69 results on '"F. Parente"'
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2. OC.11.5 TRIGGER AND TARGET TRANSFUSION STRATEGY IN PATIENTS WITH NON-VARICEAL ACUTE UPPER GASTROINTESTINAL BLEEDING (NV-AUGIB): A PROSPECTIVE MULTICENTRE OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
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L. Amitrano, C. Spada, L. Purita, R. Pumpo, L. Furio, L. Orsini, S. Metrangolo, M. Parravicini, G. D'Amico, F. Esposito, G. Spinzi, R. Bennato, A. Andriulli, A. Merighi, M. Manno, L. Cipolletta, R. Conigliaro, Alessandra Dell'Era, Maria Elena Riccioni, G. Imperiali, A. Lauri, D. Conte, V. Boarino, Guido Costamagna, G. Napolitano, E. Buscarini, G. Baldassarre, P. Cesaro, Cristina Bucci, R. Lamanda, A. Balzano, A. Anderloni, P. Borgheresi, L.M. Montalbano, S. Mangiafico, C. Londoni, A. Russo, C. De Fanis, F. Cipolletta, L. Ferraris, R. De Franchis, A. Zambelli, M.A. Bianco, F. Bazzoli, G. Bresci, L.G. Cavallaro, A. Repici, A. Chirico, O. Triossi, F. Parente, Marco Soncini, Riccardo Marmo, S. Segato, R.M. Zagari, M. De Matthaeis, P. Di Giorgio, F. De Nigris, A. Nucci, A. Bizzotto, F.R. De Filippo, C. Marmo, E. Di Giulio, B. Germanà, G. Rotondano, S. Bargiggia, P. Gasparini, Annalisa Tortora, and M. Franceschi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,Observational study ,In patient ,Acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding ,business - Published
- 2019
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3. OC.14.2 PREDICTIVE FACTORS OF MORTALITY IN ACUTE GASTROINTESTINAL BLEEDING IN ITALY (AUGIB): A NEW PRE-ENDOSCOPY PROGNOSTIC MODEL FROM A MULTICENTER STUDY
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R. Bennato, M. Manno, S. Segato, M. De Matthaeis, L.G. Cavallaro, E. Buscarini, G. D'Amico, P. Di Giorgio, A. Balzano, G. Imperiali, R. De Franchis, A. Zambelli, F. Bazzoli, Guido Costamagna, F. De Nigris, F. Esposito, A. Andriulli, G. Spinzi, A. Nucci, B. Germanà, L. Ferraris, A. Bizzotto, F.R. De Filippo, V. Boarino, Cristina Bucci, C. Marmo, L. Amitrano, L. Orsini, Marco Soncini, Riccardo Marmo, P. Cesaro, R.M. Zagari, F. Parente, Maria Elena Riccioni, R. Lamanda, A. Anderloni, P. Borgheresi, L.M. Montalbano, E. Di Giulio, A. Lauri, S. Mangiafico, A. Russo, S. Metrangolo, R. Pumpo, C. De Fanis, M.A. Bianco, L. Purita, G. Bresci, A. Chirico, O. Triossi, F. Cipolletta, L. Cipolletta, R. Conigliaro, C. Londoni, A. Repici, A. Paterlini, A. Merighi, M. Parravicini, D. Conte, G. Baldassarre, L. Furio, G. Napolitano, A. Dell'Eera, G. Rotondano, Annalisa Tortora, M. Franceschi, S. Bargiggia, and P. Gasparini
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Multicenter study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Acute gastrointestinal bleeding ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,Prognostic model ,medicine ,business ,Endoscopy - Published
- 2018
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4. P.10.10: Mortality Causes from Acute Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding: A Prospective Multicentre Observational Study
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S. Segato, M. De Matthaeis, F. Cipolletta, V. Boarino, A. Repici, A. Paterlini, G. Spinzi, P. Di Giorgio, L. Orsini, P. Cesaro, G. D'Amico, L. Cipolletta, R. Conigliaro, F. De Nigris, G. Imperiali, R. Bennato, A. Lauri, A. Anderloni, Maria Elena Riccioni, Alessandra Dell'Era, A. Nucci, A. Bizzotto, F.R. De Filippo, B. Germanà, M. Manno, C. Marmo, F. Esposito, Guido Costamagna, G. Napolitano, R. Pumpo, R.M. Zagari, A. Russo, L. Furio, A. Balzano, L. Ferraris, M.A. Bianco, E. Di Giulio, G. Bresci, S. Mangiafico, F. Parente, C. De Fanis, L. Purita, S. Bargiggia, Marco Soncini, G. Rotondano, Riccardo Marmo, A. Merighi, M. Parravicini, P. Borgheresi, L.M. Montalbano, M. Guardascione, P. Gasparini, R. De Franchis, A. Zambelli, F. Bazzoli, E. Buscarini, S. Metrangolo, D. Conte, R. Lamanda, G. Baldassarre, Annalisa Tortora, M. Franceschi, A. Andriulli, L.G. Cavallaro, C. Londoni, Cristina Bucci, A. Chirico, and O. Triossi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,Observational study ,Acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding ,business - Published
- 2017
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5. Meta-analysis: the relative efficacy of oral bowel preparations for colonoscopy 1985-2010
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Peter Layer, Owen Epstein, F. Parente, Cristiano Crosta, J. Belsey, M. Halphen, and W. Fischbach
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Relative efficacy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Gastroenterology ,Therapeutic irrigation ,Colonoscopy ,Surgery ,Nap ,Internal medicine ,Meta-analysis ,PEG ratio ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Dosing ,business - Abstract
Aliment Pharmacol Ther 2012; 35: 222–237 Summary Background Previous reviews of bowel preparation for colonoscopy have given contradictory answers. Aim To provide a definitive insight, using PRISMA-compliant methodology. Methods A comprehensive literature review identified randomised controlled trials comparing bowel preparation regimens. Data for quality of bowel preparation were pooled in multiple meta-analyses exploring a range of inclusion criteria. Results A total of 104 qualifying studies were identified, the majority of which involved comparisons of sodium phosphate (NaP) or polyethylene glycol (PEG). There was no significant difference demonstrated between NaP and PEG overall (OR = 0.82; 95% CI = 0.56–1.21; P = 0.36). Cumulative meta-analysis demonstrated that this conclusion has been qualitatively similar since the mid 1990s, with little quantitative change for the past 10 years. Amongst studies with previous day dosing in both study arms there was a significant advantage in favour of PEG (OR = 1.78; 95% CI = 1.13–2.81; P = 0.006). Studies focussing on results in the proximal colon also favoured PEG (OR = 2.36; 95% CI = 1.16–4.77; P = 0.012). PEG was also significantly more effective than non-NaP bowel preparation regimens (OR = 2.02; 95% CI = 1.08–3.78; P = 0.03). Other comparisons showed no significant difference between regimens. Conclusions Although there is no compelling evidence favouring either of the two most commonly used bowel preparation regimens, this may reflect shortcomings in study design. Where studies have ensured comparable dosage, or the clinically relevant outcome of proximal bowel clearance is considered, PEG-based regimens offer the most effective option.
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- 2011
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6. Rightward shift of colorectal cancer in Italy during the past three decades
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F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, and Claudia Cucino
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer ,Rightward shift ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Rectal disease ,Colonic disease ,Aged - Abstract
(2004). Rightward shift of colorectal cancer in Italy during the past three decades. Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology: Vol. 39, No. 8, pp. 783-786.
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- 2004
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7. P.15.3 INCREASED PERFORMANCE OF AN UPDATED ROCKALL SCORE IN ACUTE NON VARICEAL UPPER GASTRO INTESTINAL BLEEDING: A PROSPECTIVE MULTICENTRE ITALIAN STUDY
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E. Masci, S. De Stefano, S. Segato, A. Russo, D. Conte, L.G. Cavallaro, M. Martorano, M.A. Bianco, R.M. Zagari, L. Cipolletta, G. Bresci, R. Marin, G. Spinzi, A. Andreloni, Cristina Bucci, S. Metrangolo, G. Baldassarre, R. Lamanda, A. Lauri, L. Amitrano, G. D'Amico, L. Ferraris, A. Merighi, A. Chirico, C. De Fanis, R. De Franchis, O. Triossi, G. Imperiali, F. Cipolletta, G. Coccia, A. Repici, A. Paterlini, B. Germanà, S. Antoniazzi, E. Buscarini, Alessandra Dell'Era, Annalisa Tortora, M. Franceschi, L. Furio, G. Rotondano, S. Bargiggia, A. Maringhini, P. Gasparini, M. De Matthaeis, P. Di Giorgio, F. De Nigris, A. Nucci, F. Politi, A. Bizzotto, M. Parravicini, P. Borgheresi, L.M. Montalbano, C. Marmo, L. Purita, E. Di Giulio, R. Pumpo, R. Bennato, A. Balzano, Marco Soncini, Riccardo Marmo, V. Boarino, P. Cesaro, F. Parente, and Maria Elena Riccioni
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Gastro intestinal bleeding ,business ,Rockall score - Published
- 2016
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8. Role of early ultrasound in detecting inflammatory intestinal disorders and identifying their anatomical location within the bowel
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Giovanni Maconi, S. Greco, F. Parente, Massimo Cristaldi, M. Molteni, Roberto Bianco, G. Bianchi Porro, Claudia Cucino, Silvano Gallus, Giuseppe Sampietro, and Piergiorgio Danelli
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Ultrasound ,Gastroenterology ,Rectum ,Diverticulitis ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,digestive system diseases ,Appendicitis ,Descending colon ,Endoscopy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Duodenum ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business - Abstract
Summary Background : Although bowel ultrasound is a widely accepted diagnostic tool in bowel diseases, its value as the primary imaging procedure in patients with symptoms/signs suggestive of inflammatory bowel disorders is still unclear. Aim : To investigate the accuracy of bowel ultrasound compared with barium X-ray studies, computed tomography, endoscopy and bowel surgery in the initial assessment of inflammatory bowel disorders. Methods : Four hundred and eighty-seven patients hospitalized consecutively for symptoms or signs suggestive of a bowel disorder between December 1999 and March 2002 were initially enrolled in the study. All patients underwent bowel ultrasound as the first imaging procedure within 36 h of admission; radiographic evaluations, endoscopy and/or surgery were then performed as appropriate and the results of these investigations were used as the gold standard. Results : Three hundred and thirty-six patients had pathological findings of the bowel detectable at ultrasound as the final diagnosis. The main organic disorders found were Crohn's disease (56%), ulcerative/indeterminate colitis (30%), bowel tumours (5%), appendicitis/diverticulitis (2%) and other inflammatory conditions (8%). The overall sensitivity and specificity of bowel ultrasound were 85% and 95%, respectively, whereas the positive and negative predictive values were 98% and 75%, respectively. Comparisons of ultrasound with X-ray or endoscopic results by disease localization showed that the diagnostic performance of ultrasound was higher for inflammatory conditions of the ileum and sigmoid/descending colon (sensitivity of 92% and 87%, respectively), whereas abnormalities localized in the rectum, duodenum and proximal jejunum were often missed by ultrasound. Conclusions : In expert hands, bowel ultrasound is highly predictive of inflammatory disease localized in the ileum or colon, and may well be used as the primary imaging method when Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis is suspected on a clinical basis.
