480 results on '"Mincuzzi A."'
Search Results
2. Ultrashort pulsed laser texturing of current collector for Si/C Li-ion anodes: Characterization of electrochemical performance and evolution of interface morphology
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Ravesio, Elisa, Montinaro, Giorgio, Mincuzzi, Girolamo, Negozio, Marco, Versaci, Daniele, Gartiser, Valentin, Lutey, Adrian H.A., Bella, Federico, and Bodoardo, Silvia
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- 2025
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3. Corrigendum: Environmental pressures, tumor characteristics, and death rate in a female breast cancer cohort: a seven-years Bayesian survival analysis using cancer registry data from a contaminated area in Italy
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Orazio Valerio Giannico, Simona Carone, Margherita Tanzarella, Claudia Galluzzo, Antonella Bruni, Giovanna Maria Lagravinese, Ivan Rashid, Lucia Bisceglia, Rodolfo Sardone, Francesco Addabbo, Sante Minerba, and Antonia Mincuzzi
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breast cancer ,female breast cancer ,cancer survival ,environmental contamination ,environmental pollution ,cancer epidemiology ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2024
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4. Sex, environment, and death rate in a dementia cohort: a seven-years Bayesian survival analysis using medications data from a contaminated area in Italy
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Antonia Mincuzzi, Paolo Lodeserto, Jennifer Zollino, Rodolfo Sardone, Lucia Bisceglia, Francesco Addabbo, Sante Minerba, Vito Gregorio Colacicco, and Orazio Valerio Giannico
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dementia ,anti-dementia drug ,anti-dementia medication ,dementia survival ,environmental contamination ,environmental pollution ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionStudies have analyzed the effects of industrial installations on the environment and human health in Taranto, Southern Italy. Literature documented associations between different variables and dementia mortality among both women and men. The present study aims to investigate the associations between sex, environment, age, disease duration, pandemic years, anti-dementia drugs, and death rate.MethodsData from the regional medication registry were used. All women and men with an anti-dementia medication between 2015 and 2021 were included and followed-up to 2021. Bayesian mixed effects logistic and Cox regression models with time varying exposures were fitted using integrated nested Laplace approximations and adjusting for patients and therapy characteristics.ResultsA total of 7,961 person-years were observed. Variables associated with lower prevalence of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) medication were male sex (OR 0.63, 95% CrI 0.42–0.96), age 70–79 years (OR 0.17, 95% CrI 0.06–0.47) and ≥ 80 years (OR 0.08, 95% CrI 0.03–0.23), disease duration of 2–3 years (OR 0.43, 95% CrI 0.32–0.56) and 4–6 years (OR 0.21, 95% CrI 0.13–0.33), and pandemic years 2020 (OR 0.50, 95% CrI 0.37–0.67) and 2021 (OR 0.47, 95% CrI 0.33–0.65). Variables associated with higher mortality were male sex (HR 2.14, 95% CrI 1.75–2.62), residence in the contaminated site of national interest (SIN) (HR 1.25, 95% CrI 1.02–1.53), age ≥ 80 years (HR 6.06, 95% CrI 1.94–18.95), disease duration of 1 year (HR 1.50, 95% CrI 1.12–2.01), 2–3 years (HR 1.90, 95% CrI 1.45–2.48) and 4–6 years (HR 2.21, 95% CrI 1.60–3.07), and pandemic years 2020 (HR 1.38, 95% CrI 1.06–1.80) and 2021 (HR 1.56, 95% CrI 1.21–2.02). Variables associated with lower mortality were therapy with AChEIs alone (HR 0.69, 95% CrI 0.56–0.86) and in combination with memantine (HR 0.54, 95% CrI 0.37–0.81).DiscussionMale sex, age, disease duration, and pandemic years appeared to be associated with lower AChEIs medications. Male sex, residence in the SIN of Taranto, age, disease duration, and pandemic years seemed to be associated with an increased death rate, while AChEIs medication seemed to be associated with improved survival rate.
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- 2024
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5. Europa parassita
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Angelo Mincuzzi
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- 2024
6. Exposure assessment to heavy metals in general population in a polluted area through biological monitoring
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Vimercati L., Cuccaro F., Serinelli M., Bisceglia L., Galise I., Conversano M., Minerba S., Mincuzzi A., Martino T., Storelli M. A., Gagliardi T., and Assennato G.
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heavy metals ,environmental exposure ,biological monitoring ,cross sectional study ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
In polluted areas, a major issue is the correct assessment of the exposure of general population to industrial pollutants. The objectives were: to evaluate the exposure to heavy metals emitted from the industrial area of Taranto; to correlate biological monitoring data with environmental data, in order to clarify the impact of industrial pollution in terms of internal dose. A cross sectional study has been designed to measure levels of urinary arsenic, lead, cadmium, chromium, manganese in 300 inhabitants of Taranto, Statte and Laterza. Adult subjects have been selected by a two-stage random stratified sampling. Results are based on 272 subjects (131 men and 141 women). The observed concentrations of metals in the whole study population are overall high. The median values for lead (7.4 μg/l) and chromium (0.4 μg/l) are higher than the 95° percentile of the range of reference values. For manganese and arsenic the 95° percentile of concentration in the whole study population is higher than the 95° percentile of the range of reference values. Concentrations of mercury in the whole study population are comparable to reference.
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- 2013
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7. Deciphering the Interaction between Coniella granati and Pomegranate Fruit Employing Transcriptomics
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Athanasios Tsafouros, Polina C. Tsalgatidou, Anastasia Boutsika, Costas Delis, Annamaria Mincuzzi, Antonio Ippolito, and Antonios Zambounis
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defense responses ,immunity ,plant–microbe interactions ,susceptibility ,Science - Abstract
Pomegranate fruit dry rot is caused by Coniella granati, also referred as Pilidiella granati. In order to decipher the induced responses of mature pomegranates inoculated with the pathogen, an RNA-seq analysis was employed. A high number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were observed through a three-time series inoculation period. The transcriptional reprogramming was time-dependent, whereas the majority of DEGs were suppressed and the expression patterns of specific genes may facilitate the pathogen colonization at 1 day after inoculation (dai). In contrast, at 2 dai and mainly thereafter at 3 dai, defense responses were partially triggered in delay. Particularly, DEGs were mainly upregulated at the latest time point. Among them, specific DEGs involved in cell wall modification and degradation processes, pathogen recognition and signaling transduction cascades, activation of specific defense and metabolite biosynthesis-related genes, as well in induction of particular families of transcriptional factors, may constitute crucial components of a defense recruiting strategy employed by pomegranate fruit upon C. granati challenge. Overall, our findings provide novel insights to the compatible interaction of pomegranates—C. granati and lay the foundations for establishing integrated pest management (IPM) strategies involving advanced approaches, such as gene editing or molecular breeding programs for disease resistance, according to European Union (EU) goals.
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- 2024
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8. Gender differences, environmental pressures, tumor characteristics, and death rate in a lung cancer cohort: a seven-years Bayesian survival analysis using cancer registry data from a contaminated area in Italy
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Antonia Mincuzzi, Simona Carone, Claudia Galluzzo, Margherita Tanzarella, Giovanna Maria Lagravinese, Antonella Bruni, Ivan Rashid, Lucia Bisceglia, Rodolfo Sardone, Francesco Addabbo, Sante Minerba, and Orazio Valerio Giannico
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bronchus cancer ,lung cancer ,cancer survival ,gender differences ,environmental contamination ,environmental pollution ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionIn Taranto, Southern Italy, adverse impacts on the environment and human health due to industrial installations have been studied. In the literature, associations have been reported between gender, environmental factors, and lung cancer mortality in women and men. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships between gender, residence in areas with high environmental pressures, bronchus/lung cancer characteristics, and death rate.MethodsData from the Taranto Cancer Registry were used, including all women and men with invasive bronchus/lung cancer diagnosed between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2020 and with follow-up to 31 December 2022. Bayesian mixed effects logistic and Cox regression models were fitted with the approach of integrated nested Laplace approximation, adjusting for patients and disease characteristics.ResultsA total of 2,535 person-years were observed. Male gender was associated with a higher prevalence of histological grade 3 (OR 2.45, 95% CrI 1.35–4.43) and lung squamous-cell carcinoma (OR 3.04, 95% CrI 1.97–4.69). Variables associated with higher death rate were male gender (HR 1.24, 95% CrI 1.07–1.43), pathological/clinical stage II (HR 2.49, 95% CrI 1.63–3.79), III (HR 3.40, 95% CrI 2.33–4.97), and IV (HR 8.21, 95% CrI 5.95–11.34), histological grade 3 (HR 1.80, 95% CrI 1.25–2.59), lung squamous-cell carcinoma (HR 1.18, 95% CrI 1.00–1.39), and small-cell lung cancer (HR 1.62, 95% CrI 1.31–1.99). Variables associated with lower death rate were other-type lung cancer (HR 0.65, 95% CrI 0.44–0.95), high immune checkpoint ligand expression (HR 0.75, 95% CrI 0.59–0.95), lung localization (HR 0.73, 95% CrI 0.62–0.86), and left localization (HR 0.85, 95% CrI 0.75–0.95).DiscussionThe results among patients with lung cancer did not show an association between residence in the contaminated site of national interest (SIN) and the prevalence of the above mentioned prognostic factors, nor between residence in SIN and death rate. The findings confirmed the independent prognostic values of different lung cancer characteristics. Even after adjusting for patients and disease characteristics, male gender appeared to be associated with a higher prevalence of poorly differentiated cancer and squamous-cell carcinoma, and with an increased death rate.
