106 results on '"M., Patrini"'
Search Results
2. Fabrication by means of X-Ray lithography of 2D GaAs/AlGaAs photonic crystals with unconventional unit cell
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F. ROMANATO, L. BUSINARO E. DI FABRIZIO, A. PASSASEO, M. DE VITTORIO AND R. CINGOLANI, M. PATRINI, M. GALLI, D. BAJONI, DE VITTORIO, Massimo, F., Romanato, L. BUSINARO E., DI FABRIZIO, A., Passaseo, M. DE VITTORIO AND R., Cingolani, M., Patrini, M., Galli, D., Bajoni, and DE VITTORIO, Massimo
- Abstract
Two-dimensional photonic crystals have been fabricated by x-ray lithography and reactive ion etching on an air/GaAs/AlGaAs asymmetric waveguide. The shape of the lattice unit cell has been varied by exploiting x-ray diffraction effects and nonlinear response of resists during the development process. Rings with or without a central pillar have been fabricated with a resolution down to 50 nm. Lithographic details are described to show the accuracy of this fabrication technique. Optical characterization has been performed showing the presence of a well defined photonic band structure as well as band anti-crossing. The results are discussed and compared with theoretical calculations of the photonic band dispersion. Structures with high dielectric fraction are shown to yield photonic modes with small line widths and low propagation losses. The reliability and the precise control of the fabricated sample structures make this lithographic method useful for a full investigation of optical properties on the dependence of the lattice unit cell shape.
- Published
- 2002
3. Investigation of GaInAs/InP superlattices by electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and spectroscopic ellipsometry
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M Patrini, P Franzosi, G. Landgren, Giorgio Guizzetti, M Amiotti, G Mattei, and L Francesio
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Diffraction ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Superlattice ,Electron ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Characterization (materials science) ,law.invention ,Crystal ,Crystallography ,law ,X-ray crystallography ,Materials Chemistry ,Optoelectronics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Thin film ,Electron microscope ,business - Abstract
Two sets of GaInAs/InP lattice-matched superlattices containing 30 periods, with a wide range of barrier and well thicknesses, were grown on (100) InP substrates by metal organic vapour phase epitaxy, using growth interruptions for interface optimization. Structural, compositional and optical characterization was performed by transmission electron macroscopy, high-resolution X-ray diffraction and spectroscopic ellipsometry. The results from these complementary techniques agree quantitatively and show the good crystal quality of the samples. The interfaces in the long-period structures appear flat and sharp, while in the short-period ones they show undulations and graded-composition transition layers. A possible explanation for these effects is proposed.
- Published
- 1995
4. Electro-optical polarimeters for ground-based and space-based observations of the solar K-corona
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P. Calcidese, E. Balboni, Giuseppe Massone, Giuseppe Crescenzio, L. Zangrilli, Gerardo Capobianco, Silvano Fineschi, M. Patrini, Ester Antonucci, and A. M. Malvezzi
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Physics ,Brightness ,Linear polarization ,business.industry ,Polarimetry ,Polarimeter ,Polarization (waves) ,Corona ,law.invention ,Telescope ,Optics ,law ,business ,Coronagraph - Abstract
Polarimeters based on electro-optically tunable liquid crystals (LC) represent a new technology in the field of observational astrophysics. LC-based polarimeters are good candidates for replacing mechanically rotating polarimeters in most ground-based and space-based applications. During the 2006 total solar eclipse, we measured the visible-light polarized brightness (pB) of the solar K-corona with a LC-based polarimeter and imager (E-KPol). In this presentation, we describe the results obtained with the E-KPol, and we evaluate its performances in view of using a similar device for the pB imaging of the K-corona from space-based coronagraphs. Specifically, a broad-band LC polarimeter is planned for the METIS (Multi Element Telescope for Imaging and Spectroscopy) coronagraph for the Solar Orbiter mission to be launched in 2017. The METIS science driver of deriving the coronal electron density from pB images requires an accuracy of better than 1% in the measurement of linear polarization. We present the implications of this requirement on the METIS design to minimize the instrumental polarization of the broad-band visible-light (590-650 nm) polarimeter and of the other optics in the METIS visible-light path. Finally, we report preliminary ellipsometric measurements of the optical components of the METIS visible-light path.
- Published
- 2012
5. Semiconductor and Metallic Clusters, Electronic Properties of
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M. Patrini and A. Stella
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Semiconductor ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Metallic clusters ,Optoelectronics ,business ,Electronic properties - Published
- 2005
6. Fabrication by means of X-Ray lithography of 2D GaAs/AlGaAs photonic crystals with unconventional unit cell
- Author
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CINGOLANI, Roberto, F. ROMANATO, L. BUSINARO, E. DI FABRIZIO, A. PASSASEO, M. DE VITTORIO, M. PATRINI, M. GALLI, D. BAJONI, L. . C. ANDREANI, Cingolani, Roberto, Romanato, F., Businaro, L., DI FABRIZIO, E., Passaseo, A., DE VITTORIO, M., Patrini, M., Galli, M., Bajoni, D., and Andreani, L. . C.
- Published
- 2002
7. Resonant second-harmonic generation and mode dispersion in photonic crystal waveguides.
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L. C. Andreani, G. Guizzetti, M. Patrini, G. Vecchi, A. M. Malvezzi, L. Businaro, F. Romanato, E. Di Fabrizio, and A. Passaseo
- Published
- 2003
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8. Second-harmonic generation measured on a GaAs photonic crystal planar waveguide
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A. M. Malvezzi, Maddalena Patrini, Luca Businaro, Lucio Claudio Andreani, Giorgio Guizzetti, G. Vecchi, Adriana Passaseo, F. Romanato, E. Di Fabrizio, M. De Vittorio, F Cattaneo, L. C., Andreani, F., Cattaneo, G., Guizzetti, A. M., Malvezzi, M., Patrini, G., Vecchi, F., Romanato, L., Businaro, E., Di Fabrizio, A., Passaseo, and DE VITTORIO, Massimo
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Diffraction ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Guided-mode resonance ,GaAs ,Photonic integrated circuit ,Physics::Optics ,Second-harmonic generation ,Nonlinear optics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Yablonovite ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Optics ,photonic crystals ,second-harmonic generation ,Optoelectronics ,Photonics ,business ,Photonic crystal - Abstract
Second-harmonic (SH) reflection and diffraction measurements are performed, at the wavelengths of a Ti:sapphire laser on a GaAs/AlGaAs photonic crystal waveguide patterned with a square lattice, the basis consisting of rings of air in the dielectric matrix. The measured angles of diffracted SH beams agree with those predicted from nonlinear diffraction conditions. Results for reflected and diffracted SH intensities as a function of incidence angle, polarization, and pump wavelength show that, due to the low air fraction of the photonic crystal, the reflected one is dominated by the crystalline symmetry of GaAs, while the diffracted one is related to the photonic crystal structure. The large diffraction-to-reflection ratio points to the importance of nonlinear diffraction in photonic crystals. Preliminary measurements in the 1500nm range reveal explicit features related to photonic modes.
- Published
- 2003
9. Effects of particle contamination and substrate interaction on the Raman response of unintentionally doped graphene
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Vittorio Bellani, Francesco Rossella, M. Maicas, Maddalena Patrini, Enrique Diez, José M. Caridad, J. M., Caridad, Rossella, Francesco, V., Bellani, M., Maica, M., Patrini, and E., Diez
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Substrate Interaction ,Materials science ,Graphene ,Phonon ,Doping ,Analytical chemistry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Physics::Optics ,Substrate (electronics) ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,law ,Chemical physics ,Condensed Matter::Superconductivity ,symbols ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Physics::Chemical Physics ,Bilayer graphene ,Raman spectroscopy ,Graphene nanoribbons - Abstract
We investigated the inhomogeneities in the charge density of unintentionally doped graphene on SiO2 prepared by mechanical exfoliation. From the analysis of the G, D, and 2D phonon modes of the Raman spectra after displacing contaminants on graphene surface, and measuring the separation monolayer-substrate distance among zones with different doping levels, we deduce that the interaction with the substrate is the main cause of doping in graphene rather than particle contamination. In particular, we show how graphene doping levels vary within the same flake depending on the distance between graphene and the substrate.
