287 results on '"P. Scaramuzzi"'
Search Results
2. Acute myocardial infarction as presenting symptom of thymoma with compression on a coronary stent
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Beatrice Leonardi, Giovanni Natale, Paolo Laperuta, Roberto Scaramuzzi, Gianfranco Apostolico, Francesco Leone, Carlo Bergaminelli, and Alfonso Fiorelli
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mediastinal mass ,percutaneous coronary intervention ,robotic surgery ,thoracic surgery ,thymoma ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract We report the clinical case of a patient with acute myocardial infarction due to coronary stent compression as first manifestation of a large thymoma. The patient underwent a coronarography and thrombus aspiration + plain old balloon angioplasty restoring the stent patency. The mass resection was performed through left robotic‐assisted thoracic surgery (RATS), resulting in a type A thymoma pT1a, IIb Masaoka‐Koga. An uncommon presentation led to early diagnosis and treatment of a thymoma with both oncological and functional significance.
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- 2024
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3. Increasing the uptake of Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy using Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP) through seasonal malaria chemoprevention channel delivery: protocol of a multicenter cluster randomized implementation trial in Mali and Burkina Faso
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Kadiatou Koita, Joel D. Bognini, Efundem Agboraw, Mahamadou Dembélé, Seydou Yabré, Biébo Bihoun, Oumou Coulibaly, Hamidou Niangaly, Jean-Batiste N’Takpé, Maia Lesosky, Dario Scaramuzzi, Eve Worrall, Jenny Hill, Valérie Briand, Halidou Tinto, and Kassoum Kayentao
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Malaria ,Pregnant women ,Women with a child less than 12 months of age ,Tropical medicine ,Infectious diseases ,Maternal and child health ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The uptake of Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy using Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP) remains unacceptably low, with more than two-thirds of pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa still not accessing the three or more doses recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO). In contrast, the coverage of Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC), a more recent strategy recommended by the WHO for malaria prevention in children under five years living in Sahelian countries with seasonal transmission, including Mali and Burkina-Faso, is high (up to 90%). We hypothesized that IPTp-SP delivery to pregnant women through SMC alongside antenatal care (ANC) will increase IPTp-SP coverage, boost ANC attendance, and increase public health impact. This protocol describes the approach to assess acceptability, feasibility, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of the integrated strategy. Methods and analysis This is a multicentre, cluster-randomized, implementation trial of IPTp-SP delivery through ANC + SMC vs ANC alone in 40 health facilities and their catchment populations (20 clusters per arm). The intervention will consist of monthly administration of IPTp-SP through four monthly rounds of SMC during the malaria transmission season (July to October), for two consecutive years. Effectiveness of the strategy to increase coverage of three or more doses of IPTp-SP (IPTp3 +) will be assessed using household surveys and ANC exit interviews. Statistical analysis of IPT3 + and four or more ANC uptake will use a generalized linear mixed model. Feasibility and acceptability will be assessed through in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with health workers, pregnant women, and women with a child
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- 2024
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4. Evaluation of inherited germline mutations in cancer susceptibility genes among pancreatic cancer patients: a single-center study
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Tavano, Francesca, Gioffreda, Domenica, Fontana, Andrea, Palmieri, Orazio, Gentile, Annamaria, Latiano, Tiziana, Latiano, Anna, Latiano, Tiziana Pia, Scaramuzzi, Matteo, Maiello, Evaristo, Bazzocchi, Francesca, and Perri, Francesco
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- 2023
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5. Experimental evidence of adiabatic splitting of charged particle beams using stable islands of transverse phase space
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S. Gilardoni, M. Giovannozzi, M. Martini, E. Métral, P. Scaramuzzi, R. Steerenberg, and A.-S. Müller
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Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Recently, a novel technique to perform multiturn extraction from a circular particle accelerator was proposed. It is based on beam splitting and trapping, induced by a slow crossing of a nonlinear resonance, inside stable islands of transverse phase space. Experiments at the CERN Proton Synchrotron started in 2002 and evidence of beam splitting was obtained by summer 2004. In this paper, the measurement results achieved with both a low- and a high-intensity, single-bunch proton beam are presented.