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- 2024
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9. Environmental pressures, tumor characteristics, and death rate in a female breast cancer cohort: a seven-years Bayesian survival analysis using cancer registry data from a contaminated area in Italy
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Orazio Valerio Giannico, Simona Carone, Margherita Tanzarella, Claudia Galluzzo, Antonella Bruni, Giovanna Maria Lagravinese, Ivan Rashid, Lucia Bisceglia, Rodolfo Sardone, Francesco Addabbo, Sante Minerba, and Antonia Mincuzzi
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breast cancer ,female breast cancer ,cancer survival ,environmental contamination ,environmental pollution ,cancer epidemiology ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionIn Taranto, Southern Italy, adverse impacts on the environment and human health due to industrial installations have been studied. In the literature, few associations have been reported between environmental factors and breast cancer mortality in women. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships between residence in areas with high environmental pressures, female breast cancer characteristics, and death rate.MethodsData from the Taranto Cancer Registry were used, including all women with invasive breast cancer diagnosed between 01 January 2015 and 31 December 2020 and with follow-up to 31 December 2021. Bayesian mixed effects logistic and Cox regression models were fitted with the approach of integrated nested Laplace approximation, adjusting for patients and disease characteristics.ResultsA total of 10,445 person-years were observed. Variables associated with higher death rate were residence in the contaminated site of national interest (SIN) (HR 1.22, 95% CrI 1.01–1.48), pathological/clinical stage III (HR 2.77, 95% CrI 1.93–3.97) and IV (HR 17.05, 95% CrI 11.94–24.34), histological grade 3 (HR 2.50, 95% CrI 1.20–5.23), Ki-67 proliferation index of 21–50% (HR 1.42, 95% CrI 1.10–1.83) and > 50% (HR 1.81, 95% CrI 1.29–2.55), and bilateral localization (HR 1.65, 95% CrI 1.01–2.68). Variables associated with lower death rate were estrogen and/or progesterone receptor positivity (HR 0.61, 95% CrI 0.45–0.81) and HER2/neu oncogene positivity (HR 0.59, 95% CrI 0.44–0.79).DiscussionThe findings confirmed the independent prognostic values of different female breast cancer characteristics. Even after adjusting for patients and disease characteristics, residence in the SIN of Taranto appeared to be associated with an increased death rate.
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- 2024
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10. Fabrication of multisymmetrical hierarchical structures by direct laser interference patterning with 2 beams
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Sikora, A., Faucon, M., Mincuzzi, G., and Kling, R.
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- 2023
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11. Pomegranate: Postharvest Fungal Diseases and Control
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Mincuzzi, Annamaria, primary and Ippolito, Antonio, additional
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- 2023
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12. Fungal pathogens associated with harvested table grapes in Lebanon, and characterization of the mycotoxigenic genera
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HABIB, Wassim, KHALIL, Jack, MINCUZZI, Annamaria, SAAB, Carine, GERGES, Elvis, TSOUVALAKIS, Hala Chahine, IPPOLITO, Antonio, and SANZANI, Simona Marianna
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- 2021
13. Impact of the Pre-Harvest Biocontrol Agent and Post-Harvest Massive Modified Atmosphere Packaging Application on Organic Table Grape (cv. ‘Allison’) Quality during Storage
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Attilio Matera, Giuseppe Altieri, Francesco Genovese, Luciano Scarano, Giuseppe Genovese, Paola Pinto, Mahdi Rashvand, Hazem S. Elshafie, Antonio Ippolito, Annamaria Mincuzzi, and Giovanni Carlo Di Renzo
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A. pullulans ,biocontrol ,MAP ,breathable film ,post-harvest ,packaging ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The marketing value of table grapes is contingent upon several quality requirements, mostly related to microbial decay, sugar/acidity ratio, and colour. This research explores the impact of combining organic-cultured compatible techniques to delay disorders along with organic grape distribution in post-harvest. Aurebasidum pullulans in-field application on grape bunches at three growing stages as a biocontrol agent against grey mould growth coupled with massive modified atmosphere packaging (MMAP; 20% CO2, 10% O2) equipped with a breathable valve was tested. The in-field treatment had a significant impact on the colour and sugar content of the grapes at harvest and the mould count evolution during storage, whilst the trend of the other parameters was mainly affected by the interaction of the variables tested. The untreated batch experienced the worst behaviour and the packaging was paramount in preserving the moisture content and appearance of the bunches. The findings of this study may contribute to developing novel practices for setting a smart distribution of organic table grapes and reducing food waste.
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- 2024
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14. LIPSS and DLIP: From hierarchical to mutually interacting, homogeneous, structuring
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Sikora, A., Faucon, M., Gemini, L., Kling, R., and Mincuzzi, G.
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- 2022
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15. Worldwide trends in population-based survival for children, adolescents, and young adults diagnosed with leukaemia, by subtype, during 2000–14 (CONCORD-3): analysis of individual data from 258 cancer registries in 61 countries
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Bouzbid, Sabiha, Hamdi-Chérif, Mokhtar, Kara, Lamia, Meguenni, Kaouel, Regagba, Derbali, Bayo, Sine, Cheick Bougadari, Traore, Manraj, Shyam Shunker, Bendahhou, Karima, Ladipo, Akinade, Ogunbiyi, Olufemi, Somdyala, Nontuthuzelo, Chaplin, María Agustina, Moreno, Florencia, Calabrano, Gladis, Espinola, Silvia, Carballo Quintero, Beatriz, Fita, Rosalba, Laspada, Walter, Ibañez, Susana, Lima, Carlos, Mafra Da Costa, Allini, De Souza, Paulo César, Chaves, Juliana, Laporte, Cyntia, Curado, Maria Paula, de Oliveira, Jose Carlos, Veneziano, Claudia, Veneziano, Donaldo, Almeida, Ana Beatriz, Latorre, Maria, Azevedo e Silva, Gulnar, Rebelo, Marise, Santos, Marceli, Galaz, Juan, Aparicio Aravena, Mackarena, Sanhueza Monsalve, Jocelyn, Herrmann, Denise, Vargas, Solange, Herrera, Victor, Uribe, Claudia, Bravo, Luis Eduardo, Garcia, Luz Stella, Arias-Ortiz, Nelson, Morantes, Daniela, Jurado, Daniel, Yépez Chamorro, María, Delgado, Sandra, Ramirez, Melissa, Galán Alvarez, Yaima, Torres, Priscila, Martínez-Reyes, Fray, Jaramillo, Leyda, Quinto, Rina, Castillo, Jhoanna, Mendoza, Mariela, Cueva, Patricia, Yépez, José, Bhakkan, Bernard, Deloumeaux, Jacqueline, Joachim, Clarisse, Macni, Jonathan, Carrillo, Rodolfo, Shalkow Klincovstein, Jaime, Rivera