13 results on '"Di Nino G"'
Search Results
2. The effect of transient intestinal ischemia on inflammatory parameters
- Author
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Lammers, K., Innocenti, G., Venturi, A., Rizzello, F., Helwig, U., Bianchi, G., Pedrini, L., Di Nino, G., Gionchetti, P., and Campieri, M.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Proteolytic activity of bovine lactoferrin RID C-3677-2011 RID A-4573-2009
- Author
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Massucci MT, Giansanti F, Di Nino G, Turacchio M, Giardi MF, Botti D, Ippoliti R, De Giulio B, Siciliano R, Donnarumma G, Valenti P, Bocedi A, Ascenzi P, ANTONINI, GIOVANNI, POLTICELLI, Fabio, Massucci, Mt, Giansanti, F, Di Nino, G, Turacchio, M, Giardi, Mf, Botti, D, Ippoliti, R, De Giulio, B, Siciliano, R, Donnarumma, G, Valenti, P, Bocedi, A, Polticelli, Fabio, Ascenzi, P, and Antonini, Giovanni
- Abstract
Bovine lactoferrin catalyzes the hydrolysis of synthetic substrates (i.e., Z-aminoacyl-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin). Values of K-m and k(cat) for the bovine lactoferrin catalyzed hydrolysis of Z-Phe-Arg-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin are 50 muM and 0.03 s(-1), respectively, the optimum pH value is 7.5 at 25 degreesC. The bovine lactoferrin substrate specificity is similar to that of trypsin, while the hydrolysis rate is several orders of magnitude lower than that of trypsin. The bovine lactoferrin catalytic activity is irreversibly inhibited by the serine-protease inhibitors PMSF and Pefabloc. Moreover, both iron-saturation of the protein and LPS addition strongly inhibit the bovine lactoferrin activity. Interestingly, bovine lactoferrin undergoes partial auto-proteolytic cleavage at positions Arg415-Lys 416 and Lys440-Lys441.pK(a) shift calculations indicate that several Ser residues of bovine lactoferrin display the high nucleophilicity required to potentially catalyze substrate cleavage. However, a definitive identification of the active site awaits further studies.
- Published
- 2004
4. Postoperative cognitive dysfunction: toward the Alzheimer disease: Pathomechanism Hypothesis
- Author
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Fodale, Federico Bilotta, Luca Titi, Elisabetta Stazi, Giovanni Rosa, Andrea Doronzio, Di Nino G, F. Bilotta, A. Doronzio, E. Stazi, L. Titi, V. Fodale, G. Di Nino, and G. Rosa
- Subjects
Programmed cell death ,COGNITIVE DYSFUNCTION ,Disease ,Nervous System ,Postoperative Complications ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Aging brain ,Dementia ,Humans ,pathology/psychology ,Aged ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Social impact ,Delirium ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Aged, Alzheimer Disease ,pathology/psychology, Anesthesia Recovery Period, Chronic Disease, Cognition Disorders ,pathology/psychology, Delirium ,pathology/psychology, Humans, Nervous System ,pathology, Postoperative Complications ,Clinical research ,ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE ,Anesthesia Recovery Period ,Chronic Disease ,pathology ,POSTOPERATIVE ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Cognition Disorders ,Neuroscience ,Postoperative cognitive dysfunction - Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD), a chronic and progressive deterioration of memory and other cognitive domains, is the most common form of dementia. Because of related health and social impact, there is growing interest in assessing potential relationship between anesthesia and the onset and progression of chronic neurodegenerative disorders, including AD. Currently, preclinical and clinical research is addressed to identify underlying pathomechanisms, patient risk factors, and the use of the least provocative drugs and techniques, to minimize the incidence of chronic neurodegenerative disorders. Preclinical studies are providing an increasing body of evidences on some of the mechanisms that link anesthetics to neuronal programmed cell death (apoptosis) and accumulation of misfolded proteins in the aging brain. Therefore, risk factors and pathomechanisms of chronic neurodegenerative disorders, including AD, and persistent postoperative-postanesthesia cognitive dysfunction may overlap.
