2,242 results on '"D'Elia G"'
Search Results
2. Aerobic exercise attenuates dysautonomia, cardiac diastolic dysfunctions, and hemodynamic overload in female mice with atherosclerosis
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Nascimento-Carvalho, Bruno, da Silva, Bruno Durante, da Silva, Maikon Barbosa, Dos-Santos, Adriano, Ribeiro, Thayna Fabiana, da Silva Dias, Danielle, de Souza, Leandro Eziquiel, Dutra, Marina Rascio Henriques, Catanozi, Sergio, Caldini, Elia G., De Angelis, Kátia, Scapini, Katia Bilhar, Sanches, Iris Callado, and Irigoyen, Maria Claudia
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- 2024
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3. Production of hot Jupiter candidates from high-eccentricity mechanisms for different initial planetary mass configurations
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Garzón, H., Rodríguez, Adrián, and de Elía, G. C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Hot Jupiters (HJs) are giant planets with orbital periods of the order of a few days with semimajor axis within $\sim$0.1 au. Several theories have been invoked in order to explain the origin of this type of planets, one of them being the high-eccentricity migration. This migration can occur through different high-eccentricity mechanisms. Our investigation focused on six different kinds of high-eccentricity mechanisms, namely, direct dispersion, coplanar, Kozai-Lidov, secular chaos, E1 and E2 mechanisms. We investigated the efficiency of these mechanisms for the production of HJ candidates in multi-planet systems initially tightly-packed in the semimajor axis, considering a large set of numerical simulations of the exact equations of motion in the context of the N-body problem. In particular, we analyzed the sensitivity of our results to the initial number of planets, the initial semimajor axis of the innermost planetary orbit, the initial configuration of planetary masses, and to the inclusion of general relativity effects. We found that the E1 mechanism is the most efficient in producing HJ candidates both in simulations with and without the contribution of general relativity, followed by the Kozai-Lidov and E2 mechanisms. Our results also revealed that, except for the initial equal planetary mass configuration, the E1 mechanism was notably efficient in the other initial planetary mass configurations considered in this work. Finally, we investigated the production of HJ candidates with prograde, retrograde, and alternating orbits. According to our statistical analysis, the Kozai-Lidov mechanism has the highest probability of significantly exciting the orbital inclinations of the HJ candidates., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 17 pages, 13 figures, 7 tables
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- 2022
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4. Aerobic exercise attenuates dysautonomia, cardiac diastolic dysfunctions, and hemodynamic overload in female mice with atherosclerosis
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Bruno Nascimento-Carvalho, Bruno Durante da Silva, Maikon Barbosa da Silva, Adriano Dos-Santos, Thayna Fabiana Ribeiro, Danielle da Silva Dias, Leandro Eziquiel de Souza, Marina Rascio Henriques Dutra, Sergio Catanozi, Elia G. Caldini, Kátia De Angelis, Katia Bilhar Scapini, Iris Callado Sanches, and Maria Claudia Irigoyen
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Cardiovascular risk increases during the aging process in women with atherosclerosis and exercise training is a strategy for management of cardiac risks in at-risk populations. Therefore, the aims of this study were to evaluate: (1) the influence of the aging process on cardiac function, hemodynamics, cardiovascular autonomic modulation, and baroreflex sensitivity in females with atherosclerosis at the onset of reproductive senescence; and (2) the impact of exercise training on age-related dysfunctions in this model. Eighteen Apolipoprotein-E knockout female mice were divided equally into young (Y), middle-aged (MA), and trained middle-aged (MAT). Echocardiographic exams were performed to verify cardiac morphology and function. Cannulation for direct recording of blood pressure and heart rate, and analysis of cardiovascular autonomic modulation, baroreflex sensitivity were performed. The MA had lower cardiac diastolic function (E'/A' ratio), and higher aortic thickness, heart rate and mean arterial pressure, lower heart rate variability and baroreflex sensitivity compared with Y. There were no differences between Y and MAT in these parameters. Positive correlation coefficients were found between aortic wall thickness with hemodynamics data. The aging process causes a series of deleterious effects such as hemodynamic overload and dysautonomia in female with atherosclerosis. Exercise training was effective in mitigating aged-related dysfunctions.
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- 2024
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5. Drugs and natural products for the treatment of COVID-19 during 2020, the first year of the pandemic
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Elia G. Jaimes-Castelán, Claudia González-Espinosa, Gil A. Magos-Guerrero, Isabel Arrieta-Cruz, Manuel Jiménez-Estrada, Ricardo Reyes-Chilpa, and Jorge I. Castillo-Arellano
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Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. Coronavirus disease 2019. Clinical studies. Anti-inflammatory. Antiviral repositioning. ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
This work aimed to show which treatments showed efficacy against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); therefore, the results of 37 clinical trials started in 2020 and completed in 2021 are reviewed and discussed here. These were selected from databases, excluding vaccines, computational studies, in silico, in vitro, and those with hyperimmune sera from recovered patients. We found 34 drugs, one vitamin, and one herbal remedy with pharmacological activity against symptomatic COVID-19. They reduced mortality, disease progression, or recovery time. For each treatment, the identifier and type of trial, the severity of the disease, the sponsor, the country where the trial was conducted, and the trial results are presented. The drugs were classified according to their mechanism of action. Several drugs that reduced mortality also reduced inflammation in the most severe cases. These include some that are not considered anti-inflammatory, such as Aviptadil, pyridostigmine bromide, anakinra, imatinib, baricitinib, and bevacizumab, as well as the combination of ivermectin, aspirin, dexamethasone, and enoxaparin. Nigella sativa seeds with honey have also been reported to have therapeutic activity. On the other hand, tofacitinib, novaferon with ritonavir, and lopinavir were also effective, as well as in combination with antiviral therapies such as danoprevir with ritonavir. The natural products colchicine and Vitamin D3 were only effective in patients with mild-to-moderate COVID-19, as was hydroxychloroquine. Drug repositioning has been the main tool in the search for effective therapies by expanding the pharmacological options available to patients.
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- 2024
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6. New multi-part collisional model of the main belt: The contribution to near-Earth asteroids
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Zain, P. S., de Elía, G. C., and Di Sisto, R. P.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims. We developed a six-part collisional evolution model of the main asteroid belt (MB) and used it to study the contribution of the different regions of the MB to the near-earth asteroids (NEAs). Methods. We built a statistical code called ACDC that simulates the collisional evolution of the MB split into six regions (namely Inner, Middle, Pristine, Outer, Cybele and High-Inclination belts) according to the positions of the major resonances present there ($\nu_{6}$, 3:1J, 5:2J, 7:3J and 2:1J). We consider the Yarkovsky effect and the mentioned resonances as the main mechanism that removes asteroids from the different regions of the MB and delivers them to the NEA region. We calculated the evolution of the NEAs coming from the different source regions by considering the bodies delivered by the resonances and mean dynamical timescales in the NEA population. Results. Our model is in agreement with the major observational constraints associated with the MB, such as the size distributions of the different regions of the MB and the number of large asteroid families. It is also able to reproduce the observed NEAs with H < 16 and agrees with recent estimations for H < 20, but deviates for smaller sizes. We find that most sources make a significant contribution to the NEAs; however the Inner and Middle belts stand out as the most important source of NEAs followed by the Outer belt. The contributions of the Pristine and Cybele regions are minor. The High-Inclination belt is the source of only a fraction of the actual observed NEAs with high inclination, as there are dynamical processes in that region that enable asteroids to increase and decrease their inclinations., Comment: 14 pages, 12 Figures
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- 2020
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7. Formation of Solar system analogues II: post-gas phase growth and water accretion in extended discs via N-body simulations
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Ronco, M. P. and de Elía, G. C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
This work is the second part of a project that attempts to analyze the formation of Solar system analogues (SSAs) from the gaseous to the post-gas phase, in a self-consistently way. In the first paper (PI) we presented our model of planet formation during the gaseous phase which provided us with embryo distributions, planetesimal surface density, eccentricity and inclination profiles of SSAs, considering different planetesimal sizes and type I migration rates at the time the gas dissipates. In this second work we focus on the late accretion stage of SSAs using the results obtained in PI as initial conditions to carry out N-body simulations. One of our interests is to analyze the formation of rocky planets and their final water contents within the habitable zone. Our results show that the formation of potentially habitable planets (PHPs) seems to be a common process in this kind of scenarios. However, the efficiency in forming PHPs is directly related to the size of the planetesimals. The smaller the planetesimals, the greater the efficiency in forming PHPs. We also analyze the sensitivity of our results to scenarios with type I migration rates and gap-opening giants, finding that both phenomena act in a similar way. These effects seem to favor the formation of PHPs for small planetesimal scenarios and to be detrimental for scenarios formed from big planetesimals. Finally, another interesting result is that the formation of water-rich PHPs seems to be more common than the formation of dry PHPs., Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures - Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2018
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8. Influence of soil deposit heterogeneity on the dynamic behaviour of masonry towers
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D’Oria, A.F., primary, Elia, G., additional, di Lernia, A., additional, and Uva, G., additional
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- 2022
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9. Migrating Jupiter up to the habitable zone: Earth-like planet formation and water delivery
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Darriba, L. A., de Elía, G. C., Guilera, O. M., and Brunini, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Several observational works have shown the existence of Jupiter-mass planets covering a wide range of semi-major axes around Sun-like stars. We aim to analyse the planetary formation processes around Sun-like stars that host a Jupiter-mass planet at intermediate distances ranging from $\sim$1 au to 2 au. Our study focusses on the formation and evolution of terrestrial-like planets and water delivery in the habitable zone (HZ) of the system. Our goal is also to analyse the long-term dynamical stability of the resulting systems. A semi-analytic model was used to define the properties of a protoplanetary disk that produces a Jupiter-mass planet around the snow line, which is located at $\sim$2.7 au for a solar-mass star. Then, it was used to describe the evolution of embryos and planetesimals during the gaseous phase up to the formation of the Jupiter-mass planet, and we used the results as the initial conditions to carry out N-body simulations of planetary accretion. Our simulations produce three different classes of planets in the HZ: 'water worlds', with masses between 2.75 $M_{\oplus}$ and 3.57 $M_{\oplus}$ and water contents of 58% and 75% by mass, terrestrial-like planets, with masses ranging from 0.58 $M_{\oplus}$ to 3.8 $M_{\oplus}$ and water contents less than 1.2% by mass, and 'dry worlds', simulations of which show no water. A relevant result suggests the efficient coexistence in the HZ of a Jupiter-mass planet and a terrestrial-like planet with a percentage of water by mass comparable to the Earth. Moreover, our study indicates that these planetary systems are dynamically stable for at least 1 Gyr. Systems with a Jupiter-mass planet located at 1.5 au - 2 au around solar-type stars are of astrobiological interest. These systems are likely to harbour terrestrial-like planets in the HZ with a wide diversity of water contents., Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures