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- 2006
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6. Nonreciprocal nano-optics with spin-waves in synthetic antiferromagnets
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Albisetti, Edoardo, Tacchi, Silvia, Silvani, Raffaele, Scaramuzzi, Giuseppe, Finizio, Simone, Wintz, Sebastian, Raabe, Jörg, Carlotti, Giovanni, Bertacco, Riccardo, Riedo, Elisa, and Petti, Daniela
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Integrated optically-inspired wave-based processing is envisioned to outperform digital architectures in specific tasks, such as image processing and speech recognition. In this view, spin-waves represent a promising route due to their nanoscale wavelength in the GHz frequency range and rich phenomenology. Here, we realize a versatile optically-inspired platform using spin-waves, demonstrating the wavefront engineering, focusing, and robust interference of spin-waves with nanoscale wavelength. In particular, we use magnonic nanoantennas based on tailored spin-textures for launching spatially shaped coherent wavefronts, diffraction-limited spin-wave beams, and generating robust multi-beam interference patterns, which spatially extend for several times the spin-wave wavelength. Furthermore, we show that intriguing features, such as resilience to back-reflection, naturally arise from the spin-wave nonreciprocity in synthetic antiferromagnets, preserving the high quality of the interference patterns from spurious counterpropagating modes. This work represents a fundamental step towards the realization of nanoscale optically-inspired devices based on spin-waves.
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- 2019
7. Evaluation of inherited germline mutations in cancer susceptibility genes among pancreatic cancer patients: a single-center study
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Francesca Tavano, Domenica Gioffreda, Andrea Fontana, Orazio Palmieri, Annamaria Gentile, Tiziana Latiano, Anna Latiano, Tiziana Pia Latiano, Matteo Scaramuzzi, Evaristo Maiello, Francesca Bazzocchi, and Francesco Perri
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Pancreatic cancer ,Genetic testing ,Next Generation Sequencing ,Germline variants ,Prevalence ,Cancer family history ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Biochemistry ,QD415-436 - Abstract
Abstract Background Germline mutations in cancer susceptibility genes were identified in pancreatic cancer (PanC) patients with a sporadic disease and in those unselected for family cancer history. Methods With the aim to determine the prevalence of germline predisposition genes mutations in PanC, and to evaluate whether they were associated with the presence of PanC, we profiled a custom AmpliSeq panel of 27 cancer susceptibility genes in 47 PanC patients and 51 control subjects by using the Ion Torrent PGM system. Results Multigene panel testing identified a total of 31 variants in 27 PanC (57.4%), including variants with pathogenic/likely pathogenic effect, those of uncertain significance, and variants whose clinical significance remains currently undefined. Five patients carried more than one variant in the same gene or in different genes. Eight patients (17.0%) had at least one pathogenic/likely pathogenic variant in four main genes: CFTR (10.6%), BRCA2 (8.5%), ATM and CHEK2 (2.1%). Pathogenic/likely pathogenic mutation were identified in patients with positive PanC family history (20%) or in patients without first-degree relatives affected by PanC (13.6%). All the BRCA2 mutation carriers were unselected PanC patients. The presence of mutations in BRCA2 was significantly associated with an increased occurrence of PanC and with positive family history for endometrial cancer (p = 0.018). Conclusions This study confirmed the potential remarkable contribution of BRCA2 in assessing the presence of PanC. Overall our findings supported the recommendation of offering the germline testing to all the PanC patients with the intent to reduce the number of underdiagnosed carriers of mutations in predisposition genes, and not to preclude their relatives from the opportunity to benefit from surveillance programs.