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- 2003
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9. Small bowel stenosis in Crohn's disease: clinical, biochemical and ultrasonographic evaluation of histological features
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Giovanni Maconi, Massimo Cristaldi, Angelo Maria Taschieri, Giuseppe Sampietro, Gianluca Vago, Sandro Ardizzone, Paolo Fociani, Luca Carsana, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Ileal stenosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Crohn's disease ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.disease ,Stenosis ,Fibrosis ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Immunohistochemistry ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Negative correlation ,business ,Surgical treatment - Abstract
Summary Aim : To establish whether intestinal ultrasound, clinical or biochemical indices of activity can assess histological features of ileal stenosis in Crohn's disease. Methods : In 43 patients undergoing surgery for a single ileal stenosis, clinical and biochemical parameters, as well as intestinal ultrasound, were assessed prior to surgery. The echo pattern of thickened bowel segments at the site of stenosis was classified as hypoechoic, stratified or mixed (segments with/without stratification). During surgery, stenoses were identified, resected and then histologically examined using standardized criteria. Results : Clinical and biochemical indices of activity showed an overall weak positive correlation with histological inflammatory parameters and a negative correlation with fibrosis. The intestinal ultrasound echo pattern at the stenosis site was stratified in 25 patients, hypoechoic in 14 and mixed in four. Stenoses characterized by a stratified echo pattern showed a significantly higher degree of fibrosis, those characterized by hypoechoic echo pattern showed a higher degree of inflammation, while stenoses with a mixed echo pattern showed high degrees of both fibrosis and inflammation. Conclusion : Ultrasound and, to a lesser degree, clinical and laboratory indices discriminate between inflammatory and fibrotic ileal stenoses complicating Crohn's disease, thus allowing appropriate medical and/or surgical treatment to be defined.
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- 2003
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10. Sonographic Prevalence of Liver Steatosis and Biliary Tract Stones in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Study of 511 Subjects at a Single Center
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S. Bargiggia, Sandro Ardizzone, Giovanni Maconi, P. Molteni, Gabriele Bianchi Porro, G. Manzionna, S. Greco, Marco Elli, F. Parente, and Ivan Todaro
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Single Center ,Gastroenterology ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Crohn Disease ,Cholelithiasis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Colitis ,Ultrasonography ,business.industry ,Gallbladder ,Gallstones ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Fatty Liver ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Biliary tract ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,Steatosis ,business - Abstract
Goals: Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) are associated with pathologic findings in the liver and biliary tract. Ultrasonography (US) represents a noninvasive means to study hepatobiliary abnormalities. This study evaluated the prevalence of US hepatobiliary changes and their relationship to clinical variables in a large IBD patient population followed in a single center. Study: Five hundred eighty-three consecutive IBD patients were studied with US. After excluding patients with preexisting acute or chronic hepatitis, metabolic disorders, or obesity, 511 patients were investigated for age, duration, site, and severity of the disease, history of surgery, and present medical treatment. At US, liver size, echo-genicity (graded as mild-to-moderate or severe indicating a corresponding degree of hepatic steatosis), focal lesions of the liver and gallbladder, and biliary tract abnormalities were recorded. Results: Three hundred eleven patients with Crohn disease (CD) and 200 patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) were recruited for the study. Hepatobiliary abnormalities were found at US in 54.2% and 55.9% of CD and UC patients, respectively. Liver enlargement and mild-to-moderate to severe liver steatosis were found in 25.7% and 39.5% of CD patients and in 25.5%. and 35.5% of UC patients, respectively, a higher prevalence than among healthy controls (P < 0.001). The prevalence of gallstones among CD patients was 11%, higher than that among UC patients (7.5%) and controls (5.5% (P = 0.016). The higher risk of gallbladder stones in CD was related to age, female sex, and previous surgery. Conclusion: The prevalence of liver enlargement and liver steatosis was higher among IBD patients. The prevalence of gallstones was increased in CD patients only. This risk was related to age, female sex, and previous surgery.
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- 2003
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11. P.10.3: Mortality in Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding in Italy: Data from National Survey
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A. Chirico, O. Triossi, Cristina Bucci, C. Londoni, S. Mangiafico, Guido Costamagna, M. De Matthaeis, C. De Fanis, F. Cipolletta, G. Baldassarre, A. Andriulli, A. Balzano, A. Repici, A. Paterlini, F. Parente, V. Boarino, R. Lamanda, A. Russo, P. Di Giorgio, S. Segato, M.A. Bianco, R. Bennato, G. Bresci, P. Cesaro, M. Manno, G. D'Amico, G. Spinzi, E. Di Giulio, G. Imperiali, L. Orsini, F. De Nigris, L. Cipolletta, R. Conigliaro, A. Nucci, A. Lauri, A. Bizzotto, F.R. De Filippo, C. Marmo, Maria Elena Riccioni, F. Esposito, L. Amitrano, C. Tomba, D. Conte, L.G. Cavallaro, B. Germanà, A. Anderloni, S. Metrangolo, A. Merighi, E. Buscarini, R. Pumpo, R.M. Zagari, Marco Soncini, Riccardo Marmo, R. De Franchis, A. Zambelli, F. Bazzoli, M. Parravicini, L. Ferraris, L. Purita, P. Borgheresi, L.M. Montalbano, S. Bargiggia, L. Furio, P. Gasparini, Annalisa Tortora, M. Franceschi, Alessandra Dell'Era, G. Napolitano, and G. Rotondano
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,General surgery ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Upper gastrointestinal bleeding ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2017
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12. Presence of Gastric Autoantibodies Impairs Gastric Secretory Function in Patients with Helicobacter pylori-positive Duodenal Ulcer
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Giovanni Maconi, F. Parente, R. Negrini, G. Bianchi Porro, Luca Vago, Venerina Imbesi, and M. Sainaghi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Spirillaceae ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Pepsinogen A ,Internal medicine ,Gastrins ,medicine ,Humans ,Autoantibodies ,Gastric Juice ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,Immunoperoxidase ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Autoantibody ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Pentagastrin ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gastric Mucosa ,Duodenal Ulcer ,Duodenum ,Female ,Histopathology ,Gastritis ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Although the association between Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric autoimmunity is now well established, to date little is known about the significance of anticanalicular autoantibodies in patients with duodenal ulcer (DU). We therefore investigated the prevalence of serum antiparietal cell autoreactivity in DU patients as well as the relationship between these autoantibodies, gastric histopathology and gastric secretory function in this setting.Forty-one consecutive patients with H. pylori-positive DU were initially recruited. In all patients, basal (BAO) and pentagastrin stimulated acid output (PAO), fasting and meal-induced serum gastrin levels, as well as serum pepsinogen I concentrations, were measured. Antral and body gastritis was evaluated according to the Sydney system. Serum anticanalicular autoreactivity was determined by the indirect immunoperoxidase technique.Serum anticanalicular autoantibodies were found in 7 out of 34 patients (20%). The presence of these antibodies was associated with a significantly higher grade of body gastritis (activity: 1.9 versus 0.9) as well as with significantly higher fasting and meal stimulated gastrin levels (mean fasting gastrin, 76.4 (15.2) microg/ml versus 59.3 (20.5) microg/ml). In addition, PAO values were significantly lower in patients with gastric autoantibodies than in those without this autoreactivity (mean 0.35 (0.16) mmol kg(-1)h(-1) versus 0.49 (0.16)mmol kg(-1)h(-1)). In contrast, no significant differences were found between patients with and without anticanalicular autoantibodies as regards fasting serum pepsinogen I concentrations.Serum anticanalicular autoantibodies can be detected in 20% of patients with DU and are associated with a more severe pattern of body gastritis, higher gastrin levels and decreased peak acid secretion values. Their presence could account for the normal or reduced acid output which can be seen in a subset of DU patients.
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- 2001
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13. Do Some Patients With Helicobacter Pylori Infection Benefit From An Extension To 2 Weeks of A Proton Pump Inhibitor–Based Triple Eradication Therapy?
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Gabriele Bianchi Porro, Luca Vago, Venerina Imbesi, Antonio Russo, Giovanni Maconi, and F. Parente
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.drug_class ,Lansoprazole ,Proton-pump inhibitor ,Gastroenterology ,2-Pyridinylmethylsulfinylbenzimidazoles ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Helicobacter Infections ,Pharmacotherapy ,Clarithromycin ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Omeprazole ,Helicobacter pylori ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,Amoxicillin ,Proton Pump Inhibitors ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,biology.organism_classification ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Surgery ,Logistic Models ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Seven-day proton pump inhibitor (PPI)–based triple therapies are the first-line anti-Helicobacter pylori regimens; to date, however, there is still no agreement concerning all the predictors of H. pylori cure under these regimens. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate whether patients with certain pretreatment characteristics may benefit from an extension from 1 to 2 wk of treatment with lansoprazole, amoxycillin, and clarithromycin. METHODS: A total of 142 patients with H. pylori infection ascertained by means of gastric histopathology and 13C urea breath test (UBT) participated in this study. In all patients H. pylori density was determined at histology both on antral and corpus biopsies, and H. pylori culture with antibiotic susceptibility testing; IgG anti–H. pylori titers were also determined before therapy. Patients were randomized to receive 1-wk versus 2-wk of treatment with lansoprazole (30 mg b.i.d.), clarithromycin (500 mg b.i.d.), and amoxycillin (1 g b.i.d.). The association between eradication and potential predictors was analyzed by means of unconditional logistic regression models and stratified according to the duration of treatment. A stepwise regression analysis was performed to identify variables discriminated between subjects, using eradication status as the dependent variable. RESULTS: The overall eradication rates for 1- and 2-wk treatments were 74.6% and 85.9% (intention-to-treat analysis) and 81.5% and 89.1% (per-protocol analysis), respectively (p = NS). Multivariate discriminant analysis selected as the variables independently related to eradication cigarette smoking (OR = 3.98), δ of 13C-UBT higher than 35 (OR = 9.21) and IgG anti-H. pylori titer ≥93 (OR = 0.24) for the whole series of subjects. Stratified analysis according to the duration of therapy selected H. pylori density as the only predictor of eradication in the group treated for 1 wk (OR = 8.11). In contrast, no significant predictors were found in the group treated for 2 wk. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with a high intragastric bacterial load, as detected by histology (grade 3) or 13C-UBT (δ > 35) may benefit from an extension to 2 wk of triple therapy with lansoprazole, amoxycillin, and clarithromycin.
