32 results on '"Clari R"'
Search Results
2. Vegan–vegetarian diets in pregnancy: danger or panacea? A systematic narrative review
- Author
-
Piccoli, G B, Clari, R, Vigotti, F N, Leone, F, Attini, R, Cabiddu, G, Mauro, G, Castelluccia, N, Colombi, N, Capizzi, I, Pani, A, Todros, T, and Avagnina, P
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Cluster analysis identifies distinct pathogenetic patterns in c3 glomerulopathies/immune complex–Mediated membranoproliferative GN
- Author
-
Iatropoulos, P, Daina, E, Curreri, M, Piras, R, Valoti, E, Mele, C, Bresin, E, Gamba, S, Alberti, M, Breno, M, Perna, A, Bettoni, S, Sabadini, E, Murer, L, Vivarelli, M, Noris, M, Remuzzi, G, Bottanelli, L, Donadelli, R, Cuccarolo, P, Abbate, M, Carrara, C, Cannata, A, Ferrari, S, Gaspari, F, Stucchi, N, Bassani, C, Lena, M, Omati, G, Taruscia, D, Bellantuono, R, Giordano, M, Messina, G, Caruso, M, Gotti, E, Mescia, F, Perticucci, E, Schieppati, A, Verdoni, L, Berto, M, Baraldi, O, Montini, G, Pasini, A, Passler, W, Degasperi, T, Gaggiotti, M, Gregorini, G, Miglietti, N, Guarnieri, A, Cirami, L, Roperto, R, Di Giorgio, G, Barbano, G, Innocenti, M, Ghiggeri, G, Magnasco, A, Rolla, D, Casartelli, D, Lambertini, D, Maggio, M, Cosci, P, Conti, G, Amar, K, Ardissino, G, Marinosci, A, Sinico, R, Montoli, A, Bonucchi, D, Facchini, F, Furci, L, Ferretti, A, Nuzzi, F, Pecoraro, C, Visciano, B, Canavese, C, Radin, E, Stratta, P, Nordio, M, Benetti, E, Parolin, M, Alberici, F, Manenti, L, Brugnano, R, Manenti, F, Capitanini, A, Emma, F, Massella, L, Rosa, M, Mazzon, M, Basso, E, Besso, L, Lavacca, A, Mella, A, Bertero, M, Coppo, R, Peruzzi, L, Porcellini, M, Piccoli, G, Clari, R, Pasi, A, Gangemi, C, Alfandary, H, Dagan, A, Conceiçao, M, Sameiro, F, Croze, L, Malvezzi, P, Tsygin, A, Zelan, B, Nastasi, N, Iatropoulos, Paraskevas, Daina, Erica, Curreri, Manuela, Piras, Rossella, Valoti, Elisabetta, Mele, Caterina, Bresin, Elena, Gamba, Sara, Alberti, Marta, Breno, Matteo, Perna, Annalisa, Bettoni, Serena, Sabadini, Ettore, Murer, Luisa, Vivarelli, Marina, Noris, Marina, Remuzzi, Giuseppe, Bottanelli, L., Donadelli, R., Cuccarolo, P., Abbate, M., Carrara, C., Cannata, A., Ferrari, S., Gaspari, F., Stucchi, N., Bassani, C., Lena, M., Omati, G., Taruscia, D., Bellantuono, R., Giordano, M., Messina, G., Caruso, M., Gotti, E., Mescia, F., Perticucci, E., Schieppati, A., Verdoni, L., Berto, M., Baraldi, O., Montini, G., Pasini, A., Passler, W., Degasperi, T., Gaggiotti, M., Gregorini, G., Miglietti, N., Guarnieri, A., Cirami, L., Roperto, R. M., Di Giorgio, G., Barbano, G., Innocenti, M. L. D., Ghiggeri, G. M., Magnasco, A., Rolla, D., Casartelli, D., Lambertini, D., Maggio, M., Cosci, P. M., Conti, G., Amar, K., Ardissino, G., Marinosci, A., Sinico, R. A., Montoli, A., Bonucchi, D., Facchini, F., Furci, L., Ferretti, A., Nuzzi, F., Pecoraro, C., Visciano, B., Canavese, C., Radin, E., Stratta, P., Nordio, M., Benetti, E., Parolin, M., Alberici, F., Manenti, L., Brugnano, R., Manenti, F., Capitanini, A., Emma, F., Massella, L., Rosa, M., Mazzon, M., Basso, E., Besso, L., Lavacca, A., Mella, A., Bertero, M., Coppo, R., Peruzzi, L., Porcellini, M. G., Piccoli, G. B., Clari, R., Pasi, A., Gangemi, C., Alfandary, H., Dagan, A., Conceiçao, M., Sameiro, F. M., Croze, L., Malvezzi, P., Tsygin, A., Zelan, B., Nastasi, null, Iatropoulos, P, Daina, E, Curreri, M, Piras, R, Valoti, E, Mele, C, Bresin, E, Gamba, S, Alberti, M, Breno, M, Perna, A, Bettoni, S, Sabadini, E, Murer, L, Vivarelli, M, Noris, M, Remuzzi, G, Bottanelli, L, Donadelli, R, Cuccarolo, P, Abbate, M, Carrara, C, Cannata, A, Ferrari, S, Gaspari, F, Stucchi, N, Bassani, C, Lena, M, Omati, G, Taruscia, D, Bellantuono, R, Giordano, M, Messina, G, Caruso, M, Gotti, E, Mescia, F, Perticucci, E, Schieppati, A, Verdoni, L, Berto, M, Baraldi, O, Montini, G, Pasini, A, Passler, W, Degasperi, T, Gaggiotti, M, Gregorini, G, Miglietti, N, Guarnieri, A, Cirami, L, Roperto, R, Di Giorgio, G, Barbano, G, Innocenti, M, Ghiggeri, G, Magnasco, A, Rolla, D, Casartelli, D, Lambertini, D, Maggio, M, Cosci, P, Conti, G, Amar, K, Ardissino, G, Marinosci, A, Sinico, R, Montoli, A, Bonucchi, D, Facchini, F, Furci, L, Ferretti, A, Nuzzi, F, Pecoraro, C, Visciano, B, Canavese, C, Radin, E, Stratta, P, Nordio, M, Benetti, E, Parolin, M, Alberici, F, Manenti, L, Brugnano, R, Manenti, F, Capitanini, A, Emma, F, Massella, L, Rosa, M, Mazzon, M, Basso, E, Besso, L, Lavacca, A, Mella, A, Bertero, M, Coppo, R, Peruzzi, L, Porcellini, M, Piccoli, G, Clari, R, Pasi, A, Gangemi, C, Alfandary, H, Dagan, A, Conceiçao, M, Sameiro, F, Croze, L, Malvezzi, P, Tsygin, A, Zelan, B, Nastasi, N, Iatropoulos, Paraskevas, Daina, Erica, Curreri, Manuela, Piras, Rossella, Valoti, Elisabetta, Mele, Caterina, Bresin, Elena, Gamba, Sara, Alberti, Marta, Breno, Matteo, Perna, Annalisa, Bettoni, Serena, Sabadini, Ettore, Murer, Luisa, Vivarelli, Marina, Noris, Marina, Remuzzi, Giuseppe, Bottanelli, L., Donadelli, R., Cuccarolo, P., Abbate, M., Carrara, C., Cannata, A., Ferrari, S., Gaspari, F., Stucchi, N., Bassani, C., Lena, M., Omati, G., Taruscia, D., Bellantuono, R., Giordano, M., Messina, G., Caruso, M., Gotti, E., Mescia, F., Perticucci, E., Schieppati, A., Verdoni, L., Berto, M., Baraldi, O., Montini, G., Pasini, A., Passler, W., Degasperi, T., Gaggiotti, M., Gregorini, G., Miglietti, N., Guarnieri, A., Cirami, L., Roperto, R. M., Di Giorgio, G., Barbano, G., Innocenti, M. L. D., Ghiggeri, G. M., Magnasco, A., Rolla, D., Casartelli, D., Lambertini, D., Maggio, M., Cosci, P. M., Conti, G., Amar, K., Ardissino, G., Marinosci, A., Sinico, R. A., Montoli, A., Bonucchi, D., Facchini, F., Furci, L., Ferretti, A., Nuzzi, F., Pecoraro, C., Visciano, B., Canavese, C., Radin, E., Stratta, P., Nordio, M., Benetti, E., Parolin, M., Alberici, F., Manenti, L., Brugnano, R., Manenti, F., Capitanini, A., Emma, F., Massella, L., Rosa, M., Mazzon, M., Basso, E., Besso, L., Lavacca, A., Mella, A., Bertero, M., Coppo, R., Peruzzi, L., Porcellini, M. G., Piccoli, G. B., Clari, R., Pasi, A., Gangemi, C., Alfandary, H., Dagan, A., Conceiçao, M., Sameiro, F. M., Croze, L., Malvezzi, P., Tsygin, A., Zelan, B., and Nastasi, null
- Abstract
Membranoproliferative GN (MPGN) was recently reclassified as alternative pathway complement–mediated C3 glomerulopathy (C3G) and immune complex–mediated membranoproliferative GN (IC-MPGN). However, genetic and acquired alternative pathway abnormalities are also observed in IC-MPGN. Here, we explored the presence of distinct disease entities characterized by specific pathophysiologic mechanisms. We performed unsupervised hierarchical clustering, a data-driven statistical approach, on histologic, genetic, and clinical data and data regarding serum/plasma complement parameters from 173 patients with C3G/IC-MPGN. This approach divided patients into four clusters, indicating the existence of four different pathogenetic patterns. Specifically, this analysis separated patients with fluid-phase complement activation (clusters 1–3) who had low serum C3 levels and a high prevalence of genetic and acquired alternative pathway abnormalities from patients with solid-phase complement activation (cluster 4) who had normal or mildly altered serum C3, late disease onset, and poor renal survival. In patients with fluid-phase complement activation, those in clusters 1 and 2 had massive activation of the alternative pathway, including activation of the terminal pathway, and the highest prevalence of subendothelial deposits, but those in cluster 2 had additional activation of the classic pathway and the highest prevalence of nephrotic syndrome at disease onset. Patients in cluster 3 had prevalent activation of C3 convertase and highly electron-dense intramembranous deposits. In addition, we provide a simple algorithm to assign patients with C3G/IC-MPGN to specific clusters. These distinct clusters may facilitate clarification of disease etiology, improve risk assessment for ESRD, and pave the way for personalized treatment.
