4,885 results on '"Tampieri, A"'
Search Results
152. Feasibility and Cost Analysis of Portable MRI Implementation in a Remote Setting in Canada
- Author
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DesRoche, Chloe N., primary, Johnson, Ana P., additional, Hore, Elizabeth B., additional, Innes, Elaine, additional, Silver, Ian, additional, Tampieri, Donatella, additional, Kwan, Benjamin Y.M., additional, Jimenez, Johanna Ortiz, additional, Boyd, J. Gordon, additional, and Islam, Omar, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
153. Hydroxyapatite: From Nanocrystals to Hybrid Nanocomposites for Regenerative Medicine
- Author
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Tampieri, Anna, Iafisco, Michele, Sprio, Simone, Ruffini, Andrea, Panseri, Silvia, Montesi, Monica, Adamiano, Alessio, Sandri, Monica, and Antoniac, Iulian Vasile, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. Atlas-Guided Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound Examination with a Neuro-Surgical Navigation System: Case Study
- Author
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Xiao, Yiming, Gerard, Ian J., Fonov, Vladimir, De Nigris, Dante, Therrien, Catherine, Aubert-Broche, Bèrengére, Drouin, Simon, Kochanowska, Anna, Tampieri, Donatella, Collins, D. Louis, Hutchison, David, Series editor, Kanade, Takeo, Series editor, Kittler, Josef, Series editor, Kleinberg, Jon M., Series editor, Mattern, Friedemann, Series editor, Mitchell, John C., Series editor, Naor, Moni, Series editor, Pandu Rangan, C., Series editor, Steffen, Bernhard, Series editor, Terzopoulos, Demetri, Series editor, Tygar, Doug, Series editor, Weikum, Gerhard, Series editor, Oyarzun Laura, Cristina, editor, Shekhar, Raj, editor, Wesarg, Stefan, editor, González Ballester, Miguel Ángel, editor, Drechsler, Klaus, editor, Sato, Yoshinobu, editor, Erdt, Marius, editor, and Linguraru, Marius George, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
155. Tenecteplase versus standard of care for minor ischaemic stroke with proven occlusion (TEMPO-2): a randomised, open label, phase 3 superiority trial
- Author
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Coutts, Shelagh B, Ankolekar, Sandeep, Appireddy, Ramana, Arenillas, Juan F, Assis, Zarina, Bailey, Peter, Barber, Philip A, Bazan, Rodrigo, Buck, Brian H, Butcher, Ken S, Camden, Marie-Christine, Campbell, Bruce C V, Casaubon, Leanne K, Catanese, Luciana, Chatterjee, Kausik, Choi, Philip M C, Clarke, Brian, Dowlatshahi, Dar, Ferrari, Julia, Field, Thalia S, Ganesh, Aravind, Ghia, Darshan, Goyal, Mayank, Greisenegger, Stefan, Halse, Omid, Horn, Mackenzie, Hunter, Gary, Imoukhuede, Oje, Kelly, Peter J, Kennedy, James, Kenney, Carol, Kleinig, Timothy J, Krishnan, Kailash, Lima, Fabricio, Mandzia, Jennifer L, Marko, Martha, Martins, Sheila O, Medvedev, George, Menon, Bijoy K, Mishra, Sachin M, Molina, Carlos, Moussaddy, Aimen, Muir, Keith W, Parsons, Mark W, Penn, Andrew M W, Pille, Arthur, Pontes-Neto, Octávio M, Roffe, Christine, Serena, Joaquin, Simister, Robert, Singh, Nishita, Spratt, Neil, Strbian, Daniel, Tham, Carol H, Wiggam, M Ivan, Williams, David J, Willmot, Mark R, Wu, Teddy, Yu, Amy Y X, Zachariah, George, Zafar, Atif, Zerna, Charlotte, Hill, Michael D, Salluzzi, Marina, Blenkin, Nicole, Dueck, Ashley, Doram, Craig, Zhang, Qiao, Kenney, Carol, Ryckborst, Karla, Bohn, Shelly, Collier, Quentin, Taylor, Frances, Lethebe, B. Cord, Jambula, Anitha, Sage, Kayla, Toussaint, Lana, Save, Supryia, Lee, Jaclyn, Laham, N, Sultan, A.A., Deepak, A., Sitaram, A., Demchuk, Andrew M., Lockey, A., Micielli, A., Wadhwa, A., Arabambi, B., Graham, B., Bogiatzi, Chrysi, Doshi, Darshan, Chakraborty, D., Kim, Diana, Vasquez, D, Singh, D, Tse, Dominic, Harrison, E., Smith, E.E., Teleg, E., Klourfeld, E., Klein, G., Sebastian, I.A., Evans, J, Hegedus, J, Kromm, J, Lin, K, Ignacio, K, Ghavami, Kimia, Ismail, M., Moores, M., Panzini, M.A., Boyko, M., Almekhlafi, M.A., Newcommon, Nancy, Maraj, N., Imoukhuede, O., Volny, O., Stys, Peter, Couillard, Phillipe, Ojha, P., Eswaradass, P., Joundi, Raed, Singh, R., Asuncion, R.M., Muir, R.T., Dey, S., Mansoor, S., Wasyliw, S., Nagendra, S., Hu, Sherry, Althubait, S., Chen, S., Bal, S., Van Gaal, Stephen, Peters, Steven, Ray, Sucharita, Chaturvedi, S., Subramaniam, Suresh, Fu, Vivian, Villaluna, K., Maclean, G., King-Azote, P., Ma, C., Plecash, A., Murphy, C., Gorman, J., Wilson, L., Zhou, L., Benevente, O., Teal, P., Yip, S., Mann, S., Dewar, B., Demetroff, M., Shamloul, R., Beardshaw, R., Roberts, S., Blaquiere, D., Stotts, G., Shamy, M., Bereznyakova, O., Fahed, R., Alesefir, W., Lavoie, Suzy, Hache, A., Collard, K, Mackey, A., Gosselin-Lefebvre, S., Verreault, S., Beauchamp, B., Lambourn, L., Khaw, A., Mai, L., Sposato, L., Bres Bullrich, M., Azarpazhooh, R., Fridman, S., Kapoor, A., Southwell, A., Bardi, E., Fatakdawala, I., Kamra, M, Lopes, K., Popel, N., Norouzi, V., Liu, A., Liddy, A.M., Ghoari, B., Hawkes, C., Enriquez, C.A., Gladstone, D.J., Manosalva Alzate, H.A., Khosravani, H., Hopyan, J.J., Sivakumar, K., Son, M., Boulos, M.I., Hamind, M.A., Swartz, R.H., Murphy, R., Reiter, S., Fitzpatrick, T., Bhandari, V., Good, J., Penn, M., Naylor, M., Frost, S., Cayley, A., Akthar, F., Williams, J., Kalman, L., Crellin, L., Wiegner, R., Singh, R.S., Stewart, T., To, W., Singh, S., Pikula, A., Jaigobin, C., Carpani, F., Silver, F., Janssen, H., Schaafsma, J., del Campo, M., Alskaini, M., Rajendram, P., Fairall, P., Granfield, B., Crawford, D., Jabs, J., White, L., Sivakumar, L., Piquette, L., Nguyen, T., Nomani, A., Wagner, A., Alrohimi, A., Butt, A., D'Souza, A., Gajurel, B., Vekhande, C., Kamble, H., Kalashyan, H., Lloret, M., Benguzzi, M., Arsalan, N., Ishaque, N., Ashayeriahmadabad, R., Samiento, R., Hosseini, S., Kazi, S., Das, S., Sugumar, T., Selchen, D., Kostyrko, P., Muccilli, A., Saposnik, A.G., Vandervelde, C., Ratnayake, K., McMillan, S., Katsanos, A., Shoamanesh, A., Sahlas, D.J., Naidoo, V., Todorov, V., Toma, H., Brar, J., Lee, J., Horton, M., Chen, S., Shand, E., Weatherby, S., Jin, A., Durafourt, B., Jalini, S., Gardner, A., Tyson, C., Junk, E., Foster, K., Bolt, K., Sylvain, N., Maley, S., Urroz, L., Peeling, L., Kelly, M., Whelan, R., Cooley, R., Teitelbaum, J., Boutayeb, A., Moore, A., Cole, E., Waxman, L., Ben-Amor, N., Sanchez, R., Khalil, S., Nehme, A., Legault, C., Tampieri, D., Ehrensperger, E., Vieira, L., Cortes, M., Angle, M., Hannouche, M., Badawy, M., Werner, K., Wieszmuellner, S., Langer, A., Gisold, A., Zach, H., Rommer, P., Macher, S., Blechinger, S., Marik, W., Series, W., Baumgartinger, M., Krebs, S., Koski, J., Eirola, S., Ivanoff, T., Erakanto, A., Kupari, L., Sibolt, G., Panula, J., Tomppo, L., Tiainen, M., Ahlstrom, M., Martinez