- Published
- 2010
5. Distensibility index of inferior vena cava diameter in ventilated septic and trauma patients with shock
- Author
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Parenti, N, primary, Sangiorgi, D, additional, Pigna, A, additional, Coniglio, C, additional, Cancellieri, F, additional, Gordini, G, additional, Melotti, R, additional, and Di Nino, G, additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Postoperative Delirium after elective and emergency surgery: analysis and checking of risk factors. A study protocol
- Author
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Gagliardi Stefano, Franceschi Claudio, Di Nino Gianfranco, De Cataldis Angelo, Chattat Rabbih, Catena Fausto, Ansaloni Luca, Agnoletti Vanni, Melotti Rita, Potalivo Antonella, and Taffurelli Mario
- Subjects
Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Abstract Background Delirum is common in hospitalized elderly patients and may be associated with increased morbidity, length of stay and patient care costs. Delirium (acute confusional state) is defined as an acute disorder of attention and cognition. In elderly patients, delirium is often an early indicator of patho-physiological disturbances. Despite landmark studies dating back to the 1940s, the pathogenesis of Delirium remains poorly understood. Early investigators noted that Delirium was characterized by global cortical dysfunction that was associated predominantly with specific electroencephalographic changes. It's important to understand the risk factors and incidence of Delirium. Some of the risk factors are already identified in literature and can be summarized in the word "VINDICATE" which stands for: Vascular, Infections, Nutrition, Drugs, Injury, Cardiac, Autoimmune, Tumors, Endocrine. Aims of this study are: to re-evaluate the above mentioned clinical risk factors, adding some others selected from literature, and to test, as risk factors, a pattern of some genes associated to cognitive dysfunction and inflammation possibly related to postoperative Delirium. Design All patients admitted to our Emergency Unit who are meet our inclusion/exclusion criteria will be recruited. The arising of postoperative Delirium will select incidentally two groups (Delirium/non Delirium) and the forward analysis of correlate risk factors will be performed. As in a typical observational case/control study we will consider all the exposure factors to which our population are submitted towards the outcome (presence of Delirium). Our exposures are the following: ASA, Pain (SVS; VAS), Blood gas analysis (pH; Hb; pO2; pCO2), Residence pharmacological therapy (BDZ; hypnotics; narcotic drugs; alcohol; nitrous derivates), Body temperature, Arterial pressure, Heart frequency, Breath frequency, Na, K, Creatinin, Glicemia, Albumin, Hct, White blood cells, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), Cognitive state (SPMSQ), Functional state (ADL and IADL), Psychological Distress (HADS), Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS), Hypotension (classified in: light; moderate and severe and duration), Blood loss (classified in: < 2 lt and > 2 lt), Blood transfusions (< 2 lt and > 2 lt), Quantity of red cells and plasma transfusions, Visual VAS / SVS (timing: I-II-III post-operative day), Red cells and Plasma transfusions, Blood count evaluation and Saturation (O2%), Postoperative analgesia (Emilia-Romagna protocol), Presence of malignant tumoral disease, APACHE Score II. Moreover the presence of some relevant genetic polymorphisms will be studied in different genes such as IL-6, IL-10, TNF-alpha, and IL-1 cluster.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Lasting Prolonged-Release Tapentadol for Moderate/Severe Non-Cancer Musculoskeletal Chronic Pain
- Author
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Rita Maria Melotti, Sivia Ghedini, Alessio Vasarri, Boaz Gedaliahu Samolsky Dekel, Gianfranco Di Nino, Alberto Gori, Samolsky Dekel BG, Ghedini S, Gori A, Vasarri A, Di Nino G, and Melotti RM
- Subjects