- Published
- 2010
10. Polaritons in microcavities
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G. F. Bassani, LA ROCCA, Giuseppe Carlo, G. Guizzetti, L.C. Andreani, F. Marabelli, M. Patrini, G. F., Bassani, and LA ROCCA, Giuseppe Carlo
- Published
- 2007
11. High-resolution complex structures for two-dimensional photonic crystals realized by x-ray diffraction lithography
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P. Candeloro, Adriana Passaseo, Matteo Galli, F. Romanato, E. Di Fabrizio, M. De Vittorio, Luca Businaro, Maddalena Patrini, C. Andreani, L., Businaro, F., Romanato, P., Candeloro, C., Andreani, M., Galli, M., Patrini, A., Passaseo, DE VITTORIO, Massimo, and E., DI FABRIZIO
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Diffraction ,Fabrication ,Materials science ,business.industry ,photonic crystals ,X-ray diffraction lithography ,high resolution structures ,General Engineering ,Physics::Optics ,Multiphoton lithography ,Optics ,Resist ,Etching (microfabrication) ,Optoelectronics ,X-ray lithography ,business ,Lithography ,Photonic crystal - Abstract
Two-dimensional photonic band gap structures were fabricated by x-ray lithography combined with, ion etching on metalorganic chemical vapor deposition grown GaAs/AlGaAs waveguides. Such structures, more amenable to fabrication than fully three-dimensional photonic crystals, allow the confinement of light in the third direction using index guiding. The feasibility of complex high-resolution (down to 50 nm) unit cell fabrication has been demonstrated by exploiting x-ray diffraction and nonlinear resist response during the development process. Optical characterizations of some samples were performed. These characterizations show the presence of well-defined photonic band gap structures and second harmonic property generation. The results have been discussed and compared with theoretical simulation
12. Resonant second-harmonic generation in a GaAs photonic crystal waveguide
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Luca Businaro, Lucio Claudio Andreani, M. De Vittorio, Giorgio Guizzetti, Maddalena Patrini, Filippo Romanato, G. Vecchi, A. Passaseo, E. Di Fabrizio, A. M. Malvezzi, A. M., Malvezzi, G., Vecchi, M., Patrini, G., Guizzetti, L. C., Andreani, F., Romanato, L., Businaro, E., DI FABRIZIO, A., Passaseo, and DE VITTORIO, Massimo
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Physics ,business.industry ,Resonant second-harmonic generation ,GaAs ,photonic crystal waveguides ,Second-harmonic generation ,Physics::Optics ,Spectral line ,Momentum ,Reflection (mathematics) ,Dispersion (optics) ,Optoelectronics ,Photonics ,Atomic physics ,business ,Anisotropy ,Photonic crystal - Abstract
Second-harmonic generation (SHG) measurements in reflection on a ${\mathrm{G}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{A}\mathrm{s}/\mathrm{A}\mathrm{l}}_{0.25}{\mathrm{Ga}}_{0.75}\mathrm{As}$ photonic crystal waveguide show a resonant enhancement when the pump beam is frequency and momentum matched with the photonic modes in the slab. The enhanced SH signal is observed in the form of resonant peaks, unlike in linear reflectance spectra. The observations are in very good agreement with a full 3D calculation of the anisotropic mode dispersion in the photonic crystal slab. The present results open the way towards realizing the extraordinary enhancement of SHG which was recently predicted [A. R. Cowan and J. F. Young, Phys. Rev. B $65,$ 085106 (2002)], and also demonstrate the potential of SHG as a nonlinear spectroscopic tool for optical studies of photonic crystals.
13. Stretchable Distributed Bragg Reflectors as Strain-Responsive Mechanochromic Sensors.
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Martusciello M, Lanfranchi A, Castellano M, Patrini M, Lova P, and Comoretto D
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Mechanochromic materials exhibit color changes upon external mechanical stimuli, finding wide-ranging applications in colorimetric sensing, display technology, and anticounterfeiting measures. Many of these materials rely on fluorescence properties and therefore necessitate external optical or electrical excitation. However, for broader applicability, the detection of color changes by the naked eye only or without complicated detection instrumentation is highly desirable. Photonic crystals offer a promising avenue for attaining such performances. In this work, we present elastomeric distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) characterized by a series of photonic bandgaps exhibiting mechanochromic response from the near-infrared to the visible wavelengths. To achieve this, we engineered alternating thin films of a thermoplastic fluoropolymer and a styrene-butadiene copolymer using different elastomeric substrates to attain different behaviors. The reported system demonstrates a reversible and instantaneous shift of the photonic bandgaps in response to 100% strain in multiple deformation cycles. Comparing the DBR stress-strain response with the optical strain response confirms a mechanochromic sensitivity of ∼1.7-6.9 nm/% and ∼80 nm/MPa, with an optical Poisson's ratio in the range 0.3-0.7. All these properties are spectrally dependent, as demonstrated by exploiting the properties of different diffraction order photonic band gaps.
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- 2024
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14. Smart Electrospun Nanofibers from Short Peptidomimetics Based on Pyrrolo-pyrazole Scaffold.
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Chiesa E, Clerici F, Bucci R, Anastasi F, Bottiglieri M, Patrini M, Genta I, Bittner AM, and Gelmi ML
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- Tissue Scaffolds chemistry, Tissue Engineering, Peptides, Peptidomimetics, Nanofibers chemistry
- Abstract
We prepared a small library of short peptidomimetics based on 3-pyrrolo-pyrazole carboxylate, a non-coded γ-amino acid, and glycine or alanine. The robust and eco-friendly synthetic approach adopted allows to obtain the dipeptides in two steps from commercial starting materials. This gives the possibility to shape these materials by electrospinning into micro- and nanofibers, in amounts required to be useful for coating surfaces of biomedical relevance. To promote high quality of electrospun fibers, different substitution patterns were evaluated, all for pure peptide fibers, free of any polymer or additive. The best candidate, which affords a homogeneous fibrous matrix, was prepared in larger amounts, and its biocompatibility was verified. This successful work is the first step to develop a new biomaterial able to produce pristine peptide-based nanofibers to be used as helpful component or stand-alone scaffolds for tissue engineering or for the surface modification of medical devices.
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- 2024
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15. Overview of Cochrane Systematic Reviews for Rehabilitation Interventions in Individuals with Upper Limb Fractures: A Mapping Synthesis.
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Liguori S, Moretti A, Toro G, Arienti C, Patrini M, Kiekens C, Negrini S, Iolascon G, and Gimigliano F
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- Humans, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Physical Therapy Modalities, Upper Extremity, Fractures, Bone
- Abstract
Background and Objectives . This overview of Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs) reports on current evidence on the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions for persons with upper limb fractures (ULFs), and the quality of the evidence. Materials and Methods . Following the inclusion criteria defined by the World Health Organization, all CSRs tagged in the Cochrane Rehabilitation database that were relevant for persons with ULFs were included. A mapping synthesis was used to group outcomes and comparisons of included CSRs, indicating the effect of rehabilitation interventions and the certainty of evidence. Results . A total of three CSRs were included in the evidence map. The certainty of evidence was judged as low to very low. Early occupational and hand therapy, cyclic pneumatic soft tissue compression, and cross-education, when started during immobilization, may improve grip strength and wrist range of motion, with results maintained up to 12 weeks from the cast removal, compared to no intervention. Approaches such as occupational therapy and passive mobilisation, started post-immobilization, are probably safe in terms of secondary complications. However, the overall evidence of rehabilitative interventions related to proximal humeral fractures has been judged insufficient for all the outcomes considered. A paucity of primary studies and CSRs for elbow fractures was noted. Conclusions . This overview provided the effect and the certainty of evidence of rehabilitation interventions available after ULFs using a mapping synthesis. To date, there is a need to further the effectiveness and safety of these interventions for persons with ULFs, improving methodological quality of the research in the field.
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- 2024
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16. Affinity Capillary Electrophoresis as a Tool To Characterize Molecularly Imprinted Nanogels in Solution.