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- 2017
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10. Formation of solar system analogs I: looking for initial conditions through a population synthesis analysis
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Ronco, M. P., Guilera, O. M., and de Elía, G. C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Population synthesis models of planetary systems developed during the last $\sim$15 years could reproduce several of the observables of the exoplanet population, and also allowed to constrain planetary formation models. We present our planet formation model, which calculates the evolution of a planetary system during the gaseous phase. The code incorporates relevant physical phenomena for the formation of a planetary system, like photoevaporation, planet migration, gas accretion, water delivery in embryos and planetesimals, a detailed study of the orbital evolution of the planetesimal population, and the treatment of the fusion between embryos, considering their atmospheres. The main goal of this work, unlike other works of planetary population synthesis, is to find suitable scenarios and physical parameters of the disc to form solar system analogs. We are specially interested in the final planet distributions, and in the final surface density, eccentricity and inclination profiles for the planetesimal population. These final distributions will be used as initial conditions for N-body simulations, to study the post-oligarchic formation in a second work. We then consider different formation scenarios, with different planetesimal sizes and different type I migration rates. We find that solar system analogs are favored in massive discs, with low type I migration rates, and small planetesimal sizes. Besides, those rocky planets within their habitables zones are dry when discs dissipate. At last, the final configurations of solar system analogs include information about the mass and semimajor-axis of the planets, water contents, and the properties of the planetesimal remnants., Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2017
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11. Effects of an eccentric inner Jupiter on the dynamical evolution of icy body reservoirs in a planetary scattering scenario
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Zanardi, M., de Elía, G. C., Di Sisto, R. P., Naoz, S., Li, G., Guilera, O. M., and Brunini, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze the process of planetary scattering around M0-type stars. To do this, we carry out N-body simulations with three Jupiter-mass planets close to their instability limit together with an outer planetesimal disk. This paper focuses on the analysis of systems in which a single Jupiter-mass planet survives after the dynamical instability event. The small body reservoirs show different dynamical behaviors. In fact, our simulations produce particles on prograde and retrograde orbits, as well as particles whose orbital plane flips from prograde to retrograde and back again along their evolution. Such particles are called "Type-F particles". We find strong correlations between the inclination $i$ and the ascending node longitude $\Omega$ of such particles. First, $\Omega$ librates around 90$^{\circ}$ or/and 270$^{\circ}$. This property is very important since it represents a necessary and sufficient condition for the flipping of an orbit. Moreover, the libration periods of $i$ and $\Omega$ are equal and they are out to phase by a quarter period. We also remark that the larger the libration amplitude of $i$, the larger the libration amplitude of $\Omega$. Finally, we analyze the initial conditions of Type-F particles of all our simulations immediately after the dynamical instability event, when a single Jupiter-mass planet survives in the system. We carry out this study with the goal to determine the parameter space that lead to the flipping of an orbit. Our results suggest that the orbit of a test particle can flip for any value of its initial eccentricity, although we found only two Type-F particles with initial inclinations $i <$ 17$^{\circ}$. Moreover, our study indicates that the minimum value of the inclination of the Type-F particles in a given system decreases with an increase in the eccentricity of the giant planet., Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2017
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12. Transmission electron microscopy reveals the presence of SARS‐CoV‐2 in human spermatozoa associated with an ETosis‐like response.
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Hallak, Jorge, Caldini, Elia G., Teixeira, Thiago A., Correa, Maria Cassia Mendes, Duarte‐Neto, Amaro N., Zambrano, Fabiola, Taubert, Anja, Hermosilla, Carlos, Drevet, Joël R., Dolhnikoff, Marisa, Sanchez, Raul, and Saldiva, Paulo H. N.
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HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *ELECTRON detection , *TRANSMISSION electron microscopy , *PATHOGENIC viruses , *POLYMERASE chain reaction - Abstract
Background: Severe acute syndrome coronavirus 2 can invade a variety of tissues, including the testis. Even though this virus is scarcely found in human semen polymerase chain reaction tests, autopsy studies confirm the viral presence in all testicular cell types, including spermatozoa and spermatids. Objective: To investigate whether the severe acute syndrome coronavirus 2 is present inside the spermatozoa of negative polymerase chain reaction‐infected men up to 3 months after hospital discharge. Materials and methods: This cross‐sectional study included 13 confirmed moderate‐to‐severe COVID‐19 patients enrolled 30–90 days after the diagnosis. Semen samples were obtained and examined with real‐time polymerase chain reaction for RNA detection and by transmission electron microscopy. Results: In moderate‐to‐severe clinical scenarios, we identified the severe acute syndrome coronavirus 2 inside spermatozoa in nine of 13 patients up to 90 days after discharge from the hospital. Moreover, some DNA‐based extracellular traps were reported in all studied specimens. Discussion and conclusion: Although severe acute syndrome coronavirus 2 was not present in the infected men's semen, it was intracellularly present in the spermatozoa till 3 months after hospital discharge. The Electron microscopy (EM) findings also suggest that spermatozoa produce nuclear DNA‐based extracellular traps, probably in a cell‐free DNA‐dependent manner, similar to those previously described in the systemic inflammatory response to COVID‐19. In moderate‐to‐severe cases, the blood–testes barrier grants little defence against different pathogenic viruses, including the severe acute syndrome coronavirus 2. The virus could also use the epididymis as a post‐testicular route to bind and fuse to the mature spermatozoon and possibly accomplish the reverse transcription of the single‐stranded viral RNA into proviral DNA. These mechanisms can elicit extracellular cell‐free DNA formation. The potential implications of our findings for assisted conception must be addressed, and the evolutionary history of DNA‐based extracellular traps as preserved ammunition in animals' innate defence might improve our understanding of the severe acute syndrome coronavirus 2 pathophysiology in the testis and spermatozoa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Simulation of WSN for Air Particulate Matter Measurements
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D’Elia, G., De Vito, S., Ferro, M., Paciello, V., Sommella, P., Angrisani, Leopoldo, Series Editor, Arteaga, Marco, Series Editor, Panigrahi, Bijaya Ketan, Series Editor, Chakraborty, Samarjit, Series Editor, Chen, Jiming, Series Editor, Chen, Shanben, Series Editor, Chen, Tan Kay, Series Editor, Dillmann, Rüdiger, Series Editor, Duan, Haibin, Series Editor, Ferrari, Gianluigi, Series Editor, Ferre, Manuel, Series Editor, Hirche, Sandra, Series Editor, Jabbari, Faryar, Series Editor, Jia, Limin, Series Editor, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Khamis, Alaa, Series Editor, Kroeger, Torsten, Series Editor, Liang, Qilian, Series Editor, Martín, Ferran, Series Editor, Ming, Tan Cher, Series Editor, Minker, Wolfgang, Series Editor, Misra, Pradeep, Series Editor, Möller, Sebastian, Series Editor, Mukhopadhyay, Subhas, Series Editor, Ning, Cun-Zheng, Series Editor, Nishida, Toyoaki, Series Editor, Pascucci, Federica, Series Editor, Qin, Yong, Series Editor, Seng, Gan Woon, Series Editor, Speidel, Joachim, Series Editor, Veiga, Germano, Series Editor, Wu, Haitao, Series Editor, Zhang, Junjie James, Series Editor, Di Francia, Girolamo, editor, and Di Natale, Corrado, editor
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- 2021
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14. Drugs and natural products for the treatment of COVID-19 during 2020, the first year of the pandemic
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Jaimes-Castelán, Elia G., primary, González-Espinosa, Claudia, additional, Magos-Guerrero, Gil A., additional, Arrieta-Cruz, Isabel, additional, Jiménez-Estrada, Manuel, additional, Reyes-Chilpa, Ricardo, additional, and Castillo-Arellano, Jorge I., additional
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- 2024
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15. Corporate 'Excelerators': How Organizations Can Speed Up Crowdventuring for Exponential Innovation
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Margherita, A., Elia, G., Baets, W. R. J., Andersen, T. J., Acs, Zoltan J., Series Editor, Audretsch, David B., Series Editor, and Passiante, Giuseppina, editor
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- 2020
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16. Financing the Development of Technology Startups
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Elia, G., Quarta, F., Acs, Zoltan J., Series Editor, Audretsch, David B., Series Editor, and Passiante, Giuseppina, editor
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- 2020
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17. The Genome of Digital Entrepreneurship: A Descriptive Framework
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Elia, G., Gatti, Luca, Margherita, A., Acs, Zoltan J., Series Editor, Audretsch, David B., Series Editor, and Passiante, Giuseppina, editor
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- 2020
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18. Chemical and Mineralogical Characterization of a Cuprite–Miargyrite Ore and Proposal of Elimination of Semimetals by Alkaline Bath
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Ruiz, Aislinn Teja, Castro, Kinardo Flores, Labra, Migue Pérez, Perez, Martin Reyes, Palacios Beas, Elia G., Cruz, Víctor Esteban Reyes, Tapia, Julio Cesar Juárez, Li, Jian, editor, Zhang, Mingming, editor, Li, Bowen, editor, Monteiro, Sergio Neves, editor, Ikhmayies, Shadia, editor, Kalay, Yunus Eren, editor, Hwang, Jiann-Yang, editor, Escobedo-Diaz, Juan P., editor, Carpenter, John S., editor, and Brown, Andrew D., editor
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- 2020
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19. Optimal Field Calibration of Multiple IoT Low Cost Air Quality Monitors: Setup and Results
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Esposito, E., D’Elia, G., Ferlito, S., Del Giudice, A., Fattoruso, G., D’Auria, P., De Vito, S., Di Francia, G., Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Gervasi, Osvaldo, editor, Murgante, Beniamino, editor, Misra, Sanjay, editor, Garau, Chiara, editor, Blečić, Ivan, editor, Taniar, David, editor, Apduhan, Bernady O., editor, Rocha, Ana Maria A. C., editor, Tarantino, Eufemia, editor, Torre, Carmelo Maria, editor, and Karaca, Yeliz, editor
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- 2020
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20. Mineralogical and Micro-structural Investigation into the Mechanical Behaviour of a Soft Calcareous Mudstone
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Simpson, D., Rouainia, M., and Elia, G.