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- 2001
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14. Cerebral Whipple’s disease: clinical and cerebrospinal fluid findings
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P Valla, G Bernardi, S Lodrini, F Carella, Antonella Costa, and F Parente
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Leukocytosis ,Dermatology ,Gastroenterology ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Recurrence ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Whipple's disease ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Whipple Disease ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Immunoglobulin A ,Surgery ,Discontinuation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Immunoglobulin M ,Immunoglobulin G ,Encephalitis ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The case of a patient who had a relapse of cerebral Whipple's disease (WD) one year after discontinuation of a two-years' antibiotic treatment is reported. Neither the clinical course nor the results of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and routine examination of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) allowed the caring physician to predict the relapse. Retrospective analysis of serial specimens of CSF showed that slight CSF leucocytosis and intrathecal synthesis of IgA might have suggested persistence of infection. The decision to stop antibiotic therapy in cerebral WD is difficult, but evaluation of cell counts and of intrathecal synthesis of IgA may help in the decision. Some patients may need to take treatment indefinitely.
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- 1998
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15. Effects ofHelicobacter pyloriEradication on Gastric Function Indices in Functional Dyspepsia: A Prospective Controlled Study
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G. Manzionna, Giovanni Maconi, Claudia Cucino, Luca Vago, Venerina Imbesi, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ranitidine ,Gastroenterology ,Tinidazole ,Helicobacter Infections ,Gastric Acid ,Pepsin ,Clarithromycin ,Internal medicine ,Gastrins ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Dyspepsia ,Omeprazole ,Gastrin ,Helicobacter pylori ,Pepsinogens ,biology ,Gastric emptying ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Middle Aged ,Anti-Ulcer Agents ,biology.organism_classification ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Treatment Outcome ,Gastric Emptying ,Gastritis ,biology.protein ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To date, it is unclear whether Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with disturbances of gastric emptying or acid secretion in patients with functional dyspepsia (FD). Our aim was to investigate whether, in the long run, cure of H. pylori infection significantly influences gastric emptying of solids, acid secretion, and gastrin and pepsinogen I (PGI) release in patients with FD.Thirty-eight consecutive H. pylori-positive patients with FD, whose complaints were scored for severity and frequency on the basis of a validated symptom questionnaire, were initially enrolled in the study. They were randomized to receive an eradicating regimen consisting of omeprazole plus clarithromycin and tinidazole for 1 week or full-dose ranitidine for 3 weeks. In 33 patients (18 H. pylori-cured and 15 with persistent infection) basal and pentagastrin-stimulated acid secretion, fasting and meal-induced gastrin concentrations, fasting serum PGI levels, and gastric emptying of solids were determined before and 6 months after therapy.In the 18 H. pylori-cured patients meal-induced gastrin and fasting PGI levels were significantly reduced after 6 months as compared with pretreatment values (peak serum gastrin, 76.0 +/- 23.4 versus 111.9+/-37.4 pg/ml; PGI, 57.1+/-23.4 versus 72.9+/-29.1 ng/ml), whereas they remained virtually unchanged in the 15 patients with persistent infection. In contrast, both basal and stimulated acid secretion and gastric emptying time of solids remained unmodified over time in both groups of patients.We confirm that also in patients with functional dyspepsia H. pylori eradication in the long run significantly reduces gastrin and PGI release as a result of improvement in the underlying antral gastritis, but this is not accompanied by modifications of gastric emptying of solids or acid secretion.
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- 1998
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16. Anatomic distribution of cancers and colorectal adenomas according to age and sex and relationship between proximal and distal neoplasms in an i-FOBT-positive average-risk Italian screening cohort
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A. Ilardo, A. Ardizzoia, E. Bonoldi, Cinzia Boemo, S. Bargiggia, Silvano Gallus, Cristian Vailati, F. Parente, and F. Tortorella
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Adenoma ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,Population ,Colonoscopy ,Gastroenterology ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Aged ,Splenic flexure ,education.field_of_study ,Sex Characteristics ,Hematologic Tests ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Sigmoidoscopy ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,stomatognathic diseases ,Italy ,Occult Blood ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms - Abstract
Subsite-specific incidence rates of colorectal cancer (CRC) and adenomas may vary considerably by race, sex and age as well as due to different screening strategies. We assessed variations in the anatomical distribution of adenomas according to age and sex in an average-risk screening cohort testing positive at immunological faecal occult blood test (i-FOBT) in northern Italy. Data from 2,281 consecutive asymptomatic i-FOBT-positive subjects ageing 50–70 years undergone colonoscopy were reviewed. Size, number, macroscopic and histological features of all adenomas found as well as their proximal or distal location in relation to the splenic flexure were examined. Odds ratios (OR) of proximal neoplasms, according to the presence of distal neoplasms and other selected covariates were assessed by multiple logistic regression analysis. A total of 2,599 neoplasms were found in 1,396 patients. Of these, 116 (5 %) were colorectal cancers, diagnosed in 106 patients. Out of 2,483 adenomas found, 1,564 (63 %) were sessile, 795 (32 %) were peduncolated and 124 (5 %) were flat-type; 54 % of all adenomas were tubular, 36 % were tubulovillous or villous, and 10 % were serrated adenomas. The majority of neoplasms (66 %) were located in the distal colon. Tumour subsite distribution was consistent in both sexes, whereas significant proximal migration of neoplasms occurred in the older age cohort. Indeed, the rate of proximal neoplasms in patients aged ≥60 years was 37 % as compared with 29 % in those ageing 50–59 years. Male gender (OR 1.84), age of 60 years or older (OR 1.44), having a family history of colorectal neoplasms (OR 1.47) and presence of at least 1 distal advanced adenoma (OR 1.63) were all significant predictors of advanced proximal neoplasms. A left to right shift of colorectal adenomas with increasing age is evident in northern Italian asymptomatic i-FOBT-positive population. Advanced proximal neoplasms are not uncommon in subjects with or without distal adenomas, especially after 60 years of age. This should be carefully considered when implementing public screening strategies for CRC since the use of flexible sigmoidoscopy as a screening tool, particularly in older age groups, appears to be less effective.
- Published
- 2013
17. Intermittent treatment with mesalazine in the prevention of diverticulitis recurrence: a randomised multicentre pilot double-blind placebo-controlled study of 24-month duration
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S. Bargiggia, G. De Pretis, F. Parente, A. Ferrari, A. Giacosa, Alberto Prada, G. Miori, Bastianello Germanà, Aurora Bortoli, and Giovanni Casella
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Placebo-controlled study ,Pilot Projects ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Double blind ,Placebos ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mesalazine ,Double-Blind Method ,Recurrence ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Confidence Intervals ,Humans ,Mesalamine ,Diverticulitis ,Aged ,Demography ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Hepatology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Diverticular disease ,Female ,business - Abstract
Recurrence of diverticulitis is frequent within 5 years from the uncomplicated first attack, and its prophylaxis is still unclear. We have undertaken a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study in order to evaluate the role of mesalazine in preventing diverticulitis recurrence as well as its effects on symptoms associated to diverticular disease.Ninety-six patients with the recent first episode of uncomplicated diverticulitis were randomised to receive mesalazine 800 mg twice daily for 10 days every month or placebo for 24 months. The primary efficacy end point was the diverticulitis recurrence at intention to treat analysis. Clinical evaluations were performed using the Therapy Impact Questionnaire (TIQ) for physical condition and quality of life at admission and at 3-month intervals. Treatment tolerability and routine biochemistry parameters as well as the use of additional drugs were also evaluated.Ninety-two patients (mean age, 61.5) completed the study, 45 of whom received mesalazine, and 47, placebo. Diverticulitis relapse incidence in mesalazine-treated group was 5/45 (11%) at the 12th month and 6/45 (13%) at the 24th month; in the placebo-treated group, the correspondent rates were 13% (6/47) and 28% (13/47), respectively. Mean values of TIQ at 24 months were significantly better in mesalazine-treated group than in placebo-treated group (p = 0.02); in addition, average additional drug consumption was significantly lower (-20.4%, p 0.03) in mesalazine than in placebo.Diverticulitis recurrence occurred in as many as 28% of patients under placebo within 24 months from the initial episode. Intermittent prophylaxis with mesalazine did not significantly reduce the risk of relapse but induced a significant improvement of patients' physical conditions and significantly lowered the additional consumption of other gastrointestinal drugs.