Gomez, Rebeca, Perez, Patricia, Poquioma, Ebert, Tortolero-Luna, Guillermo, Zavala, Diego, Alonso, Rafael, Barrios, Enrique, Eckstrand, Angela, Nikiforuk, Cindy, Woods, Ryan, Noonan, Gail, Turner, Donna, Kumar, Eshwar, Zhang, Bin, Dowden, Jeff, Doyle, Gregory, Saint-Jacques, Nathalie, Walsh, Gordon, Anam, Aniq, De, Prithwish, McClure, Carol, Vriends, Kim, Bertrand, Christine, Ramanakumar, Agnihotram, Kozie, Serena, Stuart-Panko, Heather, Freeman, Tara, George, Justin, Avila, Rosa, O'Brien, David, Holt, Abby, Almon, Lyn, Ward, Kevin, Kwong, Sandy, Morris, Cyllene, Rycroft, Randi, Mueller, Lloyd, Phillips, Cathryn, Brown, Heather, Cromartie, Betsy, Ruterbusch, Julie, Schwartz, Ann, Levin, Gary, Wohler, Brad, Bayakly, Rana, Gomez, Scarlett, McKinley, Meg, Cress, Rosemary, Davis, Joni, Hernandez, Brenda, Johnson, Christopher, Morawski, Bozena, Ruppert, Laura, Bentler, Suzanne, Charlton, Mary, Huang, Bin, Tucker, Thomas, Deapen, Dennis, Liu, Lihua, Hsieh, Mei-Chin, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Schwenn, Molly, Stern, Kimberly, Gershman, Susan, Knowlton, Richard, Alverson, Georgetta, Weaver, Tamara, Desai, Jay, Rogers, Deirdre, Jackson-Thompson, Jeanette, Lemons, Debbi, Zimmerman, Heather, Hood, Michelle, Roberts-Johnson, Jenifer, Hammond, Whitney, Rees, Judith, Pawlish, Karen, Stroup, Antoinette, Key, Charles, Wiggins, Charles, Kahn, Amy, Schymura, Maria, Radhakrishnan, Soundarya, Rao, Chandrika, Giljahn, Lynn, Slocumb, Roberta, Dabbs, Christy, Espinoza, Raffaella, Aird, Karen, Beran, Todd, Rubertone, Jim, Slack, Stephen, Oh, Junhie, Janes, Tiffany, Schwartz, Stephen, Chiodini, Stephanie, Hurley, Deborah, Whiteside, Martin, Rai, Saroj, Williams, Melanie, Herget, Kim, Sweeney, Carol, Johnson, Alison, Keitheri Cheteri, Mahesh, Migliore Santiago, Patti, Blankenship, Steven, Farley, Shawn, Borchers, Robert, Malicki, Robin, Espinoza, Julia, Grandpre, Joseph, Edwards, Brenda, Mariotto, Angela, Weir, Hannah, Wilson, Reda, Wang, Ning, Yang, Lei, Chen, Jian-Shun, He, Yu-Tong, Song, Guo-Hui, Gu, Xiao-Ping, Mei, Dan, Ge, Heng-Ming, Wu, Tong-Hao, Li, Yan-Yan, Zhao, De-Li, Jin, Feng, Zhang, Jian-Hua, Zhu, Feng-Dong, Junhua, Qian, Yang, Yan Lei, Jiang, Chun-Xiao, Biao, Wang, Wang, Jian, Li, Qi-Long, Yi, He, Zhou, Xin, Dong, JianMei, Li, WeiWei, Fu, Fang-Xian, Chen, Jian-Guo, Zhu, Jian, Li, Yan-Hua, Lu, Yu-Qiang, Fan, Min, Huang, Su-Qin, Guo, Guo-Ping, Zhaolai, Hua, Wei, Kuangrong, Chen, Wan-Qing, Wei, Wenqiang, Zeng, Hongmei, Demetriou, Anna, Mang, Wai Kong, Ngan, Kai Cheong, Kataki, Amal, Krishnatreya, Manigreeva, Jayalekshmi, Padmavathi Amma, Sebastian, Paul, George, Preethi, Mathew, Aleyamma, Nandakumar, Ambakumar, Malekzadeh, Reza, Roshandel, Gholamreza, Keinan-Boker, Lital, Silverman, Barbara, Ito, Hidemi, Koyanagi, Yuriko, Sato, Masako, Tobori, Fumio, Nakata, Ichiro, Teramoto, Norihiro, Hattori, Masakazu, Kaizaki, Yasuharu, Moki, Fumitaka, Sugiyama, Hiromi, Utada, Mai, Nishimura, Makiko, Yoshida, Keiichi, Kurosawa, Katsuki, Nemoto, Yuji, Narimatsu, Hiroto, Sakaguchi, Masahiko, Kanemura, Seiki, Naito, Michiko, Narisawa, Rintaro, Miyashiro, Isao, Nakata, Kayo, Mori, Daisuke, Yoshitake, Mayuko, Oki, Izumi, Fukushima, Norimasa, Shibata, Akiko, Iwasa, Keiichiro, Ono, Chie, Matsuda, Tomohiro, Nimri, Omar, Jung, Kyu-Won, Won, Young-Joo, Alawadhi, Eiman, Elbasmi, Amani, Ab Manan, Azizah, Adam, Farzaana, Nansalmaa, Erdenekhuu, Tudev, Undarmaa, Ochir, Chimedsuren, Al Khater, Al Hareth, El Mistiri, Mufid, Lim, Gek Hsiang, Teo, Yik Ying, Chiang, Chun-Ju, Lee, Wen-Chung, Buasom, Rangsiya, Sangrajrang, Suleeporn, Suwanrungruang, Krittika, Vatanasapt, Patravoot, Daoprasert, Karnchana, Pongnikorn, Donsuk, Leklob, Atit, Sangkitipaiboon, Somphob, Geater, Sarayut, Sriplung, Hutcha, Ceylan, Okan, Kög, Iskender, Dirican, Oya, Köse, Tülay, Gurbuz, Tulın, Karašahin, Füsun Emine, Turhan, Duygu, Aktaş, Umut, Halat, Yakup, Eser, Sultan, Yakut, Cankut, Altinisik, Merve, Cavusoglu, Yasar, Türkköylü, Ayşe, Üçüncü, Nuršen, Hackl, Monika, Zborovskaya, Anna, Aleinikova, Olga, Henau, Kris, Van Eycken, Liesbet, Atanasov, Trayan, Valerianova, Zdravka, Šekerija, Mario, Dušek, Ladislav, Zvolský, Miroslav, Steinrud Mørch, Lina, Storm, Hans, Wessel Skovlund, Charlotte, Innos, Kaire, Mägi, Margit, Malila, Nea, Seppä, Karri, Jégu, Jérémie, Velten, Michel, Cornet, Edouard, Troussard, Xavier, Bouvier, Anne-Marie, Guizard, Anne-Valérie, Bouvier, Véronique, Launoy, Guy, Dabakuyo Yonli, Sandrine, Poillot, Marie-Laure, Maynadié, Marc, Mounier, Morgane, Vaconnet, Lina, Woronoff, Anne-Sophie, Daoulas, Mélanie, Robaszkiewicz, Michel, Clavel, Jacqueline, Poulalhon, Claire, Desandes, Emmanuel, Lacour, Brigitte, Baldi, Isabelle, Pouchieu, Camille, Amadeo, Brice, Coureau, Gaëlle, Monnereau, Alain, Audoin, Magali, D'Almeida, Tania, Boyer, Séverine, Hammas, Karima, Trétarre, Brigitte, Colonna, Marc, Delafosse, Patricia, Plouvier, Sandrine, Cowppli-Bony, Anne, Molinié, Florence, Bara, Simona, Ganry, Olivier, Lapôtre-Ledoux, Bénédicte, Daubisse-Marliac, Laetitia, Bossard, Nadine, Estève, Jacques, Uhry, Zoé, Stabenow, Roland, Wilsdorf-Köhler, Heide, Eberle, Andrea, Luttmann, Sabine, Löhden, Imma, Nennecke, Alice, Kieschke, Joachim, Sirri, Eunice, Justenhoven, Christina, Zeissig, Sylke, Holleczek, Bernd, Eisemann, Nora, Katalinic, Alexander, Asquez, Rachelle, Kumar, Vijay, Petridou, Eleni, Ólafsdóttir, Elínborg, Tryggvadóttir, Laufey, Murray, Deirdre, Walsh, Paul, Sundseth, Hildrun, Mazzoleni, Guido, Vittadello, Fabio, Coviello, Enzo, Cuccaro, Francesco, Galasso, Rocco, Sampietro, Giuseppe, Magoni, Michele, Ardizzone, Antonino, D'Argenzio, Angelo, Di Prima, Alessia Anna, Ippolito, Antonella, Lavecchia, Anna Maria, Sutera Sardo, Antonella, Gola, Gemma, Ballotari, Paola, Giacomazzi, Erica, Ferretti, Stefano, Dal Maso, Luigino, Serraino, Diego, Celesia, Maria Vittoria, Filiberti, Rosa Angela, Pannozzo, Fabio, Melcarne, Anna, Quarta, Fabrizio, Andreano, Anita, Russo, Antonio Giampiero, Carrozzi, Giuliano, Cirilli, Claudia, Cavalieri d'Oro, Luca, Rognoni, Magda, Fusco, Mario, Vitale, Maria Francesca, Usala, Mario, Cusimano, Rosanna, Mazzucco, Walter, Michiara, Maria, Sgargi, Paolo, Boschetti, Lorenza, Chiaranda, Giorgio, Seghini, Pietro, Maule, Milena, Merletti, Franco, Spata, Eugenia, Tumino, Rosario, Mancuso, Pamela, Vicentini, Massimo, Cassetti, Tiziana, Sassatelli, Romano, Falcini, Fabio, Giorgetti, Stefania, Caiazzo, Anna Luisa, Cavallo, Rossella, Piras, Daniela, Bella, Francesca, Madeddu, Anselmo, Fanetti, Anna Clara, Maspero, Sergio, Carone, Simona, Mincuzzi, Antonia, Candela, Giuseppa, Scuderi, Tiziana, Gentilini, Maria Adalgisa, Rizzello, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Zanetti, Roberto, Caldarella, Adele, Intrieri, Teresa, Bianconi, Fortunato, Stracci, Fabrizio, Contiero, Paolo, Tagliabue, Giovanna, Rugge, Massimo, Zorzi, Manuel, Beggiato, Simonetta, Brustolin, Angelita, De Angelis, Roberta, Gatta, Gemma, Maurina, Anita, Oniščuka, Marija, Mousavi, Mohsen, Lipunova, Nadezda, Vincerzevskienė, Ieva, Agius, Dominic, Calleja, Neville, Siesling, Sabine, Visser, Otto, Johannesen, Tom, Larønningen, Siri, Trojanowski, Maciej, Mierzwa, Tomasz, Rachtan, Jadwiga, Kępska, Kamila, Kościańska, Beata, Wójcik-Tomaszewska, Joanna, Motnyk, Marcin, Gos, Anna, Bielska-Lasota, Magdalena, Didkowska, Joanna, Wojciechowska, Urszula, Forjaz de Lacerda, Gonçalo, Rego, Raul, Carrito, Branca, Pais, Ana, Bento, Maria José, Rodrigues, Jessica, Lourenço, Antonio, Mayer-da-Silva, Alexandra, Blaga, Luminita, Coza, Daniela, Valkov, Mikhail, Gusenkova, Lubov, Lazarevich, Olga, Prudnikova, Olga, Vjushkov, Dmitri Mikhailovich, Egorova, Alla, Orlov, Andrey, Pikalova, Lidiya, Zhuikova, Lilia, Adamcik, Juraj, Safaei