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Contardi C, Rubes D, Serra M, Dorati R, Dattilo M, Mavliutova L, Patrini M, Guglielmann R, Sellergren B, and De Lorenzi E
- Abstract
In this work, an innovative and accurate affinity capillary electrophoresis (ACE) method was set up to monitor the complexation of aqueous MIP nanogels (NGs) with model cancer-related antigens. Using α2,6'- and α2,3'-sialyllactose as oversimplified cancer biomarker-mimicking templates, NGs were synthesized and characterized in terms of size, polydispersity, and overall charge. A stability study was also carried out in order to select the best storage conditions and to ensure product quality. After optimization of capillary electrophoresis conditions, injection of MIP NGs resulted in a single, sharp, and efficient peak. The mobility shift approach was applied to quantitatively estimate binding affinity, in this case resulting in an association constant of K ≈ 10
6 M-1 . The optimized polymers further displayed a pronounced discrimination between the two sialylated sugars. The newly developed ACE protocol has the potential to become a very effective method for nonconstrained affinity screening of NG in solution, especially during the NG development phase and/or for a final accurate quantitation of the observed binding.- Published
- 2024
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17. Photodynamic toluidine blue-gold nanoconjugates as a novel therapeutic for Staphylococcal biofilms.
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Okkeh M, De Vita L, Bruni G, Doveri L, Minzioni P, Restivo E, Patrini M, Pallavicini P, and Visai L
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Staphylococci are among the most frequent bacteria known to cause biofilm-related infections. Pathogenic biofilms represent a global healthcare challenge due to their high tolerance to antimicrobials. In this study, water soluble polyethylene glycol (PEG)-coated gold nanospheres (28 ppm) and nanostars (15 ppm) with electrostatically adsorbed photosensitizer (PS) Toluidine Blue O (TBO) ∼4 μM were successfully synthesized and characterized as PEG-GNPs@TBO and PEG-GNSs@TBO. Both nanoconjugates and the TBO 4 μM solution showed remarkable, if similar, antimicrobial photodynamic inactivation (aPDI) effects at 638 nm, inhibiting the formation of biofilms by two Staphylococcal strains: a clinical methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolate and Staphylococcus epidermidis ( S. epidermidis ) RP62A. Alternatively in biofilm eradication treatments, the aPDI effects of PEG-GNSs@TBO were more effective and yielded a 75% and 50% reduction in viable count of MRSA and S. epidermidis RP62A preformed biofilms, respectively and when compared with untreated samples. This reduction in viable count was even greater than that obtained through aPDI treatment using a 40 μM TBO solution. Confocal laser microscopy (CLSM) and scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of PEG-GNSs@TBO's aPDI treatments revealed significant changes in the integrity and morphology of biofilms, with fewer colony masses. The generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) upon PEG-GNSs@TBO's aPDI treatment was detected by CLSM using a specific ROS fluorescent probe, demonstrating bright fluorescence red spots across the surfaces of the treated biofilms. Our findings shine a light on the potential synergism between gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) and photosensitizers in developing novel nanoplatforms to target Staphylococcal biofilm related infections., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)
- Published
- 2023
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18. Overview of Cochrane systematic reviews for rehabilitation interventions in individuals with cerebral palsy: A mapping synthesis.
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Liguori S, Young VM, Arienti C, Pollini E, Patrini M, Gimigliano F, Negrini S, and Kiekens C
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- Humans, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Cerebral Palsy complications, Botulinum Toxins, Type A therapeutic use, Dystonia, Sialorrhea
- Abstract
Aim: This overview of Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs) reports on current evidence on the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions for individuals with cerebral palsy (CP) and the quality of the evidence., Method: Following the inclusion criteria defined by the World Health Organization, all CSRs tagged in the Cochrane Rehabilitation database that were relevant for individuals with CP were included. A mapping synthesis was used to group outcomes and comparisons of included CSRs indicating the effect of rehabilitation interventions and the certainty of evidence., Results: A total of eight CSRs were included in the evidence map. The effect of interventions varied across comparisons and the certainty of evidence was inconsistent, ranging from high to very low. The best evidence was found for botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT-A) combined with occupational therapy in the management of spasticity. However, the effect of BoNT-A on drooling and salivation remains unclear. A paucity of randomized controlled trials studying treatments for both dystonia and postural deformities was noted., Interpretation: This review emphasizes the need to further investigate the effectiveness and cost-benefit of rehabilitation interventions for individuals with CP., What This Paper Adds: The quality and quantity of evidence on rehabilitation interventions for cerebral palsy is limited worldwide. Botulinum neurotoxin A plus occupational therapy showed robust efficacy for the management of upper-limb spasticity. Evidence on sleep-positioning systems for hip migration and trihexyphenidyl for dystonia is scarce., (© 2023 The Authors. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Mac Keith Press.)
- Published
- 2023
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19. High Quality Factor in Solution-Processed Inorganic Microcavities Embedding CsPbBr 3 Perovskite Nanocrystals.
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Bertucci S, Escher A, Cirignano M, De Franco M, Locardi F, Patrini M, Comoretto D, Lova P, and Di Stasio F
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Optical microcavities grant manipulation over light-matter interactions and light propagation, enabling the fabrication of foundational optical and optoelectronic components. However, the materials used for high-performing systems, mostly bulk inorganics, are typically costly, and their processing is hardly scalable. In this work, we present an alternative way to fabricate planar optical resonators via solely solution processing while approaching the performances of conventional systems. Here, we couple fully solution-processed high dielectric contrast inorganic Bragg mirrors obtained by sol-gel deposition with the remarkable photoluminescence properties of CsPbBr
3 perovskite nanocrystals. The approach yields microcavities with a quality factor of ∼220, which is a record value for solution-processed inorganic structures, and a strong emission redistribution resulting in a 3-fold directional intensity enhancement., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)- Published
- 2023
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20. An overview of Cochrane systematic reviews for pulmonary rehabilitation interventions in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a mapping synthesis.
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Zampogna E, Ferriero G, Visca D, Patrini M, Negrini S, and Arienti C
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- Humans, Dyspnea rehabilitation, Exercise, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive diagnosis, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Introduction: There is a global unmet need for rehabilitation to meet which the World Health Organization, in collaboration with Cochrane Rehabilitation, is developing the Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation with the aim of identifying rehabilitation interventions relevant to a range of key health conditions, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The purpose of this paper is to describe the best available evidence on pulmonary rehabilitation interventions for people with COPD., Evidence Acquisition: An Overview of Cochrane Systematic Reviews (CSRs). Through the search strategy, COPD-related systematic reviews published from January 2009 to November 2021 were identified. Data were extracted on each reported outcome related to an intervention and judgements about the quality of evidence were made, using the GRADE approach., Evidence Synthesis: Seventeen reviews were analyzed, for a total of 314 primary studies that included 22,206 participants. CSRs provided information on the effectiveness of rehabilitation on functioning, activity, quality of life, anxiety, depression, mortality, and health care resource utilization., Conclusions: Our findings report that comprehensive pulmonary rehabilitation programs and water exercises improve the exercise capacity and quality of life (QoL) in people with COPD. Different exercise modalities, intensities, and settings for different muscle groups, breathing exercises, and counseling can improve exercise capacity, QoL, dyspnea, hospitalizations, and physical activity. It is uncertain whether breathing exercise, low-intensity exercise, neuromuscular electrical stimulation, and psychological intervention have an effect on exercise capacity, dyspnea, QoL, and physical activity. The protocol was registered on OSF (registration DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/8A26Q).
- Published
- 2023
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21. Overview of Cochrane Systematic Reviews for Rehabilitation Interventions in Persons With Spinal Cord Injury: A Mapping Synthesis.