- Published
- 2013
18. Role of Helicobacter pylori in ulcer healing and recurrence of gastric and duodenal ulcers in longterm NSAID users. Response to omeprazole dual therapy
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F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, F. Montrone, Venerina Imbesi, and I. Caruso
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medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,Anti-ulcer Agent ,Peptic ,Spirillaceae ,Gastroenterology ,Rapid urease test ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology.organism_classification ,digestive system diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Concomitant ,Internal medicine ,Duodenum ,Medicine ,business ,Omeprazole ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The relation between Helicobacter pylori infection and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID)-associated peptic ulcers remains unclear; in particular, it is not known whether H pylori plays a part in the healing and recurrence of these ulcers. AIMS: To evaluate prospectively in a consecutive series of arthritis patients receiving longterm NSAID treatment the prevalence of peptic ulcer as well as the effect of H pylori eradication on the healing and recurrence of gastric and duodenal ulcer found. PATIENTS: Some 278 consecutive patients underwent gastroscopy with multiple biopsies of the gastric antrum and corpus for histological examination and rapid urease test. One hundred peptic ulcers (59 gastric ulcers, 39 duodenal ulcers, and two gastric ulcers concomitant with a duodenal ulcer) were found. Seventy per cent of these ulcers were H pylori positive. METHODS: According to their H pylori status, ulcer patients were randomised to one of the following treatments: H pylori negative ulcers received omeprazole 20 mg twice daily for four to eight weeks, whereas H pylori positive lesions were treated with omeprazole 20 mg twice daily plus amoxycillin 1 g twice daily (the second of these for the first two weeks) or omeprazole alone for four to eight weeks while continuing NSAID therapy. Patients with healed ulcers were endoscopically followed up for six months after stopping antiulcer therapy while continuing NSAIDs. RESULTS: Endoscopic healing rates for gastric and duodenal ulcers in the three different groups were similar both at four and eight weeks. H pylori eradication did not influence healing, which occurred in 14 of 20 (70%) of patients in whom H pylori was eradicated, compared with 14 of 17 (82%) of patients with persistent infection. Cumulative recurrence rates at six months did not statistically differ among the three different groups (27% in H pylori negative, 46% in H pylori positive, and 31% in those where H pylori was eradicated during the healing phase), although a numerical trend in favour of a higher recurrence rate in infected patients was evident. CONCLUSIONS: H pylori eradication does not confer any significant advantage on the healing of gastric and duodenal ulcers associated with longterm NSAID use. It remains to be established with certainty whether eradication may be helpful in the reduction of recurrence in a specific subset of NSAID associated ulcer.
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- 1996
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19. P.15.9 TRANSFUSION STRATEGY AND DEATH RISK IN PATIENTS WITH ACUTE NON VARICEAL UPPER GASTRO INTESTINAL BLEEDING (NV-UGIB) IN ITALY: A PROSPECTIVE MULTICENTER OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
- Author
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R. Marmo, M. Soncini, L. Cipolletta, F. Parente, A. Paterlini, R. Bennato, F. Cipolletta, L. Orsini, S. Bargiggia, P. Cesaro, A. Bizzotto, A. Dell'Era, B. Germanà, L.G. Cavallaro, M.E. Riccioni, C. Marmo, A. Tortora, S. Segato, M. Parravicini, L. Purita, A. Chirico, G. Spinzi, G. Imperiali, A. Maringhi, V. Boarino, G. Bresci, S. Metrangolo, C. Bucci, G. Baldassarre, M. Franceschi, A. Nucci, F. De Nigris, E. Masci, R. Marin, S. Antoniazzi, L. Ferraris, A. Repici, A. Andreloni, M.A. Bianco, G. Rotondano, M. De Matthaeis, A. Lauri, C. De Fanis, P. Borgheresi, S. De Stefano, R. Lamanda, L. Furio, A. Russo, P. Di Giorgio, F. Politi, R. Pumpo, O. Triossi, G. Coccia, L.M. Montalbano, R.M. Zagari, A. Balzano, E. Buscarini, D. Conte, G. D'Amico, E. Di Giulio, P. Gasparini, and R. De Franchis
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Death risk ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Observational study ,In patient ,Gastro intestinal bleeding ,business - Published
- 2016
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20. Short and long term outcome of Helicobacter pylori positive resistant duodenal ulcers treated with colloidal bismuth subcitrate plus antibiotics or sucralfate alone
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F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, and M. Lazzaroni
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Letter ,Sucralfate ,Gastroenterology ,Tinidazole ,Helicobacter Infections ,Maintenance therapy ,Internal medicine ,Organometallic Compounds ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Antibacterial agent ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,business.industry ,Anti-ulcer Agent ,Amoxicillin ,Middle Aged ,Anti-Ulcer Agents ,biology.organism_classification ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Regimen ,Duodenal Ulcer ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Thirty two patients with Helicobacter pylori positive duodenal ulcers resistant to treatment were randomly assigned to 4 weeks' treatment with sucralphate 4 g/day or colloidal bismuth subcitrate 480 mg/day plus amoxycillin from days 1 to 7 and tinidazole from days 8 to 14. After 4 weeks, patients with unhealed ulcers were crossed over to the other form of treatment for a further 4 week period. Patients with healed ulcers were followed up for 1 year without maintenance therapy with clinical and endoscopic investigations 3, 6, and 12 months after healing. Complete healing rates at 4 weeks were 88% (15 of 17) in the colloidal bismuth subcitrate plus antibiotics group and 40% (six of 15) in the sucralphate group (p < 0.05). After cross over, overall healing rates were 88% (22 of 25) and 47% (eight of 17), respectively (p < 0.05). H pylori eradication occurred in 83% of patients treated with the triple therapy. Cumulative relapse rates at 12 months were 12% (two of 17) in patients in whom H pylori had been eradicated and 100% (10 of 10) in those with persistent infection after short term therapy (p < 0.05). These results show that a colloidal bismuth subcitrate plus antibiotics regimen is highly effective in the short term treatment of resistant duodenal ulcers and that H pylori eradication can change the natural tendency to early recurrence of these ulcers.
- Published
- 1993
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21. Opportunistic infections of the oesophagus in AIDS patients: clinical and therapeutic problems
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F. Parente and G. Bianchi Porro
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Gastrointestinal tract ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,Esophageal disease ,business.industry ,Candidiasis ,medicine.disease ,Dysphagia ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Immunopathology ,Immunology ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Esophagitis ,Humans ,Viral disease ,medicine.symptom ,Complication ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,Odynophagia - Abstract
The gastrointestinal tract is frequently involved in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. One of the most common digestive manifestations is dysphagia/odynophagia which constitutes the presenting feature of the syndrome in a number of patients and occurs in many others during the subsequent phases of the illness. In the majority of cases it is due to an oesophageal infection by opportunistic pathogens (fungi or viruses or both) and may be successfully treated, at least temporarily, by specific antimicrobials. The present article examines the most recent acquisitions in terms of diagnosis and treatment of such common clinical problem.
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- 1993
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22. Bowel ultrasound and mucosal healing in ulcerative colitis
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Giuseppe Sampietro, S. Greco, F. Parente, Barbara F. M. Marino, M. Molteni, Silvano Gallus, Sandro Ardizzone, and Agostino Colli
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Concordance ,Colonoscopy ,Logistic regression ,Gastroenterology ,Young Adult ,Intestinal mucosa ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Ultrasonography ,Wound Healing ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Endoscopy ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background and Aim: Mucosal healing (MH) after short-term medical treatment is being considered as an important step in the therapeutic work-up of inflammatory bowel disorder (IBD) patients due to the potential prognostic role of MH in predicting disease outcome. However, IBD patients are reluctant to be re-endoscoped during follow-up; therefore, there is a need for non-invasive alternative index of MH which can replace endoscopy in clinical practice. We evaluated bowel ultrasound (US) as a surrogate of colonoscopy in a series of consecutive patients with active ulcerative colitis (UC). Patients and Methods: 83 patients with moderate to severe UC requiring high-dose steroids were initially recruited; endoscopic severity of UC was graded 0–3 according to Baron score, and US severity was also graded 0–3 according to the colonic wall thickening and the presence of vascular signal at power Doppler. 74 patients responsive to steroids and then maintained on 5-ASA compounds were followed up with repeated colonoscopy and bowel US at 3, 9 and 15 months from entry. Concordance between clinical, endoscopic and US scores at various visits was determined by kappa statistics. Multiple unconditional logistic regression models were used to assess the predictivity of Truelove, Baron and US scores measured at 3 and 9 months on the development of a UC relapse (Baron score 2–3) at 15 months. Results: An inconsistent concordance was found over time between 0 and I Baron scores and Truelove score (weighted κ between 0.38 and 0.94), with high and consistent concordance between 0 and I Baron scores and US scores (weighted κ between 0.76 and 0.90). On logistic regression analysis, a moderate/severe Baron score, regardless of their Truelove score, at 3 months was associated with a high risk of endoscopic activity at 15 months (OR 5.2; 95% CI: 1.6–17.6); similarly, patients with severe US scores (2–3) at 3 months had a high risk of severe endoscopic activity at 15 months (OR 9.1; 95% CI: 2.5–33.5). Discussion: In expert hands bowel US may be used as a surrogate of colonoscopy in evaluating the response to high-dose steroids in severe forms of UC. US score after 3 months of steroid therapy accurately predicts clinical outcome of disease at 15 months.
- Published
- 2009
23. Faecal occult blood test-based screening programme with high compliance for colonoscopy has a strong clinical impact on colorectal cancer
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F, Parente, B, Marino, N, DeVecchi, R, Moretti, G, Ucci, P, Tricomi, A, Armellino, L, Redaelli, S, Bargiggia, E, Cristofori, E, Masala, F, Tortorella, A, Gattinoni, F, Odinolfi, and M E, Pirola
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adenoma ,Colorectal cancer ,Colonoscopy ,Pilot Projects ,Disease ,Gastroenterology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Stage (cooking) ,Sex Distribution ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,Occult Blood ,Educational Status ,Patient Compliance ,Surgery ,Female ,Faecal occult blood test ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms - Abstract
Background The results of a pilot colorectal cancer screening programme by biennial immunochemical faecal occult blood test (FOBT) are reported. Methods All residents aged between 50 and 69 years in the Italian province of Lecco were invited to have a FOBT. Those with a positive result were offered colonoscopy. FOBT uptake and compliance with colonoscopy were assessed. Detection rate and positive predictive value (PPV) for cancer and adenoma were calculated. Tumour stages were compared between screen-detected cancers and other colorectal cancers diagnosed within the target age group. Results Some 38 693 (49·6 per cent) of 78 083 individuals had a FOBT and 2392 (6·2 per cent) had a positive result. Colorectal cancer was diagnosed in 4·6 per cent and advanced adenoma in 32·7 per cent. PPVs were 4·0 per cent for cancer, 28·1 per cent for advanced adenoma and 36·6 per cent for any adenoma. There was a significant difference in incidence of stage III/IV disease between screened and non-screened cohorts. Compliance for colonoscopy was 92·0 per cent. Major determinants of compliance were age less than 59 years, female sex, high education level and non-manual work. Conclusion These results justify extension of colorectal cancer screening to other regions of Italy.