Diba, Chakameh, Zadnik, Vesna, Zagar, Tina, De-La-Cruz, Marta, Lopez-de-Munain, Arantza, Aleman, Araceli, Rojas, Dolores, Chillarón, Rosario Jiménez, Navarro, Ana Isabel Marcos, Marcos-Gragera, Rafael, Puigdemont, Montse, Rodríguez-Barranco, Miguel, Sánchez Perez, María-José, Franch Sureda, Paula, Ramos Montserrat, Maria, Chirlaque López, Maria Dolores, Sánchez Gil, Antonia, Ardanaz, Eva, Guevara, Marcela, Cañete-Nieto, Adela, Peris-Bonet, Rafael, Carulla, Marià, Galceran, Jaume, Almela, Fernando, Sabater, Consol, Khan, Staffan, Pettersson, David, Dickman, Paul, Staehelin, Katharina, Struchen, Benjamin, Herrmann, Christian, Mousavi, Seyed Mohsen, Egger Hayoz, Céline, Bouchardy, Christine, Schaffar, Robin, Went, Philip, Bulliard, Jean-Luc, Maspoli-Conconi, Manuela, Kuehni, Claudia, Redmond, Shelagh, Bordoni, Andrea, Ortelli, Laura, Chiolero, Arnaud, Konzelmann, Isabelle, Rohrmann, Sabine, Wanner, Miriam, Broggio, John, Rashbass, Jem, Stiller, Charles, Fitzpatrick, Deirdre, Gavin, Anna, Morrison, David, Thomson, Catherine, Greene, Giles, Huws, Dyfed, Allemani, Claudia, Coleman, Michel, Di Carlo, Veronica, Girardi, Fabio, Matz, Melissa, Minicozzi, Pamela, Sanz, Natalia, Ssenyonga, Naomi, Stephens, Richard, Chalker, Elizabeth, Smith, Mirka, Gugusheff, Jessica, You, Hui, Qin Li, Shu, Dugdale, Sarah, Moore, Julie, Philpot, Shoni, Pfeiffer, Rhonda, Thomas, Helen, Silva Ragaini, Bruna, Venn, Alison, Evans, Sue, Te Marvelde, Luc, Savietto, Vedrana, Trevithick, Richard, Currow, David, Fowler, Christine, Lewis, Chris, Shalkow, Jaime, Bonaventure, Audrey, Wyn Huws, Dyfed, and Coleman, Michel P
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- 2022
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16. Conspicuity and muscle-invasiveness assessment for bladder cancer using VI-RADS: a multi-reader, contrast-free MRI study to determine optimal b-values for diffusion-weighted imaging
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Delli Pizzi, Andrea, Mastrodicasa, Domenico, Taraschi, Alessio, Civitareale, Nicoletta, Mincuzzi, Erica, Censi, Stefano, Marchioni, Michele, Primiceri, Giulia, Castellan, Pietro, Castellucci, Roberto, Cocco, Giulio, Chiacchiaretta, Piero, Colasante, Antonella, Corvino, Antonio, Schips, Luigi, and Caulo, Massimo
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- 2022
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17. Electrolyzed Water as a Potential Agent for Controlling Postharvest Decay of Fruits and Vegetables
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Ippolito, Antonio, Mincuzzi, Annamaria, Surano, Antony, Youssef, Khamis, Sanzani, Simona Marianna, Gullino, Maria Lodovica, Series Editor, Spadaro, Davide, editor, and Droby, Samir, editor
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- 2021
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18. Role of the intensity profile in femtosecond laser surface texturing: An experimental study
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Sikora, Aurélien, Nourry, Simon, Faucon, Marc, Chassagne, Bruno, Kling, Rainer, and Mincuzzi, Girolamo
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- 2021
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19. Through the Forming Process of Femtosecond-Laser Nanotextured Sheets for Production of Complex 3D Parts
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Girolamo Mincuzzi, Alexandra Bourtereau, Laura Gemini, Sergi Parareda, Sylwia Rzepa, Martina Koukolíková, Pavel Konopík, and Rainer Kling
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ultra short pulses laser texturing ,forming ,high-throughput ,continous texturing ,pre-forming mechanical analysis ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The use of ultra-short pulse lasers in the kW range, combined with an appropriate beam engineering approach, enables the achievement of high-throughput production of laser-functionalised surfaces. However, the manufacturing of complex parts still faces various challenges, such as difficulties in accessing regions with high aspect ratio shapes or intricate profiles, which often leads to the necessity of adapting the laser processing workstation to specific geometries. The forming process is a well-established technique for producing parts of any shape from metallic foils by imposing specific constraints. In this study, we aimed to assess the feasibility of producing laser-functionalised 3D complex products by the forming of laser-treated flat thin metallic sheets. Two-hundred micrometre-thick stainless-steel foils were textured with laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) through a roll-to-roll pilot line. First, we optimized the morphology of LIPSS. Subsequently, we conducted three types of mechanical tests on both laser-treated and untreated foils: standard tensile tests, fatigue tests, and cruciform specimen tests. We measured and compared parameters such as ultimate tensile strength, breaking strength, maximum elongation, and area reduction between specimens with and without LIPSS, all obtained from the same foil. Additionally, we utilized scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to compare the LIPSS morphology of laser-treated samples before and after mechanical tests.
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- 2023
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20. Are Basic Substances a Key to Sustainable Pest and Disease Management in Agriculture? An Open Field Perspective
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Silvia Laura Toffolatti, Yann Davillerd, Ilaria D’Isita, Chiara Facchinelli, Giacinto Salvatore Germinara, Antonio Ippolito, Youssef Khamis, Jolanta Kowalska, Giuliana Maddalena, Patrice Marchand, Demetrio Marcianò, Kata Mihály, Annamaria Mincuzzi, Nicola Mori, Simone Piancatelli, Erzsébet Sándor, and Gianfranco Romanazzi
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disease management ,pest management ,sustainable crop protection ,integrated pest management ,organic farming ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
Pathogens and pests constantly challenge food security and safety worldwide. The use of plant protection products to manage them raises concerns related to human health, the environment, and economic costs. Basic substances are active, non-toxic compounds that are not predominantly used as plant protection products but hold potential in crop protection. Basic substances’ attention is rising due to their safety and cost-effectiveness. However, data on their protection levels in crop protection strategies are lacking. In this review, we critically analyzed the literature concerning the field application of known and potential basic substances for managing diseases and pests, investigating their efficacy and potential integration into plant protection programs. Case studies related to grapevine, potato, and fruit protection from pre- and post-harvest diseases and pests were considered. In specific cases, basic substances and chitosan in particular, could complement or even substitute plant protection products, either chemicals or biologicals, but their efficacy varied greatly according to various factors, including the origin of the substance, the crop, the pathogen or pest, and the timing and method of application. Therefore, a careful evaluation of the field application is needed to promote the successful use of basic substances in sustainable pest management strategies in specific contexts.