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Arienti C, Patrini M, Negrini S, and Kiekens C
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- Humans, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Pain Management, Spinal Cord Injuries rehabilitation
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Objective: This article aims to describe the evidence on rehabilitation interventions for persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) identified in Cochrane Systematic Reviews (CSRs) selected for inclusion in the World Health Organization Rehabilitation Programme-Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation., Data Sources: The CSRs search was led by the Cochrane Rehabilitation team, using the tagging process, using the terms "spinal cord injury" and "rehabilitation" in the Cochrane Library., Study Selection: We performed an overview of all the CSRs according to the inclusion criteria defined with the World Health Organization: rehabilitation interventions in persons with SCI., Data Extraction: The CSRs identified after the screening process were summarized using an evidence map, grouping outcomes, and comparisons of included CSRs indicating the effect and the quality of evidence to provide a comprehensive view of what is known., Data Synthesis: Out of 248 CSRs from the past 10 years tagged in the Cochrane Rehabilitation database, 3 were related to SCI. They provide data on 13 outcomes analyzed within 11 comparisons for a total of 64 primary studies, including 2024 participants with SCI. Of these, 7 outcomes and 1 comparison focused on people with cervical SCI. Rehabilitation interventions might improve respiratory outcomes and pain relief in people with SCI. There is uncertainty whether bodyweight-supported treadmill training, robotic-assisted training, and functional electrostimulation affect walking speed and capacity., Conclusions: The current evidence needs to be confirmed by better quality research. Therefore, future priorities are the improvement of methodological quality of the studies in people with SCI, particularly considering the complexity of this health condition. Further, there is a need for more CSRs in the field., (Copyright © 2022 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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22. Machine learning methods for functional recovery prediction and prognosis in post-stroke rehabilitation: a systematic review.
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Campagnini S, Arienti C, Patrini M, Liuzzi P, Mannini A, and Carrozza MC
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- Bias, Humans, Machine Learning, Prognosis, Recovery of Function, Stroke, Stroke Rehabilitation methods
- Abstract
Background: Rehabilitation medicine is facing a new development phase thanks to a recent wave of rigorous clinical trials aimed at improving the scientific evidence of protocols. This phenomenon, combined with new trends in personalised medical therapies, is expected to change clinical practice dramatically. The emerging field of Rehabilomics is only possible if methodologies are based on biomedical data collection and analysis. In this framework, the objective of this work is to develop a systematic review of machine learning algorithms as solutions to predict motor functional recovery of post-stroke patients after treatment., Methods: We conducted a comprehensive search of five electronic databases using the Patient, Intervention, Comparison and Outcome (PICO) format. We extracted health conditions, population characteristics, outcome assessed, the method for feature extraction and selection, the algorithm used, and the validation approach. The methodological quality of included studies was assessed using the prediction model risk of bias assessment tool (PROBAST). A qualitative description of the characteristics of the included studies as well as a narrative data synthesis was performed., Results: A total of 19 primary studies were included. The predictors most frequently used belonged to the areas of demographic characteristics and stroke assessment through clinical examination. Regarding the methods, linear and logistic regressions were the most frequently used and cross-validation was the preferred validation approach., Conclusions: We identified several methodological limitations: small sample sizes, a limited number of external validation approaches, and high heterogeneity among input and output variables. Although these elements prevented a quantitative comparison across models, we defined the most frequently used models given a specific outcome, providing useful indications for the application of more complex machine learning algorithms in rehabilitation medicine., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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23. The Electrical Response of Real Dielectrics: Using the Voltage Ramp Method as a Straightforward Diagnostic Tool for Polymeric Composites.
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Vitulo P, Zanoletti M, Morina R, Callegari D, Quartarone E, Viola R, Comoretto D, Dulio S, Mustarelli P, and Patrini M
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An experimental method exploiting the capacitive response of most materials is here revised. The procedure called the "Voltage Ramp Method" (VRM) is based on applying proper voltage ramp cycles over time and measuring electrical current intensity flowing through the material sample. In the case of an ideal capacitor, a current plateau should be easily measured, and the capacitance value precisely determined. However, most media, e.g., semiconductors and insulating polymers, show dielectric absorption and hence electric leakage effects. Therefore, the VRM method allows simultaneous determination of their equivalent capacitance and resistance. Some case studies are discussed as concerning the application of VRM to both standard and actual media. A figure of merit of the method is the percentage difference between 2.5% and 1.5% with respect to the nominal values of a commercial capacitor and resistor, respectively. The simulation modeling of the material electrical response is compared to the experimental data also on polymer nanocomposites suitable for energy harvesting.
- Published
- 2022
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24. Overview of Cochrane Systematic Reviews of Rehabilitation Interventions for Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury: A Mapping Synthesis.
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Young VM, Hill JR, Patrini M, Negrini S, and Arienti C
- Abstract
Background: The World Health Organization has identified an unmet global need for rehabilitation interventions concerning 20 non-communicable diseases, traumatic brain injury included. This overview compiles and synthesizes the quality and quantity of available evidence on the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions for traumatic brain injury from Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs). The results will be used to develop the Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation., Methods: All CSRs on TBI tagged in the Cochrane Rehabilitation database published between August 2009 and September 2021 were included. Evidence mapping was implemented to extract study characteristics and evidence from the CSRs., Results: Six CSRs (42 studies; n = 3983) examined the effectiveness of either non-pharmacological or pharmacological interventions after TBI. Among 19 comparisons, 3% were rated as high in quality of evidence, 9% moderate, 54% low, and 34% very low. Non-pharmacological interventions with moderate quality, hospital-based cognitive rehabilitation and cognitive didactic therapy, likely produced minimal to no changes in the return-to-work rate. Anti-epileptic drugs and neuroprotective agents resulted in a minimal difference to the frequency of late seizure episodes in post-traumatic epilepsy., Conclusions: No prominent advances in treatment options were reported in any of the CSRs. The high rate of low and very low quality of evidence makes it difficult to ascertain the effectiveness of several recommended non-pharmacological interventions.
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- 2022
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25. Mild Sol-Gel Conditions and High Dielectric Contrast: A Facile Processing toward Large-Scale Hybrid Photonic Crystals for Sensing and Photocatalysis.
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Bertucci S, Megahd H, Dodero A, Fiorito S, Di Stasio F, Patrini M, Comoretto D, and Lova P
- Abstract
Solution processing of highly performing photonic crystals has been a towering ambition for making them technologically relevant in applications requiring mass and large-area production. It would indeed represent a paradigm changer for the fabrication of sensors and for light management nanostructures meant for photonics and advanced photocatalytic systems. On the other hand, solution-processed structures often suffer from low dielectric contrast and poor optical quality or require complex deposition procedures due to the intrinsic properties of components treatable from solution. This work reports on a low-temperature sol-gel route between the alkoxides of Si and Ti and poly(acrylic acid), leading to stable polymer-inorganic hybrid materials with tunable refractive index and, in the case of titania hybrid, photoactive properties. Alternating thin films of the two hybrids allows planar photonic crystals with high optical quality and dielectric contrast as large as 0.64. Moreover, low-temperature treatments also allow coupling the titania hybrids with several temperature-sensitive materials including dielectric and semiconducting polymers to fabricate photonic structures. These findings open new perspectives in several fields; preliminary results demonstrate that the hybrid structures are suitable for sensing and the enhancement of the catalytic activity of photoactive media and light emission control.
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- 2022
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26. All-Polymer Microcavities for the Fluorescence Radiative Rate Modification of a Diketopyrrolopyrrole Derivative.
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Megahd H, Lova P, Sardar S, D'Andrea C, Lanfranchi A, Koszarna B, Patrini M, Gryko DT, and Comoretto D
- Abstract
Controlling the radiative rate of emitters with macromolecular photonic structures promises flexible devices with enhanced performances that are easy to scale up. For instance, radiative rate enhancement empowers low-threshold lasers, while rate suppression affects recombination in photovoltaic and photochemical processes. However, claims of the Purcell effect with polymer structures are controversial, as the low dielectric contrast typical of suitable polymers is commonly not enough to provide the necessary confinement. Here we show all-polymer planar microcavities with photonic band gaps tuned to the photoluminescence of a diketopyrrolopyrrole derivative, which allows a change in the fluorescence lifetime. Radiative and nonradiative rates were disentangled systematically by measuring the external quantum efficiencies and comparing the planar microcavities with a series of references designed to exclude any extrinsic effects. For the first time, this analysis shows unambiguously the dye radiative emission rate variations obtained with macromolecular dielectric mirrors. When different waveguides, chemical environments, and effective refractive index effects in the structure were accounted for, the change in the radiative lifetime was assigned to the Purcell effect. This was possible through the exploitation of photonic structures made of polyvinylcarbazole as a high-index material and the perfluorinated Aquivion as a low-index one, which produced the largest dielectric contrast ever obtained in planar polymer cavities. This characteristic induces the high confinement of the radiation electric field within the cavity layer, causing a record intensity enhancement and steering the radiative rate. Current limits and requirements to achieve the full control of radiative rates with polymer planar microcavities are also addressed., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)
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- 2022
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27. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field as of December 31st, 2021.