- Published
- 2009
24. Colorectal cancer screening in Europe: differences in approach; similar barriers to overcome
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Christian Boustière, Wolfgang Fischbach, Nicholas J. West, Roger J. Leicester, and F. Parente
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,Surgical approach ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer ,Population ,Gastroenterology ,Cancer ,Hepatology ,Health Services ,medicine.disease ,Europe ,Colorectal cancer screening ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,business ,Cancer risk ,education ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Colonic disease ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Demography - Abstract
Worldwide diagnoses of bowel cancer approximate an estimated one million new cases per year, comprising 9% of all cancer cases, and this has continued to increase over the last 25 years. With the association between cancer risk and increasing age, together with the suggestion that by 2015 there will be a 22% increase in the proportion of the population aged over 65 years and a 50% increase in the proportion of people aged over 80 years, there is likely to be a significant increase in the demand on cancer services throughout Europe and the rest of the world. This article discusses the current state of bowel cancer screening within Europe.
- Published
- 2009
25. Bowel preparation before colonoscopy in the era of mass screening for colo-rectal cancer: a practical approach
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Cristiano Crosta, Barbara F. M. Marino, and F. Parente
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Nausea ,Colon ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Colon cleansing ,Colonoscopy ,Gastroenterology ,Phosphates ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Surface-Active Agents ,Internal medicine ,Cancer screening ,Preoperative Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Therapeutic Irrigation ,Mass screening ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Cathartics ,History, 20th Century ,medicine.disease ,Colon cancer screening ,Treatment Outcome ,Laxatives ,Heart failure ,Vomiting ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms - Abstract
Colonoscopy constitutes the principal investigation for colo-rectal neoplasms due to its ability to detect and remove most of precancerous lesions; due to the ongoing or planned colon cancer screening programs in many European countries we should expect an enormous increase in colonoscopic demand over the next few years. Diagnostic accuracy and therapeutic safety of colonoscopy strictly depends upon the quality of bowel cleansing which is often perceived as the most unpleasant part of the procedure in individuals undergoing this examination. The ideal preparation for colonoscopy should reliably empty the colon from all faecal material allowing the optimal visualization of the entire colonic mucosa without causing great patient's discomfort nor significant shifts in fluids or electrolytes. Standard PEG solutions and sodium phoshate (NaP) compounds are the most frequently used preparations; both are accepted and relatively well tolerated by the majority of patients undergoing colonoscopy; however, NaP compounds should be avoided in elderly subjects as well as in those with congestive heart failure, renal and hepatic insufficiency or taking diuretics, ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers, since they can induce severe electrolyte and/or fluid disturbances. Standard PEG solutions are often taken incompletely due to the low palatability and the high volume of liquids required which induce nausea and vomiting with negative consequences in terms of colon cleansing. Reduced volume and better palatability of PEG solutions, such as those obtained with the newest PEG formulations, as well as improved patient education concerning the importance of bowel cleansing could undoubtedly increase compliance with oral bowel preparations and promote adherence to colo-rectal cancer screening programs.
- Published
- 2008
26. Inhibition of nocturnal acidity is important but not essential for duodenal ulcer healing
- Author
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O. Sangaletti, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Evening ,Ranitidine ,Placebo ,Gastroenterology ,Bedtime ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Double-Blind Method ,Histamine H2 receptor ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Morning ,business.industry ,Gastric Acidity Determination ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Duodenal Ulcer ,Duodenum ,Gastric acid ,Female ,Antacids ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We have determined the relative importance of day and night time gastric acid inhibition for duodenal ulcer healing by comparing the anti-ulcer efficacy of a single morning with that of a single bedtime dose of ranitidine. One hundred and thirty patients with active duodenal ulcer were randomly assigned to a double-blind therapy with ranitidine 300 mg at 8 am or the same dose at 10 pm for up to eight weeks. The antisecretory effects of these regimens were also assessed by 24 h intragastric pH monitoring in 18 of these patients. At four weeks ulcers had healed in 41/61 (67%) of patients taking the morning dose and in 47/63 (75%) of those receiving the nocturnal dose (95% CI for the difference -0.09 +0.25; p ns). At eight weeks, the corresponding healing rates were 82% and 85.5%, respectively (95% CI for the difference -0.11 +0.17; p ns). Both treatments were significantly superior to placebo in raising 24 h intragastric pH, although the effects of the morning dose were of shorter duration than those of the nocturnal dose. These findings suggest that suppression of nocturnal acidity is important but not essential to promote healing of duodenal ulcers; a prolonged period of acid inhibition during the day (as obtained with a single large morning dose of H2-blockers) may be equally effective.
- Published
- 1990
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27. 'Cervia II Working Group Report 2006': guidelines on diagnosis and treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection in Italy
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Giovanni Maconi, Dario Sorrentino, Giovanni Gasbarrini, F. Parente, Angelo Zullo, Michele Caselli, Vittorio Alvisi, and Tino Casetti
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Consensus Development Conferences as Topic ,Antibiotics ,MEDLINE ,Gastroenterology ,Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal ,Helicobacter Infections ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Antibiotic resistance ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Hepatology ,biology ,Helicobacter pylori ,treatment ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Gastric lymphoma ,Cancer ,Proton Pump Inhibitors ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Thrombocytopenic purpura ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Italy ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,business - Abstract
Proper management of Helicobacter pylori infection in clinical practice – when supported by evidence-based data – is expected to produce substantial cost-efficacy advantages. This consideration has prompted the Cervia Working Group to organise a meeting of experts to update the National Guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of H. pylori infection in Italy. Recommendations in the new European Guidelines were considered in the National setting, here in the light of factors such as the incidence of gastric cancer and gastric lymphoma, the accessibility to different diagnostic tools, the prevalence of bacterial resistance against antibiotics, and the availability of different drugs. The main revisions in respect to the previous guidelines include H. pylori eradication in non-ulcer dyspepsia patients and in non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drug users, as well as in patients with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura and iron deficiency anaemia. The stool antigen test is now accepted as a valid test for confirmation of H. pylori eradication following therapy. New therapeutic approaches have been recommended for both first- (sequential therapy) and second-line (levofloxacin-based) treatment in our country.
- Published
- 2007
28. P-037: Severe metformin-associated lactic acidosis – a case report
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I. Fonseca, R. Alves, J.P. Gomes, F. Parente, and H. Temido
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Lactic acidosis ,medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,medicine.disease ,Gerontology ,Gastroenterology ,Metformin ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2015
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29. Is interferon-alpha therapy safe and effective for patients with chronic hepatitis C and inflammatory bowel disease? A case-control study
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Andrea Anderloni, D. Thorburn, F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, S. Bargiggia, A. Giorgi, and Sandro Ardizzone
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C virus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Gastroenterology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Hepatitis ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,Interferon-alpha ,Alanine Transaminase ,Hepatitis C ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,Ulcerative colitis ,Treatment Outcome ,Alanine transaminase ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Female ,business ,Viral load - Abstract
Summary Background: Hepatitis C virus infection is more common in patients with inflammatory bowel disease than in general population. Limited data are available as to the safety and efficacy of α-interferon therapy for chronic active hepatitis C in patients with concomitant inflammatory bowel disease. Aim: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of α-interferon monotherapy in patients with chronic active hepatitis C and inactive or mildly active inflammatory bowel disease. Methods: A total of 513 consecutive inflammatory bowel disease patients at a single centre were tested for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-hepatitis C virus) between 1995 and 2000. Twenty-one patients had detectable anti-hepatitis C virus Ab and were hepatitis C virus-RNA positive with histologically proved chronic active hepatitis. Each of these patients, whose inflammatory bowel disease was in clinical remission or mildly active, was sex- and age-matched to three controls with similar histological grade and stage of chronic hepatitis C virus but without inflammatory bowel disease; and all were treated with human leucocyte α-interferon 6 million units given thrice weekly for 12 months. Responses to treatment were classified as follows: complete response – persistently normal alanine aminotransferase and viral clearance (hepatitis C virus-RNA–ve) at the end-of-treatment, incomplete response – alanine aminotransferase normalization without viral clearance (hepatitis C virus-RNA+ve), and sustained response – alanine aminotransferase normalization and hepatitis C virus clearance 12 months after the end-of-treatment. Results: Twenty-one patients with chronic active hepatitis C and inflammatory bowel disease (10 with Crohn's disease and 11 with ulcerative colitis) and 63 sex- and age-matched controls with chronic hepatitis C virus alone received α-interferon monotherapy. Response rates to interferon were similar for inflammatory bowel disease patients compared with controls [CR 42% vs. 35% and SR 24% vs. 18% (P, not significant), respectively]. None of the 21 inflammatory bowel disease patients had severe adverse effects and the mild ones observed were comparable with those seen in the control group. No patients developed an inflammatory bowel disease relapse during the interferon treatment period or in the 12 months thereafter. Conclusions: The biochemical and virological response to a 12-month human leucocyte α-interferon treatment in patients with chronic active hepatitis C are similar to that observed in matched controls with chronic hepatitis C virus without inflammatory bowel disease. Adverse effects are similar in both groups of patients and unrelated to the underlying inflammatory bowel condition. This provides hepatologists with evidence that α-interferon can be safely administered to patients with chronic hepatitis C virus and inflammatory bowel disease provided that the inflammatory bowel condition is in clinical remission.
