6 results on '"Giussani, Marco"'
Search Results
2. Diagnosis, treatment and prevention of pediatric obesity: consensus position statement of the Italian Society for Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetology and the Italian Society of Pediatrics
- Author
-
Valerio, Giuliana, Maffeis, Claudio, Saggese, Giuseppe, Ambruzzi, Maria Amalia, Balsamo, Antonio, Bellone, Simonetta, Bergamini, Marcello, Bernasconi, Sergio, Bona, Gianni, Calcaterra, Valeria, Canali, Teresa, Caroli, Margherita, Chiarelli, Francesco, Corciulo, Nicola, Crinò, Antonino, Di Bonito, Procolo, Di Pietrantonio, Violetta, Di Pietro, Mario, Di Sessa, Anna, Diamanti, Antonella, Doria, Mattia, Fintini, Danilo, Franceschi, Roberto, Franzese, Adriana, Giussani, Marco, Grugni, Graziano, Iafusco, Dario, Iughetti, Lorenzo, Lamborghini, Adima, Licenziati, Maria Rosaria, Limauro, Raffaele, Maltoni, Giulio, Manco, Melania, Reggiani, Leonardo Marchesini, Marcovecchio, Loredana, Marsciani, Alberto, del Giudice, Emanuele Miraglia, Morandi, Anita, Morino, Giuseppe, Moro, Beatrice, Nobili, Valerio, Perrone, Laura, Picca, Marina, Pietrobelli, Angelo, Privitera, Francesco, Purromuto, Salvatore, Ragusa, Letizia, Ricotti, Roberta, Santamaria, Francesca, Sartori, Chiara, Stilli, Stefano, Street, Maria Elisabeth, Tanas, Rita, Trifiró, Giuliana, Umano, Giuseppina Rosaria, Vania, Andrea, Verduci, Elvira, and Zito, Eugenio
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Sleep habits and pattern in 1-14 years old children and relationship with video devices use and evening and night child activities.
- Author
-
Brambilla, Paolo, Giussani, Marco, Pasinato, Angela, Venturelli, Leonello, Privitera, Francesco, Giudice, Emanuele Miraglia del, Sollai, Sara, Picca, Marina, Di Mauro, Giuseppe, Bruni, Oliviero, and Chiappini, Elena
- Subjects
- *
SLEEP , *HABIT , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *SURVEYS , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *BODY mass index , *CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Sleep in childhood and adolescence is crucial for mental and physical health; however several researches reported an increasing trend towards a sleep deprivation in this age. Due to the lack of recent epidemiological studies in Italy, the aim of our study was to depict sleep habits and patterns in Italian children aged 1-14 years and to evaluate their relationships with video devices use (TV, tablet, smartphone, PC) and evening/night child activities. Methods: A structured interview was conducted during 2015 by 72 Family Pediatricians in 2030 healthy children aged 1-14 years by a cross-sectional survey named "Ci piace sognare". Total sleep duration was calculated, 2015 National Sleep Foundation Recommendations were used as reference. Optimal sleepers were defined children sleeping in own bed all night without awakenings. Multivariable median regression was performed to identify predictors of sleep duration and multivariable logistic regression for predictors of optimal sleep. Results: Total sleep duration and numbers of awakenings decreased with age. Only 66.9% of children had sleep duration in agreement with Recommendations (50% in 10-14 years group). Before sleeping 63.5% of children used video devices (39.6% at 1-3 years), 39.1% read, 27.5% drank and 19.5% ate. Bottle users at bedtime were 30.8% at 1-3 years, 16.6% at 3-5 years and 4.9% at 5-7 years. Overall, 23.4% of children changed sleeping place during the night, 22.4% referred sleeping problems in the first year of life. Video devices use was negative predictor of sleep duration (-0.25 h [95%CI:-0.35,-0.14], < 0.001). Optimal sleep was p inversely related with bedroom TV (OR 0.63 [0.50,0.79], p < 0.001), with sleeping disorders in the first year (OR 0.62 [0.48,0.80], p < 0.001)), with bottle use (OR 0.64 [0.44,0.94], p < 0.05) and posivively related with high mother's education level (OR 1.44 [1.11,1.88], p < 0.01). Conclusions: About one third of 1 to 14 year Italian children sleep less than recommended, one half in teenage. Modifiable risk factors for sleep abnormalities such as video devices use, bedroom TV and bottle use should be target of preventive strategies for a correct sleep. Pediatricians should give priority to the identification of sleep disorders early in life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Novelty in hypertension in children and adolescents: focus on hypertension during the first year of life, use and interpretation of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, role of physical activity in prevention and treatment, simple carbohydrates and uric acid as risk factors.