Majander, N., Suomalainen, O., Raty, S., Levi, C., Kerr, E., Allen, J., Kaauwai, L.P., Belevski, L., Russell, M., Ormond, S., Chew, A., Loiselle, A., Royan, A., Hughes, B., Garcia Esperon, C., Pepper, E., Miteff, F., He, J., Lycett, M., Min, M., Murray, N., Pavey, N., Starling de Barros, R., Gangadharan, S., Dunkerton, S., Waller, S., Canento Sanchez, T., Wellings, T., Edmonds, G., Whittaker, K.A., Ewing, M., Lee, P., Singkang, R., McDonald, A., Dos Santos, A., Shin, C., Jackson, D., Tsoleridis, J., Fisicchia, L., Parsons, N., Shenoy, N., Smith, S., Sharobeam, A., Balabanski, A., Park, A., Williams, C., Pavlin-Premri, D., Rodrigues, E., Alemseged, F., Ng, F., Zhao, H., Beharry, J., Ng, J.L., Williamson, J., Wong, J.Z.W., Li, K., Kwan, M.K., Valente, M., Yassi, N., Cooley, R., Yogendrakumar, V., McNamara, B., Buchanan, C., McCarthy, C., Thomas, G., Stephens, K., Chung, M., Chung, M.F., Tang, M., Busch, T., Frost, T., Lee, R., Stuart, N., Pachani, N., Menon, A., Borojevic, B., Linton, C.M., Garcia, G., Callaly, E.P., Dewey, H., Liu, J., Chen, J., Wong, J., Nowak, K., To, K., Lizak, N.S., Bhalala, O., Park, P., Tan, P., Martins, R., Cody, R., Forbes, R., Chen, S.K., Ooi, S., Tu, S., Dang, Y.L., Ling, Z., Cranefield, J., Drew, R., Tan, A., Kurunawai, C., Harvey, J., Mahadevan, J.J., Cagi, L., Palanikumar, L., Chia, L.N., Goh, R., El-Masri, S., Urbi, B., Rapier, C., Berrill, H., McEvoy, H., Dunning, R., Kuriakose, S., Chad, T., Sapaen, V., Sabet, A., Shah, D., Yeow, D., Lilley, K., Ward, K., Mozhy Mahizhnan, M., Tan, M., Lynch, C., Coveney, S., Tobin, K., McCabe, J., Marnane, M., Murphy, S., Large, M., Moynihan, B., Boyle, K., Sanjuan, E., Sanchis, M., Boned, S., Pancorbo, O., Sala, V., Garcia, L., Garcia-Tornel, A., Juega, J., Pagola, J., Santana, K., Requena, M., Muchada, M., Olive, M., Lozano, P.J., Rubiera, M., Deck, M., Rodriguez, N., Gomez, B., Reyes Munoz, F.J., Gomez, A.S., Sanz, A.C., Garcia, E.C., Penacoba, G., Ramos, M.E., de Lera Alfonso, M., Feliu, A, Pardo, L., Ramirez, P., Murillo, A., Lopez Dominguez, D., Rodriguez, J., Terceno Izaga, M., Reina, M., Viturro, S.B., Bojaryn, U., Vera Monge, V.A., Silva Blas, Y., R Siew, R., Agustin, S J, Seet, C., Tianming, T., d'Emden, A., Murray, A., Welch, A., Hatherley, K., Day, N., Smith, W., MacRae, E., Mitchell, E.S., Mahmood, A., Elliot, J., Neilson, S., Biswas, V., Brown, C., Lewis, A., Ashton, A., Werring, D., Perry, R., Muhammad, R., Lee, Y.C., Black, A., Robinson, A., Williams, A., Banaras, A., Cahoy, C., Raingold, G., Marinescu, M., Atang, N., Bason, N., Francia, N., Obarey, S., Feerick, S., Joseph, J., Schulz, U., Irons, R., Benjamin, J., Quinn, L., Jhoots, M., Teal, R., Ford, G., Harston, G., Bains, H., Gbinigie, I., Mathieson, P., Irons, R., Sim, C.H., Hayter, E., Kennedy, K., Binnie, L., Priestley, N., Williams, R., Ghatala, R., Stratton, S., Blight, A., Zhang, L., Davies, A., Duffy, H., Roberts, J., Homer, J., Roberts, K., Dodd, K., Cawley, K., Martin, M., Leason, S., Cotgreave, S., Taylor, T., Nallasivan, A., Haider, S., Chakraborty, T., Webster, T., Gil, A., Martin, B., Joseph, B., Cabrera, C., Jose, D., Man, J., Aquino, J., Sebastian, S., Osterdahl, M., Kwan, M., Matthew, M., Ike, N., Bello, P., Wilding, P., Fuentes, R., Shah, R., Mashate, S., Patel, T., Nwanguma, U., Dave, V., Haber, A., Lee, A., O'Sullivan, A., Drumm, B., Dawson, A.C., Matar, T., Biswas, V., Roberts, D., Taylor, E., Rounis, E., El-Masry, A., O'Hare, C., Kalladka, D., Jamil, S., Auger, S., Raha, O., Evans, M., Vonberg, F., Kalam, S., Ali Sheikh, A., Jenkins, I.H., George, J., Kwan, J., Blagojevic, J., Saeed, M., Haji-Coll, M., Tsuda, M., Sayed, M., Winterkron, N., Thanbirajah, N., Vittay, O., Karim, R., Smail, R.C., Gauhar, S., Elmamoun, S., Malani, S., Pralhad Kelavkar, S., Hiden, J., Ferdinand, P., Sanyal, R., Varquez, R., Smith, B., Okechukwu, C., Fox, E., Collins, E., Courtney, K., Tauro, S., Patterson, C., McShane, D., Kerr, E., Roberts, G., McIImoyle, J., McGuire, K., Fearon, P., Gordon, P., Isaacs, K., Lucas, K., Smith, L., Dews, L., Bates, M., Lawrence, S., Heeley, S., Patel, V., Chin, Y.M., Sims, D., Littleton, E., Khaira, J., Nadar, K., Kieliszkowska, A., Sari, B., Domingos Belo, C., Smith, E., Manolo, E.Y., Aeron-Thomas, J., Doheny, M., Garcia Pardo, M., Recaman, M., Tibajia, M.C., Aissa, M., Mah, Y., Yu, T., Patel, V., Meenakshisundaram, S., Heller, S., Alsukhni, R., Williams, O., Farag, M., Benger, M., Engineer, A., Aissa, M., Bayhonan, S., Conway, S., Bhalla, A., Nouvakis, D., Theochari, E., Boyle, F., Teo, J., King-Robson, J., Law, K.Y., Sztriha, L., Ismail, M., McGovern, A., Day, D., Mitchell-Douglas, J., Francis, J., Iqbal, A., Punjabivaryani, P., Anonuevo Reyes, J., Anonuevo Reyes, M., Pauls, M., Buch, A., Hedstrom, A., Hutchinson, C., Kirkland, C., Newham, J., Wilkes, G., Fleming, L., Fleck, N., Franca, A., Chwal, B., Oldoni, C., Mantovani, G., Noll, G., Zanella, L., Soma, M., Secchi, T., Borelli, W., Rimoli, B.P., da Cunha Silva, G.H., Machado Galvao Mondin, L.A., Barbosa Cerantola, R., Imthon, A.K., Esaki, A.S., Camilo, M., Vincenzi, O.C., ds Cruz, R.R., Morillos, M.B., Riccioppa Rodrigues, G.G., Santos Ferreira, K., Pazini, A.M., Pena Pereira, M.A., de Albuquerque, A.L.A., Massote Fontanini, C.E., Matinez Rubio, C.F., dos Santos, D.T., Dias, F.A., Alves, F.F.A., Milani, C., Pegorer Santos, B., Winckler, F., De Souza, J.T., Bonome, L.A.M., Cury Silva, V.A., Teodoro, R.S., Modolo, G.P., Ferreira, N.C., Barbosa dos Santos, D.F., dos Santos Moreira, J.C., Cruz Guedes de Morais, A.B., Vieira, J., Mendes, G., and de Queiroz, J.P.