Quality of life ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pain medicine ,Analgesic ,Long-term opioids ,Chronic pain ,Prolonged release ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,Original Research ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Tapentadol ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Tolerability ,Opioid ,Musculoskeletal ,Anesthesia ,Chronicity ,Chronicity, Chronic pain, Long-term opioids, Musculoskeletal, Quality of life, Tapentadol ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Despite opioids' recognized role in the treatment of moderate/severe musculoskeletal chronic pain, their long-term benefits need investigation. We explored the lasting analgesic efficacy, tolerability, influence on life quality, and chronicity stage of the novel prolonged release (PR) opioid, tapentadol, in 30 outpatients. METHODS: We evaluated patients' pain intensity and relief (Numerical Rating Scale; NRS), adverse effects, sleep quality, treatment satisfaction, health status (12-questions Health-Survey; SF-12), chronicity stage (Italian Mainz Pain-Staging System; I-MPSS) at 10, 30, 60, and 90 days after tapentadol prescription. RESULTS: At follow-ups, the investigated outcomes showed an overall statistically significant (Wilcoxon signed-rank test) improvement and remained stable over time, as did the health status and chronicity stage. Adverse effects were limited, transitory, and tolerable. CONCLUSIONS: Twelve weeks of PR tapentadol in outpatients with moderate/severe chronic musculoskeletal pain showed satisfactory analgesic efficacy and tolerability, and had a positive influence on life quality and chronicity stage. The results are robust enough to warrant a subsequent study with a larger sample and a longer observation period. PMID:25558866
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Proteolytic activity of bovine lactoferrin
- Author
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Maria Teresa, Massucci, Francesco, Giansanti, Giovanna, Di Nino, Manola, Turacchio, Maria Federica, Giardi, Dario, Botti, Rodolfo, Ippoliti, Beatrice, De Giulio, Barbara, De Giulio, Rosa Anna, Siciliano, Rosa, Siciliano, Giovanna, Donnarumma, Piera, Valenti, Alessio, Bocedi, Fabio, Polticelli, Paolo, Ascenzi, Giovanni, Antonini, Massucci, Mt, Giansanti, F, DI NINO, G, Turacchio, M, Giardi, Mf, Botti, D, Ippoliti, R, DE GIULIO, B, Siciliano, Ra, Donnarumma, G, Valenti, P, Bocedi, A, Polticelli, Fabio, Ascenzi, Paolo, Antonini, Giovanni, MARIA TERESA, Massucci, Francesco, Giansanti, GIOVANNA DI, Nino, Manola, Turacchio, MARIA FEDERICA, Giardi, Dario, Botti, Rodolfo, Ippoliti, BARBARA DE, Giulio, Rosa, Siciliano, Giovanna, Donnarumma, Piera, Valenti, Alessio, Bocedi, Siciliano, R, Donnarumma, Giovanna, Polticelli, F, Ascenzi, P, and Antonini, G.
- Subjects
LPS ,Hydrolases ,Cleavage (embryo) ,autoproteolysis ,iron ,lactoferrin ,Chromatography, Affinity ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Biomaterials ,Hydrolysis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bovine lactoferrin ,Serine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Enzyme kinetics ,biology ,Chemistry ,Lactoferrin ,Metals and Alloys ,Active site ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Trypsin ,Molecular Weight ,natural immunity ,Biochemistry ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,proteolytic activity ,biology.protein ,Cattle ,PMSF ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Bovine lactoferrin catalyzes the hydrolysis of synthetic substrates (i.e., Z-aminoacyl-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin). Values of Km and kcat for the bovine lactoferrin catalyzed hydrolysis of Z-Phe-Arg-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin are 50 microM and 0.03 s(-1), respectively, the optimum pH value is 7.5 at 25 degrees C. The bovine lactoferrin substrate specificity is similar to that of trypsin, while the hydrolysis rate is several orders of magnitude lower than that of trypsin. The bovine lactoferrin catalytic activity is irreversibly inhibited by the serine-protease inhibitors PMSF and Pefabloc. Moreover, both iron-saturation of the protein and LPS addition strongly inhibit the bovine lactoferrin activity. Interestingly, bovine lactoferrin undergoes partial auto-proteolytic cleavage at positions Arg415-Lys416 and Lys440-Lys441. pKa shift calculations indicate that several Ser residues of bovine lactoferrin display the high nucleophilicity required to potentially catalyze substrate cleavage. However, a definitive identification of the active site awaits further studies.
- Published
- 2004
9. Postoperative Delirium after elective and emergency surgery: analysis and checking of risk factors. A study protocol
- Author
-
Rabbih Chattat, Claudio Franceschi, Fausto Catena, Stefano Gagliardi, Luca Ansaloni, Vanni Agnoletti, Mario Taffurelli, Gianfranco Di Nino, Angelo De Cataldis, Rita Maria Melotti, Antonella Potalivo, Agnoletti V., Ansaloni L., Catena F., Chattat R., De Cataldis A., Di Nino G., Franceschi C., Gagliardi S., Melotti R.M, Potalivo A., and Taffurelli M.
