP-induced changes in ELV shows excellent concordance with both SF6 and CT. Comparing IST’s measurements of Q˙ against those made with intermittent pulmonary artery thermodilution (PATD), IST tracks changes in Q˙ well in the uninjured animal model. Agreement between Q˙ measurements taken with IST and PATD show less agreement in the injured animal model. The presented results support translational research into both real-time PaO2 measurement and IST. Both techniques have the potential to provide bedside monitoring of important physiologcial parameters in mechanically ventilated patients.
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- 2020
38. OCT analysis and MPOD assessment in patients affected by retinitis pigmentosa.
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Ruggeri ML, Baroni LB, Passamonti M, Quarta A, Lorenzi C, Formenti F, Giansante R, Porreca A, Di Nicola M, Toto L, Stuppia L, and Mastropasqua R
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Macular Pigment metabolism, Visual Acuity, Retina diagnostic imaging, Retina pathology, Macula Lutea diagnostic imaging, Macula Lutea pathology, Case-Control Studies, Retinitis Pigmentosa diagnostic imaging, Retinitis Pigmentosa pathology, Retinitis Pigmentosa physiopathology, Tomography, Optical Coherence methods, Electroretinography methods, Choroid pathology, Choroid diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
This study aimed to analyze Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) parameters and Macular Pigment Optical Density (MPOD) changes in patients affected by Retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Eighteen eyes of 18 patients suffering from early-stage RP were enrolled in our observational study. 18 eyes of 18 patients age and gender matched were enrolled as controls. Patients were analyzed at baseline by undergoing complete baseline ophthalmologic examination, Spectral-domain Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), Electroretinogram (ERG) and Heterochromatic Flicker Photometry (HFP). Main outcome measures were Macular Pigment Optical Density (MPOD), Central macular thickness (CMT), Central Choroidal Thickness (CCT) and Choroidal Vascularity Index (CVI). Lower CCT (p = 0.006), CVI (p < 0.001) and MPOD levels (p = 0.038) were found in affected patients, whereas higher CMT was detected in cases compared to healthy controls. Correlation analysis revealed the presence of a negative correlation between BCVA and Age and CMT and BCVA and a positive correlation between CCT and MPOD and CVI and CCT. Retinal and choroidal variations occur in patients affected by early-stage RP regarding functional and anatomical changes., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the Institutional Review Board of the University “G. d’Annunzio”of Chieti- Pescara. Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study. Consent for publication: Consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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39. Visual and anatomical evaluation of navigated subthreshold micropulse laser versus photodynamic therapy in managing chronic central serous chorioretinopathy.
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Toto L, Ares I, Quarta A, Viggiano P, Ruggeri M, Formenti F, Boscia G, Porreca A, Di Nicola M, Boscia F, and Mastropasqua R
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare the visual and anatomical results of navigated subthreshold micropulse laser (nSML) and photodynamic therapy (PDT) in the treatment of chronic central serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR)., Methods: Patients who underwent either half-dose PDT or nSML for the management of chronic CSCR were included in this study. Comprehensive ophthalmic examination, fundus autofluorescence, and spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) were performed at baseline and at 1-, 3-, and 6-month follow-up visits after nSML or PDT. Fluorescein angiography and indocyanine green angiography were performed only at baseline. Main outcome measures were best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), central macular thickness (CMT), subretinal fluid (SRF), subfoveal choroidal thickness (SFCT), and choroidal vascularization index (CVI) that were collected at baseline and at each follow-up visit for up to 6 months., Results: Forty-two eyes of 42 patients (PDT group-20 eyes, nSML group-22 eyes) affected by chronic CSCR were enrolled. At 6-month follow-up, no significant differences were observed between the nSML group compared to the PDT group in BCVA (0.10 [0.00; 0.20]) and 0.10 [0.10; 0.10], respectively, p=0.69, and between some OCT parameters, namely CMT and CVI. SFCT was significantly reduced in the PDT group more than in the nSML group (p=0.01). Twelve eyes (60%) in the PDT group had complete resolution of the SRF at 6 months compared to 8 eyes (36.4%) in the nSML group, but the difference was not statistically significant (p=0.14)., Conclusion: Results from patients treated with PDT and nSML showed that, at 6 months, no significant differences except for choroidal thickness. nSML is less invasive than PDT and can be used as an effective alternative to PDT., Key Messages: WHAT IS KNOWN : Treating chronic CSCR is a therapeutic conundrum for clinicians because of a lack of definitive consensus over remediation options, two of which are photodynamic therapy (PDT) and navigated subthreshold micropulse laser (nSML) therapy., This Study Shows: Results from patients treated with PDT and nSML showed no significant differences except for choroidal thickness. Even though patients treated with PDT recovered more quickly, retreatment was necessary due to fluid recollection. Although patients treated with nSML also needed retreatment, nSML is less invasive than PDT and can be used as an effective alternative to PDT., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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40. Baseline Features in Polypoidal Choroidal Vasculopathy in Caucasian Patients.