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- 2023
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21. I re Mida del calcio
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Angelo Mincuzzi, Roberto Roberto Galullo
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- 2022
22. Postharvest Diseases of Pomegranate: Alternative Control Means and a Spiderweb Effect
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Annamaria Mincuzzi, Ugo Picciotti, Simona Marianna Sanzani, Francesca Garganese, Lluís Palou, Rocco Addante, Marco Ragni, and Antonio Ippolito
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Punica granatum ,gray mold ,black heart ,spiderweb ,fungicide ,fungistatic ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The pomegranate is a fruit known since ancient times for its beneficial properties. It has recently aroused great interest in the industry and among consumers, leading to a significant increase in demand. Consequently, its cultivation has been boosted all over the world. The pomegranate crop suffers considerable yield losses, especially at the postharvest stage, because it is a “minor crop” with few permitted control means. To control latent (Alternaria spp., Botrytis spp., Coniella spp., Colletotrichum spp., and Cytospora spp.) and wound (Aspergillus spp., Penicillium spp., and Talaromyces spp.) fungal pathogens, different alternative compounds, previously evaluated in vitro, were tested in the field on pomegranate cv. Wonderful. A chitosan solution, a plant protein hydrolysate, and a red seaweed extract were compared with a chemical control treatment, all as preharvest (field application) and postharvest treatments and their combinations. At the end of the storage period, the incidence of stamen infections and external and internal rots, and the severity of internal decay were evaluated. Obtained data revealed that pre- and postharvest application of all substances reduced the epiphytic population on stamens. Preharvest applications of seaweed extract and plant hydrolysate were the most effective treatments to reduce the severity of internal pomegranate decays. Furthermore, the influence of spider (Cheiracanthium mildei) cocoons on the fruit calyx as a possible barrier against postharvest fungal pathogens was assessed in a ‘Mollar de Elche’ pomegranate organic orchard. Compared to no-cocoon fruit (control), the incidence of infected stamens and internal molds in those with spiderwebs was reduced by about 30%, and the mean severity of internal rots was halved. Spiderwebs analyzed via Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) disclosed a layered, unordered structure that did not allow for the passage of fungal spores due to its mean mesh size (1 to 20 µm ca). The aims of this research were (i) to evaluate alternative compounds useful to control postharvest pomegranate decays and (ii) to evaluate the effectiveness of spiders in reducing postharvest fungal infections by analyzing related mechanisms of action. Alternative control means proposed in the present work and calyx spider colonization may be helpful to reduce postharvest pomegranate diseases, yield losses, and waste production in an integrated control strategy, satisfying organic agriculture and the planned goals of Zero Hunger Challenge launched by the United Nations.
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- 2023
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23. Non-traumatic Abdominal and Pelvic Emergencies in Pregnant Patients: Role of Ultrasound
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Basilico, Raffaella, Pizzi, Andrea Delli, Mincuzzi, Erica, Danzi, Roberta, Ricciardulli, Alessandra, Grzycka-Kowalczyk, Luiza, Patlas, Michael N., editor, Katz, Douglas S., editor, and Scaglione, Mariano, editor
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- 2020
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24. Mycotoxigenic fungi contaminating greenhouse-grown tomato fruit and their alternative control
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Sanzani, Simona Marianna, Djenane, Ferielle, Incerti, Ornella, Admane, Naouel, Mincuzzi, Annamaria, and Ippolito, Antonio
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- 2021
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25. Bladder cancer: do we need contrast injection for MRI assessment of muscle invasion? A prospective multi-reader VI-RADS approach
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Delli Pizzi, Andrea, Mastrodicasa, Domenico, Marchioni, Michele, Primiceri, Giulia, Di Fabio, Francesca, Cianci, Roberta, Seccia, Barbara, Sessa, Barbara, Mincuzzi, Erica, Romanelli, Martina, Castellan, Pietro, Castellucci, Roberto, Colasante, Antonella, Schips, Luigi, Basilico, Raffaella, and Caulo, Massimo
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- 2021
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26. Highly Repetitive Genome of Coniella granati (syn. Pilidiella granati), the Causal Agent of Pomegranate Fruit Rot, Encodes a Minimalistic Proteome with a Streamlined Arsenal of Effector Proteins.
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Zambounis, Antonios, Maniatis, Elisseos I., Mincuzzi, Annamaria, Gray, Naomi, Hossain, Mohitul, Tsitsigiannis, Dimitrios I., Paplomatas, Epaminondas, Ippolito, Antonio, Schena, Leonardo, and Hane, James K.
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FRUIT rots ,GENE clusters ,SEQUENCE analysis ,GERMPLASM ,GENOMES - Abstract
This study describes the first genome sequence and analysis of Coniella granati, a fungal pathogen with a broad host range, which is responsible for postharvest crown rot, shoot blight, and canker diseases in pomegranates. C. granati is a geographically widespread pathogen which has been reported across Europe, Asia, the Americas, and Africa. Our analysis revealed a 46.8 Mb genome with features characteristic of hemibiotrophic fungi. Approximately one third of its genome was compartmentalised within 'AT-rich' regions exhibiting a low GC content (30 to 45%). These regions primarily comprised transposable elements that are repeated at a high frequency and interspersed throughout the genome. Transcriptome-supported gene annotation of the C. granati genome revealed a streamlined proteome, mirroring similar observations in other pathogens with a latent phase. The genome encoded a relatively compact set of 9568 protein-coding genes with a remarkable 95% having assigned functional annotations. Despite this streamlined nature, a set of 40 cysteine-rich candidate secreted effector-like proteins (CSEPs) was predicted as well as a gene cluster involved in the synthesis of a pomegranate-associated toxin. These potential virulence factors were predominantly located near repeat-rich and AT-rich regions, suggesting that the pathogen evades host defences through Repeat-Induced Point mutation (RIP)-mediated pseudogenisation. Furthermore, 23 of these CSEPs exhibited homology to known effector and pathogenicity genes found in other hemibiotrophic pathogens. The study establishes a foundational resource for the study of the genetic makeup of C. granati, paving the way for future research on its pathogenicity mechanisms and the development of targeted control strategies to safeguard pomegranate production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Could Bladder Multiparametric MRI Be Introduced in Routine Clinical Practice? Role of the New VI-RADS Score: Results From a Prospective Study
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Marchioni, Michele, Primiceri, Giulia, Delli Pizzi, Andrea, Basilico, Raffaella, Berardinelli, Francesco, Mincuzzi, Erica, Castellucci, Roberto, Sessa, Barbara, Di Nicola, Marta, and Schips, Luigi
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- 2020
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28. Impact of the Pre-Harvest Biocontrol Agent and Post-Harvest Massive Modified Atmosphere Packaging Application on Organic Table Grape (cv. ‘Allison’) Quality during Storage
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Matera, Attilio, primary, Altieri, Giuseppe, additional, Genovese, Francesco, additional, Scarano, Luciano, additional, Genovese, Giuseppe, additional, Pinto, Paola, additional, Rashvand, Mahdi, additional, Elshafie, Hazem S., additional, Ippolito, Antonio, additional, Mincuzzi, Annamaria, additional, and Di Renzo, Giovanni Carlo, additional
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- 2024
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29. Advanced 2D DLIP generation by MPLC for integration into mass production of functionalized surfaces
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Hammouti, Sabrina, primary, Nuzdhin, Dmitry, additional, Gusachenko, Ivan, additional, Grosclaude, David, additional, Pallier, Gwenn, additional, Mincuzzi, Girolamo, additional, and Kling, Rainer, additional
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- 2024
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30. Nota su una nuova iscrizione senatoria da Roma
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Mincuzzi, Angela
- Published
- 2020
31. The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic and Socioeconomic Deprivation on Admissions to the Emergency Department for Psychiatric Illness: An Observational Study in a Province of Southern Italy
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Massimo Giotta, Francesco Addabbo, Antonia Mincuzzi, and Nicola Bartolomeo
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COVID-19 ,pandemic ,psychiatric illness ,emergency department ,admission rate ,public health restrictions ,Science - Abstract
The restriction measures adopted to limit population movement in order to contain the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to a global public health system crisis. This retrospective study aimed at identifying changes in psychiatric admissions to Accident and Emergency Departments (A&Es) in a province in southern Italy during the first two years of the pandemic and was characterized by two different restriction levels (phases 2 and 3) compared to the pre-pandemic period (phase 1). We also investigated the role of socioeconomic deprivation (DI) on psychiatric admissions. The total number of patients admitted to the A&Es was 291,310. The incidence of admission for a psychiatric disorder (IPd) was 4.9 per 1000 admissions, with a significant younger median age of 42 [IQR 33–56] compared to non-psychiatric patients (54 [35–73]). The type of admission and type of discharge were factors related to the psychiatric admission to A&E, and their relationship was modified by the pandemic. In the first year of the pandemic, patients with psychomotor agitation increased compared to the pre-pandemic period (72.5% vs. 62.3%). In the period preceding the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the IPd was equal to 3.33 ± 0.19; after the pandemic started, there was an increase in the IPd: 4.74 ± 0.32 for phase 2 and 3.68 ± 0.25 for phase 3. The IPd was higher for psychiatric admissions from areas with a very low DI compared to areas with a low DI; however, during phase 2, this difference was reduced. In conclusion, an increase in admissions for psychiatric disease was observed during the initial spread of SARS-CoV-2. Patients who lived in the most deprived municipalities generally came to the A&Es less than others, probably because the patients and their families had less awareness of their mental health. Therefore, public health policies to address these issues are needed to reduce the pandemic’s impact on these conditions.