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Negrini F, de Sire A, Andrenelli E, Lazzarini SG, Patrini M, and Ceravolo MG
- Subjects
- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Published
- 2022
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28. A systematic review of clinical practice guidelines for persons with osteoarthritis. A "Best Evidence for Rehabilitation" (be4rehab) paper to develop the WHO's Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation: A systematic review of Clinical Practice Guidelines for persons with osteoarthritis for the identification of best evidence for rehabilitation.
- Author
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Oral A, Arman S, Tarakci E, Patrini M, Arienti C, Etemadi Y, Rauch A, and Negrini S
- Subjects
- Exercise, Humans, World Health Organization, Osteoarthritis, Hip diagnosis, Osteoarthritis, Hip therapy
- Abstract
Aim: Identifying existing interventions for rehabilitation and related evidence presents a crucial step in developing the World Health Organization's (WHO) Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation. This paper reports the results of a systematic search that aimed to identify clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) relevant to the rehabilitation of people with osteoarthritis and presents the CPG recommendations and the current state of evidence available for the interventions in the CPGs., Methods: This paper is part of the "Best Evidence for Rehabilitation" (be4rehab) series, developed according to the methodology presented in the WHO's Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation introductory paper by Rauch et al, published in 2019. It is a systematic review of the existing CPGs on osteoarthritis published between 2009 and 2019. Identified CPGs were screened taking into consideration conflict of interest, the provision of information regarding the strength of recommendation(s), and quality to be selected. Quality of CPGs was assessed using the AGREE II tool., Results: After title and abstract screening, 51 CPGs were identified. Considering the inclusion/exclusion criteria, 26 CPGs were selected. After checking for quality, comprehensiveness, multi-professionality, and publication date, five CPGs were finally included in the review. The strong recommendations for people with knee and hip osteoarthritis consistently included in all the selected CPGs, sometimes called "core treatments", were patient education, exercise training, and weight reduction if overweight or obese. Generally, recommendations overlap in the CPGs., Conclusion: The systematic search revealed high-quality CPGs on osteoarthritis for the identification of "Best Evidence for Rehabilitation (be4rehab)" regarding interventions for rehabilitation of people with osteoarthritis., (© 2022 Asia Pacific League of Associations for Rheumatology and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
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- 2022
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29. 2,5-Diisopropenylthiophene by Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reaction and its exploitation in inverse vulcanization: a case study.
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Tavella C, Luciano G, Lova P, Patrini M, D'Arrigo C, Comoretto D, and Stagnaro P
- Abstract
A novel thiophene derivative, namely 2,5-diisopropenylthiophene (DIT) was synthetized by Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reaction (SMCCR). The influence of reaction parameters, such as temperature, solvent, stoichiometry of reagents, role of the base and reaction medium were thoroughly discussed in view of yield optimization and environmental impact minimization. Basic design of experiment (DoE) and multiple linear regression (MLR) modeling methods were used to interpret the obtained results. DIT was then employed as a comonomer in the copolymerization with waste elemental sulfur through a green process, inverse vulcanization (IV), to obtain sulfur-rich polymers named inverse vulcanized polymers (IVPs) possessing high refractive index ( n ≈ 1.8). The DIT comonomer was purposely designed to (i) favor the IV process owing to the high reactivity of the isopropenyl functionalities and (ii) enhance the refractive index of the ensuing IVPs owing to the presence of the sulfur atom itself and to the high electronic polarizability of the π-conjugated thiophene ring. A series of random sulfur- r -diisopropenylthiophene (S- r -DIT) copolymers with sulfur content from 50 up to 90 wt% were synthesized by varying the S/DIT feed ratio. Spectroscopic, thermal and optical characterizations of the new IVPs were carried out to assess their main chemical-physical features., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)
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- 2022
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30. Capabilities of Grazing Incidence X-ray Diffraction in the Investigation of Amorphous Mixed Oxides with Variable Composition.
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Achilli E, Annoni F, Armani N, Patrini M, Cornelli M, Celada L, Micali M, Terrasi A, Ghigna P, and Timò G
- Abstract
X-ray Diffraction has been fully exploited as a probe to investigate crystalline materials. However, very little research has been carried out to unveil its potentialities towards amorphous materials. In this work, we demonstrated the capabilities of Grazing Incidence X-ray Diffraction (GIXRD) as a simple and fast tool to obtain quantitative information about the composition of amorphous mixed oxides. In particular, we evidenced that low angle scattering features, associated with local structure parameters, show a significant trend as a function of the oxide composition. This evolution can be quantified by interpolating GIXRD data with a linear combination of basic analytical functions, making it possible to build up GIXRD peak-sample composition calibration curves. As a case study, the present method was demonstrated on Ta
2 O5 -SiO2 amorphous films deposited by RF-magnetron sputtering. GIXRD results were validated by independent measurement of the oxide composition using Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry (RBS). These materials are attracting interest in different industrial sectors and, in particular, in photovoltaics as anti-reflection coatings. Eventually, the optical properties measured by spectroscopic ellipsometry were correlated to the chemical composition of the film. The obtained results highlighted not only a correlation between diffraction features and the composition of amorphous films but also revealed a simple and fast strategy to characterize amorphous thin oxides of industrial interest.- Published
- 2022
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31. The methodology of a "living" COVID-19 registry development in a clinical context.
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Arienti C, Campagnini S, Brambilla L, Fanciullacci C, Lazzarini SG, Mannini A, Patrini M, and Carrozza MC
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- Evidence-Based Practice, Focus Groups, Health Status, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Survivors statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 rehabilitation, Registries
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to describe an innovative methodology of a registry development, constantly updated for the scientific assessment and analysis of the health status of the population with COVID-19., Study Design and Setting: A methodological study design to develop a multi-site, Living COVID-19 Registry of COVID-19 patients admitted in Fondazione Don Gnocchi centres started in March 2020., Results: The integration of the living systematic reviews and focus group methodologies led to a development of a registry which includes 520 fields filled in for 748 COVID-19 patients recruited from 17 Fondazione Don Gnocchi centres. The result is an evidence and experience-based registry, according to the evolution of a new pathology which was not known before outbreak of March 2020 and with the aim of building knowledge to provide a better quality of care for COVID-19 patients., Conclusion: A Living COVID-19 Registry is an open, living and up to date access to large-scale patient-level data sets that could help identifying important factors and modulating variable for recognising risk profiles and predicting treatment success in COVID-19 patients hospitalized. This innovative methodology might be used for other registries, to be sure which the data collected is an appropriate means of accomplishing the scientific objectives planned., Clinical Trial Registration Number: not applicable., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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32. Predicting SARS-CoV-2 infection duration at hospital admission:a deep learning solution.
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Liuzzi P, Campagnini S, Fanciullacci C, Arienti C, Patrini M, Carrozza MC, and Mannini A
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- Hospitalization, Hospitals, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Deep Learning
- Abstract
COVID-19 cases are increasing around the globe with almost 5 million of deaths. We propose here a deep learning model capable of predicting the duration of the infection by means of information available at hospital admission. A total of 222 patients were enrolled in our observational study. Anagraphical and anamnestic data, COVID-19 signs and symptoms, COVID-19 therapy, hematochemical test results, and prior therapies administered to patients are used as predictors. A set of 55 features, all of which can be taken in the first hours of the patient's hospitalization, was considered. Different solutions were compared achieving the best performance with a sequential convolutional neural network-based model merged in an ensemble with two different meta-learners linked in cascade. We obtained a median absolute error of 2.7 days (IQR = 3.0) in predicting the duration of the infection; the error was equally distributed in the infection duration range. This tool could preemptively give an outlook of the COVID-19 patients' expected path and the associated hospitalization effort. The proposed solution could be viable in tackling the huge burden and the logistics complexity of hospitals or rehabilitation centers during the pandemic waves. With data taken ad admission, entering a PCA-based feature selection, a k-fold cross-validated CNN-based model was implemented. After external texting, a median absolute error of 2.7 days [IQR = 3 days]., (© 2022. International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering.)