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- 2021
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21. Editorial a L’Università come luogo di benessere personale, relazionale organizzativo. Il contributo teorico prassico dei saperi pedagogici per lo sviluppo di una governance human-centered
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Elia, G, Seveso, G, Giaconi, C, Vannini, I, Elia, G, Seveso, G, Giaconi, C, and Vannini, I
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In welcoming their students, all formal education providers and training systems share an ethical and deontological duty to promote, safeguard and protect the conditions that ensure the acquisition of knowledge and skills, within a context of personal, community and social wellbeing. For universities in particular, in recent years, this task has evolved alongside all the other aspects of governance: from equal opportunities to transparency, from mobility to study support, from reception to orientation, etc. Over the past years and decades, universities have developed a deep sense of social responsibility and public en-gagement. However, this change has not always been accompanied by the development of an appropriate insti-tutional and organizational culture and a corresponding pedagogical and teaching practice to respond to new needs, different expectations and demands for recognition and care. The university institution’s lack of systematic caring thinking has sometimes promoted actions that are only useful for intervening to «fix» problems that have, from time to time, arisen. The discomfort felt by people within uni-versities is, instead, often related to the use of devices that are exclusively performance-oriented and that often ig-nore the individuality, histories, needs, desires, and potential of students, their families, faculty, technical-administrative staff, the world of work, the entire territory, etc. From a pedagogical perspective, in the medium to long term, a «restorative» approach is rarely an effective means of promoting an «intelligence of the university institution» that can situate emerging problems within a new ecol-ogy of operation that goes beyond the simple management of problems and promotes an alternative resolution. This issue of Pedagogia Oggi aims to initiate a reflection on the role that university can play today in promoting a culture of education that is never divorced from wellbeing and that safeguards the dimension of humanitas in t
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- 2024
22. Pristine and engineered biochar as Na-ion batteries anode material: A comprehensive overview
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Bartoli, M, Piovano, A, Elia, G, Meligrana, G, Pedraza, R, Pianta, N, Tealdi, C, Pagot, G, Negro, E, Triolo, C, Vazquez Gomez, L, Comisso, N, Tagliaferro, A, Santangelo, S, Quartarone, E, Di Noto, V, Mustarelli, P, Ruffo, R, Gerbaldi, C, Elia, GA, Bartoli, M, Piovano, A, Elia, G, Meligrana, G, Pedraza, R, Pianta, N, Tealdi, C, Pagot, G, Negro, E, Triolo, C, Vazquez Gomez, L, Comisso, N, Tagliaferro, A, Santangelo, S, Quartarone, E, Di Noto, V, Mustarelli, P, Ruffo, R, Gerbaldi, C, and Elia, GA
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The sodium-ion battery (Na-ion battery, NIB) is considered the most promising post-lithium energy storage technology, taking advantage of using the same manufacturing technology as Li-ion batteries (LIBs), while enabling the use of more abundant and economic, thus more sustainable, raw materials. Due to the inability of Na+ ions to be intercalated within the graphene-layered structure of graphite-based electrodes (the state of art anode material in LIBs), highly disordered and microporous carbons, known as hard carbons, are considered the anode material of choice for NIB technology. Biomass-derived biochar (BC) is one of the most relevant classes of hard carbons, exhibiting a good combination of sustainable fabrication, structural-morphological features and electrochemical performances. In this review, the main achievements on BC are rigorously reported from the production to the application into NIBs, with particular emphasis on the strategies to improve the electrochemical behaviour of BC by activating it and tailoring its chemical and structural properties. These strategies include selecting specific feedstocks, modulation of the pyrolysis temperature, pre- and post-production treatments, and materials engineering. The possible role of BC in sustainable NIBs development is also briefly discussed, together with some insights of its use in other post-Li energy storage systems and some concluding remarks and future direction of the research.
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- 2024
23. Terrestrial-type planet formation: Comparing different types of initial conditions
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Ronco, M. P., de Elía, G. C., and Guilera, O. M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
To study the terrestrial-type planet formation during the post oligarchic growth, the initial distributions of planetary embryos and planetesimals used in N-body simulations play an important role. Most of these studies typically use ad hoc initial distributions based on theoretical and numerical studies. We analyze the formation of planetary systems without gas giants around solar-type stars focusing on the sensitivity of the results to the particular initial distributions of planetesimals and embryos. The formation of terrestrial planets in the habitable zone (HZ) and their final water contents are topics of interest. We developed two different sets of N-body simulations from the same protoplanetary disk. The first set assumes ad hoc initial distributions for embryos and planetesimals and the second set obtains these distributions from the results of a semi-analytical model which simulates the evolution of the gaseous phase of the disk. Both sets form planets in the HZ. Ad hoc initial conditions form planets in the HZ with masses from $0.66M_{\oplus}$ to $2.27M_{\oplus}$. More realistic initial conditions obtained from a semi-analytical model, form planets with masses between $1.18M_{\oplus}$ and $2.21M_{\oplus}$. Both sets form planets in the HZ with water contents between 4.5% and 39.48% by mass. Those planets with the highest water contents respect to those with the lowest, present differences regarding the sources of water supply. We suggest that the number of planets in the HZ is not sensitive to the particular initial distribution of embryos and planetesimals and thus, the results are globally similar between both sets. However, the main differences are associated to the accretion history of the planets in the HZ. These discrepancies have a direct impact in the accretion of water-rich material and in the physical characteristics of the resulting planets., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, 13 pages, 9 figures
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- 2015
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24. Chemical composition of Earth-like planets
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Ronco, M. P., Thiabaud, A., Marboeuf, U., Alibert, Y., de Elía, G. C., and Guilera, O. M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Models of planet formation are mainly focused on the accretion and dynamical processes of the planets, neglecting their chemical composition. In this work, we calculate the condensation sequence of the different chemical elements for a low-mass protoplanetary disk around a solar-type star. We incorporate this sequence of chemical elements (refractory and volatile elements) in our semi-analytical model of planet formation which calculates the formation of a planetary system during its gaseous phase. The results of the semi-analytical model (final distributions of embryos and planetesimals) are used as initial conditions to develope N-body simulations that compute the post-oligarchic formation of terrestrial-type planets. The results of our simulations show that the chemical composition of the planets that remain in the habitable zone has similar characteristics to the chemical composition of the Earth. However, exist differences that can be associated to the dynamical environment in which they were formed., Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures - Accepted for publication in the Bolet\'in de la Asociaci\'on Argentina de Astronom\'ia, vol.57
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- 2015
25. Determination of the dissolution rate of hazardous jarosites in different conditions using the shrinking core kinetic model
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Islas, Hernán, Flores, Mizraim U., Reyes, Iván A., Juárez, Julio C., Reyes, Martín, Teja, Aislinn M., Palacios, Elia G., Pandiyan, Thangarasu, and Aguilar-Carrillo, Javier
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- 2020
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26. Early clearance of hairy cell leukaemia in the bone marrow after first‐line treatment with cladribine predicts a favourable outcome
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Ligia, S., primary, Passucci, M., additional, Assanto, G. M., additional, D'Elia, G. M., additional, Annechini, G., additional, De Propris, M. S., additional, Martelli, M., additional, Del Giudice, I., additional, Tiacci, E., additional, and Pulsoni, A., additional
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- 2023
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27. Planetesimal fragmentation and giant planet formation: the role of planet migration
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Guilera, O. M., Swoboda, D., Alibert, Y., de Elía, G. C., Santamaría, P. J., and Brunini, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
In the standard model of core accretion, the cores of the giant planets form by the accretion of planetesimals. In this scenario, the evolution of the planetesimal population plays an important role in the formation of massive cores. Recently, we studied the role of planetesimal fragmentation in the in situ formation of a giant planet. However, the exchange of angular momentum between the planet and the gaseous disk causes the migration of the planet in the disk. In this new work, we incorporate the migration of the planet and globally study the role of planet migration in the formation of a massive core when the population of planetesimals evolves by planet accretion, migration due to the nebular drag, and fragmentation due to planetesimal collisions., Comment: Submitted to Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 310, 2014 "Complex Planetary Systems"
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- 2014
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28. The role of planetesimal fragmentation on giant planet formation
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Guilera, O. M., de Elía, G. C., Brunini, A., and Santamaría, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
In the standard scenario of planet formation, terrestrial planets and the cores of the giant planets are formed by accretion of planetesimals. As planetary embryos grow the planetesimal velocity dispersion increases due to gravitational excitations produced by embryos. The increase of planetesimal relative velocities causes the fragmentation of them due to mutual collisions. We study the role of planetesimal fragmentation on giant planet formation. We analyze how planetesimal fragmentation modifies the growth of giant planet's cores for a wide range of planetesimal sizes and disk masses. We incorporate a model of planetesimal fragmentation into our model of in situ giant planet formation. We calculate the evolution of the solid surface density (planetesimals plus fragments) due to the accretion by the planet, migration and fragmentation. The incorporation of planetesimal fragmentation significantly modifies the process of planetary formation. If most of the mass loss in planetesimal collisions is distributed in the smaller fragments, planetesimal fragmentation inhibits the growth of the embryo for initial planetesimals of radii lower than 10 km. Only for initial planetesimals of 100 km of radius, and disks greater than 0.06 Msun, embryos achieve masses greater than the mass of the Earth. However, even for such big planetesimals and massive disks, planetesimal fragmentation induces the quickly formation of massive cores only if most of the mass loss in planetesimal collisions is distributed in the bigger fragments. Planetesimal fragmentation seems to play an important role in giant planet formation. The way in which the mass loss in planetesimal collisions is distributed leads to different results, inhibiting or favoring the formation of massive cores., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (preliminar version). 14 pages, 17 figures, 1 table
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- 2014
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29. Kennedy’s disease: an under-recognized motor neuron disorder
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Malek, Elia G., Salameh, Johnny S., and Makki, Achraf
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- 2020
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30. Resistin levels and inflammatory and endothelial dysfunction markers in obese postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes mellitus
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Giandalia, A., Alibrandi, A., Giorgianni, L., Lo Piano, F., Consolo, F., Longo Elia, G., Asztalos, B., Cucinotta, D., Squadrito, G., and Russo, G. T.