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Ruggeri ML, Toto L, D'Aloisio R, Romano A, Quarta A, Gironi M, Formenti F, Aloia R, Porreca A, Di Nicola M, and Mastropasqua R
- Abstract
Introduction: The aim of this study was to investigate demographic, anatomical, angiographic, and functional parameters in patients suffering from polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV)., Methods: Sixty eyes of 60 patients with a definite diagnosis of treatment-naïve exudative unilateral PCV were evaluated in this retrospective study. Fellow eyes and age-matched healthy subjects were enrolled as comparison. All subjects underwent complete ophthalmic evaluation with multimodal imaging assessment, including spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (OCT) and OCT angiography. Main outcome measures in the comparison analysis were central macular thickness (CMT), subfoveal choroidal thickness (SFCT), and choroidal vascularity index (CVI), whereas outcome measures for correlation analyses were best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), intraretinal fluid and subretinal fluid (SRF) presence, SRF thickness, vascularized pigmented epithelial detachment height, and PCV outer retina to choriocapillaris flow area., Results: CVI was significantly higher in affected and fellow eyes if compared with the healthy ones (p = 0.049; p = 0.003). Subfoveal choroid resulted to be thicker in the diseased eyes when compared with healthy ones (p = 0.002). A negative correlation was assessed between age and SFCT, CMT, and BCVA. In addition, a significant association between male gender and anatomical and functional parameters has been found with male prevalence at baseline in cases. No association between systemic conditions and PCV features was found., Conclusions: Patients with unilateral PCV show choroidal changes in terms of higher values of CVI, also in fellow eyes, that were negatively related with age. In our cohort of patients, males showed the poorest diagnosis with a baseline lower BCVA and higher CMT when compared with females. PCV was not associated with any systemic condition., (© 2024 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2024
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41. Sex differences in cervical disc height and neck muscle activation during manipulation of external load from helmets.
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Yin NH, Giulio ID, Hodkinson PD, Formenti F, and Pollock RD
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Cervical Vertebrae, Young Adult, Sex Characteristics, Neck Pain physiopathology, Biomechanical Phenomena physiology, Electromyography, Head Protective Devices, Neck Muscles physiology, Muscle Fatigue physiology
- Abstract
Neck pain associated with helmet-wear is an occupational health problem often observed in helicopter pilots and aircrew. Whether aircrew helmet wearing is associated with physiological and biomechanical differences between sexes is currently unknown. This study investigated neuromuscular activation patterns during different helmet-wearing conditions. The helmet load was manipulated through a novel Helmet Balancing System (HBS) in healthy, non-pilot male and female participants (n = 10 each, age 19-45 years) in two phases. Phase A assessed the acute effects of helmet-wear on neck muscles activation during head movements. Phase B examined changes in muscle activity and cervical disc height after wearing a helmet for 45 min. In Phase A, muscle activity was similar between sexes in many movements, but it was higher in female participants when wearing a helmet than in males. The HBS reduced muscle activity in both sexes. In Phase B, female participants exhibited a greater level of muscular fatigue, and male participants' cervical disc height was significantly decreased [5.7 (1.4) vs. 4.4 (1.5) mm, P < 0.001] after continuous wearing. Both sexes showed no significant change in muscle fatigue and disc height [male: 5.0 (1.3) vs. 5.2 (1.4) mm, P = 0.604] after applying HBS. These findings demonstrate sex-specific physiological and biomechanical responses to wearing a helmet. They may indicate different postural and motor control strategies, associated with different neck pain aetiologies in male and female aircrew, the knowledge of which is important to reduce or prevent musculoskeletal injuries associated with helmet wearing., (© 2024 The Author(s). Experimental Physiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Physiological Society.)