- Published
- 2018
4. Risk of acute arterial and venous thromboembolic events in eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Churg-Strauss syndrome)
- Author
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Bettiol, A., Sinico, R. A., Schiavon, F., Monti, S., Bozzolo, E. P., Franceschini, F., Govoni, M., Lunardi, C., Guida, G., Lopalco, G., Paolazzi, G., Vacca, A., Gregorini, G., Leccese, P., Piga, M., Conti, F., Fraticelli, P., Quartuccio, L., Alberici, F., Salvarani, C., Bettio, S., Negrini, S., Selmi, C., Sciascia, S., Moroni, G., Colla, L., Manno, C., Urban, M. L., Vannacci, A., Pozzi, M. R., Fabbrini, P., Polti, S., Felicetti, M., Marchi, M. R., Padoan, R., Delvino, P., Caporali, R., Montecucco, C., Dagna, L., Cariddi, A., Toniati, P., Tamanini, S., Furini, F., Bortoluzzi, A., Tinazzi, E., Delfino, L., Badiu, I., Rolla, G., Venerito, V., Iannone, F., Berti, A., Bortolotti, R., Racanelli, V., Jeannin, G., Padula, A., Cauli, A., Priori, R., Gabrielli, A., Bond, M., Tedesco, M., Pazzola, G., Tomietto, P., Pellecchio, M., Marvisi, C., Maritati, F., Palmisano, A., Dejaco, C., Willeit, J., Kiechl, S., Olivotto, I., Willeit, P., Prisco, D., Vaglio, A., Emmi, G., Bargagli, E., Becatti, M., Beccalli, M., Bello, F., Bozzao, F., Canti, V., Cassia, M. A., Cassone, G., Catanoso, M., Chieco-Bianchi, F., Clari, R., Coladonato, L., De Santis, M., Di Scala, G., Fagni, F., Fenaroli, P., Fiorillo, C., Floris, A., Fornaro, M., Galli, E., Generali, E., Giliberti, M., Lascaro, N., Leccese, I., Mattioli, I., Olivieri, B., Osti, N., Peyronel, F., Radin, M., Righetti, G., Salvati, S., Silvestri, E., Susca, N., Tamburini, C., Taurisano, G., Trezzi, B., Trivioli, G., Bettiol, A, Sinico, R, Schiavon, F, Monti, S, Bozzolo, E, Franceschini, F, Govoni, M, Lunardi, C, Guida, G, Lopalco, G, Paolazzi, G, Vacca, A, Gregorini, G, Leccese, P, Piga, M, Conti, F, Fraticelli, P, Quartuccio, L, Alberici, F, Salvarani, C, Bettio, S, Negrini, S, Selmi, C, Sciascia, S, Moroni, G, Colla, L, Manno, C, Urban, M, Vannacci, A, Pozzi, M, Fabbrini, P, Polti, S, Felicetti, M, Marchi, M, Padoan, R, Delvino, P, Caporali, R, Montecucco, C, Dagna, L, Cariddi, A, Toniati, P, Tamanini, S, Furini, F, Bortoluzzi, A, Tinazzi, E, Delfino, L, Badiu, I, Rolla, G, Venerito, V, Iannone, F, Berti, A, Bortolotti, R, Racanelli, V, Jeannin, G, Padula, A, Cauli, A, Priori, R, Gabrielli, A, Bond, M, Tedesco, M, Pazzola, G, Tomietto, P, Pellecchio, M, Marvisi, C, Maritati, F, Palmisano, A, Dejaco, C, Willeit, J, Kiechl, S, Olivotto, I, Willeit, P, Prisco, D, Vaglio, A, and Emmi, G
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Burden of disease ,Humans ,Churg-Strauss Syndrome ,Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis ,Venous Thromboembolism ,Venous Thrombosis ,Churg-strauss syndrome ,Criminology ,NO ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Vascular inflammation ,business.industry ,Conflict of interest ,Cytoplasmic antibody ,medicine.disease ,030228 respiratory system ,Wegener granulomatosis ,arterial and venous thromboembolic events, Eosinophilic Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (Churg-Strauss syndrome) ,Organ involvement ,business ,Production team - Abstract
Eosinophilic Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (EGPA, Churg-Strauss syndrome) is a rare anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV) characterised by respiratory manifestations and systemic organ involvement [1]. Particularly, cardiac manifestations occur in 40–60% of patients, representing the leading cause of mortality [2]. Recent reports suggest that venous thromboembolic events might also represent a consistent burden of disease [3, 4], as already known for the other AAVs [5–7], possibly due to eosinophil-mediated vascular inflammation [5]. Nevertheless, the occurrence of arterial and venous thrombotic events (AVTE) has never been systematically explored in EGPA. Footnotes This manuscript has recently been accepted for publication in the European Respiratory Journal . It is published here in its accepted form prior to copyediting and typesetting by our production team. After these production processes are complete and the authors have approved the resulting proofs, the article will move to the latest issue of the ERJ online. Please open or download the PDF to view this article. Conflict of interest: Alessandra Bettiol Conflict of interest: Renato Alberto Sinico Conflict of interest: Franco Schiavon Conflict of interest: Sara Monti Conflict of interest: Enrica Paola Bozzolo Conflict of interest: Franco Franceschini Conflict of interest: Marcello Govoni Conflict of interest: Claudio Lunardi Conflict of interest: Giuseppe Guida Conflict of interest: Giuseppe Lopalco Conflict of interest: Giuseppe Paolazzi Conflict of interest: Angelo Vacca Conflict of interest: Gina Gregorini Conflict of interest: Pietro Leccese Conflict of interest: Matteo Piga Conflict of interest: Fabrizio Conti Conflict of interest: Paolo Fraticelli Conflict of interest: Luca Quartuccio Conflict of interest: Federico Alberici Conflict of interest: Carlo Salvarani Conflict of interest: Silvano Bettio Conflict of interest: Simone Negrini Conflict of interest: Carlo Selmi Conflict of interest: Savino Sciascia Conflict of interest: Gabriella Moroni Conflict of interest: Loredana Colla Conflict of interest: Carlo Manno Conflict of interest: Maria Letizia Urban Conflict of interest: Alfredo Vannacci Conflict of interest: Maria Rosa Pozzi Conflict of interest: Paolo Fabbrini Conflict of interest: Stefano Polti Conflict of interest: Mara Felicetti Conflict of interest: Maria Rita Marchi Conflict of interest: Roberto Padoan Conflict of interest: Paolo Delvino Conflict of interest: Roberto Caporali Conflict of interest: Carlomaurizio Montecucco Conflict of interest: Lorenzo Dagna Conflict of interest: Adriana Cariddi Conflict of interest: Paola Toniati Conflict of interest: Dr. Tamanini reports other from Glaxo Smith Kline, outside the submitted work. Conflict of interest: Federica Furini Conflict of interest: Alessandra Bortoluzzi Conflict of interest: Elisa Tinazzi Conflict of interest: Lorenzo Delfino Conflict of interest: Iuliana Badiu Conflict of interest: Giovanni Rolla Conflict of interest: Vincenzo Venerito Conflict of interest: Florenzo Iannone Conflict of interest: Alvise Berti Conflict of interest: Roberto Bortolotti Conflict of interest: Vito Racanelli Conflict of interest: Guido Jeannin Conflict of interest: Angela Padula Conflict of interest: Alberto Cauli Conflict of interest: Roberta Priori Conflict of interest: Armando Gabrielli Conflict of interest: Milena Bond Conflict of interest: Martina Tedesco Conflict of interest: Giulia Pazzola Conflict of interest: Paola Tomietto Conflict of interest: Marco Pellecchio Conflict of interest: Chiara Marvisi Conflict of interest: Federica Maritati Conflict of interest: Alessandra Palmisano Conflict of interest: Christian Dejaco Conflict of interest: Johann Willeit Conflict of interest: Stefan Kiechl Conflict of interest: Iacopo Olivotto Conflict of interest: Peter Willeit Conflict of interest: Domenico Prisco Conflict of interest: Augusto Vaglio Conflict of interest: Giacomo Emmi
- Published
- 2020
5. Cluster Analysis Identifies Distinct Pathogenetic Patterns in C3 Glomerulopathies/Immune Complex–Mediated Membranoproliferative GN
- Author
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Iatropoulos, Paraskevas, Daina, Erica, Curreri, Manuela, Piras, Rossella, Valoti, Elisabetta, Mele, Caterina, Bresin, Elena, Gamba, Sara, Alberti, Marta, Breno, Matteo, Perna, Annalisa, Bettoni, Serena, Sabadini, Ettore, Murer, Luisa, Vivarelli, Marina, Noris, Marina, Remuzzi, Giuseppe, Bottanelli, L., Donadelli, R., Cuccarolo, P., Abbate, M., Carrara, C., Cannata, A., Ferrari, S., Gaspari, F., Stucchi, N., Bassani, C., Lena, M., Omati, G., Taruscia, D., Bellantuono, R., Giordano, M., Messina, G., Caruso, M., Gotti, E., Mescia, F., Perticucci, E., Schieppati, A., Verdoni, L., Berto, M., Baraldi, O., Montini, G., Pasini, A., Passler, W., Degasperi, T., Gaggiotti, M., Gregorini, G., Miglietti, N., Guarnieri, A., Cirami, L., Roperto, R. M., Di Giorgio, G., Barbano, G., Innocenti, M. L. D., Ghiggeri, G. M., Magnasco, A., Rolla, D., Casartelli, D., Lambertini, D., Maggio, M., Cosci, P. M., Conti, G., Amar, K., Ardissino, G., Marinosci, A., Sinico, R. A., Montoli, A., Bonucchi, D., Facchini, F., Furci, L., Ferretti, A., Nuzzi, F., Pecoraro, C., Visciano, B., Canavese, C., Radin, E., Stratta, P., Nordio, M., Benetti, E., Parolin, M., Alberici, F., Manenti, L., Brugnano, R., Manenti, F., Capitanini, A., Emma, F., Massella, L., Rosa, M., Mazzon, M., Basso, E., Besso, L., Lavacca, A., Mella, A., Bertero, M., Coppo, R., Peruzzi, L., Porcellini, M. G., Piccoli, G. B., Clari, R., Pasi, A., Gangemi, C., Alfandary, H., Dagan, A., Conceiçao, M., Sameiro, F. M., Croze, L., Malvezzi, P., Tsygin, A., Zelan, B., Nastasi, null, Iatropoulos, P, Daina, E, Curreri, M, Piras, R, Valoti, E, Mele, C, Bresin, E, Gamba, S, Alberti, M, Breno, M, Perna, A, Bettoni, S, Sabadini, E, Murer, L, Vivarelli, M, Noris, M, Remuzzi, G, Bottanelli, L, Donadelli, R, Cuccarolo, P, Abbate, M, Carrara, C, Cannata, A, Ferrari, S, Gaspari, F, Stucchi, N, Bassani, C, Lena, M, Omati, G, Taruscia, D, Bellantuono, R, Giordano, M, Messina, G, Caruso, M, Gotti, E, Mescia, F, Perticucci, E, Schieppati, A, Verdoni, L, Berto, M, Baraldi, O, Montini, G, Pasini, A, Passler, W, Degasperi, T, Gaggiotti, M, Gregorini, G, Miglietti, N, Guarnieri, A, Cirami, L, Roperto, R, Di Giorgio, G, Barbano, G, Innocenti, M, Ghiggeri, G, Magnasco, A, Rolla, D, Casartelli, D, Lambertini, D, Maggio, M, Cosci, P, Conti, G, Amar, K, Ardissino, G, Marinosci, A, Sinico, R, Montoli, A, Bonucchi, D, Facchini, F, Furci, L, Ferretti, A, Nuzzi, F, Pecoraro, C, Visciano, B, Canavese, C, Radin, E, Stratta, P, Nordio, M, Benetti, E, Parolin, M, Alberici, F, Manenti, L, Brugnano, R, Manenti, F, Capitanini, A, Emma, F, Massella, L, Rosa, M, Mazzon, M, Basso, E, Besso, L, Lavacca, A, Mella, A, Bertero, M, Coppo, R, Peruzzi, L, Porcellini, M, Piccoli, G, Clari, R, Pasi, A, Gangemi, C, Alfandary, H, Dagan, A, Conceiçao, M, Sameiro, F, Croze, L, Malvezzi, P, Tsygin, A, Zelan, B, and Nastasi, N
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Complement system ,Glomerulonephritis, Membranoproliferative ,membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Disease ,Antigen-Antibody Complex ,Biology ,Kidney ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Glomerulopathy ,Clinical Research ,medicine ,Dense Deposit Disease ,Humans ,C3 glomerulopathy ,General Medicine ,Complement System Proteins ,C3 glomerulonephriti ,medicine.disease ,C3-convertase ,Immune complex ,030104 developmental biology ,Nephrology ,Immunology ,Alternative complement pathway ,Nephrotic syndrome ,Rare disease - Abstract
Membranoproliferative GN (MPGN) was recently reclassified as alternative pathway complement–mediated C3 glomerulopathy (C3G) and immune complex–mediated membranoproliferative GN (IC-MPGN). However, genetic and acquired alternative pathway abnormalities are also observed in IC-MPGN. Here, we explored the presence of distinct disease entities characterized by specific pathophysiologic mechanisms. We performed unsupervised hierarchical clustering, a data-driven statistical approach, on histologic, genetic, and clinical data and data regarding serum/plasma complement parameters from 173 patients with C3G/IC-MPGN. This approach divided patients into four clusters, indicating the existence of four different pathogenetic patterns. Specifically, this analysis separated patients with fluid-phase complement activation (clusters 1–3) who had low serum C3 levels and a high prevalence of genetic and acquired alternative pathway abnormalities from patients with solid-phase complement activation (cluster 4) who had normal or mildly altered serum C3, late disease onset, and poor renal survival. In patients with fluid-phase complement activation, those in clusters 1 and 2 had massive activation of the alternative pathway, including activation of the terminal pathway, and the highest prevalence of subendothelial deposits, but those in cluster 2 had additional activation of the classic pathway and the highest prevalence of nephrotic syndrome at disease onset. Patients in cluster 3 had prevalent activation of C3 convertase and highly electron-dense intramembranous deposits. In addition, we provide a simple algorithm to assign patients with C3G/IC-MPGN to specific clusters. These distinct clusters may facilitate clarification of disease etiology, improve risk assessment for ESRD, and pave the way for personalized treatment.