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- 2023
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32. Pulse-on-Demand Operation for Precise High-Speed UV Laser Microstructuring
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Jernej Jan Kočica, Jaka Mur, Julien Didierjean, Arnaud Guillossou, Julien Saby, Jaka Petelin, Girolamo Mincuzzi, and Rok Petkovšek
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pulse-on-demand ,nanosecond pulses ,UV laser ,microstructuring ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 - Abstract
Laser microstructuring has been studied extensively in the last decades due to its versatile, contactless processing and outstanding precision and structure quality on a wide range of materials. A limitation of the approach has been identified in the utilization of high average laser powers, with scanner movement fundamentally limited by laws of inertia. In this work, we apply a nanosecond UV laser working in an intrinsic pulse-on-demand mode, ensuring maximal utilization of the fastest commercially available galvanometric scanners at scanning speeds from 0 to 20 m/s. The effects of high-frequency pulse-on-demand operation were analyzed in terms of processing speeds, ablation efficiency, resulting surface quality, repeatability, and precision of the approach. Additionally, laser pulse duration was varied in single-digit nanosecond pulse durations and applied to high throughput microstructuring. We studied the effects of scanning speed on pulse-on-demand operation, single- and multipass laser percussion drilling performance, surface structuring of sensitive materials, and ablation efficiency for pulse durations in the range of 1–4 ns. We confirmed the pulse-on-demand operation suitability for microstructuring for a range of frequencies from below 1 kHz to 1.0 MHz with 5 ns timing precision and identified the scanners as the limiting factor even at full utilization. The ablation efficiency was improved with longer pulse durations, but structure quality degraded.
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- 2023
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33. Virus-Induced Silencing of a Sequence Coding for Loricrin-like Protein in Phytophthora infestans upon Infection of a Recombinant Vector Based on Tobacco Mosaic Virus
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Rossella Labarile, Annamaria Mincuzzi, Roberta Spanò, and Tiziana Mascia
- Subjects
A1 ,A2 ,mating type ,P. infestans ,recombinant virus ,VIGS ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
Phytophthora infestans is the oomycete responsible for late blight disease of Solanaceae that causes both yield and economic losses. With the aim of reducing plant wilt and high management costs mainly due to wide fungicide applications, alternative eco-sustainable control strategies are needed. RNA interference (RNAi) is a powerful tool for gene function studies that can be accomplished by constitutive transformation or transient expression such as virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) experiments. VIGS makes use of viruses to deliver sequences homologous to a target gene fragment and trigger RNAi. Indeed, a P. infestans ortholog of plant loricrin-like protein (LLP), named PiLLP, has been silenced using the direct infection of a recombinant vector based on the plant virus tobacco mosaic virus (TMV-PiLLP-1056), aiming to reduce the oomycete sexual reproduction. For this purpose, the gene coding for the green fluorescent protein (GFP) present in the TMV-GFP-1056 vector has been replaced with an antisense construct obtained by fusion PCR of the PiLLP 5′-UTR and 3′-UTR sequences. Here, we show that RNAi can be expressed in the A1 mating type of P. infestans strain 96.9.5.1 by VIGS using the direct infection of TMV-PiLLP-1056. We provide evidence that the recombinant vector can enter, replicate, and persist in mycelia of P. infestans where it induces the partial downregulation of the PiLLP transcript. Compared with the wild-type, the PiLLP-silenced A1 mating type had slower colony growth and a diminished virulence in detached tomato leaflets. This seems to be the first evidence of a constitutive gene downregulation of P. infestans using a recombinant vector based on a plus-sense RNA plant virus.
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- 2023
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34. Characterization of Penicillium s.s. and Aspergillus sect. nigri causing postharvest rots of pomegranate fruit in Southern Italy
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Mincuzzi, Annamaria, Ippolito, Antonio, Montemurro, Cinzia, and Sanzani, Simona Marianna
- Published
- 2020
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35. Survey of Low Birthweight and Extremely Low Birthweight Events in a High Environmental Risk Area of Apulia, Italy
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Trerotoli, Paolo, Bartolomeo, Nicola, Leogrande, Simona, Triggiani, Sabrina, Mincuzzi, Antonella, Serio, Gabriella, and Minerba, Aldo Sante
- Published
- 2021
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36. Managing Logistics in Collaborative Manufacturing: The Integration Services for an Automotive Application.
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Nicola Mincuzzi, Mohammadtaghi Falsafi, Gianfranco E. Modoni, Marco Sacco, and Rosanna Fornasiero
- Published
- 2019
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37. 'Ectomosphere': Insects and Microorganism Interactions
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Ugo Picciotti, Viviane Araujo Dalbon, Aurelio Ciancio, Mariantonietta Colagiero, Giuseppe Cozzi, Luigi De Bellis, Mariella Matilde Finetti-Sialer, Davide Greco, Antonio Ippolito, Nada Lahbib, Antonio Francesco Logrieco, Luis Vicente López-Llorca, Federico Lopez-Moya, Andrea Luvisi, Annamaria Mincuzzi, Juan Pablo Molina-Acevedo, Carlo Pazzani, Marco Scortichini, Maria Scrascia, Domenico Valenzano, Francesca Garganese, and Francesco Porcelli
- Subjects
alien ,invasive or quarantine pest ,Integrated Farming ,resilience ,antifragility ,IPM ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
This study focuses on interacting with insects and their ectosymbiont (lato sensu) microorganisms for environmentally safe plant production and protection. Some cases help compare ectosymbiont microorganisms that are insect-borne, -driven, or -spread relevant to endosymbionts’ behaviour. Ectosymbiotic bacteria can interact with insects by allowing them to improve the value of their pabula. In addition, some bacteria are essential for creating ecological niches that can host the development of pests. Insect-borne plant pathogens include bacteria, viruses, and fungi. These pathogens interact with their vectors to enhance reciprocal fitness. Knowing vector-phoront interaction could considerably increase chances for outbreak management, notably when sustained by quarantine vector ectosymbiont pathogens, such as the actual Xylella fastidiosa Mediterranean invasion episode. Insect pathogenic viruses have a close evolutionary relationship with their hosts, also being highly specific and obligate parasites. Sixteen virus families have been reported to infect insects and may be involved in the biological control of specific pests, including some economic weevils. Insects and fungi are among the most widespread organisms in nature and interact with each other, establishing symbiotic relationships ranging from mutualism to antagonism. The associations can influence the extent to which interacting organisms can exert their effects on plants and the proper management practices. Sustainable pest management also relies on entomopathogenic fungi; research on these species starts from their isolation from insect carcasses, followed by identification using conventional light or electron microscopy techniques. Thanks to the development of omics sciences, it is possible to identify entomopathogenic fungi with evolutionary histories that are less-shared with the target insect and can be proposed as pest antagonists. Many interesting omics can help detect the presence of entomopathogens in different natural matrices, such as soil or plants. The same techniques will help localize ectosymbionts, localization of recesses, or specialized morphological adaptation, greatly supporting the robust interpretation of the symbiont role. The manipulation and modulation of ectosymbionts could be a more promising way to counteract pests and borne pathogens, mitigating the impact of formulates and reducing food insecurity due to the lesser impact of direct damage and diseases. The promise has a preventive intent for more manageable and broader implications for pests, comparing what we can obtain using simpler, less-specific techniques and a less comprehensive approach to Integrated Pest Management (IPM).
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- 2023
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38. Industrial air pollution and mortality in the Taranto area, Southern Italy: A difference-in-differences approach
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Leogrande, Simona, Alessandrini, Ester Rita, Stafoggia, Massimo, Morabito, Angela, Nocioni, Alessandra, Ancona, Carla, Bisceglia, Lucia, Mataloni, Francesca, Giua, Roberto, Mincuzzi, Antonia, Minerba, Sante, Spagnolo, Stefano, Pastore, Tiziano, Tanzarella, Annalisa, Assennato, Giorgio, and Forastiere, Francesco
- Published
- 2019
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39. Integrating IoT platforms using the INTER-IoT approach: A case study of the CasAware project.
- Author
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Gianfranco E. Modoni, Enrico Giacinto Caldarola, Nicola Mincuzzi, Marco Sacco, Katarzyna Wasielewska, Pawel Szmeja, Maria Ganzha, Marcin Paprzycki, and Wieslaw Pawlowski
- Published
- 2020
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40. Novel approaches in zero taper, fast drilling of thick metallic parts by ultra-short pulse laser
- Author
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Mincuzzi, G., Faucon, M., and Kling, R.