- Author
-
Strambi, Mirella, Giussani, Marco, Ambruzzi, Maria Amalia, Brambilla, Paolo, Corrado, Ciro, Giordano, Ugo, Maffeis, Claudio, Maringhin, Silvio, Matteucci, Maria Chiara, Menghetti, Ettore, Salice, Patrizia, Schena, Federico, Strisciuglio, Pietro, Valerio, Giuliana, Viazzi, Francesca, Virdis, Raffaele, and Genovesi, Simonetta
- Subjects
- *
CARDIOVASCULAR disease diagnosis , *CARDIOVASCULAR disease prevention , *HYPERTENSION , *HYPERTENSION risk factors , *CARBOHYDRATE content of food , *URIC acid , *CHILDREN - Abstract
The present article intends to provide an update of the article "Focus on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of hypertension in children and adolescents" published in 2013 (Spagnolo et al., Ital J Pediatr 39:20, 2013) in this journal. This revision is justified by the fact that during the last years there have been several new scientific contributions to the problem of hypertension in pediatric age and during adolescence. Nevertheless, for what regards some aspects of the previous article, the newly acquired information did not require substantial changes to what was already published, both from a cultural and from a clinical point of view. We felt, however, the necessity to rewrite and/or to extend other parts in the light of the most recent scientific publications. More specifically, we updated and extended the chapters on the diagnosis and management of hypertension in newborns and unweaned babies, on the use and interpretation of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, and on the usefulness of and indications for physical activity. Furthermore, we added an entirely new section on the role that simple carbohydrates (fructose in particular) and uric acid may play in the pathogenesis of hypertension in pediatric age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Focus on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of hypertension in children and adolescents.
- Author
-
Spagnolo A, Giussani M, Ambruzzi AM, Bianchetti M, Maringhini S, Matteucci MC, Menghetti E, Salice P, Simionato L, Strambi M, Virdis R, and Genovesi S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Blood Pressure Determination, Body Mass Index, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Child, Humans, Obesity prevention & control, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Reference Values, Risk Factors, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Diet, Sodium-Restricted, Hypertension diagnosis, Hypertension prevention & control, Hypertension therapy, Life Style
- Abstract
The European Society of Hypertension has recently published its recommendations on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of high blood pressure in children and adolescents. Taking this contribution as a starting point the Study Group of Hypertension of the Italian Society of Pediatrics together with the Italian Society of Hypertension has conducted a reappraisal of the most recent literature on this subject. The present review does not claim to be an exhaustive description of hypertension in the pediatric population but intends to provide Pediatricians with practical and updated indications in order to guide them in this often unappreciated problem. This document pays particular attention to the primary hypertension which represents a growing problem in children and adolescents. Subjects at elevated risk of hypertension are those overweight, with low birth weight and presenting a family history of hypertension. However, also children who do not present these risk factors may have elevated blood pressure levels. In pediatric age diagnosis of hypertension or high normal blood pressure is made with repeated office blood pressure measurements that show values exceeding the reference values. Blood pressure should be monitored at least once a year with adequate methods and instrumentation and the observed values have to be interpreted according to the most updated nomograms that are adjusted for children's gender, age and height. Currently other available methods such as ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and home blood pressure measurement are not yet adequately validated for use as diagnostic instruments. To diagnose primary hypertension it is necessary to exclude secondary forms. The probability of facing a secondary form of hypertension is inversely proportional to the child's age and directly proportional to blood pressure levels. Medical history, clinical data and blood tests may guide the differential diagnosis of primary versus secondary forms. The prevention of high blood pressure is based on correct lifestyle and nutrition, starting from childhood age. The treatment of primary hypertension in children is almost exclusively dietary/behavioral and includes: a) reduction of overweight whenever present b) reduction of dietary sodium intake c) increase in physical activity. Pharmacological therapy will be needed rarely and only in specific cases.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. "Mi voglio bene": a pediatrician-based randomized controlled trial for the prevention of obesity in Italian preschool children.
- Author
-
Brambilla P, Bedogni G, Buongiovanni C, Brusoni G, Di Mauro G, Di Pietro M, Giussani M, Gnecchi M, Iughetti L, Manzoni P, Sticco M, and Bernasconi S
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Italy epidemiology, Male, Obesity epidemiology, Prevalence, Prognosis, Registries, Time Factors, Breast Feeding epidemiology, Feeding Behavior physiology, Obesity prevention & control, Pediatrics methods, Physicians, Primary Prevention methods
- Abstract
Background: The first years of life are crucial to start preventive interventions that can have an impact on lifestyle and later overweight and obesity. Under the Italian National Health System (INHS), children are cared for by family pediatricians who perform health balances at regular intervals. The Italian Society of Preventive and Social Pediatrics (SIPPS) has designed a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the effectiveness of family pediatricians for the prevention of childhood obesity in preschool children. We report the rationale and protocol of such trial, named the "Mi voglio bene" ("I love myself") study., Methods: "Mi voglio bene" is a parallel-arm RCT. Family pediatricians willing to participate to the trial will be randomly assigned to a control group and to an experimental group. The control group will provide the usual standard of care while the experimental group will implement 10 preventive actions (promotion of breastfeeding, avoidance of solid foods, control of protein intake, avoidance of sugar-sweetened beverages, avoidance of bottle, active means of transportation, identification of early adiposity rebound, limitation of television viewing, promotion of movement, and teaching portion size) at 10 time points during a 6-yr follow-up. The main outcome measures is the prevalence of overweight and obesity at 6 years of age. The experimental intervention is expected to reduce the prevalence of overweight and obesity from 25% to 20% and the study requires a total of 3610 children. Each pediatrician will enroll 30 consecutive newborns into the study so that a total of 120 pediatricians will participate to the study., Discussion: "Mi voglio bene" is expected to provide important information for the INHS and possibly other institutional child care settings about the effectiveness of a pediatrician-based approach to the prevention of childhood obesity. We published this study protocol with the aim of opening a discussion with all people interested in fighting childhood obesity and to receive useful criticisms.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.