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- 2022
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33. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field as of October 31st, 2021.
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Andrenelli E, Negrini F, de Sire A, Lazzarini SG, Patrini M, and Ceravolo MG
- Subjects
- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Systematic Reviews as Topic, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Published
- 2022
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34. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field as of August 31st, 2021.
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de Sire A, Andrenelli E, Negrini F, Iannicelli V, Lazzarini SG, Patrini M, and Ceravolo MG
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- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19
- Published
- 2021
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35. Cochrane Blogshots Relevant to Rehabilitation: An Online Search Performed by Cochrane Rehabilitation.
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Patrini M, Iannicelli V, Lazzarini SG, Liguori S, and Negrini S
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- Humans, Search Engine, Blogging, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, Translational Research, Biomedical methods
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- 2021
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36. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field - third edition. Update as of June 30th, 2021.
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Ceravolo MG, Andrenelli E, Arienti C, Côté P, de Sire A, Iannicelli V, Lazzarini SG, Negrini F, Patrini M, and Negrini S
- Subjects
- Bias, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19
- Abstract
Introduction: This paper updates and summarizes the current evidence informing rehabilitation of patients with COVID-19 and/or describing the consequences of the disease and its treatment., Evidence Acquisition: Studies published from May 1
st to June 30th , 2021 were selected, excluding descriptive studies and expert opinions. Papers were categorized according to study design, research question, COVID-19 phase, limitations of functioning of rehabilitation interest, and type of rehabilitation service involved. From this edition, we improved the quality assessment using the Joanna Briggs Institute checklists for observational studies and the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool for randomized-controlled clinical trials (RCTs)., Evidence Synthesis: Twenty-five, out of 3699 papers, were included. They were three RCTs, 13 cross-sectional studies and nine cohort studies. Twenty studies reported data on symptom prevalence (N.=13) or disease natural history (N.=7); and five studies reported intervention effectiveness at the individual level. All study participants were COVID survivors and 48% of studies collected information on participants 6 months or longer after COVID-19 onset. The most frequent risks of bias for RCTs concerned weaknesses in allocation concealment, blinding of therapists, and lack of intention-to-treat analysis. Most analytical studies failed to identify or deal with confounders, describe or deal with dropouts or eventually perform an appropriate statistical analysis., Conclusions: Most studies in this updated review targeted the prevalence of limitations of functioning of rehabilitation interest in COVID-19 survivors. This is similar to past review findings; however, data in the new studies was collected at longer follow-up periods (up to one year after symptom onset) and in larger samples of participants. More RCTs and analytical observational studies are available, but the methodological quality of recently published studies is low. There is a need for good quality intervention efficacy and effectiveness studies to complement the rapidly expanding evidence from observational studies.- Published
- 2021
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37. Optical and Structural Property Tuning in Physical Vapor Deposited Bismuth Halides Cs 3 Bi 2 (I 1- x Br x ) 9 (0 ≤ x ≤ 1).
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Bonomi S, Galinetto P, Patrini M, Romani L, and Malavasi L
- Abstract
Crystalline films of lead-free all-inorganic Cs
3 Bi2 X9 (X = Br, I) perovskites have been deposited by radio frequency (RF)-magnetron sputtering providing high-quality, single-phase films as confirmed by structural, morphological, and optical property characterization. Progressive tuning of crystal structure characteristics and optical absorbance has been achieved in mixed Br/I phases Cs3 Bi2 (I1- x Brx )9 (0 ≤ x ≤ 1), highlighting a shift of the band gap from about 2.0 eV for Cs3 Bi2 I9 to 2.64 eV for Cs3 Bi2 Br9 . X-ray diffraction and Raman scattering allowed defining the range of alloyed compositions where single-phase compositions are found. Finally, preliminary photocatalytic activity tests on the degradation of methylene blue provided solid data indicating the future possible exploitation of Bi-based perovskite derivative materials as active photocatalysts.- Published
- 2021
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38. Chemical Vapor Deposition of Highly Conjugated, Transparent Boron Carbon Nitride Thin Films.
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Giusto P, Cruz D, Heil T, Tarakina N, Patrini M, and Antonietti M
- Abstract
Ternary materials made up only from the lightweight elements boron, carbon, and nitrogen are very attractive due to their tunable properties that can be obtained by changing the relative elemental composition. However, most of the times, the synthesis requires to use up to three different precursor and very high temperatures for the synthesis. Moreover, the low reciprocal solubility of boron nitride and graphene often leads to BN-C composite materials due to phase segregation. Herein, an innovative method is presented to prepare BCN thin films by chemical vapor deposition from a single source precursor, melamine diborate. The deposition occurs homogenously at relatively low temperatures generating very high degree of sp
2 conjugation. The as-prepared thin films possess high transparency and refractive index values in the visible range that are of interest for reflective mirrors and lenses. Furthermore, they are wide-bandgap semiconductor with very positive valence band, making these materials very stable against oxidation of interest as protective coating and charge transport layer for solar cells. The simple chemical vapor deposition method that relies on commonly available and low-hazard precursor can open the way for application of BCN thin films in optics, optoelectronics, and beyond., (© 2021 The Authors. Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2021
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39. Effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions in adults with multi-organ dysfunction syndrome: A rapid review.
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Arienti C, Lazzarini SG, Pollini E, Patrini M, Kiekens C, and Negrini S
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- Adult, Humans, Multiple Organ Failure etiology, Pandemics, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Critical Illness, Multiple Organ Failure rehabilitation
- Abstract
Background: Multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, defined as altered organ function in critically ill patients, is a possible consequence of COVID-19. Investigating the current evidence is therefore crucial in this pandemic, as early rehabilitation could be effective for the functioning of patients with multiple organ failure. This rapid review assesses the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions in adults with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome., Methods: A rapid review was conducted including only randomised control trials, published until 30 November 2020. All databases were investigated and the results synthesized narratively, evaluating the risk of bias and quality of evidence in all included studies., Results: A total of 404 records were identified through database searches. After removal of duplicates 346 articles remained. After screening, 3 studies (90 participants) met the inclusion criteria. All studies reported positive effects of neuromuscular electrical stimulation on muscle mass preservation compared with no treatment or standard physio-therapy., Conclusion: The lack of evidence on the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions does not allow any firm conclusion to be drawn. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation might be a possible rehabilitation intervention to prevent muscle volume loss and improve function in patients with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome. However, further studies are needed to support these preliminary findings.
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- 2021
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40. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field as of April 30, 2021.
- Author
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Negrini F, de Sire A, Andrenelli E, Lazzarini SG, Patrini M, and Ceravolo MG
- Subjects
- Humans, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Systematic Reviews as Topic, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 therapy
- Published
- 2021
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41. Methodological Issues in Rehabilitation Research: A Scoping Review.