- Published
- 2005
30. Comparison of two lansoprazole-antibiotic combinations (amoxycillin or classical triple therapy) for treatment of H. pylori infection in duodenal ulcer patients
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S. Bargiggia, Elisabetta Colombo, Giovanni Maconi, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Spirillaceae ,Antibiotics ,Lansoprazole ,Rapid urease test ,Antitrichomonal Agents ,Penicillins ,Gastroenterology ,2-Pyridinylmethylsulfinylbenzimidazoles ,Tinidazole ,Helicobacter Infections ,Pharmacotherapy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Antibacterial agent ,Helicobacter pylori ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,Amoxicillin ,Anti-Ulcer Agents ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Duodenal Ulcer ,Duodenum ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,Omeprazole ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Aim: To compare the eradicating capacity of two different antibiotic–lansoprazole combinations (amoxycillin vs. standard triple therapy) with that of lansoprazole alone in Helicobacter pylori-positive duodenal ulcer patients. Methods: Ninety-six out-patients with H. pylori-positive duodenal ulcer were randomly assigned to receive one of the following three antiulcer regimens: (1) lansoprazole 30 mg b.d. for 4 weeks plus amoxycillin 1 g t.d.s. during the last 2 weeks; or (2) lansoprazole 30 mg once daily for 4 weeks plus classical triple therapy (tripotassium dicitratobismuthate 240 mg b.d., amoxycillin 1 g t.d.s. and tinidazole 500 mg b.d.) for the last 2 weeks; or (3) lansoprazole 30 mg once daily for 4 weeks. Endoscopy was repeated at the end of treatment and 1 month later. A rapid urease test and histology were used to determine H. pylori status. Results: Duodenal ulcer healing rates at 4 weeks were 96% after both lansoprazole with amoxycillin, and lansoprazole with triple therapy, and 97% after lansoprazole alone. Eradication of H. pylori was significantly better with lansoprazole with triple therapy than with either lansoprazole with amoxycillin or lansoprazole alone (90% vs. 55% vs. 3%, respectively). Conclusion: Classical triple therapy combined with lansoprazole is significantly more effective than the lansoprazole with amoxycillin combination for the eradication of H. pylori in duodenal ulcer patients pre-treated with lansoprazole.
- Published
- 1996
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31. Oral contrast enhanced bowel ultrasonography in the assessment of small intestine Crohn's disease. A prospective comparison with conventional ultrasound, x ray studies, and ileocolonoscopy
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M. Molteni, Roberto Bianco, Andrea Anderloni, Silvano Gallus, Giuseppe Sampietro, S. Greco, F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, and Piergiorgio Danelli
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Radiography ,Colonoscopy ,Contrast Media ,Gastroenterology ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Crohn Disease ,Internal medicine ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Ultrasonography ,Observer Variation ,Crohn's disease ,Sicus ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Inflammatory Bowel Disease ,Gold standard (test) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Small intestine ,digestive system diseases ,Elasticity ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Isotonic Solutions ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Complication - Abstract
BACKGROUND/ AIM: Although ultrasound (US) has proved to be useful in intestinal diseases, barium enteroclysis (BE) remains the gold standard technique for assessing patients with small bowel Crohn's disease (CD). The ingestion of anechoic non-absorbable solutions has been recently proposed in order to distend intestinal loops and improve small bowel visualisation. The authors' aim was to evaluate the accuracy of oral contrast US in finding CD lesions, assessing their extent within the bowel, and detecting luminal complications, compared with BE and ileocolonoscopy.102 consecutive patients with proven CD, having undergone complete x ray and endoscopic evaluation, were enrolled in the study. Each US examination, before and after the ingestion of a polyethylene glycol (PEG) solution (500-800 ml), was performed independently by two sonographers unaware of the results of other diagnostic procedures. The accuracy of conventional and contrast enhanced US in detecting CD lesions and luminal complications, as well as the extent of bowel involvement, were determined. Interobserver agreement between sonographers with both US techniques was also estimated.After oral contrast, satisfactory distension of the intestinal lumen was obtained in all patients, with a mean time to reach the terminal ileum of 31.4 (SD 10.9) minutes. Overall sensitivity of conventional and oral contrast US in detecting CD lesions were 91.4% and 96.1%, respectively. The correlation coefficient between US and x ray extent of ileal disease was r1 = 0.83 (p0.001) before and r2 = 0.94 (p0.001) after PEG ingestion; r1 versus r2 p0.01. Sensitivity in detecting strictures was 74% for conventional US and 89% for contrast US. Overall interobserver agreement for bowel wall thickness and disease location within the small bowel was already good before but significantly improved after PEG ingestion.Oral contrast bowel US is comparable with BE in defining anatomic location and extension of CD and superior to conventional US in detecting luminal complications, as well as reducing interobserver variability between sonographers. It may be therefore regarded as the first imaging procedure in the diagnostic work up and follow up of small intestine CD.
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- 2004
32. Treatment Options for Patients with Helicobacter pylori Infection Resistant to One or More Eradication Attempts (Updated Contents)
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G. Bianchi Porro, Claudia Cucino, and F. Parente
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Helicobacter pylori infection ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Treatment options ,business ,Virology - Published
- 2004
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33. Treatment options for patients with Helicobacter pylori infection resistant to one or more eradication attempts
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F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, and Claudia Cucino
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Helicobacter pylori infection ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rifabutin ,medicine.drug_class ,Antibiotics ,Proton-pump inhibitor ,Ranitidine ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Refractory ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Internal medicine ,Clarithromycin ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Metronidazole ,medicine ,Humans ,Hepatology ,Helicobacter pylori ,business.industry ,Treatment options ,Amoxicillin ,Proton Pump Inhibitors ,Anti-Ulcer Agents ,Surgery ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,business ,Bismuth ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Proton pump inhibitor-based triple regimens fail to cure Helicobacter pylori infection in at least 10–23% of treated patients. Re-treatment strategies after initial failure remain poorly defined. Of the factors leading to eradication failure, patients’ compliance, gender, primary resistance to clarithromycin and metronidazole, and intragastric bacterial load appear to be the most important in determining treatment outcome. Empirical re-treatment should depend mainly upon the antibiotics initially used, as re-administration of the same compound (namely, metronidazole and clarithromycin) is not recommended. Quadruple therapy is usually suggested in this situation, but there is some reluctance to use it in clinical practice on account of the high number of tablets to be taken and concern about side-effects. The use of ranitidine bismuth citrate instead of a proton pump inhibitor plus a bismuth compound in triple second-line regimens has recently proven to be highly effective. Finally, rifabutin-based triple therapies have been shown to be a promising rescue strategy in patients who have failed two or more eradication attempts.
- Published
- 2003
34. Bowel ultrasound in assessment of Crohn's disease and detection of related small bowel strictures: a prospective comparative study versus x ray and intraoperative findings
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Simona Bollani, Roberto Bianco, Gianluca M. Sampietro, Massimo Cristaldi, Andrea Anderloni, N. Franceschelli, Giovanni Maconi, Angelo Maria Taschieri, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Colonoscopy ,Contrast Media ,Enema ,Gastroenterology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Crohn Disease ,Recurrence ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Ultrasonography ,Crohn's disease ,Sicus ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,business.industry ,Ileal Diseases ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Inflammation and Inflammatory Bowel Disease ,Double-contrast barium enema ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,digestive system diseases ,Radiography ,Barium sulfate ,chemistry ,Female ,Barium Sulfate ,business ,Complication ,Intestinal Obstruction - Abstract
Background and aim: Despite the fact that bowel ultrasound (US) has recently been proved to be useful in the assessment of bowel diseases, uncertainty persists as to its diagnostic role in patients with complicated Crohn's disease (CD). Therefore, we have prospectively investigated the accuracy of US compared with x ray procedures and intraoperative findings in detecting small bowel strictures complicating CD as well as its reliability in assessing disease extent and location within the bowel. Methods: A series of 296 consecutive patients with proven CD admitted to L Sacco University Hospital between 1997 and 1999, having undergone complete radiographic evaluation (including small bowel x ray, colonoscopy, or double contrast barium enema), were enrolled in the study. Bowel US was performed in each patient by two experienced operators unaware of the results of other diagnostic procedures. The accuracy of US in detecting strictures compared with x ray studies was determined separately in two different groups of patients: 211 patients treated conservatively (non-operative CD) and 85 patients who were candidates for surgery for CD complications or unresponsiveness to medical therapy (operative CD). Results: Overall sensitivity and specificity of US in assessing the anatomical distribution of CD were 93% and 97%, respectively. The extent of ileal disease measured at US correlated well with that determined by x ray (r=0.52, p
- Published
- 2002
35. OC.08.3 REDUCED 5-YEAR MORTALITY OF SCREEN-DETECTED COLO-RECTAL CANCERS (CRCS) COMPARED TO SYMPTOMATIC CRCS: RESULTS OF THE FIT-BASED LECCO CRC SCREENING
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Danilo Cereda, A. Ilardo, G. Achille, F. Parente, Emanuela Bonoldi, Marco Cremaschini, Cristian Vailati, A. Ardizzoia, and F. Tortorella
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Screen detected ,Crc screening ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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36. P.118 IMPACT OF COLORECTAL CANCER SCREENING PROGRAMME ON LOCAL HEALTH SERVICES DEMANDS RELATED TO CRC PREVENTION OUTSIDE THE TARGET POPULATION. A PROSPECTIVE SURVEY
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F. Parente, A. Ilardo, M.E. Pirola, S. Bargiggia, L. Fabrizio, P. Villani, L. Redaelli, N. Cattai, Barbara F. M. Marino, A. Armellino, C. Bonato, A. Ardizzoia, Roberto Moretti, and G. Ucci
- Subjects
Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health services ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer screening ,Family medicine ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Target population ,business ,Prospective survey - Published
- 2010
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37. Use of Doppler ultrasound in Crohn's disease
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F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, Antonio Russo, Venerina Imbesi, Simona Bollani, Giovanni Maconi, and Sandro Ardizzone
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hemodynamics ,Disease activity ,Sex Factors ,Crohn Disease ,Mesenteric Artery, Superior ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Laser-Doppler Flowmetry ,Medicine ,Humans ,Superior mesenteric artery ,Prospective Studies ,Letters to the Editor ,Crohn's disease ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Crohn disease ,Portal Vein ,Inflammation and Inflammatory Bowel Disease ,Gastroenterology ,Ultrasonography, Doppler ,Blood flow ,SMA ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Ultrasonography doppler ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cardiology ,Vascular resistance ,Female ,Vascular Resistance ,Doppler ultrasound ,Radiology ,Splanchnic ,business ,Blood Flow Velocity - Abstract
Background—Current knowledge on splanchnic haemodynamics in Crohn’s disease is limited.Aims—To investigate which features of Crohn’s disease affect splanchnic haemodynamics, and to establish whether portal vein (PV) and superior mesenteric artery (SMA) blood supply reflects clinical or biochemical activity of Crohn’s disease.Methods—Seventy nine patients with Crohn’s disease and 40 controls were evaluated by Doppler ultrasound (US). The mean velocity of PV and SMA flow, the volume of blood flow of the PV and SMA, and the resistance index of SMA were studied. A series of clinical, biochemical, and US variables including Crohn’s disease activity index, serum C reactive protein concentrations, disease duration and its anatomical location, smoking habits, abdominal complications, and current medical therapy, as well as the maximum bowel wall thickness as measured by US, were determined. The relation between PV and SMA blood flow and these variables was assessed by univariate and multivariate analysis.Results—Patients with Crohn’s disease had significantly higher PV and SMA flow and a lower SMA resistance index than controls. Stepwise multiple regression analysis identified bowel wall thickness and location of the disease as the main predictive variables of both PV and SMA blood flow variation, accounting for 36% and 45% of their variability, respectively. No relation was found between splanchnic haemodynamics and disease activity.Conclusion—A hyperdynamic mesenteric circulation does exist in Crohn’s disease; however splanchnic blood flow does not reflect the clinical or biochemical activity of the disease, but seems to be linked more to other Crohn’s disease characteristics, such as maximum bowel thickness and anatomical location.