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- 2021
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31. Addressing the feasibility of inboard direct-line injection of high-speed pellets, for core fueling of DEMO
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Frattolillo, A., Baylor, L.R., Bombarda, F., Cismondi, F., Colangeli, A., Combs, S.K., Day, Chr., D’Elia, G., Gebhart, T.E., Iannone, F., Lang, P.T., Meitner, S.J., Migliori, S., Moro, F., Mozzillo, R., Pégourié, B., Ploeckl, B., Podda, S., and Poggi, F.
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- 2019
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32. Remote control of a high-speed pellet injector and data synchronization & sharing tools
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Iannone, F., Frattolillo, A., Bombarda, F., D’Elia, G., Migliori, S., Podda, S., Poggi, F., Combs, S.K., Baylor, L.R., Gebhart, T.E., and Meitner, S.J.
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- 2019
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33. Impactor flux and cratering on Ceres and Vesta: Implications for the early Solar System
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de Elía, G. C. and Di Sisto, R. P.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the impactor flux and cratering on Ceres and Vesta caused by the collisional and dynamical evolution of the asteroid Main Belt. We develop a statistical code based on a well-tested model for the simultaneous evolution of the Main Belt and NEA size distributions. This code includes catastrophic collisions and noncollisional removal processes such as the Yarkovsky effect and the orbital resonances. The model assumes that the dynamical depletion of the early Main Belt was very strong, and owing to that, most Main Belt comminution occurred when its dynamical structure was similar to the present one. Our results indicate that the number of D > 1 km Main Belt asteroids striking Ceres and Vesta over the Solar System history are approximately 4 600 and 1 100 respectively. The largest Main Belt asteroids expected to have impacted Ceres and Vesta had diameters of 71.7 km and 21.1 km. The number of D > 0.1 km craters on Ceres is \sim 3.4 \times 10^8 and 6.2 \times 10^7 on Vesta. The number of craters with D > 100 km are 47 on Ceres and 8 on Vesta. Our study indicates that the D = 460 km crater observed on Vesta had to be formed by the impact of a D \sim 66.2 km projectile, which has a probability of occurr \sim 30% over the Solar System history. If significant discrepancies between our results about the cratering on Ceres and Vesta and data obtained from the Dawn Mission were found, they should be linked to a higher degree of collisional evolution during the early Main Belt and/or the existence of the late heavy bombardment. An increase in the collisional activity in the early phase may be provided for an initial configuration of the giant planets consistent with, for example, the Nice model. From this, the Dawn Mission would be able to give us clues about the initial configuration of the early Solar System and its subsequent dynamical evolution., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2011
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34. The Ara OB1a association: Stellar population and star formation history
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Baume, G., Carraro, G., Comeron, F., and de Elıa, G. C.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Context: The Ara OB1a association is a nearby complex in the fourth Galactic quadrant where a number of young/embedded star clusters are projected close to more evolved, intermediate age clusters. It is also rich in interstellar matter, and contains evidence of the interplay between massive stars and their surrounding medium, such as the rim HII region NGC 6188. Aims: We provide robust estimates of the fundamental parameters (age and distance) of the two most prominent stellar clusters, NGC 6167 and NGC 6193, that may be used as a basis for studing the star formation history of the region. Methods: The study is based on a photometric optical survey (UBVIHa) of NGC 6167 and NGC 6193 and their nearby field, complemented with public data from 2MASS-VVV, UCAC3, and IRAC-Spitzer in this region. Results: We produce a uniform photometric catalogue and estimate more robustly the fundamental parameters of NGC 6167 and NGC 6193, in addition to the IRAS 16375-4854 source. As a consequence, all of them are located at approximately the same distance from the Sun in the Sagittarius-Carina Galactic arm. However, the ages we estimate differ widely: NGC 6167 is found to be an intermediate-age cluster (20-30 Myr), NGC 6193 a very young one (1-5 Myr) with PMS, H? emitters and class II objects, and the IRAS 16375-4854 source is the youngest of the three containing several YSOs. Conclusions: These results support a picture in which Ara OB1a is a region where star formation has proceeded for several tens of Myr until the present. The difference in the ages of the different stellar groups can be interpreted as a consequence of a triggered star formation process. In the specific case of NGC 6193, we find evidence of possible non-coeval star formation.
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- 2011
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35. Impactor Flux and Cratering on the Pluto-Charon System
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de Elía, G. C., Di Sisto, R. P., and Brunini, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the impactor flux and cratering on Pluto and Charon due to the collisional evolution of Plutinos. Plutinos are those trans-Neptunian objects located at 39.5 AU, in the 3:2 mean motion resonance with Neptune. To do this, we develop a statistical code that includes catastrophic collisions and cratering events, and takes into account the stability and instability zones of the 3:2 mean motion resonance with Neptune. We proposes different initial populations that account for the uncertainty in the size distribution of Plutinos at small sizes. Depending on the initial population, our results indicate the following. The number of D > 1 km Plutinos streaking Pluto over 3.5 Gyr is between 1271 and 5552. For Charon, the number of D > 1 km Plutino impactors is between 354 and 1545. The number of D > 1 km craters on Pluto produced by Plutinos during the last 3.5 Gyr is between 43076 and 113879. For Charon, the number of D > 1 km craters is between 20351 and 50688.The largest Plutino impactor onto Pluto has a diameter between 17 and 23 km, which produces a craterwith a diameter of 31 - 39 km. The largest Plutino impactor onto Charon has a diameter between 10 and 15 km, which produces a crater with a diameter of 24 - 33 km. We test if 2 Pluto-sized objects are assumed in the 3:2 Neptune resonance, then the total number of Plutino impactors both onto Pluto as Charon with diameters D > 1 km is a factor of 1.6 - 1.8 larger if considering 1 Pluto-sized object. Given the dynamical structure of the trans-Neptunian region, it is necessary to study in detail the contribution of all the potential sources of impactors on the Pluto-Charon system, to obtain the main contributor and the whole production of craters. Then, we will be able to contrast those studies with observations which will help us to understand the geological processes and history of the surface of those worlds., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2010
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36. Dynamical evolution of escaped plutinos, another source of Centaurs
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Di Sisto, R. P., Brunini, A., and de Elia, G. C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
It was shown in previous works the existence of weakly chaotic orbits in the plutino population that diffuse very slowly. These orbits correspond to long-term plutino escapers and then represent the plutinos that are escaping from the resonance at present. In this paper we perform numerical simulations in order to explore the dynamical evolution of plutinos recently escaped from the resonance. The numerical simulations were divided in two parts. In the first one we evolved 20,000 test particles in the resonance in order to detect and select the long-term escapers. In the second one, we numerically integrate the selected escaped plutinos in order to study their dynamical post escaped behavior. Our main results include the characterization of the routes of escape of plutinos and their evolution in the Centaur zone. We obtained a present rate of escape of plutinos between 1 and 10 every 10 years. The escaped plutinos have a mean lifetime in the Centaur zone of 108 Myr and their contribution to the Centaur population would be a fraction of less than 6 % of the total Centaur population. In this way, escaped plutinos would be a secondary source of Centaurs., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2010
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37. Early clearance of hairy cell leukaemia in the bone marrow after first‐line treatment with cladribine predicts a favourable outcome.
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Ligia, S., Passucci, M., Assanto, G. M., D'Elia, G. M., Annechini, G., De Propris, M. S., Martelli, M., Del Giudice, I., Tiacci, E., and Pulsoni, A.
