11 results on '"Fermo, F"'
Search Results
2. Levoglucosan, a tracer for wood combustion in Milan particulate matter
- Author
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PIAZZALUNGA, ANDREA, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M. A, Marengo, S., Piazzalunga, A, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M, and Marengo, S
- Subjects
levoglucosano, PM10, HPAED-PAD, cromatografia ionica - Published
- 2007
3. Il levoglucosano come tracciante della combustione delle biomasse
- Author
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PIAZZALUNGA, ANDREA, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M. A, Marengo, S, Di Toro, M, Leoni, C., Piazzalunga, A, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M, Marengo, S, Di Toro, M, and Leoni, C
- Subjects
levoglucosano, PM10, combustione della legna - Published
- 2006
4. La miscela e le monorigini: primo giudizio dei consumatori
- Author
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Odello, L, Giacomini, Alessio, and Fermo, F.
- Subjects
valutazione sensoriale ,caffè - Published
- 2008
5. Levoglucosan, a tracer for wood combustion in Milan particulate matter
- Author
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Piazzalunga, A, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M, Marengo, S, PIAZZALUNGA, ANDREA, De Gregorio, M. A, Marengo, S., Piazzalunga, A, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M, Marengo, S, PIAZZALUNGA, ANDREA, De Gregorio, M. A, and Marengo, S.
- Published
- 2007
6. Il levoglucosano come tracciante della combustione delle biomasse
- Author
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Piazzalunga, A, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M, Marengo, S, Di Toro, M, Leoni, C, PIAZZALUNGA, ANDREA, De Gregorio, M. A, Leoni, C., Piazzalunga, A, Fermo, F, Vecchi, R, Valli, G, De Gregorio, M, Marengo, S, Di Toro, M, Leoni, C, PIAZZALUNGA, ANDREA, De Gregorio, M. A, and Leoni, C.
- Published
- 2006
7. MSWI fly ash native carbon thermal degradation: A TG-FTIR study
- Author
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Fermo, F, Cariati, F, Santacesaria, S, Bruni, S, Lasagni, M, Tettamanti, M, Collina, E, Pitea, D, Fermo, F, Cariati, F, Santacesaria, S, Bruni, S, Lasagni, M, Tettamanti, M, Collina, E, and Pitea, D
- Abstract
The CO2 evolution curve from MSWI fly ash (FA) and model systems containing different carbon species was studied by means of the TG-FTIR technique. The number of peaks in the curves depends on the system studied. one peak is observed from activated carbon, C-act in model mixtures with silica, SiO2, or whereas two from C-act-CUCl2-SiO2. This, together with the higher C-act reactivity in the two-peak system indicates the catalytic effect of Cu ion. Moreover, this effect is dependent on the copper compound: adding copper as CuO or CuSO4 does not change the CO2 evolution curve in comparison with the uncatalyzed C-act-SiO2 system. Two peaks were also observed for the C-nat-TTFA (Thermally Treated Fly Ash) and C-nat-TTFA systems (C-nat is the "native" carbon, i.e., the unburnt unextractable organic carbon from FA). The behavior of amorphous carbon systems, C-amoiphous-SiO2 and C-amorphous-TTFA, was different as two peaks were observed in both cases; this was explained by comparing the Raman spectra of amorphous carbon with respect to those of the native and activated carbon. Finally,two peaks were observed in the CO2 evolution curves from raw FA and fractions obtained from it. Thus, it is possible to conclude that low temperature native carbon gasification is highly dependent on the catalyst added to the model mixtures as well as on the metal already present in the TTFA or raw FA. This conclusion supports previous findings from kinetic studies. The results obtained are also important to explain the formation reactions of organochlorinated micropollutants. The influence of initial organic carbon content is also discussed
- Published
- 2000
8. MSWI Fly Ash Native Carbon Thermal Degradation: A TG-FTIR Study
- Author
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Paola Fermo, S. Santacesaria, M. Tettamanti, Franco Cariati, Marina Lasagni, Silvia Bruni, Elena Collina, Demetrio Pitea, Fermo, F, Cariati, F, Santacesaria, S, Bruni, S, Lasagni, M, Tettamanti, M, Collina, E, and Pitea, D
- Subjects