- Abstract
Individuals with minor ischaemic stroke and intracranial occlusion are at increased risk of poor outcomes. Intravenous thrombolysis with tenecteplase might improve outcomes in this population. We aimed to test the superiority of intravenous tenecteplase over non-thrombolytic standard of care in patients with minor ischaemic stroke and intracranial occlusion or focal perfusion abnormality.
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- 2024
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156. Feasibility and Cost Analysis of Portable MRI Implementation in a Remote Setting in Canada
- Author
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DesRoche, Chloe N., Johnson, Ana P., Hore, Elizabeth B., Innes, Elaine, Silver, Ian, Tampieri, Donatella, Kwan, Benjamin Y.M., Jimenez, Johanna Ortiz, Boyd, J. Gordon, and Islam, Omar
- Abstract
ABSTRACTObjective:To conduct feasibility and cost analysis of portable MRI implementation in a remote setting where MRI access is otherwise unavailable.Methods:Portable MRI (ultra-low field, 0.064T) was installed in Weeneebayko General Hospital, Moose Factory, Ontario. Adult patients, presenting with any indication for neuroimaging, were eligible for study inclusion. Scanning period was from November 14, 2021, to September 6, 2022. Images were sent via a secure PACS network for Neuroradiologist interpretation, available 24/7. Clinical indications, image quality, and report turnaround time were recorded. A cost analysis was conducted from a healthcare system’s perspective in 2022 Canadian dollars, comparing cost of portable MRI implementation to transporting patients to a center with fixed MRI.Results:Portable MRI was successfully implemented in a remote Canadian location. Twenty-five patients received a portable MRI scan. All studies were of diagnostic quality. No clinically significant pathologies were identified on any of the studies. However, based on clinical presentation and limitations of portable MRI resolution, it is estimated that 11 (44%) of patients would require transfer to a center with fixed MRI for further imaging workup. Cost savings were $854,841 based on 50 patients receiving portable MRI over 1 year. Five-year budget impact analysis showed nearly $8 million dollars saved.Conclusions:Portable MRI implementation in a remote setting is feasible, with significant cost savings compared to fixed MRI. This study may serve as a model to democratize MRI access, offer timely care and improved triaging in remote areas where conventional MRI is unavailable.
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- 2024
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157. Cournot competition and “green” innovation: An inverted-U relationship
- Author
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Lambertini, Luca, Poyago-Theotoky, Joanna, and Tampieri, Alessandro
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- 2017
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158. New bioactive bone-like microspheres with intrinsic magnetic properties obtained by bio-inspired mineralisation process
- Author
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Fernandes Patrício, Tatiana Marisa, Panseri, Silvia, Sandri, Monica, Tampieri, Anna, and Sprio, Simone
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- 2017
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159. Ribose mediated crosslinking of collagen-hydroxyapatite hybrid scaffolds for bone tissue regeneration using biomimetic strategies
- Author
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Krishnakumar, Gopal Shankar, Gostynska, Natalia, Campodoni, Elisabetta, Dapporto, Massimiliano, Montesi, Monica, Panseri, Silvia, Tampieri, Anna, Kon, Elizaveta, Marcacci, Maurilio, Sprio, Simone, and Sandri, Monica
- Published
- 2017
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160. Strontium doped calcium phosphate coatings on poly(etheretherketone) (PEEK) by pulsed electron deposition
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Bianchi, Michele, Degli Esposti, Lorenzo, Ballardini, Alberto, Liscio, Fabiola, Berni, Matteo, Gambardella, Alessandro, Leeuwenburgh, Sander C.G., Sprio, Simone, Tampieri, Anna, and Iafisco, Michele
- Published
- 2017
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161. Tethering of Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-Pro-Lys Peptides on Mg-Doped Hydroxyapatite
- Author
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Pistone, Alessandro, Iannazzo, Daniela, Espro, Claudia, Galvagno, Signorino, Tampieri, Anna, Montesi, Monica, Panseri, Silvia, and Sandri, Monica
- Published
- 2017
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162. Investigation of different cross-linking approaches on 3D gelatin scaffolds for tissue engineering application: A comparative analysis
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Shankar, K. Gopal, Gostynska, Natalia, Montesi, Monica, Panseri, Silvia, Sprio, Simone, Kon, Elizaveta, Marcacci, Maurilio, Tampieri, Anna, and Sandri, Monica
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- 2017
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163. Silibinin-conjugated graphene nanoplatform: Synthesis, characterization and biological evaluation
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Neri, Giulia, Micale, Nicola, Scala, Angela, Fazio, Enza, Mazzaglia, Antonino, Mineo, Placido G., Montesi, Monica, Panseri, Silvia, Tampieri, Anna, Grassi, Giovanni, and Piperno, Anna
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- 2017
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164. Scaffold-based 3D cellular models mimicking the heterogeneity of osteosarcoma stem cell niche
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Bassi, Giada, Panseri, Silvia, Dozio, Samuele Maria, Sandri, Monica, Campodoni, Elisabetta, Dapporto, Massimiliano, Sprio, Simone, Tampieri, Anna, and Montesi, Monica
- Published
- 2020
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165. 3D Patterning of cells in Magnetic Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering
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Goranov, V., Shelyakova, T., De Santis, R., Haranava, Y., Makhaniok, A., Gloria, A., Tampieri, A., Russo, A., Kon, E., Marcacci, M., Ambrosio, L., and Dediu, V. A.
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- 2020
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166. Canadian Stroke Best Practice Recommendations: Acute Stroke Management, 7thEdition Practice Guidelines Update, 2022
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Manraj Heran, Patrice Lindsay, Gord Gubitz, Amy Yu, Aravind Ganesh, Rebecca Lund, Sacha Arsenault, Doug Bickford, Donnita Derbyshire, Shannon Doucette, Esseddeeg Ghrooda, Devin Harris, Nick Kanya-Forstner, Eric Kaplovitch, Zachary Liederman, Shauna Martiniuk, Marie McClelland, Genevieve Milot, Jeffrey Minuk, Erica Otto, Jeffrey Perry, Rob Schlamp, Donatella Tampieri, Brian van Adel, David Volders, Ruth Whelan, Samuel Yip, Norine Foley, Eric E. Smith, Dar Dowlatshahi, Anita Mountain, Michael D. Hill, Chelsy Martin, and Michel Shamy
- Subjects
Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Abstract
The 2022 update of theCanadian Stroke Best Practice Recommendations (CSBPR) for Acute Stroke Management, 7thedition, is a comprehensive summary of current evidence-based recommendations, appropriate for use by an interdisciplinary team of healthcare providers and system planners caring for persons with an acute stroke or transient ischemic attack. These recommendations are a timely opportunity to reassess current processes to ensure efficient access to acute stroke diagnostics, treatments, and management strategies, proven to reduce mortality and morbidity. The topics covered include prehospital care, emergency department care, intravenous thrombolysis and endovascular thrombectomy (EVT), prevention and management of inhospital complications, vascular risk factor reduction, early rehabilitation, and end-of-life care. These recommendations pertain primarily to an acuteischemicvascular event. Notable changes in the 7thedition include recommendations pertaining the use of tenecteplase, thrombolysis as a bridging therapy prior to mechanical thrombectomy, dual antiplatelet therapy for stroke prevention,1the management of symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage following thrombolysis, acute stroke imaging, care of patients undergoing EVT, medical assistance in dying, and virtual stroke care. An explicit effort was made to address sex and gender differences wherever possible. The theme of the 7thedition of the CSBPR is building connections to optimize individual outcomes, recognizing that many people who present with acute stroke often also have multiple comorbid conditions, are medically more complex, and require a coordinated interdisciplinary approach for optimal recovery. Additional materials to support timely implementation and quality monitoring of these recommendations are available atwww.strokebestpractices.ca.