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HAIRY cell leukemia ,BONE marrow cells ,BONE marrow ,PROGRESSION-free survival - Abstract
Summary: First‐line purine nucleoside analogues (PNAs) in hairy cell leukaemia (HCL) allow deep and long‐lasting responses. We retrospectively analysed 53 HCL patients treated frontline with cladribine and assessed for response at 2 and 6 months after treatment to evaluate the kinetics of response. The estimated median progression‐free survival was significantly different according to the degree of residual HCL infiltrate detected by immunohistochemistry at the bone marrow biopsy at 2 months (≤5% vs. >5%, 247 vs. 132 months, respectively, p = 0.033), but not at 6 months (p = 0.79). Our data suggest a favourable prognostic impact of early marrow HCL clearance in patients treated with cladribine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. Evaluating vandetanib in the treatment of medullary thyroid cancer: patient-reported outcomes
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Fallahi P, Ferrari SM, Elia G, Ragusa F, Paparo SR, Ruffilli I, Patrizio A, Materazzi G, and Antonelli A
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MTC ,pediatric MTC ,vandetanib ,RET ,VEGFR ,EGFR ,DTC ,AEs ,calcitonin ,CEA. ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Poupak Fallahi,1 Silvia Martina Ferrari,2 Giusy Elia,2 Francesca Ragusa,2 Sabrina Rosaria Paparo,2 Ilaria Ruffilli,2 Armando Patrizio,2 Gabriele Materazzi,3 Alessandro Antonelli21Department of Translational Research and of New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy; 2Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy; 3Department of Surgical, Medical, Molecular Pathology and Critical Area, University of Pisa, Pisa, ItalyCorrespondence: Alessandro AntonelliDepartment of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Pisa, Via Savi, 10, Pisa I-56126, ItalyTel +39 05 099 2318Fax +39 05 099 3472Email alessandro.antonelli@med.unipi.itAbstract: Medullary thyroid cancers (MTCs) are neuroendocrine tumors, which secrete calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen, both of which can serve as tumor markers. Extensive and accurate surgical resection is the primary treatment for MTC, whereas the use of external beam radiotherapy is limited. Moreover, since MTC is derived from thyroid parafollicular cells or C cells, it is not responsive to either radioiodine or thyroid-stimulating hormone suppression, and therefore, they cannot be considered as treatment strategies. Traditional therapies for advanced or metastatic progressive medullary thyroid cancer (pMTC) are poorly effective. Among the new approaches tested in clinical trials, targeted chemotherapies with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are now available and they represent effective interventions for progressive disease, with additional investigational options emerging. This paper reviews the efficacy and safety of vandetanib in patients with a pMTC, as it has been shown to improve progression-free survival (30.5 vs 19.3 months in controls). Vandetanib is approved by the FDA and EMA for symptomatic or progressive MTC in patients with unresectable locally advanced or metastatic disease in adults, adolescents, and children older than 5 years. The most common adverse events in vandetanib-treated patients are diarrhea, rash, folliculitis, nausea, QTc prolongation, hypertension, and fatigue. More data are required to deepen our knowledge on molecular biology of tumor and host defense, with the aim to achieve better prognosis and higher quality of life for affected patients.Keywords: MTC, pediatric MTC, vandetanib, RET, VEGFR, AEs
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- 2019
39. Optimal Field Calibration of Multiple IoT Low Cost Air Quality Monitors: Setup and Results
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Esposito, E., primary, D’Elia, G., additional, Ferlito, S., additional, Del Giudice, A., additional, Fattoruso, G., additional, D’Auria, P., additional, De Vito, S., additional, and Di Francia, G., additional
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- 2020
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40. The Genome of Digital Entrepreneurship: A Descriptive Framework
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Elia, G., primary, Gatti, Luca, additional, and Margherita, A., additional
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- 2020
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41. Corporate “Excelerators”: How Organizations Can Speed Up Crowdventuring for Exponential Innovation
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Margherita, A., primary, Elia, G., additional, Baets, W. R. J., additional, and Andersen, T. J., additional
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- 2020
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42. Financing the Development of Technology Startups
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Elia, G., primary and Quarta, F., additional
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- 2020
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43. Evidence of exposure to SARS-CoV-2 in cats and dogs from households in Italy
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Patterson, E. I., Elia, G., Grassi, A., Giordano, A., Desario, C., Medardo, M., Smith, S. L., Anderson, E. R., Prince, T., Patterson, G. T., Lorusso, E., Lucente, M. S., Lanave, G., Lauzi, S., Bonfanti, U., Stranieri, A., Martella, V., Solari Basano, F., Barrs, V. R., Radford, A. D., Agrimi, U., Hughes, G. L., Paltrinieri, S., and Decaro, N.
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- 2020
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44. State of the art and perspective of high-speed pellet injection technology
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Bombarda, F., Frattolillo, A., Migliori, S., Iannone, F., Podda, S., D’Elia, G., Baylor, L.R., and Combs, S.K.
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- 2017
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45. Exercise Training Improves High Blood Pressure Variability-induced Cardiac Damage In Normotensive Rats: 2119 Board #38 May 28 3:00 PM - 4:30 PM
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Moraes-Silva, Ivana C., De Angelis, Katia, Damaceno-Rodrigues, Nilsa R., Caldini, Elia G., and Irigoyen, Maria Claudia
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- 2020
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46. Leveraging knowledge discovery and knowledge visualization to define the 'inner areas': an application to an Italian province
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Moretto V., Elia G., Ghiani G., Moretto, V., Elia, G., and Ghiani, G.
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Knowledge discovery ,Knowledge visualization ,Inner area ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Strategy and Management ,Local development ,Territorial planning ,Rural area ,Clustering - Abstract
Purpose Starting from a critical analysis of the main criteria currently used to identify marginal areas, this paper aims to propose a new classification model of such territories by leveraging knowledge discovery approaches and knowledge visualization techniques, which represent a fundamental pillar in the knowledge-based urban development process. Design/methodology/approach The methodology adopted in this study relies on the design science research, which includes five steps: problem identification, objective definition, solution design and development, demonstration and evaluation. Findings Results demonstrate how to exploit knowledge discovery and visualization to obtain multiple mappings of inner areas, in the aim to identify good practices and optimize resources to set up more effective territorial development strategies and plans. The proposed approach overcomes the traditional way adopted to map inner areas that uses a single indicator (i.e. the distance between a municipality and the nearest pole where it is possible to access to education, health and transportation services) and leverages seven groups of indicators that represent the distinguishing features of territories (territorial capital, social costs, citizenship, geo-demography, economy, innovation and sustainable development). Research limitations/implications The proposed model could be enriched by new variables, whose value can be collected by official sources and stakeholders engaged to provide both structured and unstructured data. Also, another enhancement could be the development of a cross-algorithms comparison that may reveal useful to suggest which algorithm can better suit the needs of policy makers or practitioners. Practical implications This study sets the ground for proposing a decision support tool that policy makers can use to classify in a new way the inner areas, thus overcoming the current approach and leveraging the distinguishing features of territories. Originality/value This study shows how the availability of distributed knowledge sources, the modern knowledge management techniques and the emerging digital technologies can provide new opportunities for the governance of a city or territory, thus revitalizing the domain of knowledge-based urban development.