- Published
- 2019
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41. Controlling 2D laser nano structuring over large area with double femtosecond pulses
- Author
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Fraggelakis, Fotis, Mincuzzi, Girolamo, Lopez, John, Manek-Hönninger, Inka, and Kling, Rainer
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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42. Fungal pathogens associated with harvested table grapes in Lebanon, and characterization of the mycotoxigenic genera
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Wassim Habib, Jack Khalil, Annamaria Mincuzzi, Carine Saab, Elvis Gerges, Hala Chahine Tsouvalakis, Antonio Ippolito, and Simona Marianna Sanzani
- Subjects
postharvest ,Aspergillus ,Penicillium ,Alternaria ,Mycotoxins ,Sulphur dioxide ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
Table grapes are exposed to fungal infections before and after harvest. In particular, Aspergillus, Penicillium, and Alternaria can cause decays and contamination by mycotoxins. The main fungi affecting Lebanese table grapes after harvest were assessed as epiphytic populations, latent infections, and rots. Effects of storage with and without SO2 generating pads were also evaluated. Representative isolates of toxigenic genera were characterised, and their genetic potential to produce ochratoxin A, fumonisins, and patulin was established. The epiphytic populations mainly included wound pathogens (Aspergillus spp. and Penicillium spp.), while latent infections and rots were mostly caused by Botrytis spp. The use of SO2 generating pads reduced the epiphytic populations and rots, but was less effective against latent infections. Characterization of Aspergillus, Penicillium, and Alternaria isolates showed that A. tubingensis, P. glabrum, and A. alternata were the most common species. Strains of A. welwitschiae and P. expansum were also found to be genetically able to produce, respectively, ochratoxin A plus fumonisins and patulin. These data demonstrate the need for effective measures to prevent postharvest losses caused by toxigenic fungi.
- Published
- 2021
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43. Benefits of Femtosecond Laser 40 MHz Burst Mode for Li-Ion Battery Electrode Structuring
- Author
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Sikora, Aurélien, primary, Gemini, Laura, additional, Faucon, Marc, additional, and Mincuzzi, Girolamo, additional
- Published
- 2024
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44. Gender differences, environmental pressures, tumor characteristics, and death rate in a lung cancer cohort: a seven-years Bayesian survival analysis using cancer registry data from a contaminated area in Italy
- Author
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Mincuzzi, Antonia, primary, Carone, Simona, additional, Galluzzo, Claudia, additional, Tanzarella, Margherita, additional, Lagravinese, Giovanna Maria, additional, Bruni, Antonella, additional, Rashid, Ivan, additional, Bisceglia, Lucia, additional, Sardone, Rodolfo, additional, Addabbo, Francesco, additional, Minerba, Sante, additional, and Giannico, Orazio Valerio, additional
- Published
- 2024
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45. Environmental pressures, tumor characteristics, and death rate in a female breast cancer cohort: a seven-years Bayesian survival analysis using cancer registry data from a contaminated area in Italy
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Giannico, Orazio Valerio, primary, Carone, Simona, additional, Tanzarella, Margherita, additional, Galluzzo, Claudia, additional, Bruni, Antonella, additional, Lagravinese, Giovanna Maria, additional, Rashid, Ivan, additional, Bisceglia, Lucia, additional, Sardone, Rodolfo, additional, Addabbo, Francesco, additional, Minerba, Sante, additional, and Mincuzzi, Antonia, additional
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- 2024
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46. Sex, environment, and death rate in a dementia cohort: a seven-years Bayesian survival analysis using medications data from a contaminated area in Italy.
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Mincuzzi, Antonia, Lodeserto, Paolo, Zollino, Jennifer, Sardone, Rodolfo, Bisceglia, Lucia, Addabbo, Francesco, Minerba, Sante, Colacicco, Vito Gregorio, and Giannico, Orazio Valerio
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- 2024
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47. Deciphering the Interaction between Coniella granati and Pomegranate Fruit Employing Transcriptomics.
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Tsafouros, Athanasios, Tsalgatidou, Polina C., Boutsika, Anastasia, Delis, Costas, Mincuzzi, Annamaria, Ippolito, Antonio, and Zambounis, Antonios
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TRANSCRIPTOMES ,POMEGRANATE ,INTEGRATED pest control ,FRUIT ,DRIED fruit ,FRUIT drying - Abstract
Pomegranate fruit dry rot is caused by Coniella granati, also referred as Pilidiella granati. In order to decipher the induced responses of mature pomegranates inoculated with the pathogen, an RNA-seq analysis was employed. A high number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were observed through a three-time series inoculation period. The transcriptional reprogramming was time-dependent, whereas the majority of DEGs were suppressed and the expression patterns of specific genes may facilitate the pathogen colonization at 1 day after inoculation (dai). In contrast, at 2 dai and mainly thereafter at 3 dai, defense responses were partially triggered in delay. Particularly, DEGs were mainly upregulated at the latest time point. Among them, specific DEGs involved in cell wall modification and degradation processes, pathogen recognition and signaling transduction cascades, activation of specific defense and metabolite biosynthesis-related genes, as well in induction of particular families of transcriptional factors, may constitute crucial components of a defense recruiting strategy employed by pomegranate fruit upon C. granati challenge. Overall, our findings provide novel insights to the compatible interaction of pomegranates—C. granati and lay the foundations for establishing integrated pest management (IPM) strategies involving advanced approaches, such as gene editing or molecular breeding programs for disease resistance, according to European Union (EU) goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. First report of collar and root rot caused by Phytophthora nicotianae on Lycium barbarum
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Cariddi, Corrado, Mincuzzi, Annamaria, Schena, Leonardo, Ippolito, Antonio, and Sanzani, Simona Marianna
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- 2018
49. Electrolyzed Water as a Potential Agent for Controlling Postharvest Decay of Fruits and Vegetables
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Ippolito, Antonio, primary, Mincuzzi, Annamaria, additional, Surano, Antony, additional, Youssef, Khamis, additional, and Sanzani, Simona Marianna, additional
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- 2020
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50. Global surveillance of trends in cancer survival 2000–14 (CONCORD-3): analysis of individual records for 37 513 025 patients diagnosed with one of 18 cancers from 322 population-based registries in 71 countries