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- 2022
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167. Ethic Statement Correction: Peri-Aneurysmal Brain Edema in Native and Treated Aneurysms: The Role of Thrombosis
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Valeria Onofrj, Donatella Tampieri, Alessandro Cianfoni, and Elisa Ventura
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Published
- 2021
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168. Plenty of Fish in the Sea: Divorce Choice and the Quality of Singles
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Giorgio Gronchi, Elena Parilina, and Alessandro Tampieri
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non-stationary distribution ,divorce cost ,waiting cost ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
In the literature of marriage, divorce choices are usually assumed to not affect the distribution of types in the pool of singles. The scope of the present paper is to overcome this assumption. We analyse divorce choices when separation decision influences the distribution of singles and, thus, their expected quality. We consider a three-period model where heterogeneous individuals may unilaterally experience divorce and return to the marriage market. The choices of individuals are based on the change in the distribution of singles and the cost of waiting and divorcing, taking into consideration the individual’s eligibility in the marriage market. There are two main findings: Firstly, positive assortative matching dissolves with divorce for some intermediate types. Therefore, the endogenous positive assortative matching that usually emerges in models with nontransferable utility is weakened when matches can dissolve. Secondly, the existence of ranges where divorce emerges among individuals with positive assortative matching implies the existence of two disconnected classes of types. If matchings in the first period were to occur between individuals of different classes, such matches would be dissolved later.
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- 2021
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169. Strabismus in early disseminated Lyme disease: case report and summary of the literature.
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Holdsworth, Mary B., Mocan, Mehmet Cem, Leifso, Kirk, Tampieri, Donatella, and Strube, Yi Ning J.
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- 2024
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170. Non–ECG-gated cardiac CT angiography in acute stroke is feasible and detects sources of embolism.
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Lee, Peter, Dhillon, Gurmohan, Pourafkari, Marina, DaBreo, Dominique, Jaff, Zardasht, Appireddy, Ramana, Jin, Albert, Boissé Lomax, Lysa, Durafourt, Bryce A, Boyd, John Gordon, Nasirzadeh, Amir Reza, Tampieri, Donatella, and Jalini, Shirin
- Subjects
STROKE ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,ANGIOGRAPHY ,EMBOLISMS ,CARDIAC imaging - Abstract
Background: A significant portion of cryptogenic stroke is hypothesized to be secondary to cardiac embolism. However, transthoracic echocardiogram is usually delayed after stroke, and more detailed cardiac imaging is not routinely done. Aims: This study aimed to determine whether non–ECG-gated cardiac CT angiography (cCTA) during hyperacute stroke would provide diagnostic quality images and act as an adjunct modality of cardiac imaging to detect sources of emboli. Methods: In this single-center prospective cohort study, modified Code Stroke imaging was implemented with a 64-slice CT scanner, where the longitudinal axis of CT angiography was extended from the carina to the diaphragm. The primary outcomes of image quality, recruitment feasibility, impact on hyperacute time metrics, and additional radiation dose were assessed. Secondary outcomes consisted of detection of high-risk cardiac sources of embolism, mediastinal or lung pathology, and impact on etiologic classification. Results: One hundred and twenty eligible patients were enrolled, of which 105 (87.5%) had good/moderate quality images for motion artifact and 119 (99.2%) for contrast opacification. Total CT time, door-to-needle time, and door-to-groin puncture time were unchanged with the addition of cCTA. Eighty-nine patients received a final diagnosis of ischemic stroke, of which 12/89 (13.5%) had high-risk cardioembolic findings on cCTA. Incidental findings, such as pulmonary embolism (PE) (7/89, 7.9%) and malignancy (6/89, 6.7%), were observed. cCTA led to changes in management for 19/120 (15.8%) of all patients, and reclassification of stroke etiology for 8/89 (9%) of patients. Conclusions: Non–ECG-gated cCTA can be feasibly incorporated into Code Stroke and provide diagnostic quality images without delays in hyperacute time metrics. It can detect high-risk cardiac sources, and other findings impacting patient care. This may help reclassify a subset of cryptogenic stroke cases and improve secondary prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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171. A bioartificial and vasculomorphic bone matrix‐based organoid mimicking microanatomy of flat and short bones.
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Toni, Roberto, Barbaro, Fulvio, Di Conza, Giusy, Zini, Nicoletta, Remaggi, Giulia, Elviri, Lisa, Spaletta, Giulia, Quarantini, Enrico, Quarantini, Marco, Mosca, Salvatore, Caravelli, Silvio, Mosca, Massimiliano, Ravanetti, Francesca, Sprio, Simone, and Tampieri, Anna
- Subjects
BONE remodeling ,STROMAL cells ,EXTRACELLULAR matrix ,CANCELLOUS bone ,FIBROBLASTS ,SCAPULA ,COMPACT bone - Abstract
We engineered an in vitro model of bioartificial 3D bone organoid consistent with an anatomical and vascular microenvironment common to mammalian flat and short bones. To achieve this, we chose the decellularized–decalcified matrix of the adult male rat scapula, implemented with the reconstruction of its intrinsic vessels, obtained through an original intravascular perfusion with polylevolactic (PLLA), followed by coating of the PLLA‐fabricated vascularization with rat tail collagen. As a result, the 3D bone and vascular geometry of the native bone cortical and cancellous compartments was reproduced, and the rat tail collagen–PLLA biomaterial could in vitro act as a surrogate of the perivascular extracellular matrix (ECM) around the wall of the biomaterial‐reconstituted cancellous vessels. As a proof‐of‐concept of cell compatibility and site‐dependent osteoinductive properties of this bioartificial 3D construct, we show that it in vitro leads to a time‐dependent microtopographic positioning of rat mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs), initiating an osteogenic fate in relation to the bone compartment. In addition, coating of PLLA‐reconstructed vessels with rat tail collagen favored perivascular attachment and survival of MSC‐like cells (mouse embryonic fibroblasts), confirming its potentiality as a perivascular stroma for triggering competence of seeded MSCs. Finally, in vivo radiographic topography of bone lesions in the human jaw and foot tarsus of subjects with primary osteoporosis revealed selective bone cortical versus cancellous involvement, suggesting usefulness of a human 3D bone organoid engineered with the same principles of our rat organoid, to in vitro investigate compartment‐dependent activities of human MSC in flat and short bones under experimental osteoporotic challenge. We conclude that our 3D bioartificial construct offers a reliable replica of flat and short bones microanatomy, and promises to help in building a compartment‐dependent mechanistic perspective of bone remodeling, including the microtopographic dysregulation of osteoporosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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172. Synthesis of Nanostructured Hydroxyapatite via Controlled Hydrothermal Route
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Ruffini, Andrea, primary, Sprio, Simone, additional, Preti, Lorenzo, additional, and Tampieri, Anna, additional
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- 2019
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173. Nature-Inspired Processes and Structures: New Paradigms to Develop Highly Bioactive Devices for Hard Tissue Regeneration
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Preti, Lorenzo, primary, Lambiase, Barbara, additional, Campodoni, Elisabetta, additional, Sandri, Monica, additional, Ruffini, Andrea, additional, Pugno, Nicola, additional, Tampieri, Anna, additional, and Sprio, Simone, additional
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- 2019
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174. List of Contributors
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Abraham, Gustavo A., primary, Agrawal, Satish, additional, Ahmad, Hafsa, additional, Ambrosio, Luigi, additional, Arahira, Takaaki, additional, Armyanov, Stephan, additional, Arya, Abhishek, additional, Atanasov, Petar A., additional, Barbosa, Maria Ingrid Rocha, additional, Batista, Rejane Andrade, additional, Beitel, Susan Michelz, additional, Benatti, Ana Carolina B., additional, Bhushan, Binay, additional, Bolshanina, S., additional, Caracciolo, Pablo C., additional, Coelho, Luciana Fontes, additional, Contiero, Jonas, additional, Dwivedi, Anil Kumar, additional, Espitia, Paula J.P., additional, Filho, Rubens Maciel, additional, Giuliani, Alessandra, additional, Guarino, Vincenzo, additional, Iordache, Florin, additional, Jardini, André Luiz, additional, Kaasi, Andreas, additional, Kharmandayan, Paulo, additional, Kolev, Konstantin, additional, Kumar, Rakesh, additional, Londoño-Restrepo, Sandra M., additional, Lores, Nayla J., additional, Manescu, Adrian, additional, Mazzoni, Serena, additional, Nedyalkov, Nikolay N., additional, Otoni, Caio Gomide, additional, Pareek, Nidhi, additional, Paritosh, Kunwar, additional, Pattaro, Ana Flávia, additional, Ramirez-Gutierrez, Cristian F., additional, Rodrigues, Ana Amélia, additional, Rodriguez-García, Mario E., additional, Romo-Uribe, Angel, additional, Sandri, Monica, additional, Scaglione, Silvia, additional, Sprio, Simone, additional, Stankova, Nadya E., additional, Tampieri, Anna, additional, Todo, Mitsugu, additional, Tromba, Giuliana, additional, Valova, Eugenia, additional, Villarraga-Gómez, Herminso, additional, Vivekanand, Vivekanand, additional, Xavier, Mariana Vitelo, additional, Yadav, Monika, additional, and Yanovska, A., additional