- Published
- 2000
38. Focal gastric inflammatory infiltrates in inflammatory bowel diseases: prevalence, immunohistochemical characteristics, and diagnostic role
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Gabriele Bianchi Porro, Venerina Imbesi, Sara Bonetto, F. Parente, Simona Bollani, Giovanni Maconi, Claudia Cucino, and Luca Vago
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Adolescent ,Biopsy ,CD4-CD8 Ratio ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Crohn Disease ,Internal medicine ,Gastroscopy ,medicine ,Gastric mucosa ,Humans ,Colitis ,Aged ,Hepatology ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Helicobacter pylori ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,digestive system diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gastric Mucosa ,Gastritis ,Immunohistochemistry ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Complication ,business - Abstract
To date, few studies have evaluated gastric histology in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The aim of this prospective controlled study was to establish the frequency of focal gastritis in Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) patients, as well as to evaluate its immunohistochemical characteristics and clinicoanatomical determinants.We evaluated 141 consecutive patients with known CD of the large and/or small bowel, 79 patients with UC, and 141 CD- and UC-free controls; all underwent upper gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy and 13C urea-breath test. Biopsy specimens taken from the antrum, angulus, and gastric body were evaluated by histology and immunohistochemistry. A series of variables, including CD activity index, duration, extent and location of disease, intestinal resection, number of recurrences, and previous and current medical therapy, as well as the presence of dyspeptic symptoms and mucosal lesions at endoscopy, were determined in all CD patients and correlated with the presence or absence of focal gastritis.Helicobacter pylori-associated gastritis was found in 47 patients with CD (33%), in 37 patients with UC (47%), and in 60% of CD-/UC-free controls (p0.01). In H. pylori-negative CD patients focal gastritis was found in 43% of cases (40/94), compared with 12% (5/42) of UC patients and 19% (11/57) of controls (p0.05). Specificity and positive predictive value of focal gastritis in CD were 84% and 71%, respectively. It was characterized by a focal perifoveolar or periglandular lymphomonocytic infiltrate, with CD8+/CD4+ cells predominant both in CD and UC patients. There were no significant correlations between the occurrence of focal gastritis and any clinicoanatomical CD features.Focal gastritis is relatively common in CD patients although it is not exclusive to this condition. Its recognition could be useful in the diagnostic workup of any patient with suspected or indeterminate inflammatory bowel disease, as it makes a diagnosis of CD more likely.
- Published
- 2000
39. Helicobacter pylori CagA seropositivity does not influence inflammatory parameters, lipid concentrations and haemostatic factors in healthy individuals
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U. Russo, Claudia Cucino, Venerina Imbesi, Piergiorgio Duca, Giovanni Maconi, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Spirillaceae ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Systemic inflammation ,Asymptomatic ,Bacterial Proteins ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,CagA ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Inflammation ,Antigens, Bacterial ,Hematology ,biology ,Helicobacter pylori ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,biology.organism_classification ,Lipids ,Blood Coagulation Factors ,Hemostasis ,Immunoglobulin G ,Immunology ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Acute-Phase Proteins - Abstract
Background H. pylori CagA seropositivity has been recently associated with ischaemic heart disease. Objective To evaluate whether H. pylori virulence has any effect on certain circulating coagulation factors and on markers of systemic inflammation in healthy individuals. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting Haematology and gastroenterology unit at a university teaching hospital. Subjects A total of 494 consecutive asymptomatic blood donors attending a blood bank. Measurements Blood analysis for haemostatic factors, lipids concentrations, inflammatory parameters as well as determination of anti H. pylori IgG and CagA reactivity by ELISA assayes. Results The overall prevalence of H. pylori infection was 53%; 56% of H. pylori positive sera expressed CagA reactivity. CagA seropositive subjects did not differ significantly from CagA negative or H. pylori negative subjects in values for lipids, haemostatic factors, or inflammatory parameters. Conclusions CagA seropositivity is not associated with increased systemic inflammation or with raised concentrations of haemostatic factors - predictors of ischaemic heart disease - in healthy individuals.
- Published
- 2000
40. Prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection and related upper gastrointestinal lesions in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases. A cross-sectional study with matching
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Simona Bollani, Piergiorgio Duca, Luca Vago, Giovanni Maconi, B. Rembacken, A. T. R. Axon, P. Molteni, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Spirillaceae ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Crohn Disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Clinical significance ,Aged ,Crohn's disease ,biology ,Helicobacter pylori ,business.industry ,Endoscopy ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,Ulcerative colitis ,digestive system diseases ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Sulfasalazine ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Italy ,Gastritis ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Although a reduced prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection has been observed in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients, the clinical significance of H. pylori infection in this setting remains unknown. The aim of this study was, therefore, to evaluate the prevalence of H. pylori infection in a large series of IBD patients and the frequency of gastroduodenal lesions in those who agreed to undergo upper GI endoscopy.Two hundred and sixteen consecutive IBD patients (123 with Crohn's disease (CD) and 93 with ulcerative colitis (UC)) had their anti-H. pylori IgG titres measured. Two hundred and sixteen blood donors matched for age, sex, place of birth in Italy, and socioeconomic status served as controls. All patients were offered the possibility of undergoing endoscopy with antral and corpus biopsies regardless of their H. pylori status.The overall seroprevalence of H. pylori infection was 48% in IBD patients versus 59% in the control group (P0.05), with a significantly lower frequency in CD versus UC patients (41% versus 56%). After adjustment for age, education, and socioeconomic status CD remained associated with a significantly lower risk of H. pylori infection. Previous therapy with sulphasalazine but not with 5-aminosalicylic acid or with steroids/immunosuppressants was associated with a reduced risk of H. pylori infection both in CD and UC patients. One hundred and eighty-nine patients (110 with CD and 79 with UC) underwent endoscopy; the prevalence of peptic ulcer was similar in both groups (5.5% in CD and 5.1% in UC patients); however, 11 more CD patients had gastroduodenal ulcers that were interpreted as CD-related; 7 of these patients had never had foregut symptoms. Two CD patients had granulomatous gastritis at histology, and another 16 patients with CD had H. pylori-negative gastritis.IBD patients have a reduced prevalence of H. pylori infection as compared with matched healthy controls; this appears mostly attributable to a reduced frequency of H. pylori colonization in CD patients. Previous use of sulphasalazine is associated with a reduced risk of infection both in CD and UC patients. Of CD patients 10% have a gastroduodenal localization of their disease, which is often asymptomatic. Of CD patients 15% also have H. pylori-negative gastritis at histology.
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- 1997
41. Helicobacter pylori infection and coagulation in healthy people
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Venerina Imbesi, Giovanni Maconi, M. Poggio, O. Sangaletti, F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, E. Rossi, and Piergiorgio Duca
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart disease ,Spirillaceae ,Chronic gastritis ,Fibrinogen ,Gastroenterology ,Asymptomatic ,Helicobacter Infections ,Leukocyte Count ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Risk factor ,General Environmental Science ,Blood coagulation test ,biology ,Helicobacter pylori ,business.industry ,Platelet Count ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Blood Coagulation Disorders ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Cholesterol ,Immunology ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,Blood Coagulation Tests ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug ,Research Article - Abstract
Helicobacter pylori infection has recently been associated with an increased risk of developing ischaemic heart disease.1 2 It has been suggested that chronic gastritis related to H pylori infection may increase, through inflammatory mediators, the concentration of certain coagulation factors such as fibrinogen,3 which are predictors of ischaemic heart disease.4 We investigated the potential association between H pylori infection and abnormalities of plasma coagulation in healthy people, with particular emphasis on the possibility of H pylori inducing a tendency towards coagulation, thereby influencing the risk of ischaemic heart disease. Initially, 368 consecutive asymptomatic blood donors (unpaid volunteers) were recruited for this study. Exclusion criteria were age >51 years, any chronic drug treatment, recent intake of drugs interfering with blood coagulation, use of oral contraceptives, previous treatment for H pylori infection, …
- Published
- 1997
42. Prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection and related gastroduodenal lesions in spouses of Helicobacter pylori positive patients with duodenal ulcer
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O. Sangaletti, Giovanni Maconi, M. Minguzzi, Luca Vago, F. Parente, G. Bianchi Porro, and E. Rossi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Spirillaceae ,Gastroenterology ,Serology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Duodenitis ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Seroprevalence ,Humans ,Stomach Ulcer ,Dyspepsia ,Spouses ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Helicobacter pylori ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunoglobulin G ,Duodenum ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND: To date, very few studies have evaluated the risk of infection among spouses of Helicobacter pylori positive patients and their results are conflicting. AIM: To assess the seroprevalence of H pylori infection in spouse of H pylori positive patients with duodenal ulcer as compared with age and sex matched volunteer blood donors, as well as the frequency of endoscopic gastroduodenal lesions in these spouses, according to the presence or absence of gastrointestinal complaints. METHODS: Some 124 spouses (48% males) of patients with duodenal ulcer consecutively seen over a 10 month period were studied. They were all screened for serum IgG anti-H pylori antibodies and asked to complete a questionnaire with particular reference to the presence of chronic or recurrent dyspepsia. Upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy with antral and corpus biopsy specimens taken for histological examination and urease rapid test was offered to all seropositive spouses. Volunteer blood donors (248), living in Milan and matched for age, sex, north-south origins, and socioeconomic status to the cases, were used as controls. RESULTS: Spouses of patients with duodenal ulcer had a significantly higher seroprevalence of H pylori infection than controls (71% v 58%, p < 0.05); 30 of 88 (34%) H pylori positive spouses complained of dyspeptic symptoms compared with only four of 34 (12%) seronegative spouses (p < 0.02). At endoscopy, H pylori infection was confirmed in 48 of 49 (98%) seropositive spouses. The endoscopic findings in those spouses showed active duodenal ulcer in eight (17%), duodenal scar and cap deformity in two (4%), active gastric ulcer in two (4%), erosive duodenitis in three (6%), antral erosions in two (4%), antral erosions plus duodenitis in one, and peptic oesophagitis in another patient. The prevalence of major endoscopic lesions was significantly higher in symptomatic spouses than in those who had never been symptomatic. CONCLUSIONS: These findings show that being the spouse of an H pylori positive patient with duodenal ulcer may increase the risk of H pylori colonisation and perhaps of peptic ulcer disease, and raises questions as to whether serological screening of cohabiting partners of H pylori positive patients with duodenal ulcer may be indicated.