- Published
- 2017
6. WHAT ABOUT THE CHILDREN BORN TO MOTHERS ON VEGAN LOW-PROTEIN SUPPLEMENTED DIETS IN PREGNANCY?
- Author
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Vigotti, FEDERICA NEVE, Attini, Rossella, Parisi, Silvia, Fassio, F, Deagostini, MARIA CHIARA, Ghiotto, S, Ferraresi, Martina, Clari, R, Biolcati, Marilisa, Todros, Tullia, and Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
- Published
- 2013
7. Eco-friendly dialysis with the Systemic Design methodology: an eco-friendly dialysis may start from 'the grave'
- Author
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Ferraresi, M., Pereno, Amina, Nazha, M., Castelluccia, N., Clari, R., Moro, I., Colombi, N., Di Giorgio, G., Barbero, Silvia, and Piccoli, G. B.
- Published
- 2013
8. PARATHYROID HORMONE PROFILING FOR OPTIMIZATION OF CALCIUM CONTENT IN DIALYSATE IN SEVERE HYPERPARATHYROIDISM, IN TAILORED, INCREMENTAL HEMODIALYSIS
- Author
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Di Vico MC, Ferraresi, Martina, Pia, A, Aroasio, E, Gonella, S, Mongilardi, E, Clari, R, Moro, I, and Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
- Published
- 2013
9. THE LAST WILL BE FIRST .... A FLEXIBLE APPROACH FOR RESTARTING HOME HEMODIALYSIS
- Author
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Ferraresi, Martina, DI VICO, MARIA CRISTINA, Vigotti, FEDERICA NEVE, Deagostini, MARIA CHIARA, Scognamiglio, S, Consiglio, V, Clari, R, Moro, I, Mongilardi, Elena, and Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
- Published
- 2013
10. CKD LAB METHODS, PROGRESSION & RISK FACTORS 1
- Author
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Heisterkamp, M., primary, Titze, S., additional, Lorenzen, J., additional, Eckardt, K.-U., additional, Koettgen, A., additional, Kielstein, J. T., additional, Bouquegneau, A., additional, Vidal-Petiot, E., additional, Vrtovsnik, F., additional, Cavalier, E., additional, Krzesinski, J. M., additional, Flamant, M., additional, Delanaye, P., additional, Anguiano, L., additional, Riera, M., additional, Pascual, J., additional, Barrios, C., additional, Betriu, A., additional, Valdivielso, J. M., additional, Fernandez, E., additional, Soler, M. J., additional, Denys, M.-A., additional, Viaene, A., additional, Goessaert, A.-S., additional, Delanghe, J., additional, Everaert, K., additional, Kim, Y. S., additional, Choi, M. J., additional, Deok, J. Y., additional, Kim, S. G., additional, Bevc, S., additional, Hojs, N., additional, Hojs, R., additional, Ekart, R., additional, Gorenjak, M., additional, Puklavec, L., additional, Piskunowicz, M., additional, Hofmann, L., additional, Zurcher, E., additional, Bassi, I., additional, Zweiacker, C., additional, Stuber, M., additional, Narkiewicz, K., additional, Vogt, B., additional, Burnier, M., additional, Pruijm, M., additional, Rusu, E., additional, Zilisteanu, D., additional, Atasie, T., additional, Circiumaru, A., additional, Carstea, F., additional, Ecobici, M., additional, Rosca, M., additional, Tanase, C., additional, Mihai, S., additional, Voiculescu, M., additional, Jeon, Y. D., additional, Polenakovic, M., additional, Pop-Jordanova, N., additional, Hung, S.-C., additional, Tarng, D.-C., additional, Tuta, L., additional, Stanigut, A., additional, Mesiano, P., additional, Rollino, C., additional, Ferro, M., additional, Beltrame, G., additional, Massara, C., additional, Quattrocchio, G., additional, Borca, M., additional, Bazzan, M., additional, Roccatello, D., additional, Maksudova, A., additional, Urasaeva, L. I., additional, Khalfina, T. N., additional, Tekce, H., additional, Kin Tekce, B., additional, Aktas, G., additional, Alcelik, A., additional, Sengul, E., additional, Lindic, J., additional, Purg, D., additional, Skamen, J., additional, Krsnik, M., additional, Skoberne, A., additional, Pajek, J., additional, Kveder, R., additional, Bren, A., additional, Kovac, D., additional, Delgado, G., additional, Drechsler, C., additional, Wanner, C., additional, Blouin, K., additional, Pilz, S., additional, Tomaschitz, A., additional, Kleber, M. E., additional, Willmes, C., additional, Krane, V., additional, Marz, W., additional, Ritz, E., additional, Van Gilst, W. H., additional, Van Der Harst, P., additional, De Boer, R. A., additional, Scholze, A., additional, Petersen, L., additional, Hocher, B., additional, Rasmussen, L. M., additional, Tepel, M., additional, De Paula, E. A., additional, Vanelli, C. P., additional, Caminhas, M. S., additional, Soares, B. C., additional, Bassoli, F. A., additional, Da Costa, D. M. N., additional, Lanna, C. M. M., additional, Galil, A. G. S., additional, Colugnati, F. A. B., additional, Costa, M. B., additional, Bastos, M. G., additional, De Paula, R. B., additional, Santoro, D., additional, Zappulla, Z., additional, Alibrandi, A., additional, Tomasello Andulajevic, M., additional, Licari, M., additional, Baldari, S., additional, Buemi, M., additional, Cernaro, V., additional, Campenni, A., additional, Pallet, N., additional, Chauvet, S., additional, Levi, C., additional, Meas-Yedid, V., additional, Beaune, P., additional, Thevet, E., additional, Karras, A., additional, Santos, S., additional, Malheiro, J., additional, Campos, A., additional, Pedroso, S., additional, Santos, J., additional, Cabrita, A., additional, Mayor, M. M., additional, Ayala, R., additional, Ramos, C., additional, Franco, S., additional, Guillen, R., additional, Kim, J. S., additional, Yang, J. W., additional, Han, B. G., additional, Choi, S. O., additional, Tudor, M.-N., additional, Navajas Martinez, M. F., additional, Vaduva, C., additional, Maria, D. T., additional, Mota, E., additional, Clari, R., additional, Mongilardi, E., additional, Vigotti, F. N., additional, Consiglio, V., additional, Scognamiglio, S., additional, Nazha, M., additional, Roggero, S., additional, Piga, A., additional, Piccoli, G., additional, Mukhopadhyay, P., additional, Patar, K., additional, Chaterjee, N., additional, and Ganguly, K., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Vegetarian low-protein diets supplemented with keto analogues: a niche for the few or an option for many?