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- 2019
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175. Composite scaffolds for bone and osteochondral defects
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Guarino, Vincenzo, primary, Scaglione, Silvia, additional, Sandri, Monica, additional, Sprio, Simone, additional, Tampieri, Anna, additional, and Ambrosio, Luigi, additional
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- 2019
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176. Social Background Effects on School and Job Opportunities
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Tampieri, Alessandro
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This paper proposes a theory on how students' social background affects their school attainment and job opportunities. I study a set-up where students differ in ability and social background, and I analyse the interaction between a school and an employer. Students with disadvantaged background are penalised compared to other students: they receive less teaching and/or are less likely to be hired. A surprising result is that policy aiming to subsidise education for disadvantaged students might in fact decrease their job opportunities.
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- 2016
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177. Over-Education and Assortative Matching in Partnerships: A Theoretical Analysis
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Tampieri, Alessandro
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This paper argues that assortative matching may explain over-education. Education determines individuals' income and, due to the presence of assortative matching, the quality of partners in personal, social and working life. Thus, an individual acquires education to improve the expected partners' quality. However, since every individual of the same level of ability acquires the same level of education, the relative levels of education among individuals do not change, the expected partners' quality does not increase and over-education emerges.
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- 2016
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178. Interaction Between Waves and Turbulence Within the Nocturnal Boundary Layer
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Francesco Barbano, Luigi Brogno, Francesco Tampieri, Silvana Di Sabatino, and Francesco Barbano, Luigi Brogno, Francesco Tampieri, Silvana Di Sabatino
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Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Small-scale turbulence ,Atmospheric Science ,Buoyancy wave ,Triple decomposition ,Stable boundary layer - Abstract
The presence of waves is proven to be ubiquitous within nocturnal stable boundary layers over complex terrain, where turbulence is in a continuous, although weak, state of activity. The typical approach based on Reynolds decomposition is unable to disaggregate waves from turbulence contributions, thus hiding any information about the production/destruction of turbulence energy injected/subtracted by the wave motion. We adopt a triple-decomposition approach to disaggregate the mean, wave, and turbulence contributions within near-surface boundary-layer flows, with the aim of unveiling the role of wave motion as a source and/or sink of turbulence kinetic and potential energies in the respective explicit budgets. By exploring the balance between buoyancy (driving waves) and shear (driving turbulence), a simple interpretation paradigm is introduced to distinguish two layers, namely the near-ground and far-ground sublayer, estimating where the turbulence kinetic energy can significantly feed or be fed by the wave. To prove this paradigm, a nocturnal valley flow is used as a case study to detail the role of wave motions on the kinetic and potential energy budgets within the two sublayers. From this dataset, the explicit kinetic and potential energy budgets are calculated, relying on a variance–covariance analysis to further comprehend the balance of energy production/destruction in each sublayer. With this investigation, we propose a simple interpretation scheme to capture and interpret the extent of the complex interaction between waves and turbulence in nocturnal stable boundary layers.
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- 2022
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179. Atlas-Guided Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound Examination with a Neuro-Surgical Navigation System: Case Study.
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Yiming Xiao, Ian J. Gerard, Vladimir S. Fonov, Dante De Nigris, Catherine Therrien, Bérengère Aubert-Broche, Simon Drouin, Anna Kochanowska, Donatella Tampieri, and D. Louis Collins
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- 2015
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180. Knowledge Capture and Information Sharing for Science and Technology
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Paci, Augusta Maria, Bartolucci, Cecilia, Lalle, Cecilia, Tampieri, Francesco, Diniz Junqueira Barbosa, Simone, Series editor, Chen, Phoebe, Series editor, Du, Xiaoyong, Series editor, Filipe, Joaquim, Series editor, Kara, Orhun, Series editor, Kotenko, Igor, Series editor, Liu, Ting, Series editor, Sivalingam, Krishna M., Series editor, Washio, Takashi, Series editor, Fred, Ana, editor, Dietz, Jan L. G., editor, Aveiro, David, editor, and Liu, Kecheng, editor
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- 2015
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181. Characterization of Turbulence in the Neutral and Stable Surface Layer at Jang Bogo Station, Antarctica
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Mauro Mazzola, Angelo Pietro Viola, Taejin Choi, and Francesco Tampieri
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turbulence ,atmospheric stability ,surface layer ,submeso motion ,Richardson number ,Antarctica ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
The availability of 5-year time series of velocity and temperature data from two sonic anemometers installed at Jang Bogo Station, Antarctica, allowed a systematic investigation of the turbulence features in a stable layer affected by submeso motions and characterized by the vertical divergence of some second-order moments for a large fraction of time (quite a non-ideal surface layer). The investigation of the effect of the averaging time interval on the statistics of the second-order moments showed that this is greater for the variances of the velocity components with respect to that for the vertical fluxes. This corresponds to a greater contribution from low-frequency motions. The turbulence statistics were investigated and compared with current literature results in terms of vertical structure, share of energy between horizontal and vertical components, skewness of the vertical velocity and turbulent velocities. As a general result, all the normalized second-order moments show a clear change passing from neutral to stable conditions, passing through the range of bulk Richardson number equal to 0.1–1.
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- 2021
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182. Chemical and Antimicrobial Effects of Air Non-Thermal Plasma Processing of Fresh Apple Juice with Focus on Safety Aspects
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Barbora Tarabová, Francesco Tampieri, Elisabetta Maran, Ester Marotta, Andrea Ostrihoňová, Marco Krewing, and Zdenko Machala
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apple juice ,cold air plasma ,food safety ,pathogen inactivation ,RONS ,sugars ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
Freshly squeezed apple juice was subjected to air non-thermal plasma treatment to investigate the capability of this processing method to inactivate microorganisms and to evaluate its safety when applied to liquid food products. Two different configurations of a transient spark discharge in ambient air were tested: an electrospray system with the juice flowing directly through the high voltage needle electrode, and a batch system, where the discharge was generated onto the surface of the juice. The key physico-chemical parameters of the juice, such as pH, conductivity, color, transmittance, and Brix degree, did not significantly change upon treatment. The concentration of nitrate ions formed by the plasma was safe, while that of nitrite ions and hydrogen peroxide was initially higher than the safety limits, but decreased within 24 h post treatment. The plasma effect on individual natural components of the juice, such as sugars, organic acids, and polyphenols, treated in water solutions led to their partial or substantial decomposition. However, when these compounds were plasma-treated altogether in the juice, they remained unaffected. The antimicrobial effect of the plasma processing was evaluated via the inoculation of model microorganisms. A stronger (6 log) decontamination was detected for bacteria Escherichia coli with respect to yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Plasma processing led to a substantial extension of the juice shelf-life by up to 26 days if refrigerated, which represents a promising application potential in food technology.