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- 2024
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42. Good Initial Visual Acuity in Patients with Macular Edema due to Retinal Vein Occlusion - Management and Outcomes.
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Gomel N, D'Aloisio R, Wattad A, Mastropasqua R, Formenti F, Loewenstein A, Iglicki M, and Zur D
- Abstract
Purpose: The approach to managing patients with retinal vein occlusion (RVO) and cystoid macular edema (CME) with good initial visual acuity (VA) better than 6/12 has not been investigated. This study aimed to evaluate functional and anatomical outcomes of intravitreal treatment and observation in patients with CME due to RVO, who presented with good initial VA. Methods: Multicenter retrospective cohort study. Seventy-nine eyes of 79 patients with CME secondary to RVO and initial VA better than 6/12, either treated with anti-VEGF therapy or observed. Clinical parameters and OCT measures were recorded. Main Outcome Measure: Proportion of patients losing ≥1 line of VA at 12 months. Secondary outcomes: Visual and anatomical results at 12 and 24 months, and correlation between number of injections and VA outcomes., Results: Fifty-three percent of patients maintained VA at month 12. VA of 6/6 - 6/7.5 was maintained in 59% and 57% at 12 and 24 months, respectively. At 24 months, the number of anti-VEGF injections was strongly correlated with VA among patients with BRVO and CRVO., Conclusion: This study marks the first exploration of patients with RVO and initial VA better than 6/12, indicating that most patients sustained good VA, and anti-VEGF treatment maintained and improved VA., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest: no conflicting relationship exists for any author
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- 2024
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43. Prevalence of Strongyloides stercoralis and other helminths in four districts of Madagascar.
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Scarso S, Rakotoarivelo RA, Hey JC, Rasamoelina T, Razafindrakoto AR, Rasolojaona ZT, Razafindralava NM, Remkes A, Rakotozandrindrainy N, Rasoamanamihaja CF, Schwarz NG, May J, Rakotozandrindrainy R, Marchese V, Formenti F, Perandin F, Tamarozzi F, Mazzi C, Fusco D, and Buonfrate D
- Abstract
Background: Estimation of prevalence of Strongyloides stercoralis infection is required in endemic areas, in order to identify areas in need of control programmes. Data on prevalence of strongyloidiasis in Madagascar are scant. Aim of this work was to estimate prevalence of S. stercoralis in four districts of Madagascar., Methods: Fecal and serum samples collected in the context of a previous study on schistosomiasis were tested with S. stercoralis real-time PCR and serology, respectively. A multiplex real-time PCR for Ascaris lumbricoides, Ancylostoma duodenalis, Necator americanus, and Trichuris trichiura was done on fecal samples collected in the areas demonstrating higher prevalence of strongyloidiasis. Comparisons between proportions were made using Fisher exact test, with false discovery rate correction used for post-hoc comparisons. A multivariable Firth logistic regression model was used to assess potential risk factors for S. stercoralis infection., Results: Overall, 1775 serum samples were tested, of which 102 of 487 (20.9%) and 104 of 296 (35.2%) were serological-positive in Marovoay and in Vatomandry districts (both coastal areas), respectively, compared to 28 of 496 (5.6%) and 30 of 496 (6.1%) in Tsiroanomandidy and in Ambositra districts (both highlands), respectively (adj. p < 0.001). PCR for S. stercoralis was positive in 15 of 210 (7.1%) and in 11 of 296 (3.7%) samples from Marovoay from Vatomandry, respectively, while was negative for all samples tested in the other two districts. High prevalence of A. lumbricoides (45.9%), hookworm (44.6%) and T. trichiura (32.1%) was found in Vatomandry. In the multivariable analysis, strongyloidiasis was associated with hookworm infection. Hookworm infection was also associated with male sex and lower education level., Conclusions: S. stercoralis prevalence proved higher in coastal areas compared to highlands. Different climatic conditions may explain this distribution, along with previous rounds of anthelminthics distributed in the country, which may have reduced the parasite load in the population. The high prevalence of the other soil-transmitted helminths (STH) in Vatomandry was unexpected, given the good coverage with benzimidazole in control campaigns. Further studies are needed to explore the risk factors for STH and S. stercoralis infections in Madagascar, in order to align with the WHO recommendations., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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44. A deep learning approach to hard exudates detection and disorganization of retinal inner layers identification on OCT images.