- Subjects
Research design ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Surgery ,MEDLINE ,ELECTIVE SURGERY ,Study Protocol ,Cognition ,Postoperative Complications ,Clinical Protocols ,Risk Factors ,EMERGENCY SURGERY ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Postoperative delirium ,Elective surgery ,POSTOPERATIVE DELIRIUM ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Case-control study ,Delirium ,lcsh:RD1-811 ,General Medicine ,Surgery ,Research Design ,Case-Control Studies ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background Delirum is common in hospitalized elderly patients and may be associated with increased morbidity, length of stay and patient care costs. Delirium (acute confusional state) is defined as an acute disorder of attention and cognition. In elderly patients, delirium is often an early indicator of patho-physiological disturbances. Despite landmark studies dating back to the 1940s, the pathogenesis of Delirium remains poorly understood. Early investigators noted that Delirium was characterized by global cortical dysfunction that was associated predominantly with specific electroencephalographic changes. It's important to understand the risk factors and incidence of Delirium. Some of the risk factors are already identified in literature and can be summarized in the word "VINDICATE" which stands for: Vascular, Infections, Nutrition, Drugs, Injury, Cardiac, Autoimmune, Tumors, Endocrine. Aims of this study are: to re-evaluate the above mentioned clinical risk factors, adding some others selected from literature, and to test, as risk factors, a pattern of some genes associated to cognitive dysfunction and inflammation possibly related to postoperative Delirium. Design All patients admitted to our Emergency Unit who are meet our inclusion/exclusion criteria will be recruited. The arising of postoperative Delirium will select incidentally two groups (Delirium/non Delirium) and the forward analysis of correlate risk factors will be performed. As in a typical observational case/control study we will consider all the exposure factors to which our population are submitted towards the outcome (presence of Delirium). Our exposures are the following: ASA, Pain (SVS; VAS), Blood gas analysis (pH; Hb; pO2; pCO2), Residence pharmacological therapy (BDZ; hypnotics; narcotic drugs; alcohol; nitrous derivates), Body temperature, Arterial pressure, Heart frequency, Breath frequency, Na, K, Creatinin, Glicemia, Albumin, Hct, White blood cells, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), Cognitive state (SPMSQ), Functional state (ADL and IADL), Psychological Distress (HADS), Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS), Hypotension (classified in: light; moderate and severe and duration), Blood loss (classified in: < 2 lt and > 2 lt), Blood transfusions (< 2 lt and > 2 lt), Quantity of red cells and plasma transfusions, Visual VAS / SVS (timing: I-II-III post-operative day), Red cells and Plasma transfusions, Blood count evaluation and Saturation (O2%), Postoperative analgesia (Emilia-Romagna protocol), Presence of malignant tumoral disease, APACHE Score II. Moreover the presence of some relevant genetic polymorphisms will be studied in different genes such as IL-6, IL-10, TNF-alpha, and IL-1 cluster.
- Published
- 2005
10. Medical Evidence Influence on Inpatients and Nurses Pain Ratings Agreement.
- Author
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Samolsky Dekel BG, Gori A, Vasarri A, Sorella MC, Di Nino G, and Melotti RM
- Subjects
- Analgesics classification, Analgesics therapeutic use, Awareness, Female, Humans, Male, Nurse-Patient Relations, Pain drug therapy, Pain etiology, Time Factors, Inpatients, Nurses psychology, Nursing Diagnosis, Pain diagnosis, Pain Measurement methods, Self Report
- Abstract
Biased pain evaluation due to automated heuristics driven by symptom uncertainty may undermine pain treatment; medical evidence moderators are thought to play a role in such circumstances. We explored, in this cross-sectional survey, the effect of such moderators (e.g., nurse awareness of patients' pain experience and treatment) on the agreement between n = 862 inpatients' self-reported pain and n = 115 nurses' pain ratings using a numerical rating scale. We assessed the mean of absolute difference, agreement (κ-statistics), and correlation (Spearman rank) of inpatients and nurses' pain ratings and analyzed congruence categories' (CCs: underestimation, congruence, and overestimation) proportions and dependence upon pain categories for each medical evidence moderator (χ (2) analysis). Pain ratings agreement and correlation were limited; the CCs proportions were further modulated by the studied moderators. Medical evidence promoted in nurses overestimation of low and underestimation of high inpatients' self-reported pain. Knowledge of the negative influence of automated heuristics driven by symptoms uncertainty and medical-evidence moderators on pain evaluation may render pain assessment more accurate.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The influence of medical evidence moderators on pain rating agreement between inpatients and nurses.