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- 2021
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183. Nature-Inspired Unconventional Approaches to Develop 3D Bioceramic Scaffolds with Enhanced Regenerative Ability
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Andrea Ruffini, Monica Sandri, Massimiliano Dapporto, Elisabetta Campodoni, Anna Tampieri, and Simone Sprio
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3D biomimetic scaffolds ,ion-doped hydroxyapatite ,self-hardening bone cements ,bio-inspired mineralisation process ,collagen ,biomorphic transformation ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Material science is a relevant discipline in support of regenerative medicine. Indeed, tissue regeneration requires the use of scaffolds able to guide and sustain the natural cell metabolism towards tissue regrowth. This need is particularly important in musculoskeletal regeneration, such as in the case of diseased bone or osteocartilaginous regions for which calcium phosphate-based scaffolds are considered as the golden solution. However, various technological barriers related to conventional ceramic processing have thus far hampered the achievement of biomimetic and bioactive scaffolds as effective solutions for still unmet clinical needs in orthopaedics. Driven by such highly impacting socioeconomic needs, new nature-inspired approaches promise to make a technological leap forward in the development of advanced biomaterials. The present review illustrates ion-doped apatites as biomimetic materials whose bioactivity resides in their unstable chemical composition and nanocrystallinity, both of which are, however, destroyed by the classical sintering treatment. In the following, recent nature-inspired methods preventing the use of high-temperature treatments, based on (i) chemically hardening bioceramics, (ii) biomineralisation process, and (iii) biomorphic transformations, are illustrated. These methods can generate products with advanced biofunctional properties, particularly biomorphic transformations represent an emerging approach that could pave the way to a technological leap forward in medicine and also in various other application fields.
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- 2021
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184. Medicated Hydroxyapatite/Collagen Hybrid Scaffolds for Bone Regeneration and Local Antimicrobial Therapy to Prevent Bone Infections
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Manuela Mulazzi, Elisabetta Campodoni, Giada Bassi, Monica Montesi, Silvia Panseri, Francesca Bonvicini, Giovanna Angela Gentilomi, Anna Tampieri, and Monica Sandri
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biomimetic materials ,bone regeneration ,microbial bone infection ,local therapy ,gentamicin sulfate ,vancomycin hydrochloride ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
Microbial infections occurring during bone surgical treatment, the cause of osteomyelitis and implant failures, are still an open challenge in orthopedics. Conventional therapies are often ineffective and associated with serious side effects due to the amount of drugs administered by systemic routes. In this study, a medicated osteoinductive and bioresorbable bone graft was designed and investigated for its ability to control antibiotic drug release in situ. This represents an ideal solution for the eradication or prevention of infection, while simultaneously repairing bone defects. Vancomycin hydrochloride and gentamicin sulfate, here considered for testing, were loaded into a previously developed and largely investigated hybrid bone-mimetic scaffold made of collagen fibers biomineralized with magnesium doped-hydroxyapatite (MgHA/Coll), which in the last ten years has widely demonstrated its effective potential in bone tissue regeneration. Here, we have explored whether it can be used as a controlled local delivery system for antibiotic drugs. An easy loading method was selected in order to be reproducible, quickly, in the operating room. The maintenance of the antibacterial efficiency of the released drugs and the biosafety of medicated scaffolds were assessed with microbiological and in vitro tests, which demonstrated that the MgHA/Coll scaffolds were safe and effective as a local delivery system for an extended duration therapy—promising results for the prevention of bone defect-related infections in orthopedic surgeries.
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- 2021
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185. 3D Cocultures of Osteoblasts and Staphylococcus aureus on Biomimetic Bone Scaffolds as a Tool to Investigate the Host–Pathogen Interface in Osteomyelitis
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Raffaella Parente, Valentina Possetti, Maria Lucia Schiavone, Elisabetta Campodoni, Ciro Menale, Mattia Loppini, Andrea Doni, Barbara Bottazzi, Alberto Mantovani, Monica Sandri, Anna Tampieri, Cristina Sobacchi, and Antonio Inforzato
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Staphylococcus aureus ,osteomyelitis ,osteoblast-like cells ,host–pathogen interface ,3D models ,biomimetic bone scaffolds ,Medicine - Abstract
Osteomyelitis (OM) is an infectious disease of the bone primarily caused by the opportunistic pathogen Staphylococcus aureus (SA). This Gram-positive bacterium has evolved a number of strategies to evade the immune response and subvert bone homeostasis, yet the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. OM has been modeled in vitro to challenge pathogenetic hypotheses in controlled conditions, thus providing guidance and support to animal experimentation. In this regard, traditional 2D models of OM inherently lack the spatial complexity of bone architecture. Three-dimensional models of the disease overcome this limitation; however, they poorly reproduce composition and texture of the natural bone. Here, we developed a new 3D model of OM based on cocultures of SA and murine osteoblastic MC3T3-E1 cells on magnesium-doped hydroxyapatite/collagen I (MgHA/Col) scaffolds that closely recapitulate the bone extracellular matrix. In this model, matrix-dependent effects were observed in proliferation, gene transcription, protein expression, and cell–matrix interactions both of the osteoblastic cell line and of bacterium. Additionally, these had distinct metabolic and gene expression profiles, compared to conventional 2D settings, when grown on MgHA/Col scaffolds in separate monocultures. Our study points to MgHA/Col scaffolds as biocompatible and bioactive matrices and provides a novel and close-to-physiology tool to address the pathogenetic mechanisms of OM at the host–pathogen interface.
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- 2021
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186. An augmented-reality system prototype for guiding transcranial Doppler ultrasound examination
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Xiao, Yiming, Drouin, Simon, Gerard, Ian J., Fonov, Vladimir, Aubert-Broche, Bérengère, Ma, Yuhan, Kersten-Oertel, Marta, Tampieri, Donatella, and Collins, D. Louis
- Published
- 2018
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187. Stability and cooperative solution in stochastic games
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Parilina, Elena M. and Tampieri, Alessandro
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- 2018
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188. On the surface effects of citrates on nano-apatites: evidence of a decreased hydrophilicity
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Pavlo Ivanchenko, José Manuel Delgado-López, Michele Iafisco, Jaime Gómez-Morales, Anna Tampieri, Gianmario Martra, and Yuriy Sakhno
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The surface structure and hydrophilicity of synthetic nanocrystalline apatite with strongly bound citrates on their surface are here investigated at the molecular level, by combining advanced IR spectroscopy, microgravimetry and adsorption microcalorimetry. Citrate are found to form unidentate-like and ionic-like complexes with surface Ca2+ ions, with a surface coverage closely resembling that present in bone apatite platelets (i.e., 1 molecule/(n nm)2, with n ranging between 1.4 and 1.6). These surface complexes are part of a hydrated non-apatitic surface layer with a sub-nanometre thickness. Noticeably, it is found that the hydrophilicity of the nanoparticles, measured in terms of adsorption of water molecules in the form of multilayers, decreases in a significant extent in relation to the presence of citrates, most likely because of the exposure toward the exterior of –CH2 groups. Our findings provide new insights on the surface properties of bio-inspired nano-apatites, which can be of great relevance for better understanding the role of citrate in determining important interfacial properties, such as hydrophobicity, of bone apatite platelets. The evaluation and comprehension of surface composition and structure is also of paramount interest to strictly control the functions of synthetic biomaterials, since their surface chemistry strongly affects the hosting tissue response.