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Toto L, Romano A, Pavan M, Degl'Innocenti D, Olivotto V, Formenti F, Viggiano P, Midena E, and Mastropasqua R
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- Humans, Neural Networks, Computer, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Tomography, Optical Coherence methods, Deep Learning, Diabetic Retinopathy diagnostic imaging, Diabetic Retinopathy pathology, Macular Edema diagnostic imaging, Exudates and Transudates diagnostic imaging, Retina diagnostic imaging, Retina pathology
- Abstract
The purpose of the study was to detect Hard Exudates (HE) and classify Disorganization of Retinal Inner Layers (DRIL) implementing a Deep Learning (DL) system on optical coherence tomography (OCT) images of eyes with diabetic macular edema (DME). We collected a dataset composed of 442 OCT images on which we annotated 6847 HE and the presence of DRIL. A complex operational pipeline was defined to implement data cleaning and image transformations, and train two DL models. The state-of-the-art neural network architectures (Yolov7, ConvNeXt, RegNetX) and advanced techniques were exploited to aggregate the results (Ensemble learning, Edge detection) and obtain a final model. The DL approach reached good performance in detecting HE and classifying DRIL. Regarding HE detection the model got an AP@0.5 score equal to 34.4% with Precision of 48.7% and Recall of 43.1%; while for DRIL classification an Accuracy of 91.1% with Sensitivity and Specificity both of 91.1% and AUC and AUPR values equal to 91% were obtained. The P-value was lower than 0.05 and the Kappa coefficient was 0.82. The DL models proved to be able to identify HE and DRIL in eyes with DME with a very good accuracy and all the metrics calculated confirmed the system performance. Our DL approach demonstrated to be a good candidate as a supporting tool for ophthalmologists in OCT images analysis., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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45. Wide Real-Life Data Support Reduced Sensitivity of Antigen Tests for Omicron SARS-CoV-2 Infections.
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Piubelli C, Treggiari D, Lavezzari D, Deiana M, Dishnica K, Tosato EMS, Mazzi C, Cattaneo P, Mori A, Pomari E, Nicolini L, Leonardi M, Perandin F, Formenti F, Giorgetti A, Conti A, Capobianchi MR, Gobbi FG, and Castilletti C
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- Humans, Male, Viral Load, Female, Antigens, Viral immunology, COVID-19 Serological Testing methods, Mutation, Middle Aged, Adult, Prospective Studies, RNA, Viral genetics, Aged, SARS-CoV-2 immunology, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 virology, COVID-19 immunology, Sensitivity and Specificity
- Abstract
With the continuous spread of new SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern (VOCs), the monitoring of diagnostic test performances is mandatory. We evaluated the changes in antigen diagnostic tests' (ADTs) accuracy along the Delta to Omicron VOCs transition, exploring the N protein mutations possibly affecting ADT sensitivity and assessing the best sampling site for the diagnosis of Omicron infections. In total, 5175 subjects were enrolled from 1 October 2021 to 15 July 2022. The inclusion criteria were SARS-CoV-2 ADT combined with a same-day RT-PCR swab test. For the sampling site analysis, 61 patients were prospectively recruited during the Omicron period for nasal and oral swab analyses by RT-PCR. Next-Generation Sequencing data were obtained to evaluate the different sublineages. Using RT-PCR as a reference, 387 subjects resulted in becoming infected and the overall sensitivity of the ADT decreased from 63% in the Delta period to 33% in the Omicron period. This decrease was highly statistically significant ( p < 0.001), and no decrease in viral load was detected at the RNA level. The nasal site presented a significantly higher viral load than the oral site during the Omicron wave. The reduced detection rate of Omicron infections by ADT should be considered in the global testing strategy to preserve accurate diagnoses across the changing SARS-CoV-2 variants.
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- 2024
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46. Quantifying heterogeneity in an animal model of acute respiratory distress syndrome, a comparison of inspired sinewave technique to computed tomography.