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- 2023
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8. Thirst in patients admitted to intensive care units: an observational study
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Negro, Alessandra, Villa, Giulia, Greco, Massimiliano, Ciriolo, Eleonora, Luraschi, Elisabetta Livia, Scaramuzzi, Jacopo, Manara, Duilio Fiorenzo, and Zangrillo, Alberto
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- 2022
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9. Percepções locais sobre transformações ambientais na região do Oiapoque: reflexões a partir da experiência de formação de pesquisadores indígenas
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Igor Alexandre Badolato Scaramuzzi, Rita Becker Lewkowicz, Rosélis Remor de Souza Mazurek, and Vinícius Cosmos Benvegnú
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pesquisadores indígenas ,conhecimentos tradicionais ,transformações ambientais ,Amazônia ,Anthropology ,GN1-890 - Abstract
Resumo Este artigo discute a experiência de um curso de formação e pesquisa sobre conhecimentos indígenas associados aos ciclos ambientais sazonais e às percepções locais sobre alterações desses padrões, observadas nos últimos anos nas Terras Indígenas do Oiapoque, estado do Amapá, na Amazônia oriental. Ele se propõe a descrever e analisar as explicações indígenas para as transformações ambientais observadas, em diálogo com saberes científicos não indígenas que associam tais fenômenos a processos de mudanças climáticas em curso na escala global. A partir da atuação dos autores como pesquisadores, professores e orientadores dos pesquisadores indígenas nas atividades do curso, foi feito um exercício etnográfico com reflexões sobre a pesquisa, o processo de formação e alguns de seus resultados. Buscou-se promover o diálogo com outras pesquisas antropológicas que também abordam o tema das mudanças climáticas e os saberes tradicionais, assinalando algumas contribuições dos pesquisadores indígenas do Oiapoque nesse debate.
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- 2023
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10. Traditional forest-related knowledge and agrobiodiversity preservation: the case of the chagras in the Indigenous Reserve of Monochoa (Colombia)
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Hernandez Marentes, Maria Alejandra, Venturi, Martina, Scaramuzzi, Silvia, Focacci, Marco, and Santoro, Antonio
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- 2022
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11. Biomarker-guided intervention to prevent acute kidney injury after major surgery (BigpAK-2 trial): study protocol for an international, prospective, randomised controlled multicentre trial
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Joachim Gerss, Javier Ripollés-Melchor, Emmanuel Futier, Melanie Meersch, Carola Wempe, Detlef Kindgen-Milles, Alexander Zarbock, Markus W Hollmann, Sigismond Lasocki, Thomas Rimmele, Tim Rahmel, Michael Adamzik, Hartmuth Nowak, Ingeborg Welters, Brian Johnston, Ane Abad-motos, Alfredo Abad-gurumeta, Marc Moritz Berger, Davide Ricci, Maurizio Cecconi, Gudrun Kunst, Christian Stoppe, Christian Putensen, Marlies Ostermann, Sascha Ott, Brijesh Patel, Gabriele Baldini, Antoine Lamblin, Karen Williams, Elena Mancini, Christian Arndt, Hinnerk Wulf, Marc Irqsusi, Wim Vandenberghe, John Kellum, Raphael Weiss, Jackie Donovan, Lui G Forni, Giacomo Monti, Céline Monard, Markus A Weigand, Thorsten Brenner, Ulrich Jaschinski, Carlos Lopez, Maxime Leger, Emmanuel Rineau, Philipp Simon, María Gómez-Rojo, Lars Bergmann, Alicia Waite, Savino Spadaro, Alexander Wolf, Andrew Spence, Simon Dubler, Alexander PJ Vlaar, Patrick Schober, Ben C Creagh-Brown, Nandor Marczin, Emilio Maseda, Christian Strauss, Stefano Romagnoli, Christian Nusshag, Ulrich Gobel, Ángel Candela-Toha, Jon Silversides, Nuttha Lumlertgul, Khaschayar Saadat-Gilani, Vincent Legros, Timo Brandenburger, Thomas Dimski, Laura Huthmann, Claude Pelletier, Manon Schleß, Peter Rosenberger, Helene Häberle, Jan Gerrit Haaker, Matthias