- Author
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Piccoli, G. B., primary, Ferraresi, M., additional, Deagostini, M. C., additional, Vigotti, F. N., additional, Consiglio, V., additional, Scognamiglio, S., additional, Moro, I., additional, Clari, R., additional, Fassio, F., additional, Biolcati, M., additional, and Porpiglia, F., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. CKD-MBD II
- Author
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Fujii, T., primary, Suzuki, S., additional, Shinozaki, M., additional, Tanaka, H., additional, Bell, S., additional, Cooper, S., additional, Lomonte, C., additional, Libutti, P., additional, Chimienti, D., additional, Casucci, F., additional, Bruno, A., additional, Antonelli, M., additional, Lisi, P., additional, Cocola, L., additional, Basile, C., additional, Negri, A., additional, Del Valle, E., additional, Zanchetta, M., additional, Zanchetta, J., additional, Di Vico, M. C., additional, Ferraresi, M., additional, Pia, A., additional, Aroasio, E., additional, Gonella, S., additional, Mongilardi, E., additional, Clari, R., additional, Moro, I., additional, Piccoli, G. B., additional, Gonzalez-Parra, E., additional, Rodriguez-Osorio, L., additional, Ortiz-Arduan, A., additional, de la Piedra, C., additional, Egido, J., additional, Perez Gomez, M. V., additional, Tabikh, A. A., additional, Afsar, B., additional, Kirkpantur, A., additional, Imanishi, Y., additional, Yamagata, M., additional, Nagata, Y., additional, Ohara, M., additional, Michigami, T., additional, Yukimura, T., additional, Inaba, M., additional, Bieber, B., additional, Robinson, B., additional, Mariani, L., additional, Jacobson, S., additional, Frimat, L., additional, Bommer, J., additional, Pisoni, R., additional, Tentori, F., additional, Ciceri, P., additional, Elli, F., additional, Brancaccio, D., additional, Cozzolino, M., additional, Adamczak, M., additional, Wiecek, A., additional, Kuczera, P., additional, Sezer, S., additional, Bal, Z., additional, Tutal, E., additional, Kal, O., additional, Yavuz, D., additional, Y ld r m, I., additional, Sayin, B., additional, Ozelsancak, R., additional, Ozkurt, S., additional, Turk, S., additional, Ozdemir, N., additional, Lehmann, R., additional, Roesel, M., additional, Fritz, P., additional, Braun, N., additional, Ulmer, C., additional, Steurer, W., additional, Dagmar, B., additional, Ott, G., additional, Dippon, J., additional, Alscher, D., additional, Kimmel, M., additional, Latus, J., additional, Turkvatan, A., additional, Balci, M., additional, Mandiroglu, S., additional, Seloglu, B., additional, Alkis, M., additional, Serin, M., additional, Calik, Y., additional, Erkula, S., additional, Gorboz, H., additional, Mandiroglu, F., additional, Lindley, E., additional, Cruz Casal, M., additional, Rogers, S., additional, Pancirova, J., additional, Kernc, J., additional, Copley, J. B., additional, Fouque, D., additional, Kiss, I., additional, Kiss, Z., additional, Szabo, A., additional, Szegedi, J., additional, Balla, J., additional, Ladanyi, E., additional, Csiky, B., additional, orkossy, O., additional, Torok, M., additional, Turi, S., additional, Ambrus, C., additional, Deak, G., additional, Tisler, A., additional, Kulcsar, I., additional, K d r, V., additional, Altuntas, A., additional, Akp nar, A., additional, Orhan, H., additional, Sezer, M., additional, Filiopoulos, V., additional, Manolios, N., additional, Arvanitis, D., additional, Pani, I., additional, Panagiotopoulos, K., additional, Vlassopoulos, D., additional, Rodriguez-Ortiz, M. E., additional, Canalejo, A., additional, Herencia, C., additional, Martinez-Moreno, J. M., additional, Peralta-Ramirez, A., additional, Perez-Martinez, P., additional, Navarro-Gonzalez, J. F., additional, Rodriguez, M., additional, Peter, M., additional, Gundlach, K., additional, Steppan, S., additional, Passlick-Deetjen, J., additional, Munoz-Castaneda, J. R., additional, Almaden, Y., additional, Rodriguez-Ortiz, M., additional, Martinez-Moreno, J., additional, Lopez, I., additional, Aguilera-Tejero, E., additional, Hanafusa, N., additional, Masakane, I., additional, Ito, S., additional, Nakai, S., additional, Maeda, K., additional, Suzuki, H., additional, Tsunoda, M., additional, Ikee, R., additional, Sasaki, N., additional, Sato, M., additional, Hashimoto, N., additional, Wang, M.-H., additional, Hung, K.-Y., additional, Chiang, C.-K., additional, Huang, J.-W., additional, Lu, K.-C., additional, Lang, C.-L., additional, Okano, K., additional, Yamashita, T., additional, Tsuruta, Y., additional, Hibi, A., additional, Miwa, N., additional, Kimata, N., additional, Tsuchiya, K., additional, Nitta, K., additional, Akiba, T., additional, Harb, L., additional, Komaba, H., additional, Kakuta, T., additional, Suga, T., additional, Fukagawa, M., additional, Kikuchi, H., additional, Shimada, H., additional, Karasawa, R., additional, Suzuki, M., additional, Zhelyazkova-Savova, M., additional, Gerova, D., additional, Paskalev, D., additional, Ikonomov, V., additional, Zortcheva, R., additional, Galunska, B., additional, Jean, G., additional, Deleaval, P., additional, Hurot, J.-M., additional, Lorriaux, C., additional, Mayor, B., additional, Chazot, C., additional, Vannucchi, H., additional, Vannucchi, M. T., additional, Martins, J. C., additional, Merino, J. L., additional, Teruel, J. L., additional, Fernandez-Lucas, M., additional, Villafruela, J. J., additional, Bueno, B., additional, Gomis, A., additional, Paraiso, V., additional, Quereda, C., additional, Ibrahim, F. H., additional, Fadhlina, N. Z., additional, Ng, E. K., additional, Thong, K. M., additional, Goh, B. L., additional, Sulaiman, D. M., additional, Fatimah, D. A. N., additional, Evi, D. O., additional, Siti, S. R., additional, Wilson, R. J., additional, Keith, M., additional, Gros, B., additional, Galan, A., additional, Herrero, J. A., additional, Oyaguez, I., additional, Casado, M. A., additional, Lucisano, S., additional, Coppolino, G., additional, Villari, A., additional, Cernaro, V., additional, Lupica, R., additional, Trimboli, D., additional, Aloisi, C., additional, and Buemi, M., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Extracorporeal dialysis: techniques and adequacy - A
- Author
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Steckiph, D., primary, Calabrese, G., additional, Bertucci, A., additional, Mazzotta, A., additional, Vagelli, G., additional, Gonella, M., additional, Stamopoulos, D., additional, Manios, E., additional, Papachristos, N., additional, Grapsa, E., additional, Papageorgiou, G., additional, Gogola, V., additional, So, B., additional, Dey, V., additional, Spalding, E. M., additional, Libetta, C., additional, Esposito, P., additional, Margiotta, E., additional, Maffioli, P., additional, Bonaventura, A., additional, Bianchi, L., additional, Romano, D., additional, Rampino, T., additional, De Rosa, G., additional, Mauric, A., additional, Haug, U., additional, Enzinger, G., additional, Kern-Derstvenscheg, E., additional, Sluga, A., additional, Ausserwinkler, C., additional, Beck, W., additional, Rosenkranz, A. R., additional, Maheshwari, V., additional, Haroon, S., additional, Loy, Y., additional, Samavedham, L., additional, Rangaiah, G. P., additional, Lau, T., additional, Mpakirtzi, N., additional, Panagiotou, M., additional, Barbarousi, D., additional, Matsouka, C., additional, Bunani, A. D., additional, Kowalczyk, M., additional, Bartnicki, P., additional, Banach, M., additional, Rysz, J., additional, Lentini, P., additional, Zanoli, L., additional, Granata, A., additional, Contestabile, A., additional, Basso, A., additional, Berlingo, G., additional, Pellanda, V., additional, de Cal, M., additional, Grazia, V., additional, Clementi, A., additional, Insalaco, M., additional, Dell'Aquila, R., additional, Karkar, A., additional, Abdelrahman, M., additional, Martins, A. R., additional, Parreira, L., additional, Duque, A. S., additional, Rodrigues, I., additional, Baffoun, A. B., additional, Youssfi, M. A., additional, Sayeh, A., additional, Beji, M., additional, Ben Khadra, R., additional, Hmida, J., additional, Akazawa, M., additional, Horiuchi, H., additional, Hori, Y., additional, Yamada, A., additional, Satou, H., additional, Odamaki, S., additional, Nakai, S., additional, Satou, K., additional, Aoki, K., additional, Saito, I., additional, Kamijo, Y., additional, Ogata, S., additional, Ishibashi, Y., additional, Basso, F., additional, Wojewodzka-Zelezniakowicz, M., additional, Cruz, D., additional, Giuliani, A., additional, Blanca Martos, L., additional, Piccinni, P., additional, Ronco, C., additional, Potier, J., additional, Queffeulou, G., additional, Bouet, J., additional, Nilsson, A., additional, Sternby, J., additional, Grundstrom, G., additional, Alquist, M., additional, Ferraresi, M., additional, Di Vico, M. C., additional, Vigotti, F. N., additional, Deagostini, M., additional, Scognamiglio, S., additional, Consiglio, V., additional, Clari, R., additional, Moro, I., additional, Mongilardi, E., additional, Piccoli, G. B., additional, Hancock, V., additional, Huang, S., additional, Nilsson Ekdahl, K., additional, Steckiph, D., additional, Baldin, C., additional, Petrarulo, M., additional, Mancuso, D., additional, Inguaggiato, P., additional, Canepari, G., additional, Gigliola, G., additional, Ferrando, C., additional, Meinero, S., additional, Sicuso, C., additional, Pacitti, A., additional, Afentakis, N., additional, Tomo, T., additional, Matsuyama, K., additional, Nakata, T., additional, Ishida, K., additional, Takeno, T., additional, Kadota, J.-i., additional, Minakuchi, J., additional, Kastl, J., additional, Merello, M., additional, Boccato, C., additional, Giordana, G., additional, Mazzone, S., additional, Moscardo, V., additional, Reinhardt, B., additional, Knaup, R., additional, Kruger, W., additional, Tovbin, D., additional, Kim, S., additional, Avnon, L., additional, Zlotnik, M., additional, Storch, S., additional, Umimoto, K., additional, Shimamoto, Y., additional, Suyama, M., additional, Miyata, M., additional, Bosch Benitez-Parodi, E., additional, Baamonde Laborda, E. E., additional, Perez, G., additional, Ramirez, J. I., additional, Ramirez Puga, A., additional, Guerra, R., additional, Garcia Canton, C., additional, Lago Alonso, M. M., additional, Toledo, A., additional, Checa Andres, M. D., additional, Latif, F. E., additional, Mochida, Y., additional, Matsumoto, K., additional, Morita, K., additional, Tsutsumi, D., additional, Ishioka, K., additional, Maesato, K., additional, Oka, M., additional, Moriya, H., additional, Hidaka, S., additional, Ohtake, T., additional, Kobayashi, S., additional, Ficheux, A., additional, Gayrard, N., additional, Duranton, F., additional, Guzman, C., additional, Szwarc, I., additional, Bismuth-Mondolfo, J., additional, Brunet, P., additional, Servel, M.-F., additional, Argiles, A., additional, Tsikliras, N., additional, Mademtzoglou, S., additional, Balaskas, E., additional, Zeid, M., additional, Mostafa, A., additional, Mowafy, M. N., additional, Abdo, E. I., additional, Al Amin, O. M., additional, Ksiazek, A., additional, Zaluska, W., additional, Waniewski, J., additional, Debowska, M., additional, Wojcik-Zaluska, A., additional, Elias, M., additional, Francois, H., additional, Obada, E., additional, Lorenzo, H. K., additional, Charpentier, B., additional, Durrbach, A., additional, Beaudreuil, S., additional, Imamovic, G., additional, Marcelli, D., additional, Bayh, I., additional, Hrvacevic, R., additional, Kapun, S., additional, Grassmann, A., additional, Scatizzi, L., additional, Maslovaric, J., additional, Daelemans, R., additional, Mesens, S., additional, Mohamed, E. A., additional, Wafae, A., additional, Kawtar, H., additional, Mohamed Amine, H., additional, Driss, K., additional, and Mohammed, B., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Lab methods / biomarkers
- Author