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- 2017
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189. Tethering of Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-Pro-Lys Peptides on Mg-Doped Hydroxyapatite
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Alessandro Pistone, Daniela Iannazzo, Claudia Espro, Signorino Galvagno, Anna Tampieri, Monica Montesi, Silvia Panseri, and Monica Sandri
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Mg-doped hydroxyapatite ,Mesenchymal stem cells ,Chemotactic/haptotactic factors ,Bone tissue engineering ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
Stem cell homing, namely the recruitment of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to injured tissues, is highly effective for bone regeneration in vivo. In order to explore whether the incorporation of mimetic peptide sequences on magnesium-doped (Mg-doped) hydroxyapatite (HA) may regulate the homing of MSCs, and thus induce cell migration to a specific site, we covalently functionalized MgHA disks with two chemotactic/haptotactic factors: either the fibronectin fragment III1-C human (FF III1-C), or the peptide sequence Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-Pro-Lys, a fibronectin analog that is able to bind to integrin transmembrane receptors. Preliminary biological evaluation of MSC viability, analyzed by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) test, suggested that stem cells migrate to the MgHA disks in response to the grafted haptotaxis stimuli.
- Published
- 2017
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190. Identification of slow relaxing spin components by pulse EPR techniques in graphene-related materials
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Antonio Barbon and Francesco Tampieri
- Subjects
graphenic-related materials ,RGO ,exfoliated graphite ,pulse EPR ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) is a powerful technique that is suitable to study graphene-related materials. The challenging ability requested to the spectroscopy is its capability to resolve the variety of structures, relatively similar, that are obtained in materials produced through different methods, but that also coexist inside a single sample. In general, because of the intrinsic inhomogeneity of the samples, the EPR spectra are therefore a superposition of spectra coming from different structures. We show that by pulse EPR techniques (echo-detected EPR, ESEEM and Mims ENDOR) we can identify and characterize species with slow spin relaxing properties. These species are generally called molecular states, and are likely small pieces of graphenic structures of limited dimensions, thus conveniently described by a molecular approach. We have studied commercial reduced graphene oxide and chemically exfoliated graphite, which are characterized by different EPR spectra. Hyperfine spectroscopies enabled us to characterize the molecular components of the different materials, especially in terms of the interaction of the unpaired electrons with protons (number of protons and hyperfine coupling constants). We also obtained useful precious information about extent of delocalization of the molecular states.
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- 2017
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191. SS18-SSX Antibody: A Useful Tool to Save Time and Reduce Costs in Synovial Sarcoma Diagnosis. Proposal of a Novel Diagnostic Algorithm
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Orlando, Giulia, primary, Santoro, Federica, additional, Linari, Alessandra, additional, Tampieri, Cristian, additional, Verdun di Cantogno, Ludovica, additional, De Meo, Simone, additional, Ratto, Nicola, additional, Grignani, Giovanni, additional, Papotti, Mauro, additional, and Senetta, Rebecca, additional
- Published
- 2023
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192. Nature-Inspired Heat and Moisture Exchanger Filters Composed of Gelatin and Chitosan for the Design of Eco-Sustainable “Artificial Noses”
- Author
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Campodoni, Elisabetta, primary, Artusi, Chiara, additional, Vazquez Iglesias, Brais, additional, Nicosia, Alessia, additional, Belosi, Franco, additional, Vandini, Alberta, additional, Monticelli, Paolo, additional, Tampieri, Anna, additional, and Sandri, Monica, additional
- Published
- 2023
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193. The influence of Cold Atmospheric Plasma treated hydrogels on dentinal MMPs activity
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Lainovic, Tijana, Tampieri, Francesco, Maravic, T, Blažic, L, Mazzitelli, C, Breschi, L, Mazzoni, A, Josic, U, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Lainovic, Tijana, Tampieri, Francesco, Maravic, T, Blažic, L, Mazzitelli, C, Breschi, L, Mazzoni, A, Josic, U, and Canal Barnils, Cristina
- Abstract
Postprint (published version)
- Published
- 2023
194. Plasma-treated liquids in medicine: let's get chemical
- Author
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Tampieri, Francesco, Gorbanev, Yury, Sardella, Eloisa, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Tampieri, Francesco, Gorbanev, Yury, and Sardella, Eloisa
- Abstract
Fundamental and applied research on plasma-treated liquids for biomedical applications was boosted in the last few years, dictated by their advantages with respect to direct treatments. However, often, the lack of consistent analysis at a molecular level of these liquids, and of the processes used to produce them, have raised doubts of their usefulness in the clinic. The aim of this article is to critically discuss some basic aspects related to the use of plasma-treated liquids in medicine, with a focus on their chemical composition. We analyze the main liquids used in the field, how they are affected by non-thermal plasmas, and the possibility to replicate them without plasma treatment., Peer Reviewed, Objectius de Desenvolupament Sostenible::3 - Salut i Benestar, Postprint (published version)
- Published
- 2023
195. Special issue: Plasma Medicine - part I
- Author
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Espona Noguera, Albert, Tampieri, Francesco, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Espona Noguera, Albert, and Tampieri, Francesco
- Abstract
Peer Reviewed, Objectius de Desenvolupament Sostenible::3 - Salut i Benestar, Postprint (published version)
- Published
- 2023
196. Hydrogels as models to evaluate the effect of non-thermal plasma treatment on living tissues
- Author
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Tampieri, Francesco, Pascual Tomico, Laura, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Tampieri, Francesco, and Pascual Tomico, Laura
- Abstract
Recentment, el plasma no tèrmic ha demostrat ser molt prometedor per diferents aplicacions biomèdiques. Això és degut a que el plasma genera espècies reactives d’oxigen i nitrogen que poden tenir efectes tant regeneratius com citotòxics segons la dosi. Els hidrogels s’han estudiat com potencials medis d’emmagatzematge i d’administració de RONS generats per plasma (tractament indirecte) degut a la seva capacitat de romandre en el lloc d’interès i alliberar RONS de manera controlada. També s’han estudiat com a models per avaluar l’efecte del tractament directe amb plasma en teixits vius. L'objectiu és estudiar la distribució de RONS en la superfície dels hidrogels de gelatina i agarosa i la profunditat de penetració a través d’ells. A més a més, s’estudia la quantificació del transport de RONS a través de fines capes d’hidrogel en una solució aquosa. En el mateix estudi es compara l’efecte del tractament amb plasma sobre la gelatina i l’agarosa. Es van tractar hidrogels mitjançant un raig de plasma a pressió atmosfèrica utilitzant heli. Es van realitzar dos experiments diferents. En un d’ells, els hidrogels contenien reactius colorimètrics per avaluar la distribució i penetració. Els resultats es van avaluar qualitativament, mitjançant un anàlisi visual, y semiquantitativament, amb el software ImageJ. Van mostrar que la distribució de RONS augmentava amb el temps de tractament i tenia una distribució radial en la superfície del hidrogel. Les concentracions de RONS van ser majors en els hidrogels d’agarosa que en els de gelatina. En quant a les profunditats de penetració, es van obtenir resultats similars. Per al segon experiment, es va avaluar la concentració de RONS en una solució aquosa, posant una capa d’hidrogel entre la solució i el plasma. La quantificació es va realitzar utilitzant reactius químics i va mostrar una dependència lineal de la concentració de RONS amb el temps de tractament, y una dependència inversa amb el gruix del hidrogel., El plasma no térmico ha demostrado ser muy prometedor para diferentes aplicaciones biomédicas debido a que el plasma genera especies reactivas de oxígeno y nitrógeno que pueden tener efectos tanto regenerativos como citotóxicos según la dosis. Los hidrogeles se han estudiado como potenciales medios de almacenaje y administración de RONS (tratamiento indirecto) debido a su capacidad para permanecer en el lugar de interés y liberar RONS de forma controlada. Además, se han estudiado como modelos para evaluar el efecto del tratamiento directo con plasma en tejidos vivos. El objetivo es estudiar la distribución de RONS en la superficie de hidrogeles de gelatina y agarosa y la profundidad de penetración. Además, se estudia la cuantificación del transporte de RONS a través de finas capas de hidrogel en una solución acuosa. En el mismo estudio se compara el efecto del tratamiento con plasma sobre la gelatina y la agarosa. Se trataron hidrogeles mediante un chorro de plasma a presión atmosférica utilizando helio. Se realizaron dos experimentos diferentes. En uno de ellos, los hidrogeles contenían reactivos colorimétricos para evaluar