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Bouzbid, S, Hamdi-Chérif, M, Zaidi, Z, Meguenni, K, Regagba, D, Bayo, S, Cheick Bougadari, T, Manraj, S S, Bendahhou, K, Fabowale, A, Bradshaw, D, Somdyala, N I M, Kumcher, I, Moreno, F, Calabrano, G H, Espinola, S B, Carballo Quintero, B, Fita, R, Diumenjo, M C, Laspada, W D, Ibañez, S G, Lima, C A, De Souza, P C F, Del Pino, K, Laporte, C, Curado, M P, de Oliveira, J C, Veneziano, C L A, Veneziano, D B, Latorre, M R D O, Tanaka, L F, Rebelo, M S, Santos, M O, Galaz, J C, Aparicio Aravena, M, Sanhueza Monsalve, J, Herrmann, D A, Vargas, S, Herrera, V M, Uribe, C J, Bravo, L E, Garcia, L S, Arias-Ortiz, N E, Morantes, D, Jurado, D M, Yépez Chamorro, M C, Delgado, S, Ramirez, M, Galán Alvarez, Y H, Torres, P, Martínez-Reyes, F, Jaramillo, L, Quinto, R, Castillo, J, Mendoza, M, Cueva, P, Yépez, J G, Bhakkan, B, Deloumeaux, J, Joachim, C, Macni, J, Carrillo, R, Shalkow Klincovstein, J, Rivera Gomez, R, Poquioma, E, Tortolero-Luna, G, Zavala, D, Alonso, R, Barrios, E, Eckstrand, A, Nikiforuk, C, Noonan, G, Turner, D, Kumar, E, Zhang, B, McCrate, F R, Ryan, S, MacIntyre, M, Saint-Jacques, N, Nishri, D E, McClure, C A, Vriends, K A, Kozie, S, Stuart-Panko, H, Freeman, T, George, J T, Brockhouse, J T, O'Brien, D K, Holt, A, Almon, L, Kwong, S, Morris, C, Rycroft, R, Mueller, L, Phillips, C E, Brown, H, Cromartie, B, Schwartz, A G, Vigneau, F, Levin, G M, Wohler, B, Bayakly, R, Ward, K C, Gomez, S L, McKinley, M, Cress, R, Green, M D, Miyagi, K, Ruppert, L P, Lynch, C F, Huang, B, Tucker, T C, Deapen, D, Liu, L, Hsieh, M C, Wu, X C, Schwenn, M, Gershman, S T, Knowlton, R C, Alverson, G, Copeland, G E, Bushhouse, S, Rogers, D B, Jackson-Thompson, J, Lemons, D, Zimmerman, H J, Hood, M, Roberts-Johnson, J, Rees, J R, Riddle, B, Pawlish, K S, Stroup, A, Key, C, Wiggins, C, Kahn, A R, Schymura, M J, Radhakrishnan, S, Rao, C, Giljahn, L K, Slocumb, R M, Espinoza, R E, Khan, F, Aird, K G, Beran, T, Rubertone, J J, Slack, S J, Garcia, L, Rousseau, D L, Janes, T A, Schwartz, S M, Bolick, S W, Hurley, D M, Whiteside, M A, Miller-Gianturco, P, Williams, M A, Herget, K, Sweeney, C, Johnson, A T, Keitheri Cheteri, M B, Migliore Santiago, P, Blankenship, S E, Farley, S, Borchers, R, Malicki, R, Espinoza, J R, Grandpre, J, Wilson, R, Edwards, B K, Mariotto, A, Lei, Y, Wang, N, Chen, J S, Zhou, Y, He, Y T, Song, G H, Gu, X P, Mei, D, Mu, H J, Ge, H M, Wu, T H, Li, Y Y, Zhao, D L, Jin, F, Zhang, J H, Zhu, F D, Junhua, Q, Yang, Y L, Jiang, C X, Biao, W, Wang, J, Li, Q L, Yi, H, Zhou, X, Dong, J, Li, W, Fu, F X, Liu, S Z, Chen, J G, Zhu, J, Li, Y H, Lu, Y Q, Fan, M, Huang, S Q, Guo, G P, Zhaolai, H, Wei, K, Zeng, H, Demetriou, A V, Mang, W K, Ngan, K C, Kataki, A C, Krishnatreya, M, Jayalekshmi, P A, Sebastian, P, Nandakumar, A, Malekzadeh, R, Roshandel, G, Keinan-Boker, L, Silverman, B G, Ito, H, Nakagawa, H, Sato, M, Tobori, F, Nakata, I, Teramoto, N, Hattori, M, Kaizaki, Y, Moki, F, Sugiyama, H, Utada, M, Nishimura, M, Yoshida, K, Kurosawa, K, Nemoto, Y, Narimatsu, H, Sakaguchi, M, Kanemura, S, Naito, M, Narisawa, R, Miyashiro, I, Nakata, K, Sato, S, Yoshii, M, Oki, I, Fukushima, N, Shibata, A, Iwasa, K, Ono, C, Nimri, O, Jung, K W, Won, Y J, Alawadhi, E, Elbasmi, A, Ab Manan, A, Adam, F, Sanjaajmats, E, Tudev, U, Ochir, C, Al Khater, A M, El Mistiri, M M, Teo, Y Y, Chiang, C J, Lee, W C, Buasom, R, Sangrajrang, S, Kamsa-ard, S, Wiangnon, S, Daoprasert, K, Pongnikorn, D, Leklob, A, Sangkitipaiboon, S, Geater, S L, Sriplung, H, Ceylan, O, Kög, I, Dirican, O, Köse, T, Gurbuz, T, Karaşahin, F E, Turhan, D, Aktaş, U, Halat, Y, Yakut, C I, Altinisik, M, Cavusoglu, Y, Türkköylü, A, Üçüncü, N, Hackl, M, Zborovskaya, A A, Aleinikova, O V, Henau, K, Van Eycken, L, Valerianova, Z, Yordanova, M R, Šekerija, M, Dušek, L, Zvolský, M, Storm, H, Innos, K, Mägi, M, Malila, N, Seppä, K, Jégu, J, Velten, M, Cornet, E, Troussard, X, Bouvier, A M, Guizard, A V, Bouvier, V, Launoy, G, Arveux, P, Maynadié, M, Mounier, M, Woronoff, A S, Daoulas, M, Robaszkiewicz, M, Clavel, J, Goujon, S, Lacour, B, Baldi, I, Pouchieu, C, Amadeo, B, Coureau, G, Orazio, S, Preux, P M, Rharbaoui, F, Marrer, E, Trétarre, B, Colonna, M, Delafosse, P, Ligier, K, Plouvier, S, Cowppli-Bony, A, Molinié, F, Bara, S, Ganry, O, Lapôtre-Ledoux, B, Grosclaude, P, Bossard, N, Uhry, Z, Bray, F, Piñeros, M, Stabenow, R, Wilsdorf-Köhler, H, Eberle, A, Luttmann, S, Löhden, I, Nennecke, A L, Kieschke, J, Sirri, E, Emrich, K, Zeissig, S R, Holleczek, B, Eisemann, N, Katalinic, A, Asquez, R A, Kumar, V, Petridou, E, Ólafsdóttir, E J, Tryggvadóttir, L, Clough-Gorr, K, Walsh, P M, Sundseth, H, Mazzoleni, G, Vittadello, F, Coviello, E, Cuccaro, F, Galasso, R, Sampietro, G, Giacomin, A, Magoni, M, Ardizzone, A, D'Argenzio, A, Castaing, M, Grosso, G, Lavecchia, A M, Sutera Sardo, A, Gola, G, Gatti, L, Ricci, P, Ferretti, S, Serraino, D, Zucchetto, A, Celesia, M V, Filiberti, R A, Pannozzo, F, Melcarne, A, Quarta, F, Russo, A G, Carrozzi, G, Cirilli, C, Cavalieri d'Oro, L, Rognoni, M, Fusco, M, Vitale, M F, Usala, M, Cusimano, R, Mazzucco, W, Michiara, M, Sgargi, P, Boschetti, L, Borciani, E, Seghini, P, Maule, M M, Merletti, F, Tumino, R, Mancuso, P, Vicentini, M, Cassetti, T, Sassatelli, R, Falcini, F, Giorgetti, S, Caiazzo, A L, Cavallo, R, Cesaraccio, R, Pirino, D R, Contrino, M L, Tisano, F, Fanetti, A C, Maspero, S, Carone, S, Mincuzzi, A, Candela, G, Scuderi, T, Gentilini, M A, Piffer, S, Rosso, S, Barchielli, A, Caldarella, A, Bianconi, F, Stracci, F, Contiero, P, Tagliabue, G, Rugge, M, Zorzi, M, Beggiato, S, Brustolin, A, Berrino, F, Gatta, G, Sant, M, Buzzoni, C, Mangone, L, Capocaccia, R, De Angelis, R, Zanetti, R, Maurina, A, Pildava, S, Lipunova, N, Vincerževskiené, I, Agius, D, Calleja, N, Siesling, S, Larønningen, S, Møller, B, Dyzmann-Sroka, A, Trojanowski, M, Góźdź, S, Mężyk, R, Mierzwa, T, Molong, L, Rachtan, J, Szewczyk, S, Błaszczyk, J, Kępska, K, Kościańska, B, Tarocińska, K, Zwierko, M, Drosik, K, Maksimowicz, K M, Purwin-Porowska, E, Reca, E, Wójcik-Tomaszewska, J, Tukiendorf, A, Grądalska-Lampart, M, Radziszewska, A U, Gos, A, Talerczyk, M, Wyborska, M, Didkowska, J A, Wojciechowska, U, Bielska-Lasota, M, Forjaz de Lacerda, G, Rego, R A, Bastos, J, Silva, M A, Antunes, L, Laranja Pontes, J, Mayer-da-Silva, A, Miranda, A, Blaga, L M, Coza, D, Gusenkova, L, Lazarevich, O, Prudnikova, O, Vjushkov, D M, Egorova, A G, Orlov, A E, Kudyakov, L A, Pikalova, L V, Adamcik, J, Safaei Diba, C, Primic-Žakelj, M, Zadnik, V, Larrañaga, N, Lopez de Munain, A, Herrera, A A, Redondas, R, Marcos-Gragera, R, Vilardell Gil, M L, Molina, E, Sánchez Perez, M J, Franch Sureda, P, Ramos Montserrat, M, Chirlaque, M D, Navarro, C, Ardanaz, E E, Guevara, M M, Fernández-Delgado, R, Peris-Bonet, R, Carulla, M, Galceran, J, Alberich, C, Vicente-Raneda, M, Khan, S, Pettersson, D, Dickman, P, Avelina, I, Staehelin, K, Camey, B, Bouchardy, C, Schaffar, R, Frick, H, Herrmann, C, Bulliard, J L, Maspoli-Conconi, M, Kuehni, C E, Redmond, S M, Bordoni, A, Ortelli, L, Chiolero, A, Konzelmann, I, Matthes, K L, Rohrmann, S, Broggio, J, Rashbass, J, Fitzpatrick, D, Gavin, A, Clark, D I, Deas, A J, Huws, D W, White, C, Montel, L, Rachet, B, Turculet, A D, Stephens, R, Chalker, E, Phung, H, Walton, R, You, H, Guthridge, S, Johnson, F, Gordon, P, D'Onise, K, Priest, K, Stokes, B C, Venn, A, Farrugia, H, Thursfield, V, Dowling, J, Currow, D, Hendrix, J, Lewis, C, Allemani, Claudia, Matsuda, Tomohiro, Di Carlo, Veronica, Harewood, Rhea, Matz, Melissa, Nikšić, Maja, Bonaventure, Audrey, Valkov, Mikhail, Johnson, Christopher J, Estève, Jacques, Ogunbiyi, Olufemi J, Azevedo e Silva, Gulnar, Chen, Wan-Qing, Eser, Sultan, Engholm, Gerda, Stiller, Charles A, Monnereau, Alain, Woods, Ryan R, Visser, Otto, Lim, Gek Hsiang, Aitken, Joanne, Weir, Hannah K, and Coleman, Michel P
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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