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Tran MC, Crockett DC, Tran TK, Phan PA, Federico F, Bruce R, Perchiazzi G, Payne SJ, and Farmery AD
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- Swine, Animals, Reproducibility of Results, Models, Animal, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Lung diagnostic imaging, Respiratory Distress Syndrome diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The inspired sinewave technique (IST) is a non-invasive method to measure lung heterogeneity indices (including both uneven ventilation and perfusion or heterogeneity), which reveal multiple conditions of the lung and lung injury. To evaluate the reproducibility and predicted clinical outcomes of IST heterogeneity values, a comparison with a quantitative lung computed tomography (CT) scan is performed. Six anaesthetised pigs were studied after surfactant depletion by saline-lavage. Paired measurements of lung heterogeneity were then taken with both the IST and CT. Lung heterogeneity measured by the IST was calculated by (a) the ratio of tracer gas outputs measured at oscillation periods of 180 s and 60 s, and (b) by the standard deviation of the modelled log-normal distribution of ventilations and perfusions in the simulation lung. In the CT images, lungs were manually segmented and divided into different regions according to voxel density. A quantitative CT method to calculate the heterogeneity (the Cressoni method) was applied. The IST and CT show good Pearson correlation coefficients in lung heterogeneity measurements (ventilation: 0.71, and perfusion, 0.60, p < 0.001). Within individual animals, the coefficients of determination average ventilation (R
2 = 0.53) and perfusion (R2 = 0.68) heterogeneity. Strong concordance rates of 98% in ventilation and 89% when the heterogeneity changes were reported in pairs measured by CT scanning and IST methods. This quantitative method to identify heterogeneity has the potential to replicate CT lung heterogeneity, and to aid individualised care in ARDS., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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47. Characteristics of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections in Children in the Post-COVID Seasons: A Northern Italy Hospital Experience.
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Treggiari D, Pomari C, Zavarise G, Piubelli C, Formenti F, and Perandin F
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- Infant, Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Seasons, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Hospitals, Italy epidemiology, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human
- Abstract
Background: Public health measures for COVID-19 mitigation influenced the circulation of Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) during the 2020-2021 winter season. In the following autumn, an unprecedented resurgence of RSV occurred. Our study monitored RSV pediatric infections one and two years after the relaxation of containment measures for the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: We analyzed diagnostic molecular data for SARS-CoV-2, flu, and RSV infections and clinical data from children with respiratory symptoms referring to our hospital during the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 seasons., Results: In the 2021-2022 season, the number of RSV-affected children was very high, especially for babies <1 year. The outbreak appeared in a shorter interval of time, with a high clinical severity. In the 2022-23 season, a reduced number of infected pediatric patients were detected, with a similar hospitalization rate (46% vs. 40%), and RSV accounted for 12% of the infections. Coinfections were observed in age <2 years. In RSV patients, symptoms were similar across the two seasons., Conclusions: The clinical presentation of RSV in the two post-COVID seasons suggests that the pathophysiology of the virus did not change across these two years. Further studies are needed to continuously monitor RSV to support an effective prevention strategy.
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- 2024
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48. Efficacy and Durability of Faricimab in Naïve Eyes with Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration.