- Published
- 1996
43. Behaviour of acid secretion, gastrin release, serum pepsinogen I, and gastric emptying of liquids over six months from eradication of helicobacter pylori in duodenal ulcer patients. A controlled study
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Giovanni Maconi, O. Sangaletti, Luca Vago, M. Minguzzi, F. Parente, and G. Bianchi Porro
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Lansoprazole ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Pepsin ,Internal medicine ,Gastrins ,Medicine ,Humans ,Gastrin ,Aged ,biology ,Gastric emptying ,Helicobacter pylori ,Pepsinogens ,business.industry ,Stomach ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Duodenal Ulcer ,biology.protein ,Duodenum ,Gastric acid ,Female ,business ,Biomarkers ,medicine.drug ,Research Article - Abstract
The behaviour of basal and stimulated acid secretion, gastrin release, serum pepsinogen I, and gastric emptying of liquids was studied in 19 consecutive patients with Helicobacter pylori positive duodenal ulcer, over a follow up period of six months. Eleven patients were studied before and at three and six months after eradication with lansoprazole plus amoxicillin and tinidazole (case group), whereas the remainder, with persistent H pylori infection, were studied before and after three and six months from ulcer healing, thus constituting the control group. In the case group, three months after eradication, fasting serum pepsinogen I fell from (mean (SEM)) 91.9 (6.9) (pretreatment) to 72.2 (5.1) ng/l and the integrated gastrin response to a meal reduced from 11,470 (1174) (pretreatment) to 8130 (608) pg/ml/h (p < 0.05). Fasting serum gastrin concentrations and maximal acid output reduced significantly only six months after eradication. In contrast, no significant change of any of these measurements was seen in the control group either at three or six months from healing compared with the pretreatment values. Gastric emptying of liquids did not change over the entire period of follow up in both study groups. In conclusion, eradication of H pylori in duodenal ulcer patients is accompanied by a rapid fall in serum pepsinogen I and plasma gastrin concentrations, whereas a slight but significant reduction of maximal acid secretion takes place later on. In contrast, gastric emptying of liquids does not seem to be influenced by H pylori status.
- Published
- 1995
44. Acid inhibitory characteristics of nizatidine in man: an overview
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F. Parente and G. Bianchi Porro
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Evening ,Time Factors ,Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,Gastric Acid ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Dosing ,Nizatidine ,Morning ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Antagonist ,Ambulatory pH monitoring ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Pepsin A ,Circadian Rhythm ,Endocrinology ,Histamine H2 Antagonists ,Gastric Mucosa ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The antisecretory activity of nizatidine, an H2-receptor antagonist, has been extensively investigated in man both by quantitative acid secretory tests and by means of 24-h continuous ambulatory pH monitoring. Studies have shown that nizatidine is a potent inhibitor of basal, nocturnal and stimulated acid secretion. Particular modalities of nizatidine administration, such as early evening intake with supper or morning dosing, have been recently defined. Further studies are needed to clarify if rebound nocturnal acid hypersecretion may develop after abrupt withdrawal of nizatidine or if tolerance may develop during prolonged administration.
- Published
- 1994
45. OC.08.1: RANDOMISED MULTICENTRE PILOT DOUBLE-BLIND PLACEBO-CONTROLLED STUDY OF EVALUATING THE EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF MESALAZINE IN THE PREVENTION OF RECURRENCE OF DIVERTICULITIS: INTERIM ANALYSIS AFTER 24-MONTH FOLLOW-UP
- Author
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F. Parente, P. Secreto, A. Ferrari, Alberto Prada, G. Miori, A. Giacosa, E. Galliani, S. Bargiggia, Bastianello Germanà, Giovanni Casella, G. De Pretis, C. Monti, and Aurora Bortoli
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Placebo-controlled study ,Diverticulitis ,Interim analysis ,Placebo ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mesalazine ,chemistry ,Tolerability ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Diverticular disease ,business - Abstract
Background and aim: Recurrence of diverticulitis occurs in 19-54% of patients within 5 years after uncomplicated first attack. A few open clinical trials suggested the usefulness of 5-ASA compounds in these patients. We have undertaken a multicentre randomized pilot placebo-controlled study to evaluate the prophylactic role of mesalazine in preventing recurrence of diverticulitis as well as its effects on symptoms associated to diverticular disease. Material and methods: 105 patients with uncomplicated diverticulitis in the previous 6 months were randomized to receive in a double-blind fashion for 24 months: (a) mesalazine 800 mg bid for 10 days every month or (b) matching placebo. The primary efficacy endpoints were the diverticulitis recurrence at ITT analysis and the time of relapse (TTR). Clinical evaluations were performed using the Therapy Impact Questionnaire (TIQ) for physical condition and quality of life at admission and at 3-month-intervals. Treatment tolerability and use of additional GI-drugs were also evaluated at baseline visit and every 6 and 3 months, respectively. Results: 96 patients (mean-age 61.5 years), 47 on mesalazine and 49 on placebo, were analyzed. Relative risk (RR) of diverticulitis relapse in mesalazine vs placebo group was 1.04, 0.87, 0.69 and 0.48 at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months, respectively (p: ns). The average time-to-relapse was 219 days for mesalazine-treated-group and 370 days for the placebo-group (p: ns). Mean values of TIQ for physical condition at 24 months was significantly better in mesalazine than in placebo group (p =0.021); average additional drug consumption was also significantly lower (-20.4%, p=0.028) during mesalazine than placebo treatment. No significant difference in the development of side effects or changes of the laboratory parameters were recorded in the two groups. Conclusions: Intermittent prophylactic treatment with mesalazine reduces the relative risk of diverticulitis recurrence after 24 months (0.48, 95%CI 0.201.15). Patient physical conditions are significantly improved by mesalazine, with a significant reduction of the additional consumption of other GI drugs.
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- 2011
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46. OC.06.7 MULTIPLE FAECAL TESTS (COLON PANEL) FOR THE DETECTION OF COLON CANCER: A NEW STRATEGY FOR APPROPRIATE PRIORITIZATION OF SCREENING REFERRALS? PRELIMINARY EXPERIENCE IN ITALY
- Author
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A. Ardizzoia, Roberto Moretti, Marco Cremaschini, Dolores Vaira, P. Fracasso, G. Ucci, Cesare Hassan, I. Saracino, F. Parente, Barbara F. M. Marino, F. Perna, M.E. Pirola, and A. Zullo
- Subjects
Prioritization ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Colorectal cancer ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2010
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47. Reply
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F. Parente and G. Bianchi Porro
- Subjects
Internal Medicine - Published
- 2000
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48. REDUCED PREDICTED MORTALITY FOR COLORECTAL CANCER IN ASYMPTOMATIC PATIENTS DETECTED BY IMMUNOCHEMICAL FOBT SCREENING
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F. Tortorella, N. Devecchi, G. Ucci, Barbara F. M. Marino, F. Parente, M.E. Pirola, Marcos Mota do Carmo Costa, P. Carzaniga, Roberto Moretti, P. Tricomi, and M. Gilardoni
- Subjects
Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Immunochemical FOBT ,Colorectal cancer ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,medicine.disease ,business ,Asymptomatic - Published
- 2009
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49. Kaposi's sarcoma and AIDS: frequency of gastrointestinal involvement and its effect on survival. A prospective study in a heterogeneous population
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F. Parente, Adriano Lazzarin, G. Bianchi Porro, Massimo Cernuschi, Giovanna Orlando, and Giuliano Rizzardini
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Disease ,Gastroenterology ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Immunopathology ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Kaposi's sarcoma ,Sarcoma, Kaposi ,Gastrointestinal Neoplasms ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,business.industry ,Immunosuppression ,Homosexuality ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Female ,Viral disease ,Sarcoma ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The frequency and distribution of gastrointestinal Kaposi's sarcoma were pro spectively investigated in 33 consecutive AIDS patients with heterogeneous risk factors and established skin or lymph-node disease. The influence of visceral involvement and degree of immunosuppression at the time of diagnosis on patient survival was also evaluated. Gastrointestinal lesions were found in 17 cases (51%): 5 patients (15%) had both upper and lower GI tract involvement, 8 patients (24%) had only gastroduodenal lesions, and 4 (12%) only lower tract disease. No difference in the frequency of visceral involvement was found between the two major risk groups (homosexuals and intravenous drug abusers). The degree of immunosuppression at diagnosis was the major determinant of survival, whereas gastrointestinal involvement did not in itself significantly influence patient survival. Morbidity from enteric Kaposi's sarcoma was quite low, 80% of these lesions being clinically silent during the follow-up period.
- Published
- 1991
50. How can a large gallstone give rise to chronic diarrhoea?
- Author
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Agostino Colli, S. Bargiggia, F. Parente, S. Greco, and M Costa
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Biliary Fistula ,Intermittent fever ,Physical examination ,Gallstones ,Gastroenterology ,Colonic Diseases ,Weight loss ,Internal medicine ,Intestinal Fistula ,medicine ,Humans ,Stigmata ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Colonoscopy ,Chronic diarrhoea ,Radiography ,Chronic Disease ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
A 78-year-old man was admitted to our department complaining of chronic diarrhoea, fatigue and weight loss persisting for 3 months and complicated, during the previous 2 weeks, by episodes of intermittent fever (maximum, 38.5°C). On physical examination, the patient appeared to be malnourished but anicteric and with no stigmata …
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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