Gründel, Lucia Cattin, Laura Villarino Villa, Juan Victor Lorente, Christine Martin, Jan Larmann, Wolfgang Bauer, Giovanni Borghi, Benjamin O’Brien, Thilo von Groote, Antoine Guillaume Schneider, Silvia De Rosa, Diego Parise, Alice Bernard, Paula Fernández-Valdes-Bango, Irene Romero Bhathal, A Suarez-de-la-Rica, Gianluca Villa, Raquel García-Álvarez, Antonio Siniscalchi, Richard Ellerkmann, Florian Espeter, Christian Porschen, Mahan Sadjadi, Michael Storck, Tobias Brix, Dana Meschede, Wida Amini, Carina Stenger, Julius Freytag, Jens Brands, Matthias Unterberg, Britta Marko, Fabian Dusse, Wolfgang A Wetsch, Sandra E Stoll, Hendrik Drinhaus, Bernd W Böttiger, Onnen Mörer, Lars-Olav Harnisch, Roswitha Lubjuhn, Daniel Heise, Christian Bode, Andrea Sauer, Konrad Peukert, Lennart Wild, Philippe Kruse, Jan Menzenbach, Valbona Mirakaj, Sabine Hermann, Stefanie Decker, Mona Jung-König, Tobias Hölle, Sarah Dehne, Jörg Reutershan, Thomas Prüfer, Stefan Pielmeier, Indra Wimmelmeier, Michaela Scholz, Andrea Paris, Isabel Christina Gallego Zapata, Holger Pohl, Nirmeen Fayed, Kai Dielmann, Evelyn Martin, Tilo Koch, Alexander Mück, Philipp Deetjen, Ngoc Bich Mehlmann, Peter M Spieth, Andreas Güldner, Axel Rand, Maximillian Ragaller, Martin Mirus, Rebecca Bockholt, Marc Herzog, Maren Kleine-Brüggeney, Ant Isabelle Cristiani, Marion Ohl, Monica Vieira Da Silva, Gilda Filipe de Castro Reblo, Matthias Hilty, Katharina Spanaus, Benedetta Mura, Eleonora Terreni, Francesco Magiotti, Lorenzo Turi, Cristiana Laici, Chiara Capozzi, Andrea Castelli, Massimiliano Greco, Antonio Messina, Gianluca Castellani, Romina Aceto, Vinicio Danzi, Alessandro Rigobello, Massimo De Cal, Monica Zanella, Gaetano Scaramuzzo, Riccardo La Rosa, Paolo Priani, Alberto Volta Carlo, Stefano Turi, Martina Baiardo Redaelli, Marilena Marmiere, Kittisak Weerapolchai, Shelley Lorah, Fabiola D’Amato, Aneta Bociek, Rosario Lim, Benjie Cendreda, Reynaldo Dela Cuesta, Eirini Kosifidou, Zoka Milan, Juliana Fernanda, Emma Clarey, Daveena Meeks, Nicholas J Lees, Marco Scaramuzzi, Orinta Kviatkovske, Adam Glass, Christine Turley, Charlotte Quinn, Syeda Haider, Adam Rossiter, Syed Nasser, Ned Gilbert-Kawai, Tatjana Besse-Hammer, Eric Hoste, Hannah Schaubroeck, Jan De Waele, Jenni Breel, Eline de Klerk, Harm-Jan de Grooth, Lothar Schwarte, Alexander Loer, Alicia Ruiz-Escobar, Diana Fernández-García, Nerea Gómez-Pérez, Pascual Crespo-Aliseda, Cristina Cerro-Zaballos, Cristina Fernández-Martín, Eduardo Martín-Montero, Alejandro Suarez de la Rica, Héctor Berges Gutiérrez, Maria del Pino Heredia Pérez, Maria de los Reyes Bellido Fernández, Liena Izquierdo López, Javier Valiente Lourtau, Ma Angeles Ferre Colomer, Ma Azucena Pajares Moncho, Maria Jesús Montero Hernández, Esther Pérez Sancho, Silvia Polo Matínez, Pedro Rivera Soria, Maider Puyada Jáuregui, Hugo Rivera Ramos, Marta Antelo Adrán, Ramón Adalia Bartolomé, Patricia Galán Menéndez, Laura Llinares Espin, Yuri Santiago Loaiza Aldean, Víctor MoralesAriza, Rosalía Navarro-Perez, Luis Santé-Serna, Pedro de la Calle-Elguezabal, Rubén Sánchez-Martín, Inés De Soto, Pau Vallhonrat Alcántara, Laura Perelló Cerdà, Gal·la Rouras Hurtado, Paula Rodriguez Nieto, John Narros Sicluna, Angel Molero Molinero, Juan Pablo Nocete, Elena Murcia Sánchez, Stanislas Abrard, Marie-Luce Parrouffe, Frank Bidar, Lucie Aupetitgendre, Ugo Schiff, Bertille Paquette, Gaëlle Sellier, Nathalie Borgnetta, Benjamin Brochet, Thierry Floch, Julien Coffinet, and Marion Leclercq-Rouget
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Previous studies demonstrated that the implementation of the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) guideline-based bundle, consisting of different supportive measures in patients at high risk for acute kidney injury (AKI), might reduce rate and severity of AKI after surgery. However, the effects of the care bundle in broader population of patients undergoing surgery require confirmation.Methods and analysis The BigpAK-2 trial is an international, randomised, controlled, multicentre trial. The trial aims to enrol 1302 patients undergoing major surgery who are subsequently admitted