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Borras, M., primary, Roig, J., additional, Betriu, A., additional, Vilar, A., additional, Hernandez, M., additional, Martin, M., additional, Fernandez, E. D., additional, Dounousi, E., additional, Kiatou, V., additional, Papagianni, A., additional, Zikou, X., additional, Pappas, K., additional, Pappas, E., additional, Tatsioni, A., additional, Tsakiris, D., additional, Siamopoulos, K. C., additional, Kim, J.-K., additional, Kim, Y., additional, Kim, S. G., additional, Kim, H. J., additional, Ahn, S. Y., additional, Chin, H. J., additional, Oh, K.-H., additional, Ahn, C., additional, Chae, D.-W., additional, Yazici, R., additional, Altintepe, L., additional, Bakdik, S., additional, Guney, I., additional, Arslan, S., additional, Topal, M., additional, Karagoz, A., additional, Stefan, G., additional, Mircescu, G., additional, Capusa, C., additional, Stancu, S., additional, Petrescu, L., additional, Alecu, S., additional, Nedelcu, D., additional, Bennett, A. H. L., additional, Pham, H., additional, Garrity, M., additional, Magdeleyns, E., additional, Vermeer, C., additional, Zhang, M., additional, Ni, Z., additional, Zhu, M., additional, Yan, J., additional, Mou, S., additional, Wang, Q., additional, Qian, J., additional, Saade, A., additional, Karavetian, M., additional, ElZein, H., additional, de Vries, N., additional, de Haseth, D. E., additional, Lay Penne, E., additional, van Dam, B., additional, Bax, W. A., additional, Bots, M. L., additional, Grooteman, M. P. C., additional, van den Dorpel, R. A., additional, Blankenstijn, P. J., additional, Nube, M. J., additional, Wee, P. M., additional, Park, J. H., additional, Jo, Y.-I., additional, Lee, J. H., additional, Cianfrone, P., additional, Comi, N., additional, Lucisano, G., additional, Piraina, V., additional, Talarico, R., additional, Fuiano, G., additional, Toyonaga, M., additional, Fukami, K., additional, Yamagishi, S.-i., additional, Kaida, Y., additional, Nakayama, Y., additional, Ando, R., additional, Obara, N., additional, Ueda, S., additional, Okuda, S., additional, Granatova, J., additional, Havrda, M., additional, Hruskova, Z., additional, Tesar, V., additional, Viklicky, O., additional, Rysava, R., additional, Rychlik, I., additional, Kratka, K., additional, Honsova, E., additional, Vernerova, Z., additional, Maluskova, J., additional, Vranova, J., additional, Bolkova, M., additional, Borecka, K., additional, Benakova, H., additional, Zima, T., additional, Lu, K.-C., additional, Yang, H.-Y., additional, Su, S.-L., additional, Cao, Y.-H., additional, Lv, L.-L., additional, Liu, B.-C., additional, Zeng, R., additional, Gao, X.-F., additional, Deng, Y.-Y., additional, Boelaert, J., additional, t' Kindt, R., additional, Glorieux, G., additional, Schepers, E., additional, Jorge, L., additional, Neirynck, N., additional, Lynen, F., additional, Sandra, P., additional, Sandra, K., additional, Vanholder, R., additional, Yamamoto, T., additional, Nameta, M., additional, Yoshida, Y., additional, Uhlen, M., additional, Shi, Y., additional, Tang, J., additional, Zhang, J., additional, An, Y., additional, Liao, Y., additional, Li, Y., additional, Tao, Y., additional, Wang, L., additional, Koibuchi, K., additional, Tanaka, K., additional, Aoki, T., additional, Miyagi, M., additional, Sakai, K., additional, Aikawa, A., additional, Martins, A. R., additional, Branco, P. Q., additional, Serra, F. M., additional, Matias, P. J., additional, Lucas, C. P., additional, Adragao, T., additional, Duarte, J., additional, Oliveira, M. M., additional, Saraiva, A. M., additional, Barata, J. D., additional, Masola, V., additional, Zaza, G., additional, Granata, S., additional, Proglio, M., additional, Pontrelli, P., additional, Abaterusso, C., additional, Schena, F., additional, Gesualdo, L., additional, Gambaro, G., additional, Lupo, A., additional, Pruijm, M., additional, Hofmann, L., additional, Stuber, M., additional, Zweiacker, C., additional, Piskunowicz, M., additional, Muller, M.-E., additional, Vogt, B., additional, Burnier, M., additional, Togashi, N., additional, Yamashita, T., additional, Mita, T., additional, Ohnuma, Y., additional, Hasegawa, T., additional, Endo, T., additional, Tsuchida, A., additional, Ando, T., additional, Yoshida, H., additional, Miura, T., additional, Bevins, A., additional, Assi, L., additional, Ritchie, J., additional, Jesky, M., additional, Stringer, S., additional, Kalra, P., additional, Hutchison, C., additional, Harding, S., additional, Cockwell, P., additional, Viccica, G., additional, Cupisti, A., additional, Chiavistelli, S., additional, Borsari, S., additional, Pardi, E., additional, Centoni, R., additional, Fumagalli, G., additional, Cetani, F., additional, Marcocci, C., additional, Scully, P., additional, O'Flaherty, D., additional, Sankaralingam, A., additional, Hampson, G., additional, Goldsmith, D. J., additional, Pallet, N., additional, Chauvet, S., additional, Beaune, P., additional, Nochy, D., additional, Thervet, E., additional, Karras, A., additional, Bertho, G., additional, Gallyamov, M. G., additional, Saginova, E. A., additional, Severova, M. M., additional, Krasnova, T. N., additional, Kopylova, A. A., additional, Cho, E., additional, Jo, S.-K., additional, Kim, M.-G., additional, Cho, W.-Y., additional, kim, H. K., additional, Trivin, C., additional, Metzger, M., additional, Boffa, J.-J., additional, Vrtovsnik, F., additional, Houiller, P., additional, Haymann, J.-P., additional, Flamant, M., additional, Stengel, B., additional, Roozbeh, J., additional, Yavari, V., additional, Pakfetrat, M., additional, Zolghadr, A. A., additional, Kim, C. S., additional, Kim, M. J., additional, Kang, Y. U., additional, Choi, J. S., additional, Bae, E. H., additional, Ma, S. K., additional, Kim, S. W., additional, Lemoine, S., additional, Guebre-Egziabher, F., additional, Dubourg, L., additional, Hadj-Aissa, A., additional, Blumberg, S., additional, Katzir, Z., additional, Biro, A., additional, Cernes, R., additional, Barnea, Z., additional, Vasquez, D., additional, Gordillo, R., additional, Aller, C., additional, Fernandez, B., additional, Jabary, N., additional, Perez, V., additional, Mendiluce, A., additional, Bustamante, J., additional, Coca, A., additional, Goek, O.-N., additional, Sekula, P., additional, Prehn, C., additional, Meisinger, C., additional, Gieger, C., additional, Suhre, K., additional, Adamski, J., additional, Kastenmuller, G., additional, Kottgen, A., additional, Kuzniewski, M., additional, Fedak, D., additional, Dumnicka, P., additional, Solnica, B., additional, Kusnierz-Cabala, B., additional, Kapusta, M., additional, Sulowicz, W., additional, Drozdz, R., additional, Zawada, A. M., additional, Rogacev, K. S., additional, Hummel, B., additional, Fliser, D., additional, Geisel, J., additional, Heine, G. H., additional, Kretschmer, A., additional, Volsek, M., additional, Krahn, T., additional, Kolkhof, P., additional, Kribben, A., additional, Bruck, H., additional, Koh, E. S., additional, Chung, S., additional, Yoon, H. E., additional, Park, C. W., additional, Chang, Y. S., additional, Shin, S. J., additional, Deagostini, M. C., additional, Vigotti, F. N., additional, Ferraresi, M., additional, Consiglio, V., additional, Scognamiglio, S., additional, Moro, I., additional, Clari, R., additional, Daidola, G., additional, Versino, E., additional, Piccoli, G. B., additional, Mammadrahim Agayev, M., additional, Mehrali Mammadova, I., additional, Qarib Ismayilova, S., additional, Anguiano, L., additional, Riera, M., additional, Pascual, J., additional, Barrios, C., additional, Valdivielso, J. M., additional, Fernandez, E., additional, Soler, M. J., additional, Tsarpali, V., additional, Liakopoulos, V., additional, Panagopoulou, E., additional, Kapoukranidou, D., additional, Spaia, S., additional, Kostopoulou, M., additional, Michalaki, A., additional, Nikitidou, O., additional, Dombros, N., additional, Zhu, F., additional, Abba, S., additional, Flores-Gama, C., additional, Williams, C., additional, Cartagena, C., additional, Carter, M., additional, Kotanko, P., additional, Levin, N. W., additional, Kolesnyk, M., additional, Stepanova, N., additional, Driyanska, V., additional, Stashevska, N., additional, Kundin, V., additional, Shifris, I., additional, Dudar, I., additional, Zaporozhets, O., additional, Keda, T., additional, Ishchenko, M., additional, Khil, M., additional, Choe, J.-Y., additional, Nam, S.-A., additional, Kim, J., additional, Cha, J.-H., additional, Gliga, M. L., additional, Irimescu, C. G., additional, Caldararu, C. D., additional, Gliga, M. G., additional, Toma, L. V., additional, Gomotarceanu, A., additional, Park, Y., additional, Jeon, J., additional, Kwon, S. K., additional, Kim, S. J., additional, Kim, S. M., additional, Kim, H.-Y., additional, Montero, N., additional, Marquez, E., additional, Berrada, A., additional, Arias, C., additional, Prada, J. A., additional, Orfila, M. A., additional, Mojal, S., additional, Vilaplana, C., additional, Attini, R., additional, Parisi, S., additional, Fassio, F., additional, Ghiotto, S., additional, Biolcati, M., additional, Todros, T., additional, Jin, K., additional, Vaziri, N. D., additional, Tramonti, G., additional, Romiti, N., additional, Chieli, E., additional, Maksudova, A. N., additional, Khusnutdinova, L. A., additional, Reque, J. E., additional, Quiroga, B., additional, Lopez, J. M., additional, Verdallez, U. G., additional, Garcia de Vinuesa, M., additional, Goicoechea, M., additional, Nayara, P. G., additional, Arroyo, D. R., additional, Luno, J., additional, Tanaka, H., additional, Abbas, S. R., additional, Thijssen, S., additional, Berthoux, F. C., additional, Azzouz, L., additional, Afiani, A., additional, Ziane, A., additional, Mariat, C., additional, Fournier, H., additional, Kusztal, M., additional, Dzierzek, P., additional, Witkowski, G., additional, Nurzynski, M., additional, Golebiowski, T., additional, Weyde, W., additional, Klinger, M., additional, Altiparmak, M. R., additional, Seyahi, N., additional, Trabulus, S., additional, Bolayirli, M., additional, Andican, Z. G., additional, Suleymanlar, G., additional, Serdengecti, K., additional, Niculae, A., additional, Checherita, I.-A., additional, Neagoe, D.-N., additional, Ciocalteu, A., additional, Seiler, S., additional, Pickering, J. W., additional, Emrich, I., additional, Heine, G., additional, Bargnoux, A.-S., additional, Obiols, J., additional, Kuster, N., additional, Fessler, P., additional, Badiou, S., additional, Dupuy, A.-M., additional, Ribstein, J., additional, Cristol, J.-P., additional, Yanagisawa, N., additional, Ando, M., additional, Ajisawa, A., additional, Tsuchiya, K., additional, Nitta, K., additional, Bouquegneau, A., additional, Cavalier, E., additional, Krzesinski, J.-M., additional, Delanaye, P., additional, Tominaga, N., additional, Shibagaki, Y., additional, Kida, K., additional, Miyake, F., additional, Kimura, K., additional, Ayvazyan, A., additional, Rameev, V., additional, Kozlovskaya, L., additional, Simonyan, A., additional, Scholze, A., additional, Marckmann, P., additional, Tepel, M., additional, Rasmussen, L. M., additional, Hara, M., additional, Kanai, H., additional, Harada, K., additional, Tamura, Y., additional, Kawai, Y., additional, Al-Jebouri, M. M., additional, Madash, S. A., additional, Leonidovna Berezinets, O., additional, and Nicolaevich Rossolovskiy, A., additional
- Published
- 2013
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15. Urine spoke well before the patient
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Torta, E., primary, Clari, R., additional, and Boero, R., additional
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- 2012
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16. Functioning and quality of life among treatment-engaged adults with psychotic disorders in urban Tanzania: Baseline results from the KUPAA clinical trial.