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Toto L, Formenti F, Ruggeri ML, Quarta A, Romano A, De Nicola C, Belloni Baroni L, Porreca A, Di Nicola M, and Mastropasqua R
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Treatment Outcome, Follow-Up Studies, Fundus Oculi, Prospective Studies, Macula Lutea pathology, Macula Lutea diagnostic imaging, Tomography, Optical Coherence methods, Visual Acuity, Intravitreal Injections, Fluorescein Angiography methods, Wet Macular Degeneration drug therapy, Wet Macular Degeneration diagnosis, Wet Macular Degeneration physiopathology, Angiogenesis Inhibitors administration & dosage, Angiogenesis Inhibitors therapeutic use
- Abstract
Introduction: The aim of the study was to evaluate functional and anatomical changes in patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) treated with a loading dose of faricimab intravitreal injections (IVIs)., Methods: Eighteen eyes of 18 patients with active macular neovascularization and nAMD were enrolled at the Ophthalmology Clinic of University G. D'Annunzio, Chieti-Pescara, Italy. All patients were scheduled for faricimab IVI as per label. Enrolled patients underwent complete ophthalmic evaluation, including optical coherence tomography, fluorescein angiography, and indocyanine green angiography. All measurements were evaluated at baseline (T0) and then monthly up to week 20 (T4). Main outcome measures were changes in best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), central macular thickness (CMT), subfoveal choroidal thickness (SFCT), pigment epithelial detachments (PEDs) presence and maximum height (PED-MH), intraretinal fluid (IRF) presence, subfoveal subretinal fluid (SSRF) presence and thickness., Results: BCVA improved and CMT reduced significantly during follow-up (p < 0.001). In addition, SFCT decreased significantly (p = 0.031). Between T0 and T4, SSRF presence reduced from 55.6 to 16.7% (p = 0.045); IRF presence changed from 50 to 22.2%, respectively (p = 0.074). PED-MH was reduced in 58.8% of patients at T4. At week 20, 72.3% of patients were in the q12/q16 interval., Conclusion: Faricimab showed efficacy in the treatment of naïve nAMD patients with an improvement of anatomical and functional parameters and a treatment interval after the loading phase equal or greater than 12 weeks in the majority of patients., (© 2024 The Author(s). Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2024
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49. Strongyloidiasis in humans and dogs in Southern Italy: an observational study.
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Paradies P, Digiaro S, Colella A, Greco B, Recchia A, Prato MG, Mazzi C, Losurdo G, Di Leo A, Formenti F, and Buonfrate D
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- Animals, Dogs, Humans, Feces, Italy epidemiology, Ivermectin therapeutic use, Strongyloides stercoralis, Strongyloidiasis diagnosis, Strongyloidiasis epidemiology, Strongyloidiasis veterinary
- Abstract
Strongyloidiasis is a clinical issue both in humans and in dogs. Moreover, there are concerns about its zoonotic potential. We aimed to explore Strongyloides stercoralis epidemiology in Southern Italy in humans and dogs sharing the same environment in three different settings: (1) kennels (group K); (2) livestock farms (group L) and (3) agricultural farms (group A). For humans, a commercial ELISA test was used for screening. RT-PCR on faecal samples was done for people testing positive or equivocal at serology. On dog's faecal samples, Baermann test and RT-PCR were performed. A total of 145 dogs and 139 persons were tested. Based on faecal tests in dogs and serology in humans, a S. stercoralis positivity of 4.1% and 6.5% was revealed, respectively. The sites where cases were found were different for animals and humans. In dogs the highest positivity was in group K (6.7% against 2% and 0% in L and A). Differently, in humans the proportion of positive results was similar between the groups (p = 0.883). Fifty percent (3/6) of positive dogs were healthy; the other dogs presented weight loss and/or diarrhoea. ELISA-positive persons (n=9) were all in health, but abdominal pain (37.5%), urticaria (22.2%) and asthma (22.2%) were reported, resolving after treatment with oral ivermectin 200 μg/kg. RT-PCR performed on 13 human faecal samples resulted negative. These findings suggest that strongyloidiasis is present in humans and dogs in Southern Italy, and screening in larger cohorts would be needed for more accurate estimates., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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50. The Human Blood Fluke, Schistosoma mansoni, Harbors Bacteria Throughout the Parasite's Life Cycle.
- Author
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Formenti F, Cortés A, Deiana M, Salter S, Parkhill J, Berriman M, Rinaldi G, and Cantacessi C
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Schistosoma mansoni genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Life Cycle Stages, Bacteria genetics, Parasites genetics, Helminths, Schistosomiasis mansoni parasitology
- Abstract
While symbiotic relationships between invertebrates and bacteria have been extensively described, studies of microbial communities inhabiting parasitic worms remain scarce. Exploring the microbiota associated with helminths responsible for major infectious diseases will inform on parasite biology, host-pathogen interactions, and disease pathophysiology. We investigated the presence of microorganisms inhabiting tissues of the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni. In situ hybridization using a pan-bacterial 16S rRNA gene probe revealed bacteria colonizing key developmental stages that were successfully removed after antibiotic treatment of live parasites. Understanding the composition and function of the S. mansoni-associated microbiota may lead to the development of novel microbiome-targeting control strategies., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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