- Author
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Samolsky Dekel BG, Gori A, Vasarri A, Sorella C, Di Nino G, and Melotti RM
- Published
- 2015
12. Pre-Operative, High-IL-6 Blood Level is a Risk Factor of Post-Operative Delirium Onset in Old Patients.
- Author
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Capri M, Yani SL, Chattat R, Fortuna D, Bucci L, Lanzarini C, Morsiani C, Catena F, Ansaloni L, Adversi M, Melotti MR, Di Nino G, and Franceschi C
- Abstract
Background: Post-operative delirium (POD) is a common complication in elderly patients undergoing surgery, but the underpinning causes are not clear. We hypothesized that inflammaging, the subclinical low and chronic grade inflammation characteristic of old people, can contribute to POD onset. Accordingly, we investigated the association of pre-operative and circulating cytokines in elderly patients (>65 years), admitted for elective and emergency surgery., Methods: This is a secondary analysis of a sub-cohort of patients belonging to a previous large case-control study, where 351 patients were clinically and cognitively thoroughly characterized, together with the assessment of POD (47 patients) by confusion assessment method and delirium rating scale. Seventy-four pre-operative plasma samples were selected from a larger bio-bank and they included 37 subjects with POD and 37 without POD. Inflammaging related cytokines, i.e., IL-1β, IL-2, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, and TNF-α, were assayed by ELISA in pre-operative blood samples; univariate and multivariable analyses have been applied to identify cytokines independently associated to POD. Associations of cytokine levels with functional status, cognitive decline, intra-hospital mortality, and comorbidity were also analyzed independently of POD onset., Results: High IL-6 and low-IL-2 levels were significantly associated with POD. After adjustment for potential confounders in multivariate analysis, high level of pre-operative IL-6 was confirmed to be significantly associated with risk of POD onset. High level of IL-6 was also associated with several baseline features (including poor functional status, cognitive impairment, emergency admission, and higher comorbidity burden) and intra-hospital mortality., Conclusion: Pre-operative, high-plasma level of IL-6 (≥9 pg/mL) was significantly associated with POD onset. We propose IL-6 as an additional risk factor of POD onset together with the previously identified factors. Discovery of all risk factors contributing to POD onset will permit to improve hospitalized patient management and the decrease of healthcare cost.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. [Thoraco-abdominal aneurysms of type IV].
- Author
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Stella A, Paragona O, Freyrie A, Faggioli G, Kapelj S, Spagnolo C, Di Nino G, and D'Addato M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aortic Aneurysm classification, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Vascular Surgical Procedures methods, Aortic Aneurysm surgery
- Abstract
Aim of the Study: Aims of the study were: 1. to evaluate the results of surgical treatment of type IV thoraco-abdominal aneurysms (TAA), with relationship to other types, 2. to evaluate results obtained with an approach different from the traditional thoraco-phreno laparatomy, with specific attention to postoperative respiratory function., Material and Methods: We have retrospectively compared type IV TAA with all other types of thoraco-abdominal aneurysms electively treated between January 1st, 1994 and May 31st, 2003. Data on perioperative mortality, spinal cord ischemia and renal failure (both temporary and permanent) occurring in the first 30 postoperative days were considered. Protection from spinal cord ischemia was accomplished through liquor drainage and prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) infusion. When the aneurysm extension was limited to the celiac axis an extrapleuric access with removal of XI rib was performed. In this subgroup of patients we have considered postoperative recovery time of respiratory function (intubation time, number of days in intensive care unit, postoperative pulmonary complications) postoperative renal failure, perioperative mortality and morbidity., Results: Seventy-eight TAA have been treated in the period of time of the study. Twenty cases were type IV TAA (25.6%) of which 2 due to chronic dissection. Cumulative postoperative mortality has been 19.2%. The single perioperative death in the group of type IV TAA (5%) occurred in post-operative day 15 for multiple organ failure. No spinal cord ischemia occurred in this group. Temporary renal failure occurred in 3 cases (15%) with one case requiring dialysis. In 10 cases (50%) an extrapleuric access with removal of XI rib was performed, with adequate control of the proximal aorta. Postoperative respiratory failure requiring and intubation time longer than 12 hours occurred in 2 cases (20%). In the remaining 8 cases the mean intubation time was 5.3 hours (range 4-8 hrs). Tracheostomy was not necessary in any case. Mean time of intensive care unit stay was 3.5 days (range 0-15 days)., Conclusion: The appropriate treatment of type IV TAA leads to low mortality and morbidity with results similar to those of pararenal aneurysms rather than those of other TAA forms. Left extrapleuric access when feasible allows faster recovery of a normal respiratory function.
- Published
- 2004
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