la distribución y penetración. Los resultados se evaluaron cualitativamente, mediante un análisis visual, y semicuantitativamente, con el software ImageJ. Mostraron que la distribución de RONS aumentaba con el tiempo de tratamiento y tenía una distribución radial en la superficie del hidrogel. Las concentraciones de RONS fueron mayores en los hidrogeles de agarosa que en los de gelatina. En cuanto a las profundidades de penetración, se obtuvieron resultados similares. Para el segundo tipo de experimento, evaluamos la concentración de RONS en una solución acuosa poniendo una capa de hidrogel entre la solución y el plasma. La cuantificación se realizó utilizando reactivos químicos y mostró una dependencia lineal de la concentración de RONS. Además, también se observa una mayor concentración de RONS en la agarosa que en la gelatina., Non-thermal plasma has been shown to be very promising for different biomedical applications. This is due to the fact that plasma generates reactive oxygen and nitrogen species that can have both regenerative and cytotoxic effects according to their doses. Hydrogels have been studied as potential media for the storage and delivery of plasma-generated RONS due to their capacity to remain in the site of interest and release RONS in a controlled way. Furthermore, hydrogels have been studied as model systems to evaluate the effect of direct plasma treatment in living tissues. The aim of this work is to study the distribution of RONS on the surface of gelatin and agarose hydrogels and the penetration depth through them. Moreover, a quantification of the transport of RONS through thin hydrogel layers in a water solution is studied. We are comparing the effect of plasma treatment on gelatin and agarose within the same study. Gelatin and agarose hydrogels were treated by an atmospheric pressure plasma jet using helium. Two different kinds of experiments were performed. In one of them, the hydrogels contained colorimetric probes to evaluate the distribution and penetration depths. The change of colour on the surface and inside the hydrogels was evaluated qualitatively, by a visual analysis, and semi-quantitatively, with the software ImageJ. The results showed that RONS distribution increased with the treatment time and it had a radial distribution on the hydrogel surface. RONS concentrations were higher in agarose than in gelatin hydrogels. For the penetration depths, similar results have been obtained. For the second experiment, we evaluated the RONS concentration in a water solution putting a hydrogel layer between them. The quantification was done using chemical probes and showed a linear dependence of tRONS concentration with the treatment time, and an inverse dependence with the hydrogel thickness. Moreover, it is also observed a higher RONS concentration in agarose.
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- 2023
197. Interdisciplinarity: In the DNA of plasma medicine
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Espona Noguera, Albert, Tampieri, Francesco, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Espona Noguera, Albert, and Tampieri, Francesco
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Peer Reviewed, Objectius de Desenvolupament Sostenible::3 - Salut i Benestar, Postprint (author's final draft)
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- 2023
198. Oxidation of lactate to pyruvate mediates the cytotoxic potential of physical plasma-treated saline solutions in ovarian cancer
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Università di Bologna, Institut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu, Bucci, Cristina, Tampieri, Francesco, Mateu Sanz, Miguel, Laurita, Romolo, Colombo, Vittorio, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Università di Bologna, Institut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu, Bucci, Cristina, Tampieri, Francesco, Mateu Sanz, Miguel, Laurita, Romolo, Colombo, Vittorio, and Canal Barnils, Cristina
- Abstract
Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most common type of gynecological tumor, presenting poor prognosis at diagnosis and with recurrences being frequently observed. Reactive species generated by physical plasma and transferred into liquids have shown promising results in cancer therapy. Recently, Ringer's lactate solution was exposed to plasma showing selective anticancer activity on EOC cells. In this work, we compared the effect of plasma treatment, using the kINPen plasma jet, on Ringer's saline and Ringer's lactate solution. These two plasma-treated liquids were analyzed chemically by quantifying reactive species and the extent of lactate oxidation. The biological efficiency of the plasma-treated liquids was explored in EOC cells. The results show that lactate is affected by plasma treatment, displaying a reduction of cytotoxic potential., This publication is based upon work from COST Action Action CA20114 PlasTHER “Therapeutical Applications of Cold Plasmas,” supported by COST. The authors also acknowledge MINECO for PID2019‐103892RB‐I00/AEI/ 12 of 14 | BUCCI ET AL .16128869, 0, Downloaded from https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ppap.202300093 by Readcube (Labtiva Inc.), Wiley Online Library on [13/11/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License 10.13039/501100011033 project and for PLEC2022‐ 009277/MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 funded by UE through NextGenerationEU/PRTR. The authors belong to SGR2017‐1165 (Cristina Canal, Miguel Mateu‐Sanz, and Francesco Tampieri) and acknowledge Generalitat de Catalunya for the ICREA Academia Award for Excellence in Research of Cristina Canal., Peer Reviewed, Postprint (published version)
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- 2023
199. Does non-thermal plasma modify biopolymers in solution? A chemical and mechanistic study for alginate
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Centre de Recerca en Enginyeria Biomedica, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Institut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu, Institut de Bioenginyeria de Catalunya, New Uzbekistan University, National Research University, Uzbekistan, Universiteit Antwerpen, Tampieri, Francesco, Espona Noguera, Albert, Labay, Cédric Pierre, Ginebra Molins, Maria Pau, Yusupov, Maksudbek, Bogaerts, Annemie, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Centre de Recerca en Enginyeria Biomedica, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Institut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu, Institut de Bioenginyeria de Catalunya, New Uzbekistan University, National Research University, Uzbekistan, Universiteit Antwerpen, Tampieri, Francesco, Espona Noguera, Albert, Labay, Cédric Pierre, Ginebra Molins, Maria Pau, Yusupov, Maksudbek, Bogaerts, Annemie, and Canal Barnils, Cristina
- Abstract
In the last decades, non-thermal plasma has been extensively investigated as a relevant tool for various biomedical applications, ranging from tissue decontamination to regeneration and from skin treatment to tumor therapies. This high versatility is due to the different kinds and amount of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species that can be generated during a plasma treatment and put in contact with the biological target. Some recent studies report that solutions of biopolymers with the ability to generate hydrogels, when treated with plasma, can enhance the generation of reactive species and influence their stability, resulting thus in the ideal media for indirect treatments of biological targets. The direct effects of the plasma treatment on the structure of biopolymers in water solution, as well as the chemical mechanisms responsible for the enhanced generation of RONS, are not yet fully understood. In this study, we aim at filling this gap by investigating, on the one hand, the nature and extent of the modifications induced by plasma treatment in alginate solutions, and, on the other hand, at using this information to explain the mechanisms responsible for the enhanced generation of reactive species as a consequence of the treatment. The approach we use is twofold: (i) investigating the effects of plasma treatment on alginate solutions, by size exclusion chromatography, rheology and scanning electron microscopy and (ii) study of a molecular model (glucuronate) sharing its chemical structure, by chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry and by molecular dynamics simulations. Our results point out the active role of the biopolymer chemistry during direct plasma treatment. Short-lived reactive species, such as OH radicals and O atoms, can modify the polymer structure, affecting its functional groups and causing partial fragmentation. Some of these chemical modifications, like the generation of organic peroxide, are likely responsible for the secondary generation, Peer Reviewed, Postprint (author's final draft)
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- 2023
200. Hydrogels as models to evaluate the effect of non ther mal plasma treatment on living tissues
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Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Doctorat en Ciència i Enginyeria dels Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Tampieri, Francesco, Pascual Tomico, Laura, Arcoria, Alfio Giuseppe, Canal Barnils, Cristina, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Doctorat en Ciència i Enginyeria dels Materials, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits, Tampieri, Francesco, Pascual Tomico, Laura, Arcoria, Alfio Giuseppe, and Canal Barnils, Cristina
- Abstract
Objectius de Desenvolupament Sostenible::3 - Salut i Benestar, Postprint (published version)
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- 2023
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