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Egger JR, Kaaya S, Swai P, Lawala P, Ndelwa L, Temu J, Bukuku ES, Lukens E, Susser E, Dixon L, Minja A, Clari R, Martinez A, Headley J, and Baumgartner JN
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- Humans, Male, Tanzania, Female, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Urban Population, Middle Aged, Schizophrenia therapy, Young Adult, Quality of Life, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Psychotic Disorders therapy
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Background: There is a treatment gap for those living with severe mental illnesses in low- and middle-income countries, yet not enough is known about those who are currently accessing clinical services. A better understanding of potentially modifiable factors associated with functioning and quality of life will help inform policies and programming., Aims: To describe the functioning and quality of life for a psychiatric treatment-engaged population living with psychotic disorders in two urban areas of Tanzania, and to explore their respective correlates., Methods: This study analyzed cross-sectional data from 66 individuals enrolled in the Kuwezeshana Kupata Uzima (KUPAA) pilot clinical trial who had a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, recent relapse, and who were receiving outpatient treatment. Baseline functioning (WHO Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0) and quality of life (WHO Quality of Life BREF scale) were measured. Univariable and multivariable regression analyses were conducted to determine correlates of functioning and quality of life., Results: Adjusted analyses indicated that higher disability was associated with higher food insecurity, more symptomatology, more self-stigma, less instrumental support, less hope, lower self-efficacy, and/or lower levels of family functioning. Higher quality of life was associated with higher levels of self-efficacy, more hopefulness, more instrumental support, less self-stigma, and better family functioning., Conclusions: Identification of factors associated with disability and quality of life can help clinicians and policymakers, as well as consumers of mental health services, to better co-design and target psychosocial interventions to optimize their impact in low-resource settings., Trial Registration: Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov # NCT04013932, July 10, 2019., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Egger et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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17. Perceived burden and family functioning among informal caregivers of individuals living with schizophrenia in Tanzania: a cross-sectional study.
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Clari R, Headley J, Egger J, Swai P, Lawala P, Minja A, Kaaya S, and Baumgartner JN
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- Cost of Illness, Cross-Sectional Studies, Family psychology, Humans, Tanzania, Caregivers psychology, Schizophrenia therapy
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Background: Globally, families play a critical role in providing care and support for persons living with schizophrenia. It is important to identify potentially modifiable factors that influence perceived caregiver burden in order to properly address the needs of caregivers. This is especially relevant in low-resource settings where psychiatric services are scarce and interventions could be most effective if targeted to both the individual living with schizophrenia and their caregiver. This study examines correlates of perceived burden among informal caregivers of individuals with schizophrenia in Tanzania, in particular, the association between burden and caregiver-reported family functioning., Methods: This study used baseline data from an individually randomized controlled trial with 65 pairs of individuals with schizophrenia and their informal caregivers in Dar es Salaam and Mbeya, Tanzania. Caregiver burden was measured using the Burden Assessment Scale. Univariable and multivariable regression analyses were performed to determine the relationship between caregiver burden and family functioning and to explore other correlates of burden., Results: Sixty-three percent of caregivers reported experiencing high burden as a result of caring for a relative with schizophrenia. Multivariable regression analyses revealed that poor family functioning and the caregiver being employed were associated with high caregiver burden, while higher levels of hopefulness in the caregiver was associated with low caregiver burden., Conclusion: Caregivers who were employed, reported poor family functioning, and/or had low levels of hopefulness were more likely to perceive high caregiver burden. Future interventions aiming to reduce caregiver burden may benefit from improving family functioning and nurturing hope among caregivers of individuals living with schizophrenia. Policies and programs should be cognizant of the needs of caregivers that work in addition to providing care for a relative with schizophrenia in order to better support them., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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18. Renal involvement in sarcoidosis: histological patterns and prognosis, an Italian survey.
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Rastelli F, Baragetti I, Buzzi L, Ferrario F, Benozzi L, Di Nardo F, Devoti E, Cancarini G, Mezzina N, Napodano P, Gallieni M, Santoro D, Buemi M, Pecchini P, Malberti F, Colombo V, Colussi G, Sabadini E, Remuzzi G, Argentiero L, Gesualdo L, Gatti G, Trevisani F, Slaviero G, Spotti D, Baraldi O, La Manna G, Pignone E, Saltarelli M, Heidempergher M, Tedesco M, Genderini A, Ferro M, Rollino C, Roccatello D, Guzzo G, Clari R, Barbara Piccoli G, Comotti C, Brunori G, Cameli P, Bargagli E, Rottoli P, Dugo M, Cristina Maresca M, Bertoli M, Giozzet M, Brugnano R, Giovanni Nunzi E, D'Amico M, Minoretti C, Acquistapace I, Colturi C, Minola E, Camozzi M, Tosoni A, Nebuloni M, Ferrario F, Dell'Antonio G, Cusinato S, Feriozzi S, and Pozzi C
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Background: Granulomatous interstitial nephritis in sarcoidosis (sGIN) is generally clinically silent, but in <1% causes acute kidney injury (AKI)., Methods: This Italian multicentric retrospective study included 39 sarcoidosis-patients with renal involvement at renal biopsy: 31 sGIN-AKI, 5 with other patterns (No-sGIN-AKI), 3 with nephrotic proteinuria. We investigate the predictive value of clinical features, laboratory, radiological parameters and histological patterns regarding steroid response. Primary endpoint: incident chronic kidney disease (CKD) beyond the 1°follow-up (FU) year; secondary endpoint: response at 1°line steroid therapy; combined endpoint: the association of initial steroid response and outcome at the end of FU., Results: Complete recovery in all 5 No-sGIN-AKI-patients, only in 45% (13/29) sGIN-AKI-patients (p=0.046) (one lost in follow-up, for another not available renal function after steroids). Nobody had not response. Primary endpoint of 22 sGIN-AKI subjects: 65% (13/20) starting with normal renal function developed CKD (2/22 had basal CKD; median FU 77 months, 15-300). Combined endpoint: 29% (6/21) had complete recovery and final normal renal function (one with renal relapse), 48% (10/21) had partial recovery and final CKD (3 with renal relapse, of whom one with basal CKD) (p=0.024). Acute onset and hypercalcaemia were associated to milder AKI and better recovery than subacute onset and patients without hypercalcaemia, women had better endpoints than men. Giant cells, severe interstitial infiltrate and interstitial fibrosis seemed negative predictors in terms of endpoints., Conclusions: sGIN-AKI-patients with no complete recovery at 1°line steroid should be treated with other immunosuppressive to avoid CKD, in particular if males with subacute onset and III stage-not hypercalcaemic AKI., Competing Interests: Special thanks to Jacqueline Rodriguez, who revised the manuscript for English language, and to Claudia Giuliani, for graphic support. We express gratitude to Immunopathology Group of Italian Society of Nephrology and to ACSI Onlus “Amici contro la Sarcoidosi Italia”, the Italian national society of Sarcoidosis patients.Francesco Rastelli and Ivano Baragetti were responsible for the work. Other authors contributed to the data collection and reviewed and revised the manuscript as supervisors.Each author declares that he or she has no commercial associations (e.g. consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangement etc.) that might pose a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted article., (Copyright: © 2021 SARCOIDOSIS VASCULITIS AND DIFFUSE LUNG DISEASES.)
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- 2021
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19. Author Correction: Detection of urinary podocytes by flow cytometry in idiopathic membranous nephropathy.
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Mella A, Deambrosis I, Mingozzi S, Colla L, Burdese M, Giaretta F, Bruno S, Camussi G, Boaglio E, Dolla C, Clari R, and Biancone L
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- 2020
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20. Case series of six kidney transplanted patients with COVID-19 pneumonia treated with tocilizumab.
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Mella A, Mingozzi S, Gallo E, Lavacca A, Rossetti M, Clari R, Randone O, Maffei S, Salomone M, Imperiale D, and Biancone L
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- Acute Kidney Injury therapy, Adult, Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, C-Reactive Protein immunology, COVID-19 immunology, COVID-19 mortality, Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy, Enzyme Inhibitors therapeutic use, Humans, Hydroxychloroquine therapeutic use, Leukocyte Count, Lymphocyte Count, Male, Middle Aged, SARS-CoV-2, Treatment Outcome, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized therapeutic use, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Immunocompromised Host immunology, Immunosuppressive Agents therapeutic use, Kidney Transplantation, COVID-19 Drug Treatment
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Few reports described the outcome of kidney transplanted patients (KTs) affected by COVID-19 treated with interleukin-6 receptor inhibitor tocilizumab (TCZ). We report our case series of 6 KTs with COVID-19 pneumonia who received TCZ: All were of male gender, with a mean age of 55.5 ± 8.4 years, a median time from transplantation of 3611 days (1465-5757); 5/6 had cardiovascular comorbidities, 1/6 had diabetes, and 3/6 have one or more previous KTs. Four out of six patients died, at an average time of 9.75 ± 2.4 days after tocilizumab administration, 3/6 due to a coexistent septic shock. Two patients improved after TCZ and were discharged at 20 and 21 days, respectively; in both patient, a significant increase of total lymphocyte count was observed. In conclusion, KTs, where the role of peculiar factors such as chronic immunosuppression is still undetermined, represent a high-risk group with significant COVID-19-associated mortality. The evaluation of the TCZ effect in COVID-19 pneumonia requires controlled studies (ideally RCTs) in this specific population., (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2020
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21. Detection of urinary podocytes by flow cytometry in idiopathic membranous nephropathy.
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Mella A, Deambrosis I, Mingozzi S, Colla L, Burdese M, Giaretta F, Bruno S, Camussi G, Boaglio E, Dolla C, Clari R, and Biancone L
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- Adult, Aged, Autoantibodies immunology, Biomarkers urine, Case-Control Studies, Female, Glomerulonephritis, Membranous immunology, Glomerulonephritis, Membranous urine, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Flow Cytometry, Glomerulonephritis, Membranous diagnosis, Podocytes metabolism, Receptors, Phospholipase A2 immunology
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Idiopathic membranous nephropathy (iMN) is considered an immune-mediated disease where circulating autoantibodies against podocyte targets (mainly the PLA
2 R) cause the deposition of in-situ subepithelial immune-complexes. The consequent podocyte damage may cause cell detachment in urine (Podocyturia-PdoU). PdoU has been assessed in different kidney diseases, but limited data are available in iMN. In this study all patients with a diagnosis of iMN between 15/12/1999-16/07/2014 were tested for PLA2 R antibodies (Ab anti-PLA2 R, ELISA kit) and PdoU by flow cytometry with anti-podocalyxin antibody. A semi-quantitative PdoU score was defined according to the percentage of podocalyxin positive cells normalized to the total volume of sample and set relative to the urine creatinine measured in the supernatant. PdoU was positive in 17/27 patients (63%; 1+ score in 6/27-22.2%, 2+ in 4/27-14.8%, 3+ in 2/27-7.4%, 4+ in 5/27-18.5%). Only 2/7 patients with complete remission showed a positive PdoU (1+) while all six patients without remission have significant PdoU. PdoU+ was statistically correlated with the absence of remission and Ab anti-PLA2 R + (p < 0.05) but PdoU, analysed as a continuous variable, showed a non-linear correlation with proteinuria or PLA2 R antibody levels also in the cohort of patients with two available PdoU tests. In conclusion, PdoU could be detected in iMN and seems to be associated with commonly considered markers of disease activity (proteinuria and Ab anti-PLA2 R) with a non-linear correlation. Despite data should be confirmed in large and prospective cohorts, according to the podocyte depletion hypothesis PdoU may represent an early marker of immunological activation with potential prognostic utility.- Published
- 2020
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22. Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance coexisting in patients undergoing kidney transplantation does not adversely influence post-graft clinical outcome.