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Arienti C, Armijo-Olivo S, Minozzi S, Tjosvold L, Lazzarini SG, Patrini M, and Negrini S
- Subjects
- Humans, Evidence-Based Practice standards, Rehabilitation Research standards, Research Design standards
- Abstract
Objective: To identify, synthesize, and categorize the methodological issues faced by the rehabilitation field., Data Sources: A scoping review was conducted using studies identified in MEDLINE, the Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Web of Science, Scopus, Physiotherapy Evidence Database, and Google Scholar up to August 2018., Study Selection: We included all type of publications describing methodological issues in rehabilitation research where rehabilitation is described as a multimodal process. The methodological issues have been categorized and classified., Data Extraction: The synthesis included qualitative and quantitative analysis. To focus the attention on rehabilitation, we post hoc divided in "specific issues" (highly related to, even if not exclusive of, rehabilitation research) and "generic issues" (common in biomedical research)., Data Synthesis: Seventy-one publications were included: 68% were narrative reviews, 15% systematic reviews, 7% editorials, 4% meta-epidemiologic studies, and 5% others. Specific methodological issues include the following: problematic application of randomized controlled trials (32%), absent definition of core outcome sets (28%), poor interventions description (22%), weak methodological (conducting) and reporting quality (21%), scarce clinical practice applicability (14%), lack of blinding assessor (10%), inadequate randomization methods or inadequate allocation concealment (8%), and inadequate participants description and recruitment (8%). "Generic" issues included the following: data and statistical description (31%), authors' methodological training (7%), peer review process (6%, n=4), funding declaration (6%), ethical statement (3%), protocol registration (3%), and conflict of interest declaration (1%)., Conclusions: Methodological and reporting issues might influence the quality of the evidence produced in rehabilitation research. The next steps to move forward in the field of rehabilitation could be to evaluate the influence of all these issues on the validity of trial results through meta-epidemiologic studies and to develop specific checklists to provide guidance to authors to improve the reporting and conduct of trials in this field., (Copyright © 2021 The American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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42. Tools to Assess the Risk of Bias and Reporting Quality of Randomized Controlled Trials in Rehabilitation.
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Armijo-Olivo S, Patrini M, Oliveira-Souza AIS, Dennett L, Arienti C, Dahchi M, and Negrini S
- Subjects
- Humans, Bias, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic standards, Rehabilitation Research standards, Research Design standards
- Abstract
Objectives: (1) To determine whether new tools and items have been developed to evaluate the risk of bias (RoB) and reporting of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in rehabilitation; (2) to determine which items are included in the existing reporting guidelines, and to create a matrix of items to report and conduct trials in rehabilitation as the first step for a starting a rigorous validation process., Data Sources: Searches were conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health databases., Study Selection: Studies should describe a newly developed tool to evaluate the RoB or quality of reporting for RCTs in the area of rehabilitation., Data Extraction: (1) First, we extracted items from new tools identified by the electronic search strategies and then (2) we looked at the items provided by the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials statement and its relevant extensions. We determined whether these items were already included in our matrix of items. Items were classified based on methodological domains they accomplish, biases they were able to target, and whether they guide reporting or conduct., Data Synthesis: Among the 1596 citations found, 23 articles were potentially relevant. From these, only 3 new scales (National Institute for Complementary Medicine Acupuncture Network, Quality of reports on spa and balneotherapy [SPAC], Assessment of Study Quality and Reporting in Exercise) were found. In addition, the newly updated Cochrane RoB tool (RoB 2.0) was included. Our matrix contained 122 unique items for any rehabilitation area, 46 items (37.7%) were related to conduct, and 58 (47.5%) were related to the reporting; 18 (14.8%) were related to both. Overall, 76 new items were added among all domains., Conclusions: Many individual and diverse items have been used to guide the reporting and conduct of rehabilitation trials. This indicates a great variability in number of items and an apparent lack of consensus on a core set of items to be used in rehabilitation. Future research should look into developing a core set of items for the rehabilitation field., (Copyright © 2021 The American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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43. Mortality and characteristics of older people dying with COVID-19 in Lombardy nursing homes, Italy: An observational cohort study.
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Arienti C, Brambilla L, Campagnini S, Fanciullacci C, Giunco F, Mannini A, Patrini M, Tartarone F, and Carrozza MC
- Abstract
Background: The aim of the study was to describe the epidemiological characteristics of Nursing Homes (NHs) residents infected by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and to compute the related case-fatality rate., Materials and Methods: The outcomes were mortality and case-fatality rate with related epidemiological characteristics (age, sex, comorbidity, and frailty)., Results: During the COVID-19 outbreak lasted from March 1 to May 7, 2020, 330 residents died in Fondazione Don Gnocchi NHs bringing the mortality rate to 27% with a dramatic increase compared to the same period of 2019, when it was 7.5%. Naso/oropharyngeal swabs resulted positive for COVID-19 in 315 (71%) of the 441of the symptomatic/exposed residents tested. The COVID-19 population was 75% female, with a 17% overall fatality rate and sex-specific fatality rates of 19% and 13% for females and males, respectively. Fifty-six percent of deaths presented SARS-CoV-2-associated pneumonia, 15% cardiovascular, and 29% miscellaneous pathologies., Conclusion: Patients' complexity and frailty might influence SARS-CoV-2 infection case-fatality rate estimates. A COVID-19 register is needed to study COVID-19 frail patients' epidemiology and characteristics., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest., (Copyright: © 2021 Journal of Research in Medical Sciences.)
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- 2021
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44. Systematic Review of Clinical Practice Guidelines for Individuals With Amputation: Identification of Best Evidence for Rehabilitation to Develop the WHO's Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation.
- Author
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Heyns A, Jacobs S, Negrini S, Patrini M, Rauch A, and Kiekens C
- Subjects
- Humans, World Health Organization, Amputation, Surgical rehabilitation, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine standards, Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Abstract
Objectives: To report the results of the systematic search performed to identify interventions and related evidence for rehabilitation of individuals with amputation based on the current evidence from clinical practice guidelines (CPG)., Data Sources: Pubmed, Pedro, CINAHL, Embase, Google Scholar, and multiple guideline databases (date restriction, 2008-2018)., Study Selection: Exclusion criteria were no CPG, not reporting on rehabilitation, published before 2008, developed for health conditions other than amputation, presence of conflict of interest (financial or nonfinancial), lack of information on the strength of the recommendation, and lack of quality assessed by the "Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation.", Data Extraction: Data extraction was done using a standardized form, which comprised information on the recommendation, the strength of recommendation and the quality of the evidence used to inform the recommendation., Data Synthesis: We included 4 guidelines, providing a total of 217 recommendations (20 on assessments, 131 on interventions, and 66 on service provision). Most recommendations concerned pain management, education, pre- and postoperative management, and residual limb care. The strength of recommendation was generally weak to intermediate. The level of evidence mostly compromised expert opinions, with only 6.9% (15 of 217) being provided by randomized controlled trials, systematic reviews, or meta-analyses., Conclusions: The field of amputation is well covered for recommended interventions, but the level of evidence is generally low and is based mostly on expert opinion. Some important domains are not covered (eg, vocation and education, sexual and/or intimate relationships, activities of daily living or leisure activities, education concerning socket/liner fitting). There is also a lack of description of the contents of training and rehabilitation programs. This should be taken into account for the development of future guidelines., (Copyright © 2020 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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45. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field as of February 28, 2021.
- Author
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Andrenelli E, Negrini F, de Sire A, Patrini M, Lazzarini SG, and Ceravolo MG
- Subjects
- Humans, Pandemics, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 rehabilitation, SARS-CoV-2, Systematic Reviews as Topic
- Published
- 2021
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46. Cochrane collaborates with the World Health Organization to establish a Package of Rehabilitation Interventions based on the best available evidence.
- Author
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Negrini S, Arienti C, Patrini M, Kiekens C, Rauch A, and Cieza A
- Subjects
- Consensus, Humans, Evidence-Based Practice, Noncommunicable Diseases rehabilitation, Rehabilitation methods, World Health Organization
- Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) and Cochrane have been collaborating for a long time. As a part of "Rehabilitation 2030: a call for action", WHO's Department of Noncommunicable Diseases is developing a Package of Rehabilitation Interventions (PRI) which provides a set of prioritized evidence-based interventions, along with resource requirements for their delivery. Cochrane Rehabilitation were asked to contribute to the methodological development of the PRI, with particular involvement in the initial phases of the evidence selection and extraction. The whole project comprises six phases of development: 1) definition of the 20 health relevant conditions; 2) selection and extraction of the current best evidence and expertise; 3) identification of the interventions to be included by expert consensus and (4) definition of the resources needed for their provision; 5) external review of the preliminary PRI and (6) dissemination of the final version of PRI. This joint WHO-Cochrane project is a major contribution to the Cochrane Knowledge Translation Strategy. PIR will be provided by WHO to all countries, particularly to help health policy makers in planning and implementing rehabilitation into Healthcare Systems.
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- 2021
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47. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: a rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field updated as of December 31st, 2020 and synthesis of the scientific literature of 2020.