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- 2022
47. Corrigendum to ‘An international genome-wide meta-analysis of primary biliary cholangitis: Novel risk loci and candidate drugs’ [J Hepatol 2021;75(3):572–581] (Journal of Hepatology (2021) 75(3) (572–581), (S0168827821003342), (10.1016/j.jhep.2021.04.055))
- Author
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Cordell H. J., Cordell, H, Fryett, J, Ueno, K, Darlay, R, Aiba, Y, Hitomi, Y, Kawashima, M, Nishida, N, Khor, S, Gervais, O, Kawai, Y, Nagasaki, M, Tokunaga, K, Tang, R, Shi, Y, Li, Z, Juran, B, Atkinson, E, Gerussi, A, Carbone, M, Asselta, R, Cheung, A, de Andrade, M, Baras, A, Horowitz, J, Ferreira, M, Sun, D, Jones, D, Flack, S, Spicer, A, Mulcahy, V, Byun, J, Han, Y, Sandford, R, Lazaridis, K, Amos, C, Hirschfield, G, Seldin, M, Invernizzi, P, Siminovitch, K, Ma, X, Nakamura, M, Mells, G, Mason, A, Vincent, C, Xie, G, Zhang, J, Affronti, A, Almasio, P, Alvaro, D, Andreone, P, Andriulli, A, Azzaroli, F, Battezzati, P, Benedetti, A, Bragazzi, M, Brunetto, M, Bruno, S, Calvaruso, V, Cardinale, V, Casella, G, Cazzagon, N, Ciaccio, A, Coco, B, Colli, A, Colloredo, G, Colombo, M, Colombo, S, Cristoferi, L, Cursaro, C, Croce, L, Crosignani, A, D'Amato, D, Donato, F, Elia, G, Fabris, L, Fagiuoli, S, Ferrari, C, Floreani, A, Galli, A, Giannini, E, Grattagliano, I, Lampertico, P, Lleo, A, Malinverno, F, Mancuso, C, Marra, F, Marzioni, M, Massironi, S, Mattalia, A, Miele, L, Milani, C, Morini, L, Morisco, F, Muratori, L, Muratori, P, Niro, G, O'Donnell, S, Picciotto, A, Portincasa, P, Rigamonti, C, Ronca, V, Rosina, F, Spinzi, G, Strazzabosco, M, Tiribelli, C, Toniutto, P, Valenti, L, Vinci, M, Zuin, M, Nakamura, H, Abiru, S, Nagaoka, S, Komori, A, Yatsuhashi, H, Ishibashi, H, Ito, M, Migita, K, Ohira, H, Katsushima, S, Naganuma, A, Sugi, K, Komatsu, T, Mannami, T, Matsushita, K, Yoshizawa, K, Makita, F, Nikami, T, Nishimura, H, Kouno, H, Ota, H, Komura, T, Nakamura, Y, Shimada, M, Hirashima, N, Komeda, T, Ario, K, Nakamuta, M, Yamashita, T, Furuta, K, Kikuchi, M, Naeshiro, N, Takahashi, H, Mano, Y, Tsunematsu, S, Yabuuchi, I, Shimada, Y, Yamauchi, K, Sugimoto, R, Sakai, H, Mita, E, Koda, M, Tsuruta, S, Kamitsukasa, H, Sato, T, Masaki, N, Kobata, T, Fukushima, N, Ohara, Y, Muro, T, Takesaki, E, Takaki, H, Yamamoto, T, Kato, M, Nagaoki, Y, Hayashi, S, Ishida, J, Watanabe, Y, Kobayashi, M, Koga, M, Saoshiro, T, Yagura, M, Hirata, K, Tanaka, A, Takikawa, H, Zeniya, M, Abe, M, Onji, M, Kaneko, S, Honda, M, Arai, K, Arinaga-Hino, T, Hashimoto, E, Taniai, M, Umemura, T, Joshita, S, Nakao, K, Ichikawa, T, Shibata, H, Yamagiwa, S, Seike, M, Honda, K, Sakisaka, S, Takeyama, Y, Harada, M, Senju, M, Yokosuka, O, Kanda, T, Ueno, Y, Kikuchi, K, Ebinuma, H, Himoto, T, Yasunami, M, Murata, K, Mizokami, M, Kawata, K, Shimoda, S, Miyake, Y, Takaki, A, Yamamoto, K, Hirano, K, Ichida, T, Ido, A, Tsubouchi, H, Chayama, K, Harada, K, Nakanuma, Y, Maehara, Y, Taketomi, A, Shirabe, K, Soejima, Y, Mori, A, Yagi, S, Uemoto, S, H, E, Tanaka, T, Yamashiki, N, Tamura, S, Sugawara, Y, Kokudo, N, Chalasani, N, Luketic, V, Odin, J, Chopra, K, Abecasis, G, Cantor, M, Coppola, G, Economides, A, Lotta, L, Overton, J, Reid, J, Shuldiner, A, Beechert, C, Forsythe, C, Fuller, E, Gu, Z, Lattari, M, Lopez, A, Schleicher, T, Padilla, M, Toledo, K, Widom, L, Wolf, S, Pradhan, M, Manoochehri, K, Ulloa, R, Bai, X, Balasubramanian, S, Barnard, L, Blumenfeld, A, Eom, G, Habegger, L, Hawes, A, Khalid, S, Maxwell, E, Salerno, W, Staples, J, Jones, M, Mitnaul, L, Sturgess, R, Healey, C, Yeoman, A, Gunasekera, A, Kooner, P, Kapur, K, Sathyanarayana, V, Kallis, Y, Subhani, J, Harvey, R, Mccorry, R, Rooney, P, Ramanaden, D, Evans, R, Mathialahan, T, Gasem, J, Shorrock, C, Bhalme, M, Southern, P, Tibble, J, Gorard, D, Jones, S, Srivastava, B, Foxton, M, Collins, C, Elphick, D, Karmo, M, Porras-Perez, F, Mendall, M, Yapp, T, Patel, M, Ede, R, Sayer, J, Jupp, J, Fisher, N, Carter, M, Koss, K, Shah, J, Piotrowicz, A, Scott, G, Grimley, C, Gooding, I, Williams, S, Tidbury, J, Lim, G, Cheent, K, Levi, S, Mansour, D, Beckley, M, Hollywood, C, Wong, T, Marley, R, Ramage, J, Gordon, H, Ridpath, J, Ngatchu, T, Bob Grover, V, Shidrawi, R, Abouda, G, Corless, L, Narain, M, Rees, I, Brown, A, Taylor-Robinson, S, Wilkins, J, Grellier, L, Banim, P, Das, D, Heneghan, M, Curtis, H, Matthews, H, Mohammed, F, Aldersley, M, Srirajaskanthan, R, Walker, G, Mcnair, A, Sharif, A, Sen, S, Bird, G, Prince, M, Prasad, G, Kitchen, P, Barnardo, A, Oza, C, Sivaramakrishnan, N, Gupta, P, Shah, A, Evans, C, Saha, S, Pollock, K, Bramley, P, Mukhopadhya, A, Barclay, S, Mcdonald, N, Bathgate, A, Palmer, K, Dillon, J, Rushbrook, S, Przemioslo, R, Mcdonald, C, Millar, A, Tai, C, Mitchell, S, Metcalf, J, Shaukat, S, Ninkovic, M, Shmueli, U, Davis, A, Naqvi, A, Lee, T, Ryder, S, Collier, J, Klass, H, Cramp, M, Sharer, N, Aspinall, R, Ghosh, D, Douds, A, Booth, J, Williams, E, Hussaini, H, Christie, J, Mann, S, Thorburn, D, Marshall, A, Patanwala, I, Ala, A, Maltby, J, Matthew, R, Corbett, C, Vyas, S, Singhal, S, Gleeson, D, Misra, S, Butterworth, J, George, K, Harding, T, Douglass, A, Mitchison, H, Panter, S, Shearman, J, Bray, G, Roberts, M, Butcher, G, Forton, D, Mahmood, Z, Cowan, M, Ch'Ng, C, Rahman, M, Whatley, G, Wesley, E, Mandal, A, Jain, S, Pereira, S, Wright, M, Trivedi, P, Gordon, F, Unitt, E, Palejwala, A, Austin, A, Vemala, V, Grant, A, Higham, A, Brind, A, Mathew, R, Cox, M, Ramakrishnan, S, King, A, Whalley, S, Fraser, J, Thomson, S, Bell, A, Wong, V, Kia, R, Gee, I, Keld, R, Ransford, R, Gotto, J, Millson, C, Tarocchi, M, Cordell H. J., Fryett J. J., Ueno K., Darlay R., Aiba Y., Hitomi Y., Kawashima M., Nishida N., Khor S. -S., Gervais O., Kawai Y., Nagasaki M., Tokunaga K., Tang R., Shi Y., Li Z., Juran B. D., Atkinson E. J., Gerussi A., Carbone M., Asselta R., Cheung A., de Andrade M., Baras A., Horowitz J., Ferreira M. A. R., Sun D., Jones D. E., Flack S., Spicer A., Mulcahy V. L., Byun J., Han Y., Sandford R. N., Lazaridis K. N., Amos C. I., Hirschfield G. M., Seldin M. F., Invernizzi P., Siminovitch K. A., Ma X., Nakamura M., Mells G. F., Mason A., Vincent C., Xie G., Zhang J., Affronti A., Almasio P. L., Alvaro D., Andreone P., Andriulli A., Azzaroli F., Battezzati P. M., Benedetti A., Bragazzi M. C., Brunetto M., Bruno S., Calvaruso V., Cardinale V., Casella G., Cazzagon N., Ciaccio A., Coco B., Colli A., Colloredo G., Colombo M., Colombo S., Cristoferi L., Cursaro C., Croce L. S., Crosignani A., D'Amato D., Donato F., Elia G., Fabris L., Fagiuoli S., Ferrari C., Floreani A., Galli A., Giannini E., Grattagliano I., Lampertico P., Lleo A., Malinverno F., Mancuso C., Marra F., Marzioni M., Massironi S., Mattalia A., Miele L., Milani C., Morini L., Morisco F., Muratori L., Muratori P., Niro G. A., O'Donnell S., Picciotto A., Portincasa P., Rigamonti C., Ronca V., Rosina F., Spinzi G., Strazzabosco M., Tiribelli C., Toniutto P., Valenti L., Vinci M., Zuin M., Nakamura H., Abiru S., Nagaoka S., Komori A., Yatsuhashi H., Ishibashi H., Ito M., Migita K., Ohira H., Katsushima S., Naganuma A., Sugi K., Komatsu T., Mannami T., Matsushita K., Yoshizawa K., Makita F., Nikami T., Nishimura H., Kouno H., Ota H., Komura T., Nakamura Y., Shimada M., Hirashima N., Komeda T., Ario K., Nakamuta M., Yamashita T., Furuta K., Kikuchi M., Naeshiro N., Takahashi H., Mano Y., Tsunematsu S., Yabuuchi I., Shimada Y., Yamauchi K., Sugimoto R., Sakai H., Mita E., Koda M., Tsuruta S., Kamitsukasa H., Sato T., Masaki N., Kobata T., Fukushima N., Ohara Y., Muro T., Takesaki E., Takaki H., Yamamoto T., Kato M., Nagaoki Y., Hayashi S., Ishida J., Watanabe Y., Kobayashi M., Koga M., Saoshiro T., Yagura M., Hirata K., Tanaka A., Takikawa H., Zeniya M., Abe