Inorganic chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Mineralogy ,General Chemistry ,Copper ,Amorphous solid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Amorphous carbon ,Fly ash ,Carbon dioxide ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,MSWI, fly ash, thermal degradation, TG-FTIR ,Copper chloride ,Carbon ,Activated carbon ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The CO 2 evolution curve from MSWI fly ash (FA) and model systems containing different carbon species was studied by means of the TG-FTIR technique. The number of peaks in the curves depends on the system studied: one peak is observed from activated carbon, C act , in model mixtures with silica, SiO 2 , or whereas two from C act -CuCl 2 -SiO 2 . This, together with the higher C act reactivity in the two-peak system indicates the catalytic effect of Cu ion. Moreover, this effect is dependent on the copper compound: adding copper as CuO or CuSO 4 does not change the CO 2 evolution curve in comparison with the uncatalyzed C act -SiO 2 system. Two peaks were also observed for the C act -TTFA (Thermally Treated Fly Ash) and C nat -TTFA systems (Coat is the native carbon, i.e., the unburnt unextractable organic carbon from FA). The behavior of amorphous carbon systems, C amorphous -SiO 2 and C amorphous -TTFA, was different as two peaks were observed in both cases; this was explained by comparing the Raman spectra of amorphous carbon with respect to those of the native and activated carbon. Finally, two peaks were observed in the CO 2 evolution curves from raw FA and fractions obtained from it. Thus, it is possible to conclude that low temperature native carbon gasification is highly dependent on the catalyst added to the model mixtures as well as on the metal already present in the TTFA or raw FA. This conclusion supports previous findings from kinetic studies. The results obtained are also important to explain the formation reactions of organochlorinated micropollutants. The influence of initial organic carbon content is also discussed.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Thyroid cancer and insulin resistance.
- Author
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Brenta G and Di Fermo F
- Subjects
- Humans, Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor, Hypoglycemic Agents pharmacology, Insulin metabolism, Glucagon-Like Peptide 1, Insulin Resistance, Metformin, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Thyroid Neoplasms
- Abstract
Thyroid cancer has shown a parallel increase with diabetes in the last few years. This narrative review aims to explain the association between these two entities, focusing on insulin resistance as the mediator and exploring the effects of antidiabetic agents on thyroid cancer incidence and progression.We searched Pubmed for English-written articles on insulin resistance, diabetes, antidiabetic treatments, and thyroid cancer reported from January 2019 to April 2023. Exclusion criteria were preclinical and clinical studies involving a population with thyroid dysfunction, benign nodular goiter, or those that only analyzed thyroid cancer's association with obesity.The results of the narrative literature review revealed 96 articles. Additionally, four studies from a manual search were retrieved. After the exclusion criteria were applied, we included 20 studies. Out of 8 studies on insulin-resistant or Metabolic Syndrome patients, all suggest a positive association with thyroid cancer. At the same time, for diabetes, four out of five publications support a link with thyroid cancer. The seven remaining studies on antidiabetics suggest that metformin might benefit thyroid cancer. In contrast, the evidence for an association between Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RA) and increased thyroid cancer findings is limited.In conclusion, the association between thyroid cancer and diabetes may be explained by insulin resistance, as shown in observational studies. However, the causal role is yet to be defined. Although the wide use of different antidiabetic agents has been related to thyroid cancer prevalence and progression, future research with drugs such as metformin or GLP-1 RA is still needed., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Comparison of different systems of ultrasound (US) risk stratification for malignancy in elderly patients with thyroid nodules. Real world experience.