- Author
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de Sire A, Andrenelli E, Negrini F, Patrini M, Lazzarini SG, and Ceravolo MG
- Subjects
- COVID-19 epidemiology, Humans, COVID-19 rehabilitation, Pandemics, Periodicals as Topic, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Introduction: COVID-19 infection significantly increased mortality risk and the burden of disability in most survivors, regardless of symptom severity at onset. The rehabilitation needs of people infected are receiving growing attention, as evidenced by the increasing number of publications, including those addressing the chronic consequences of infection. This rapid living systematic review reports the evidence published in November and December 2020 and summarises the entire body of literature on rehabilitation in COVID-19 patients published in 2020., Evidence Acquisition: This update was performed using the methodology reported by the second edition conducted by Cochrane Rehabilitation REH-COVER Action. We searched PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus, Web of Science, and Pedro databases. Papers related to COVID-19 and rehabilitation were retrieved and summarised descriptively., Evidence Synthesis: The search retrieved 4441 studies. After the removal of duplicates and the screening for title and abstract, we retained 105 studies. Of these, we included 54 in the qualitative synthesis of this update. According to OCEBM 2011 levels of evidence table, most studies (64.8%) fall within the category of level 4 evidence. Up to 40.7% of papers included COVID-19 patients in the postacute phase. In 2020, our rapid living systematic review included 230 studies; most of these (73.9%) were level 4 studies, 25.7% were level 3, and only one study was level 2. The evidence level improved over time. While most studies (44.8%) included patients with acute COVID-19, we observed a gradual increase in the number of reports about chronic symptoms and the long-term consequences of the infection., Conclusions: The update of the rapid living systematic review by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field demonstrates an increase in the level of evidence of studies addressing the rehabilitation needs associated with COVID-19 infection. Although most studies are still case reports/series, there is a trend towards conducting prospective investigations of the early natural history of the disease (first months post onset). High-quality-level studies on the efficacy of rehabilitation, and long-term monitoring of the disease and its sequelae are yet to emerge.
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- 2021
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48. Cochrane Rehabilitation: 2020 annual report.
- Author
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Arienti C, Kiekens C, Bettinsoli R, Engkasan JP, Frischknecht R, Gimigliano F, Grubisic F, Howe T, Iannicelli V, Ilieva E, Lazzarini SG, Levack WM, Meyer T, Oral A, Patrini M, Pollini E, Rathore FA, and Negrini S
- Subjects
- COVID-19 epidemiology, Humans, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 rehabilitation, Decision Making, Pandemics
- Abstract
During its fourth year of existence, Cochrane Rehabilitation went on to promote evidence-informed health decision-making in rehabilitation. In 2020, the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has made it necessary to alter priorities. In these challenging times, Cochrane Rehabilitation has firstly changed its internal organisation and established a new relevant project in line with pandemic needs: the REH-COVER (Rehabilitation - COVID-19 evidence-based response) action. The aim was to focus on the timely collection, review and dissemination of summarised and synthesised evidence relating to COVID-19 and rehabilitation. Cochrane Rehabilitation REH-COVER action has included in 2020 five main initiatives: 1) rapid living systematic reviews on rehabilitation and COVID-19; 2) interactive living evidence map on rehabilitation and COVID-19; 3) definition of the research topics on "rehabilitation and COVID-19" in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO) rehabilitation programme; 4) Cochrane Library special collection on Coronavirus (COVID-19) rehabilitation; and 5) collaboration with COVID-END for the topics "rehabilitation" and "disability." Furthermore, we are still carrying on five different special projects: Be4rehab; RCTRACK; definition of rehabilitation for research purposes; ebook project; and a prioritization exercise for Cochrane Reviews production. The Review Working Area continued to identify and "tag" the rehabilitation-relevant reviews published in the Cochrane library; the Publication Working Area went on to publish Cochrane Corners, working more closely with the Cochrane Review Groups (CRGs) and Cochrane Networks, particularly with Cochrane Musculoskeletal, Oral, Skin and Sensory Network; the Education Working Area, the most damaged in 2020, tried to continue performing educational activities such as workshops in different online meetings; the Methodology Working Area organized the third and fourth Cochrane Rehabilitation Methodological (CRM) meetings respectively in Milan and Orlando; the Communication Working Area spread rehabilitation evidences through different channels and translated the contents in different languages.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Multicenter prospective longitudinal study in 34 patients with Dravet syndrome: Neuropsychological development in the first six years of life.
- Author
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Battaglia D, Chieffo D, Lucibello S, Marini C, Sibilia V, Mei D, Darra F, Offredi F, Fontana E, Specchio N, Cappelletti S, Granata T, Ragona F, Patrini M, Baglietto MG, Prato G, Ferrari A, Vigevano F, Mercuri E, Bernardina BD, Guerrini R, Dravet C, and Guzzetta F
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Epilepsies, Myoclonic genetics, Epilepsies, Myoclonic physiopathology, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prospective Studies, Disease Progression, Epilepsies, Myoclonic complications, Neurodevelopmental Disorders genetics
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to identify developmental trajectories of developmental/behavioral phenotypes and possibly their relationship to epilepsy and genotype by analyzing developmental and behavioral features collected prospectively and longitudinally in a cohort of patients with Dravet syndrome (DS). Thirty-four patients from seven Italian tertiary pediatric neurology centers were enrolled in the study. All patients were examined for the SCN1A gene mutation and prospectively assessed from the first years of life with repeated full clinical observations including neurological and developmental examinations. Subjects were found to follow three neurodevelopmental trajectories. In the first group (16 patients), an initial and usually mild decline was observed between the second and the third year of life, specifically concerning visuomotor abilities, later progressing towards global involvement of all abilities. The second group (12 patients) showed an earlier onset of global developmental impairment, progressing towards a generally worse outcome. The third group of only two patients ended up with a normal neurodevelopmental quotient, but with behavioral and linguistic problems. The remaining four patients were not classifiable due to a lack of critical assessments just before developmental decline. The neurodevelopmental trajectories described in this study suggest a differential contribution of neurobiological and genetic factors. The profile of the first group, which included the largest fraction of patients, suggests that in the initial phase of the disease, visuomotor defects might play a major role in determining developmental decline. Early diagnosis of milder cases with initial visuomotor impairment may therefore provide new tools for a more accurate habilitation strategy., (Copyright © 2020 The Japanese Society of Child Neurology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Rehabilitation and COVID-19: a rapid living systematic review 2020 by Cochrane Rehabilitation Field. Update as of October 31st, 2020.
- Author
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Negrini F, de Sire A, Andrenelli E, Lazzarini SG, Patrini M, and Ceravolo MG
- Subjects
- COVID-19 epidemiology, Humans, COVID-19 rehabilitation, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Introduction: This living systematic review presents the monthly update of the second edition of the rapid living systematic review 2020 conducted by Cochrane Rehabilitation REH-COVER Action Steering Committee. The aim of this study was to update the monthly COVID-19 and rehabilitation literature research up to October 31
st , 2020., Evidence Acquisition: Methodology described in the second edition of the rapid living systematic review 2020 conducted by Cochrane Rehabilitation REH-COVER action was applied. PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus, Web of Science, and PEDro databases were searched, and papers related to COVID-19 and rehabilitation were retrieved and summarized descriptively., Evidence Synthesis: The database search retrieved 2704 publications. Duplicates were removed, and 1185 unique records were screened for inclusion. After screening titles, abstracts and full-texts, 22 papers were included in the present review. According to OCEBM 2011 Levels of Evidence table, 17 studies (77%) fall within the level of evidence 4 category, while the remainder (23%) are categorized as level of evidence 3. Most studies (N.=19; 86%) provided epidemiological data about the disease natural history/determining factor or the clinical presentation of COVID-19 infection, while only two studies focused on health service organization and intervention efficacy., Conclusions: The most recent published COVID-19 research relevant to rehabilitation primarily provides data on the clinical course and the clinical presentation of the pathology, rather than on rehabilitation interventions or service delivery. Studies with high levels of evidence regarding the efficacy of interventions, long-term monitoring, or new health service organization models are lacking.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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