M., Onji M., Kaneko S., Honda M., Arai K., Arinaga-Hino T., Hashimoto E., Taniai M., Umemura T., Joshita S., Nakao K., Ichikawa T., Shibata H., Yamagiwa S., Seike M., Honda K., Sakisaka S., Takeyama Y., Harada M., Senju M., Yokosuka O., Kanda T., Ueno Y., Kikuchi K., Ebinuma H., Himoto T., Yasunami M., Murata K., Mizokami M., Kawata K., Shimoda S., Miyake Y., Takaki A., Yamamoto K., Hirano K., Ichida T., Ido A., Tsubouchi H., Chayama K., Harada K., Nakanuma Y., Maehara Y., Taketomi A., Shirabe K., Soejima Y., Mori A., Yagi S., Uemoto S., H E., Tanaka T., Yamashiki N., Tamura S., Sugawara Y., Kokudo N., Chalasani N., Luketic V., Odin J., Chopra K., Abecasis G., Cantor M., Coppola G., Economides A., Lotta L. A., Overton J. D., Reid J. G., Shuldiner A., Beechert C., Forsythe C., Fuller E. D., Gu Z., Lattari M., Lopez A., Schleicher T. D., Padilla M. S., Toledo K., Widom L., Wolf S. E., Pradhan M., Manoochehri K., Ulloa R. H., Bai X., Balasubramanian S., Barnard L., Blumenfeld A., Eom G., Habegger L., Hawes A., Khalid S., Maxwell E. K., Salerno W., Staples J. C., Jones M. B., Mitnaul L. J., Sturgess R., Healey C., Yeoman A., Gunasekera A. V. J., Kooner P., Kapur K., Sathyanarayana V., Kallis Y., Subhani J., Harvey R., McCorry R., Rooney P., Ramanaden D., Evans R., Mathialahan T., Gasem J., Shorrock C., Bhalme M., Southern P., Tibble J. A., Gorard D. A., Jones S., Mells G., Mulcahy V., Srivastava B., Foxton M. R., Collins C. E., Elphick D., Karmo M., Porras-Perez F., Mendall M., Yapp T., Patel M., Ede R., Sayer J., Jupp J., Fisher N., Carter M. J., Koss K., Shah J., Piotrowicz A., Scott G., Grimley C., Gooding I. R., Williams S., Tidbury J., Lim G., Cheent K., Levi S., Mansour D., Beckley M., Hollywood C., Wong T., Marley R., Ramage J., Gordon H. M., Ridpath J., Ngatchu T., Bob Grover V. P., Shidrawi R. G., Abouda G., Corless L., Narain M., Rees I., Brown A., Taylor-Robinson S., Wilkins J., Grellier L., Banim P., Das D., Heneghan M. A., Curtis H., Matthews H. C., Mohammed F., Aldersley M., Srirajaskanthan R., Walker G., McNair A., Sharif A., Sen S., Bird G., Prince M. I., Prasad G., Kitchen P., Barnardo A., Oza C., Sivaramakrishnan N. N., Gupta P., Shah A., Evans C. D. J., Saha S., Pollock K., Bramley P., Mukhopadhya A., Barclay S. T., McDonald N., Bathgate A. J., Palmer K., Dillon J. F., Rushbrook S. M., Przemioslo R., McDonald C., Millar A., Tai C., Mitchell S., Metcalf J., Shaukat S., Ninkovic M., Shmueli U., Davis A., Naqvi A., Lee T. J. W., Ryder S., Collier J., Klass H., Cramp M. E., Sharer N., Aspinall R., Ghosh D., Douds A. C., Booth J., Williams E., Hussaini H., Christie J., Mann S., Thorburn D., Marshall A., Patanwala I., Ala A., Maltby J., Matthew R., Corbett C., Vyas S., Singhal S., Gleeson D., Misra S., Butterworth J., George K., Harding T., Douglass A., Mitchison H., Panter S., Shearman J., Bray G., Roberts M., Butcher G., Forton D., Mahmood Z., Cowan M., Ch'ng C. L., Rahman M., Whatley G. C. A., Wesley E., Mandal A., Jain S., Pereira S. P., Wright M., Trivedi P., Gordon F. H., Unitt E., Palejwala A., Austin A., Vemala V., Grant A., Higham A. D., Brind A., Mathew R., Cox M., Ramakrishnan S., King A., Whalley S., Fraser J., Thomson S. J., Bell A., Wong V. S., Kia R., Gee I., Keld R., Ransford R., Gotto J., Millson C., Tarocchi M., Cordell H. J., Cordell, H, Fryett, J, Ueno, K, Darlay, R, Aiba, Y, Hitomi, Y, Kawashima, M, Nishida, N, Khor, S, Gervais, O, Kawai, Y, Nagasaki, M, Tokunaga, K, Tang, R, Shi, Y, Li, Z, Juran, B, Atkinson, E, Gerussi, A, Carbone, M, Asselta, R, Cheung, A, de Andrade, M, Baras, A, Horowitz, J, Ferreira, M, Sun, D, Jones, D, Flack, S, Spicer, A, Mulcahy, V, Byun, J, Han, Y, Sandford, R, Lazaridis, K, Amos, C, Hirschfield, G, Seldin, M, Invernizzi, P, Siminovitch, K, Ma, X, Nakamura, M, Mells, G, Mason, A, Vincent, C, Xie, G, Zhang, J, Affronti, A, Almasio, P, Alvaro, D, Andreone, P, Andriulli, A, Azzaroli, F, Battezzati, P, Benedetti, A, Bragazzi, M, Brunetto, M, Bruno, S, Calvaruso, V, Cardinale, V, Casella, G, Cazzagon, N, Ciaccio, A, Coco, B, Colli, A, Colloredo, G, Colombo, M, Colombo, S, Cristoferi, L, Cursaro, C, Croce, L, Crosignani, A, D'Amato, D, Donato, F, Elia, G, Fabris, L, Fagiuoli, S, Ferrari, C, Floreani, A, Galli, A, Giannini, E, Grattagliano, I, Lampertico, P, Lleo, A, Malinverno, F, Mancuso, C, Marra, F, Marzioni, M, Massironi, S, Mattalia, A, Miele, L, Milani, C, Morini, L, Morisco, F, Muratori, L, Muratori, P, Niro, G, O'Donnell, S, Picciotto, A, Portincasa, P, Rigamonti, C, Ronca, V, Rosina, F, Spinzi, G, Strazzabosco, M, Tiribelli, C, Toniutto, P, Valenti, L, Vinci, M, Zuin, M, Nakamura, H, Abiru, S, Nagaoka, S, Komori, A, Yatsuhashi, H, Ishibashi, H, Ito, M, Migita, K, Ohira, H, Katsushima, S, Naganuma, A, Sugi, K, Komatsu, T, Mannami, T, Matsushita, K, Yoshizawa, K, Makita, F, Nikami, T, Nishimura, H, Kouno, H, Ota, H, Komura, T, Nakamura, Y, Shimada, M, Hirashima, N, Komeda, T, Ario, K, Nakamuta, M, Yamashita, T, Furuta, K, Kikuchi, M, Naeshiro, N, Takahashi, H, Mano, Y, Tsunematsu, S, Yabuuchi, I, Shimada, Y, Yamauchi, K, Sugimoto, R, Sakai, H, Mita, E, Koda, M, Tsuruta, S, Kamitsukasa, H, Sato, T, Masaki, N, Kobata, T, Fukushima, N, Ohara, Y, Muro, T, Takesaki, E, Takaki, H, Yamamoto, T, Kato, M, Nagaoki, Y, Hayashi, S, Ishida, J, Watanabe, Y, Kobayashi, M, Koga, M, Saoshiro, T, Yagura, M, Hirata, K, Tanaka, A, Takikawa, H, Zeniya, M, Abe, M, Onji, M, Kaneko, S, Honda, M, Arai, K, Arinaga-Hino, T, Hashimoto, E, Taniai, M, Umemura, T, Joshita, S, Nakao, K, Ichikawa, T, Shibata, H, Yamagiwa, S, Seike, M, Honda, K, Sakisaka, S, Takeyama, Y, Harada, M, Senju, M, Yokosuka, O, Kanda, T, Ueno, Y, Kikuchi, K, Ebinuma, H, Himoto, T, Yasunami, M, Murata, K, Mizokami, M, Kawata, K, Shimoda, S, Miyake, Y, Takaki, A, Yamamoto, K, Hirano, K, Ichida, T, Ido, A, Tsubouchi, H, Chayama, K, Harada, K, Nakanuma, Y, Maehara, Y, Taketomi, A, Shirabe, K, Soejima, Y, Mori, A, Yagi, S, Uemoto, S, H, E, Tanaka, T, Yamashiki, N, Tamura, S, Sugawara, Y, Kokudo, N, Chalasani, N, Luketic, V, Odin, J, Chopra, K, Abecasis, G, Cantor, M, Coppola, G, Economides, A, Lotta, L, Overton, J, Reid, J, Shuldiner, A, Beechert, C, Forsythe, C, Fuller, E, Gu, Z, Lattari, M, Lopez, A, Schleicher, T, Padilla, M, Toledo, K, Widom, L, Wolf, S, Pradhan, M, Manoochehri, K, Ulloa, R, Bai, X, Balasubramanian, S, Barnard, L, Blumenfeld, A, Eom, G, Habegger, L, Hawes, A, Khalid, S, Maxwell, E, Salerno, W, Staples, J, Jones, M, Mitnaul, L, Sturgess, R, Healey, C, Yeoman, A, Gunasekera, A, Kooner, P, Kapur, K, Sathyanarayana, V, Kallis, Y, Subhani, J, Harvey, R, Mccorry, R, Rooney, P, Ramanaden, D, Evans, R, Mathialahan, T, Gasem, J, Shorrock, C, Bhalme, M, Southern, P, Tibble, J, Gorard, D, Jones, S, Srivastava, B, Foxton, M, Collins, C, Elphick, D, Karmo, M, Porras-Perez, F, Mendall, M, Yapp, T, Patel, M, Ede, R, Sayer, J, Jupp, J, Fisher, N, Carter, M, Koss, K, Shah, J, Piotrowicz, A, Scott, G, Grimley, C, Gooding, I, Williams, S, Tidbury, J, Lim, G, Cheent, K, Levi, S, Mansour, D, Beckley, M, Hollywood, C, Wong, T, Marley, R, Ramage, J, Gordon, H, Ridpath, J, Ngatchu, T, Bob Grover, V, Shidrawi, R, Abouda, G, Corless, L, Narain, M, Rees, I, Brown, A, Taylor-Robinson, S, Wilkins, J, Grellier, L, Banim, P, Das, D, Heneghan, M, Curtis, H, Matthews, H, Mohammed, F, Aldersley, M, Srirajaskanthan, R, Walker, G, Mcnair, A, Sharif, A, Sen, S, Bird, G, Prince, M, Prasad, G, Kitchen, P, Barnardo, A, Oza, C, Sivaramakrishnan, N, Gupta, P, Shah, A, Evans, C, Saha, S, Pollock, K, Bramley, P, Mukhopadhya, A, Barclay, S, Mcdonald, N, Bathgate, A, Palmer, K, Dillon, J, Rushbrook, S, Przemioslo, R, Mcdonald, C, Millar, A, Tai, C, Mitchell, S, Metcalf, J, Shaukat, S, Ninkovic, M, Shmueli, U, Davis, A, Naqvi, A, Lee, T, Ryder, S, Collier, J, Klass, H, Cramp, M, Sharer, N, Aspinall, R, Ghosh, D, Douds, A, Booth, J, Williams, E, Hussaini, H, Christie, J, Mann, S, Thorburn, D, Marshall, A, Patanwala, I, Ala, A, Maltby, J, Matthew, R, Corbett, C, Vyas, S, Singhal, S, Gleeson, D, Misra, S, Butterworth, J, George, K, Harding, T, Douglass, A, Mitchison, H, Panter, S, Shearman, J, Bray, G, Roberts, M, Butcher, G, Forton, D, Mahmood, Z, Cowan, M, Ch'Ng, C, Rahman, M, Whatley, G, Wesley, E, Mandal, A, Jain, S, Pereira, S, Wright, M, Trivedi, P, Gordon, F, Unitt, E, Palejwala, A, Austin, A, Vemala, V, Grant, A, Higham, A, Brind, A, Mathew, R, Cox, M, Ramakrishnan, S, King, A, Whalley, S, Fraser, J, Thomson, S, Bell, A, Wong, V, Kia, R, Gee, I, Keld, R, Ransford, R, Gotto, J, Millson, C, Tarocchi, M, Cordell H. J., Fryett