- Author
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Di Fermo F, Sforza N, Rosmarin M, Morosan Allo Y, Parisi C, Santamaria J, Pacenza N, Zuk C, Faingold C, Ferraro F, Meroño T, and Brenta G
- Subjects
- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Ultrasonography, United States, Thyroid Nodule diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Purpose: To comparatively assess the performance of three sonographic classification systems, American Thyroid Association (ATA), the American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (ACR TI-RADS), and American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE)/American College of Endocrinology (ACE)/Associazione Medici Endocrinologi (AME) in identifying malignant nodules in an elderly population., Methods: Cross-sectional study of patients referred for fine needle aspiration biopsy in an academic center for the elderly. One nodule/patient was considered. Nodules classified Bethesda V/VI were considered malignant. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curves were established and compared to evaluate diagnostic performance. Malignancy among biopsies below the size cutoff for each ultrasound classification was also compared., Results: One thousand, eight hundred sixty-seven patients (92% females); median (Q1-Q3), age 71 (67-76) years, were studied showing 82.8% benign (Bethesda II) and 2.6% malignant cytology. The three classifications correctly identified malignancy (P < 0.01). Nonetheless, in the ATA and AACE/ACE/AME 16 and 2 malignant nodules, respectively, were unclassifiable. Including unclassified malignant nodules (n = 1234, malignant = 50), comparison of the ROC curves showed lower performance of ATA [area under the curve (AUC) = ATA (0.49) vs. ACR TI-RADS (0.62), p = 0.008 and ATA vs. AACE/ACE/AME (0.59), p = 0.022]. Proportion of below size cutoff biopsies for ATA, ACR TI-RADS, and AACE/ACE/AME was different [16, 42, and 29% (all p < 0.001)], but no differences in malignancy rate were observed in these nodules., Conclusion: The present study is the first to validate in elderly patients these classifications showing that AACE/ACE/AME and ACR TI-RADS can predict thyroid malignancy more accurately than the ATA when unclassifiable malignant nodules are considered. Moreover, in this aged segment of the population, the use of ACR TI-RADS avoided more invasive procedures.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Does texting while walking really affect gait in young adults?
- Author
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Agostini V, Lo Fermo F, Massazza G, and Knaflitz M
- Subjects
- Adult, Ankle physiology, Ankle Joint physiology, Biomechanical Phenomena, Electromyography, Female, Humans, Knee Joint physiology, Leg physiology, Male, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Young Adult, Gait physiology, Text Messaging, Walking physiology
- Abstract
Background: Texting on a smartphone while walking has become a customary task among young adults. In recent literature many safety concerns on distracted walking have been raised. It is often hypothesized that the allocation of attentional resources toward a secondary task can influence dynamic stability. In the double task of walking and texting it was found that gait speed is reduced, but there is scarce evidence of a modified motor control strategy compromising stability. The aim of this study is twofold: 1) to comprehensively examine the gait modifications occurring when texting while walking, including the study of the lower limb muscle activation patterns, 2) to specifically assess the co-contraction of ankle antagonist muscles. We hypothesized that texting while walking increases co-contractions of ankle antagonist muscles when the body weight is transferred from one lower limb to the other, to improve the distal motor control and joint stabilization., Methods: From the gait data collected during an instrumented walk lasting 3 min, we calculated the spatio-temporal parameters, the ankle and knee kinematics, the muscle activation patterns of tibialis anterior, gastrocnemius lateralis, peroneus longus, rectus femoris, and lateral hamstrings, and the co-contraction (occurrence and duration) of the ankle antagonist muscles (tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius lateralis), bilaterally., Results: Young adults showed, overall, small gait modifications that could be mainly ascribable to gait speed reduction and a modified body posture due to phone handling. We found no significant alterations of ankle and knee kinematics and a slightly delayed activation onset of the left gastrocnemius lateralis. However, we found an increased co-contraction of tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius lateralis, especially during mid-stance. Conversely, we found a reduced co-contraction during terminal stance., Conclusions: Our results suggest that, in young adults, there is an adjustment of the motor control strategy aimed at increasing ankle joint stability in a specific and "critical" phase of the gait cycle, when the body weight is transferred from one leg to the other.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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