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Clari R, Tarella C, Giraudi R, Torazza MC, Gallo E, Lavacca A, Fop F, Mella A, Dolla C, and Biancone L
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Background: Management of patients with oncohaematological disorders such as monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) is a frequent problem in pre-transplant work-up. Insights on disease progression and long-term functional outcomes are still lacking in this setting., Methods: This was a retrospective analysis on all patients with MGUS who underwent kidney transplant (KT) at our centre between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2017 (cases, n = 65). Patients were matched with a control group (KTs with similar characteristics but without history of haematological disease, controls, n = 1079). Primary endpoints were graft and patient survival; secondary endpoints were causes of graft failure, patient death, occurrence of allograft rejection, post-transplant neoplasia (not correlated to previous disorder) and/or infectious episodes., Results: The MGUS and control groups had a similar mean age [60 (29-79) versus 55.2 (19.3-79.5) years, respectively] and percentage of males (69.2% versus 64.6%, respectively). Median follow-up time since KT was 3.5 years (0-14) in cases and 8.3 years (0-14.9) in controls. All MGUS patients underwent KT following extensive multidiscliplinary investigations. No differences were found between cases and controls regarding patient and graft survival or post-transplant complications except for lower incidence of infections (58.7% versus 69.8%, P = 0.019) and increased use of mTOR inhbitors (30.3% versus 14.7%, P = 0.001) in MGUS. MGUS isotype did not influence graft and patient survival. The absence of difference in patients and graft survival was also confirmed in an adjunctive analysis where MGUS were compared with controls (ratio 1:2) matched for recipient age, gender, number of transplantations and transplant period., Conclusion: Patients with MGUS may undergo KT without significantly increased risks of complications, provided that appropriate diagnostic procedures are carefully followed. Multidiscipline-based studies are crucial for establishing well designed pre- and post-transplant protocols for the best management of patients with coexisting MGUS and end-stage renal disease., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA.)
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- 2020
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23. A preliminary investigation of impulsivity, aggression and white matter in patients with bipolar disorder and a suicide attempt history.
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Reich R, Gilbert A, Clari R, Burdick KE, and Szeszko PR
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- Adult, Anisotropy, Bipolar Disorder diagnostic imaging, Bipolar Disorder pathology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Case-Control Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Female, Frontal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Humans, Internal Capsule diagnostic imaging, Internal Capsule pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Organ Size, Risk Factors, White Matter diagnostic imaging, Aggression psychology, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Impulsive Behavior, Suicide, Attempted psychology, White Matter pathology
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Background: Impulsivity and aggression may be associated with suicide attempts in bipolar disorder (BD), but findings have been inconsistent. Abnormalities in anterior white matter tracts that project to the frontal lobes mediate top-down regulation of emotion and may contribute to this clinical phenomenology., Methods: We assessed white matter (i.e., fractional anisotropy) in anterior and posterior brain regions using diffusion tensor imaging in 18 patients with BD and no prior suicide attempt (BD-S), 12 patients with BD and a prior suicide attempt (BD+S), and 12 healthy volunteers. Patients completed the Urgency, Premeditation, Perseverance, Sensation Seeking, Positive Urgency (UPPS-P) Impulsive Behavior Scale and Impulsive Premeditated Aggression Scale (IPAS). All individuals completed the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11)., Results: Patients with BD+S had higher overall impulsivity (assessed using both the UPPS-P Impulsive Behavior Scale and BIS-11) and premeditated aggression compared to patients with BD-S. There were no significant group differences on measures of fractional anisotropy (FA). In patients with BD+S, however, higher FA in the anterior (but not the posterior) brain regions correlated with greater overall impulsivity on the UPPS-P Impulsive Behavior Scale. There were no significant correlations between either anterior or posterior brain regions with clinical measures in patients with BD-S., Limitations: Cross-sectional study, sample size and possible contribution of psychotropic medications., Conclusion: Impulsivity and aggression may be risk factors for a suicide attempt in BD. White matter in the anterior limb of the internal capsule and anterior corona radiata may play a role in this phenomenology., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2019
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24. Effects of childhood trauma on adult moral decision-making: Clinical correlates and insights from bipolar disorder.
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Larsen EM, Ospina LH, Cuesta-Diaz A, Vian-Lains A, Nitzburg GC, Mulaimovic S, Latifoglu A, Clari R, and Burdick KE
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- Adult, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Self Report, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adult Survivors of Child Abuse psychology, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Decision Making, Morals
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Background: Childhood adversity has been shown to exert profound effects on basic psychological processes well into adulthood. Some of these processes, such as those related to reward and emotion, play critical roles in moral decision-making. As a population with high rates of childhood trauma as well as heterogenous clinical presentation, individuals with bipolar disorder (BD) constitute an enriched group in which to examine the correlates of trauma and other clinical variables with moral cognition., Methods: 62 euthymic BD patients and 27 controls responded to moral dilemma scenarios and completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire., Results: Results revealed a main effect of diagnosis on moral decision-making only when both personal force and an intention were required, indicating a more utilitarian style in BD patients relative to controls. Several interesting patterns also emerged regardless of diagnostic status. Higher ratings of physical neglect were significantly associated with higher ratings of acceptability (a utilitarian tendency) across dilemma types, and a similar pattern was observed at the trend level for experiences of emotional neglect. Significant main effects on moral decision-making were also observed for sex, illness duration, and history of psychotic features in the BD sample., Limitations: The present study is limited by the self-reported nature of the CTQ and by the small number of trials of moral dilemmas. In addition, practical and clinical implications of the moral dilemmas paradigm are limited due to its abstract nature., Conclusions: Our results indicate that certain clinical features as well as childhood maltreatment (in particular neglect) may significantly impact moral decision making in adult life. Surprisingly, childhood trauma was associated with a more utilitarian style, which is in the opposite direction from previous effects shown in PTSD. Although speculative, our results suggest that there may be a protective quality associated with utilitarian moral decision-making tendencies., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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25. Vegan-vegetarian diets in pregnancy: danger or panacea? A systematic narrative review.
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Piccoli GB, Clari R, Vigotti FN, Leone F, Attini R, Cabiddu G, Mauro G, Castelluccia N, Colombi N, Capizzi I, Pani A, Todros T, and Avagnina P
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- Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic, Female, Humans, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Nutrition Policy, Nutritional Requirements, Pregnancy, Risk Factors, Vitamins administration & dosage, Diet, Vegetarian adverse effects, Diet, Vegetarian statistics & numerical data, Dietary Proteins administration & dosage, Feeding Behavior, Pregnancy Outcome
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Background: Although vegan-vegetarian diets are increasingly popular, no recent systematic reviews on vegan-vegetarian diets in pregnancy exist., Objectives: To review the literature on vegan-vegetarian diets and pregnancy outcomes., Search Strategy: PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane library were searched from inception to September 2013 for pregnancy and vegan or vegetarian Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) and free-text terms., Selection Criteria: Vegan or vegetarian diets in healthy pregnant women. We excluded case reports and papers analysing vegan-vegetarian diets in poverty and malnutrition. Searching, paper selection, and data extraction were performed in duplicate., Data Collection and Analysis: The high heterogeneity of the studies led to a narrative review., Main Results: We obtained 262 full texts from 2329 references; 22 selected papers reporting maternal-fetal outcomes (13) and dietary deficiencies (nine) met the inclusion criteria. None of the studies reported an increase in severe adverse outcomes or in major malformations, except one report of increased hypospadias in infants of vegetarian mothers. Five studies reported vegetarian mothers had lower birthweight babies, yet two studies reported higher birthweights. The duration of pregnancy was available in six studies and was similar between vegan-vegetarians and omnivores. The nine heterogeneous studies on microelements and vitamins suggest vegan-vegetarian women may be at risk of vitamin B12 and iron deficiencies., Author's Conclusions: The evidence on vegan-vegetarian diets in pregnancy is heterogeneous and scant. The lack of randomised studies prevents us from distinguishing the effects of diet from confounding factors. Within these limits, vegan-vegetarian diets may be considered safe in pregnancy, provided that attention is paid to vitamin and trace element requirements., (© 2015 Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists.)
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- 2015
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26. Which low-protein diet for which CKD patient? An observational, personalized approach.
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Piccoli GB, Deagostini MC, Vigotti FN, Ferraresi M, Moro I, Consiglio V, Scognamiglio S, Mongilardi E, Clari R, Aroasio E, Versino E, and Porpiglia F
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- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cause of Death, Comorbidity, Disease Progression, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Compliance, Proteinuria epidemiology, Renal Dialysis, Diet, Protein-Restricted, Diet, Vegetarian, Dietary Proteins administration & dosage, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic diet therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Low protein diets (LPDs) are milestones in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Concerns over compliance and safety limit their use. The aim of this study was to test the feasibility and main results of a multiple-choice approach to LPDs, adapted to patient preferences., Methods: From December 2007 to January 2013, all CKD patients (stages 4/5; progressive stage 3) without contraindications (malnutrition, short life expectancy), were offered two main LPDs (proteins 0.6 g/kg daily): Vegan supplemented (LPD-KA) or with "aproteic" commercial food (LPD-ACF). LPDs followed a qualitative approach based on forbidden and allowed food; one to three free meals per week, and flexible control policy (1-3 mo). Start of dialysis, death, and combined outcome (death-dialysis) were analyzed by Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox model. Comparison with dialysis in patients with glomerular filtration rate (GRF) <15 mL/min, (corresponding to "early" dialysis start) employed standardized mortality rates, with respect to the Italian and the United States Dialysis Registry., Results: One hundred eighty-five patients (222 patient-years) started at least a trial of LPD-KA, 122 (177 patients-years) LPD-ACF; only 3 patients with GFR <30 mL/min denied an LPD trial. Patients who chose LPD-KA were younger than those on LPD-ACF (63 versus 74 y), had less comorbidity (82% versus 93%), higher proteinuria (1.4 versus 0.7 g/d) and lower GFR (17 versus 23 mL/min) (P < 0.001). Median daily protein intake was 0.7 g/kg on both diets (Maroni-Mitch formula). The combined outcome (death or dialysis) was not influenced by the diet chosen (Cox analysis). Relative risk for death on the diet (patients with GFR <15 mL/min) was 0.5 with respect to the Italian Registry and 0.3 to the United States Dialysis Registry. The diets had comparable costs (1 y on dialysis: 50 patient-years on LPD)., Conclusions: The choice of diet is strictly linked to patient characteristics, thus supporting a multiple-choice offer. Once corrected for baseline data, both LPDs led to similar results, suggesting at least survival equivalence with dialysis, at lesser cost., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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27. Tailoring dialysis and resuming low-protein diets may favor chronic dialysis discontinuation: report on three cases.