J. J., Ueno K., Darlay R., Aiba Y., Hitomi Y., Kawashima M., Nishida N., Khor S. -S., Gervais O., Kawai Y., Nagasaki M., Tokunaga K., Tang R., Shi Y., Li Z., Juran B. D., Atkinson E. J., Gerussi A., Carbone M., Asselta R., Cheung A., de Andrade M., Baras A., Horowitz J., Ferreira M. A. R., Sun D., Jones D. E., Flack S., Spicer A., Mulcahy V. L., Byun J., Han Y., Sandford R. N., Lazaridis K. N., Amos C. I., Hirschfield G. M., Seldin M. F., Invernizzi P., Siminovitch K. A., Ma X., Nakamura M., Mells G. F., Mason A., Vincent C., Xie G., Zhang J., Affronti A., Almasio P. L., Alvaro D., Andreone P., Andriulli A., Azzaroli F., Battezzati P. M., Benedetti A., Bragazzi M. C., Brunetto M., Bruno S., Calvaruso V., Cardinale V., Casella G., Cazzagon N., Ciaccio A., Coco B., Colli A., Colloredo G., Colombo M., Colombo S., Cristoferi L., Cursaro C., Croce L. S., Crosignani A., D'Amato D., Donato F., Elia G., Fabris L., Fagiuoli S., Ferrari C., Floreani A., Galli A., Giannini E., Grattagliano I., Lampertico P., Lleo A., Malinverno F., Mancuso C., Marra F., Marzioni M., Massironi S., Mattalia A., Miele L., Milani C., Morini L., Morisco F., Muratori L., Muratori P., Niro G. A., O'Donnell S., Picciotto A., Portincasa P., Rigamonti C., Ronca V., Rosina F., Spinzi G., Strazzabosco M., Tiribelli C., Toniutto P., Valenti L., Vinci M., Zuin M., Nakamura H., Abiru S., Nagaoka S., Komori A., Yatsuhashi H., Ishibashi H., Ito M., Migita K., Ohira H., Katsushima S., Naganuma A., Sugi K., Komatsu T., Mannami T., Matsushita K., Yoshizawa K., Makita F., Nikami T., Nishimura H., Kouno H., Ota H., Komura T., Nakamura Y., Shimada M., Hirashima N., Komeda T., Ario K., Nakamuta M., Yamashita T., Furuta K., Kikuchi M., Naeshiro N., Takahashi H., Mano Y., Tsunematsu S., Yabuuchi I., Shimada Y., Yamauchi K., Sugimoto R., Sakai H., Mita E., Koda M., Tsuruta S., Kamitsukasa H., Sato T., Masaki N., Kobata T., Fukushima N., Ohara Y., Muro T., Takesaki E., Takaki H., Yamamoto T., Kato M., Nagaoki Y., Hayashi S., Ishida J., Watanabe Y., Kobayashi M., Koga M., Saoshiro T., Yagura M., Hirata K., Tanaka A., Takikawa H., Zeniya M., Abe M., Onji M., Kaneko S., Honda M., Arai K., Arinaga-Hino T., Hashimoto E., Taniai M., Umemura T., Joshita S., Nakao K., Ichikawa T., Shibata H., Yamagiwa S., Seike M., Honda K., Sakisaka S., Takeyama Y., Harada M., Senju M., Yokosuka O., Kanda T., Ueno Y., Kikuchi K., Ebinuma H., Himoto T., Yasunami M., Murata K., Mizokami M., Kawata K., Shimoda S., Miyake Y., Takaki A., Yamamoto K., Hirano K., Ichida T., Ido A., Tsubouchi H., Chayama K., Harada K., Nakanuma Y., Maehara Y., Taketomi A., Shirabe K., Soejima Y., Mori A., Yagi S., Uemoto S., H E., Tanaka T., Yamashiki N., Tamura S., Sugawara Y., Kokudo N., Chalasani N., Luketic V., Odin J., Chopra K., Abecasis G., Cantor M., Coppola G., Economides A., Lotta L. A., Overton J. D., Reid J. G., Shuldiner A., Beechert C., Forsythe C., Fuller E. D., Gu Z., Lattari M., Lopez A., Schleicher T. D., Padilla M. S., Toledo K., Widom L., Wolf S. E., Pradhan M., Manoochehri K., Ulloa R. H., Bai X., Balasubramanian S., Barnard L., Blumenfeld A., Eom G., Habegger L., Hawes A., Khalid S., Maxwell E. K., Salerno W., Staples J. C., Jones M. B., Mitnaul L. J., Sturgess R., Healey C., Yeoman A., Gunasekera A. V. J., Kooner P., Kapur K., Sathyanarayana V., Kallis Y., Subhani J., Harvey R., McCorry R., Rooney P., Ramanaden D., Evans R., Mathialahan T., Gasem J., Shorrock C., Bhalme M., Southern P., Tibble J. A., Gorard D. A., Jones S., Mells G., Mulcahy V., Srivastava B., Foxton M. R., Collins C. E., Elphick D., Karmo M., Porras-Perez F., Mendall M., Yapp T., Patel M., Ede R., Sayer J., Jupp J., Fisher N., Carter M. J., Koss K., Shah J., Piotrowicz A., Scott G., Grimley C., Gooding I. R., Williams S., Tidbury J., Lim G., Cheent K., Levi S., Mansour D., Beckley M., Hollywood C., Wong T., Marley R., Ramage J., Gordon H. M., Ridpath J., Ngatchu T., Bob Grover V. P., Shidrawi R. G., Abouda G., Corless L., Narain M., Rees I., Brown A., Taylor-Robinson S., Wilkins J., Grellier L., Banim P., Das D., Heneghan M. A., Curtis H., Matthews H. C., Mohammed F., Aldersley M., Srirajaskanthan R., Walker G., McNair A., Sharif A., Sen S., Bird G., Prince M. I., Prasad G., Kitchen P., Barnardo A., Oza C., Sivaramakrishnan N. N., Gupta P., Shah A., Evans C. D. J., Saha S., Pollock K., Bramley P., Mukhopadhya A., Barclay S. T., McDonald N., Bathgate A. J., Palmer K., Dillon J. F., Rushbrook S. M., Przemioslo R., McDonald C., Millar A., Tai C., Mitchell S., Metcalf J., Shaukat S., Ninkovic M., Shmueli U., Davis A., Naqvi A., Lee T. J. W., Ryder S., Collier J., Klass H., Cramp M. E., Sharer N., Aspinall R., Ghosh D., Douds A. C., Booth J., Williams E., Hussaini H., Christie J., Mann S., Thorburn D., Marshall A., Patanwala I., Ala A., Maltby J., Matthew R., Corbett C., Vyas S., Singhal S., Gleeson D., Misra S., Butterworth J., George K., Harding T., Douglass A., Mitchison H., Panter S., Shearman J., Bray G., Roberts M., Butcher G., Forton D., Mahmood Z., Cowan M., Ch'ng C. L., Rahman M., Whatley G. C. A., Wesley E., Mandal A., Jain S., Pereira S. P., Wright M., Trivedi P., Gordon F. H., Unitt E., Palejwala A., Austin A., Vemala V., Grant A., Higham A. D., Brind A., Mathew R., Cox M., Ramakrishnan S., King A., Whalley S., Fraser J., Thomson S. J., Bell A., Wong V. S., Kia R., Gee I., Keld R., Ransford R., Gotto J., Millson C., and Tarocchi M.
- Abstract
It has come to our attention that the name of one of the authors in our manuscript was incorrectly spelled ‘Jinyoung Byan’; the correct spelling is ‘Jinyoung Byun’ as in the author list above. In addition, the excel files of the supplementary tables were not included during the online publication of our article. These have now been made available online. We apologize for any inconvenience caused.
- Published
- 2022
48. An analysis of PM2.5 related air pollution in Ploiesti city
- Author
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Mihaela OPREA, Elia G. DRAGOMIR, C. IANACHE, and R. IANACHE
- Subjects
air pollution analysis ,PM2.5 air pollution episodes ,meteorological parameters correlation. ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
he paper presents an analysis of PM2.5 related air pollution in Ploiesti city, based on datasets with measurements of PM2.5 concentration and some meteorological variables at PH-2 monitoring station, taken from the RNMCA public site (www.calitateaer.ro) and AirBase, and the dataset with in situ measurements of PM2.5 concentration and some meteorological variables acquired through the ROKIDAIR project monitoring campaigns run during the period August 2014 – November 2016, in the Ploiesti city. PM2.5 most correlated meteorological variables are highlighted and the Ploiesti city map with seasonal PM2.5 air pollution distribution is provided. The paper experiments highlight that the PM2.5 concentration evolution analysis must be done taking into consideration the other atmospheric and seasonal parameters, in order to obtain the most appropriate results.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. AB1291 COVID-19 AND CRYOGLOBULINEMIC VASCULITIS.LONG-TERM SURVEY STUDY ON THE IMPACT OF PANDEMIC AND VACCINATION ON A LARGE PATIENT’S POPULATION
- Author
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Gragnani, L., primary, Visentini, M., additional, Lorini, S., additional, Santini, S., additional, Lauletta, G., additional, Mazzaro, C., additional, Urraro, T., additional, Luca, Q., additional, Cacciapaglia, F., additional, Ruscitti, P., additional, Tavoni, A., additional, Marri, S., additional, Cusano, G., additional, Petraccia, L., additional, Naclerio, C., additional, Treppo, E., additional, Del Frate, G., additional, Di Cola, I., additional, Raimondo, V., additional, Scorpiniti, D., additional, Monti, M., additional, Puccetti, L., additional, Elia, G., additional, Fallahi, P., additional, Basili, S., additional, Scarpato, S., additional, Iannone, F., additional, Casato, M., additional, Antonelli, A., additional, Zignego, A. L., additional, and Ferri, C., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Biliary pancreatitis – is endoscopic sphincterotomy an alternative approach for patients unfit for cholecystectomy?
- Author
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Lopes, S. Ramos, additional, I., C. S., additional, Sequeira, C., additional, Coelho, M., additional, Elia, G., additional, and Ana, P. O., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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