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Piccoli GB, Guzzo G, Vigotti FN, Capizzi I, Clari R, Scognamiglio S, Consiglio V, Aroasio E, Gonella S, Veltri A, and Avagnina P
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic diet therapy, Diet, Protein-Restricted, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Renal Dialysis methods
- Abstract
Renal function recovery (RFR), defined as the discontinuation of dialysis after 3 months of replacement therapy, is reported in about 1% of chronic dialysis patients. The role of personalized, intensive dialysis schedules and of resuming low-protein diets has not been studied to date. This report describes three patients with RFR who were recently treated at a new dialysis unit set up to offer intensive hemodialysis. All three patients were females, aged 73, 75, and 78 years. Kidney disease included vascular-cholesterol emboli, diabetic nephropathy and vascular and dysmetabolic disease. At time of RFR, the patients had been dialysis-dependent from 3 months to 1 year. Dialysis was started with different schedules and was progressively discontinued with a "decremental" policy, progressively decreasing number and duration of the sessions. A moderately restricted low-protein diet (proteins 0.6 g/kg/day) was started immediately after dialysis discontinuation. The most recent update showed that two patients are well off dialysis for 5 and 6 months; the diabetic patient died (sudden death) 3 months after dialysis discontinuation. Within the limits of small numbers, our case series may suggest a role for personalized dialysis treatments and for including low-protein diets in the therapy, in enhancing long-term RFR in elderly dialysis patients., (© 2014 International Society for Hemodialysis.)
- Published
- 2014
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28. Association of low-protein supplemented diets with fetal growth in pregnant women with CKD.
- Author
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Piccoli GB, Leone F, Attini R, Parisi S, Fassio F, Deagostini MC, Ferraresi M, Clari R, Ghiotto S, Biolcati M, Giuffrida D, Rolfo A, and Todros T
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child Development, Child, Preschool, Creatinine blood, Female, Fetal Development, Fetal Growth Retardation etiology, Follow-Up Studies, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Hospitalization, Humans, Hypertension complications, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Small for Gestational Age, Keto Acids administration & dosage, Kidney Failure, Chronic complications, Kidney Failure, Chronic physiopathology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Proteinuria etiology, Diet, Protein-Restricted adverse effects, Diet, Vegetarian adverse effects, Dietary Supplements, Kidney Failure, Chronic diet therapy
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Women affected by CKD increasingly choose to get pregnant. Experience with low-protein diets is limited. The aim of this study was to review results obtained from pregnant women with CKD on supplemented vegan-vegetarian low-protein diets., Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: This was a single-arm, open intervention study between 2000-2012 of a low-protein diet in pregnant patients with stages 3-5 CKD or severe proteinuria (>1 g/d in the first trimester or nephrotic at any time). Stages 3-5 CKD patients who were not on low-protein diets for clinical, psychologic, or logistic reasons served as controls. The setting was the Obstetrics-Nephrology Unit dedicated to kidney diseases in pregnancy. The treated group included 24 pregnancies--21 singleton deliveries, 1 twin pregnancy, 1 abortion, and 1 miscarriage. Additionally, there were 21 controls (16 singleton deliveries, 5 miscarriages). The diet was a vegan-vegetarian low-protein diet (0.6-0.8 g/kg per day) with keto-acid supplementation and 1-3 protein-unrestricted meals allowed per week., Results: Treated patients and controls were comparable at baseline for median age (35 versus 34 years), referral week (7 versus 8), eGFR (59 versus 54 ml/min), and hypertension (43.5% versus 33.3%); median proteinuria was higher in patients on the low-protein diet (1.96 [0.1-6.3] versus 0.3 [0.1-2.0] g/d; P<0.001). No significant differences were observed in singletons with regard to gestational week (34 versus 36) or Caesarean sections (76.2% versus 50%). Kidney function at delivery was not different, but proteinuria was higher in the diet group. Incidence of small for gestational age babies was significantly lower in the diet group (3/21) versus controls (7/16; chi-squared test; P=0.05). Throughout follow-up (6 months to 10 years), hospitalization rates and prevalence of children below the third percentile were similar in both groups., Conclusion: Vegan-vegetarian supplemented low-protein diets in pregnant women with stages 3-5 CKD may reduce the likelihood of small for gestational age babies without detrimental effects on kidney function or proteinuria in the mother.
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- 2014
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29. Reiki and related therapies in the dialysis ward: an evidence-based and ethical discussion to debate if these complementary and alternative medicines are welcomed or banned.
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Ferraresi M, Clari R, Moro I, Banino E, Boero E, Crosio A, Dayne R, Rosset L, Scarpa A, Serra E, Surace A, Testore A, Colombi N, and Piccoli BG
- Subjects
- Complementary Therapies ethics, Complementary Therapies statistics & numerical data, Humans, Treatment Outcome, Evidence-Based Medicine ethics, Renal Dialysis ethics, Therapeutic Touch ethics, Therapeutic Touch statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAMs) are increasingly practiced in the general population; it is estimated that over 30% of patients with chronic diseases use CAMs on a regular basis. CAMs are also used in hospital settings, suggesting a growing interest in individualized therapies. One potential field of interest is pain, frequently reported by dialysis patients, and seldom sufficiently relieved by mainstream therapies. Gentle-touch therapies and Reiki (an energy based touch therapy) are widely used in the western population as pain relievers.By integrating evidence based approaches and providing ethical discussion, this debate discusses the pros and cons of CAMs in the dialysis ward, and whether such approaches should be welcomed or banned., Discussion: In spite of the wide use of CAMs in the general population, few studies deal with the pros and cons of an integration of mainstream medicine and CAMs in dialysis patients; one paper only regarded the use of Reiki and related practices. Widening the search to chronic pain, Reiki and related practices, 419 articles were found on Medline and 6 were selected (1 Cochrane review and 5 RCTs updating the Cochrane review). According to the EBM approach, Reiki allows a statistically significant but very low-grade pain reduction without specific side effects. Gentle-touch therapy and Reiki are thus good examples of approaches in which controversial efficacy has to be balanced against no known side effect, frequent free availability (volunteer non-profit associations) and easy integration with any other pharmacological or non pharmacological therapy. While a classical evidence-based approach, showing low-grade efficacy, is likely to lead to a negative attitude towards the use of Reiki in the dialysis ward, the ethical discussion, analyzing beneficium (efficacy) together with non maleficium (side effects), justice (cost, availability and integration with mainstream therapies) and autonomy (patients' choice) is likely to lead to a permissive-positive attitude., Summary: This paper debates the current evidence on Reiki and related techniques as pain-relievers in an ethical framework, and suggests that physicians may wish to consider efficacy but also side effects, contextualization (availability and costs) and patient's requests, according also to the suggestions of the Society for Integrative Oncology (tolerate, control efficacy and side effects).
- Published
- 2013
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30. Severe diabetic nephropathy in type 1 diabetes and pregnancy--a case series.
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Piccoli GB, Tavassoli E, Melluzza C, Grassi G, Monzeglio C, Donvito V, Leone F, Attini R, Ghiotto S, Clari R, Moro I, Fassio F, Parisi S, Pilloni E, Vigotti FN, Giuffrida D, Rolfo A, and Todros T
- Subjects
- Adult, Blood Pressure, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Diabetic Nephropathies etiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 physiopathology, Diabetic Nephropathies physiopathology, Pregnancy Outcome, Pregnancy in Diabetics physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Diabetes and nephropathy are important challenges during pregnancy, increasingly encountered because of the advances in maternal-fetal care., Aim: To evaluate the maternal and fetal outcomes recorded in "severe" diabetic nephropathy in type 1 diabetic patients referred to nephrological healtcare., Methods: The study was performed in an outpatient unit dedicated to kidney diseases in pregnancy (with joint nephrological and obstetric follow-up and strict cooperation with the diabetes unit). 383 pregnancies were referred to the outpatient unit in 2000-2012, 14 of which were complicated by type 1 diabetes. The report includes 12 deliveries, including 2 pregnancies in 1 patient; one twin pregnancy; 2 spontaneous abortions were not included. All cases had long-standing type 1 diabetes (median of 21 (15-31) years), relatively high median age (35 (29-40) years) and end-organ damage (all patients presented laser-treated retinopathy and half of them clinical neuropathy). Median glomerular filtration rate (GFR) at referral was 67 ml/min (48-122.6), proteinuria was 1.6 g/day (0.1-6.3 g/day)., Results: Proteinuria steeply increased in 11/12 patients, reaching the nephrotic range in nine (6 above 5 g/day). One patient increased by 2 chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages. Support therapy included blood pressure and diabetes control, bed rest, and moderate protein restriction. All children were preterm (7 early preterm); early spontaneous labor occurred in 4/12 patients. All singletons were appropriate for gestational age and developed normally after birth. The male twin child died 6 days after birth (after surgery for great vessel transposition)., Conclusions: Diabetic patients with severe diabetic nephropathy are still present a considerable challenge. Therefore, further investigations are required, particularly on proteinuria management and the occurrence of spontaneous labor.
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- 2013
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31. Type 1 diabetes, diabetic nephropathy, and pregnancy: a systematic review and meta-study.
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Piccoli GB, Clari R, Ghiotto S, Castelluccia N, Colombi N, Mauro G, Tavassoli E, Melluzza C, Cabiddu G, Gernone G, Mongilardi E, Ferraresi M, Rolfo A, and Todros T
- Subjects
- Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 physiopathology, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications metabolism, Pregnancy Outcome, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Diabetic Nephropathies etiology, Pregnancy in Diabetics
- Abstract
Background: In the last decade, significant improvements have been achieved in maternal-fetal and diabetic care which make pregnancy possible in an increasing number of type 1 diabetic women with end-organ damage. Optimal counseling is important to make the advancements available to the relevant patients and to ensure the safety of mother and child. A systematic review will help to provide a survey of the available methods and to promote optimal counseling., Objectives: To review the literature on diabetic nephropathy and pregnancy in type 1 diabetes., Methods: Medline, Embase, and the Cochrane Library were scanned in November 2012 (MESH, Emtree, and free terms on pregnancy and diabetic nephropathy). Studies were selected that report on pregnancy outcomes in type 1 diabetic patients with diabetic nephropathy in 1980-2012 (i.e. since the detection of microalbuminuria). Case reports with less than 5 cases and reports on kidney grafts were excluded. Paper selection and data extraction were performed in duplicate and matched for consistency. As the relevant reports were highly heterogeneous, we decided to perform a narrative review, with discussions oriented towards the period of publication., Results: Of the 1058 references considered, 34 fulfilled the selection criteria, and one was added from reference lists. The number of cases considered in the reports, which generally involved single-center studies, ranged from 5 to 311. The following issues were significant: (i) the evidence is scattered over many reports of differing format and involving small series (only 2 included over 100 patients), (ii) definitions are non-homogeneous, (iii) risks for pregnancy-related adverse events are increased (preterm delivery, caesarean section, perinatal death, and stillbirth) and do not substantially change over time, except for stillbirth (from over 10% to about 5%), (iv) the increase in risks with nephropathy progression needs confirmation in large homogeneous series, (v) the newly reported increase in malformations in diabetic nephropathy underlines the need for further studies., Conclusions: The heterogeneous evidence from studies on diabetic nephropathy in pregnancy emphasizes the need for further perspective studies on this issue.
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- 2013
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32. Urine spoke well before the patient.
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Neild GH, Torta E, Clari R, and Boero R
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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