to the intensive care or high dependency unit and are at high-risk for postoperative AKI as identified by urinary biomarkers (tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 2*insulin like growth factor binding protein 7 (TIMP-2)*IGFBP7)). Eligible patients will be randomised to receive either standard of care (control) or a KDIGO-based AKI care bundle (intervention). The primary endpoint is the incidence of moderate or severe AKI (stage 2 or 3) within 72 hours after surgery, according to the KDIGO 2012 criteria. Secondary endpoints include adherence to the KDIGO care bundle, occurrence and severity of any stage of AKI, change in biomarker values during 12 hours after initial measurement of (TIMP-2)*(IGFBP7), number of free days of mechanical ventilation and vasopressors, need for renal replacement therapy (RRT), duration of RRT, renal recovery, 30-day and 60-day mortality, intensive care unit length-of-stay and hospital length-of-stay and major adverse kidney events. An add-on study will investigate blood and urine samples from recruited patients for immunological functions and kidney damage.Ethics and dissemination The BigpAK-2 trial was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Medical Faculty of the University of Münster and subsequently by the corresponding Ethics Committee of the participating sites. A study amendment was approved subsequently. In the UK, the trial was adopted as an NIHR portfolio study. Results will be disseminated widely and published in peer-reviewed journals, presented at conferences and will guide patient care and further research.Trial registration number NCT04647396.
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- 2023
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12. ICG fluorescence imaging in colorectal surgery: a snapshot from the ICRAL study group
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Gian Luca Baiocchi, Gianluca Guercioni, Nereo Vettoretto, Stefano Scabini, Paolo Millo, Andrea Muratore, Marco Clementi, Giuseppe Sica, Paolo Delrio, Graziano Longo, Gabriele Anania, Vittoria Barbieri, Pietro Amodio, Carlo Di Marco, Gianandrea Baldazzi, Gianluca Garulli, Alberto Patriti, Felice Pirozzi, Raffaele De Luca, Stefano Mancini, Corrado Pedrazzani, Matteo Scaramuzzi, Marco Scatizzi, Lucio Taglietti, Michele Motter, Graziano Ceccarelli, Mauro Totis, Andrea Gennai, Diletta Frazzini, Gianluca Di Mauro, Gabriella Teresa Capolupo, Francesco Crafa, Pierluigi Marini, Giacomo Ruffo, Roberto Persiani, Felice Borghi, Nicolò de Manzini, and Marco Catarci
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Colon cancer ,Rectal cancer ,Laparoscopy ,Fluorescence guided surgery ,ICG ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Abstract Background Fluorescence-guided visualization is a recently proposed technology in colorectal surgery. Possible uses include evaluating perfusion, navigating lymph nodes and searching for hepatic metastases and peritoneal spread. Despite the absence of high-level evidence, this technique has gained considerable popularity among colorectal surgeons due to its significant reliability, safety, ease of use and relatively low cost. However, the actual use of this technique in daily clinical practice has not been reported to date. Methods This survey was conducted on April 2020 among 44 centers dealing with colorectal diseases and participating in the Italian ColoRectal Anastomotic Leakage (iCral) study group. Surgeons were approximately equally divided based on geographical criteria from multiple Italian regions, with a large proportion based in public (89.1%) and nonacademic (75.7%) centers. They were invited to answer an online survey to snapshot their current behaviors regarding the use of fluorescence-guided visualization in colorectal surgery. Questions regarding technological availability, indications and techniques, personal approaches and feelings were collected in a 23-item questionnaire. Results Questionnaire replies were received from 37 institutions and partially answered by 8, as this latter group of centers do not implement fluorescence technology (21.6%). Out of the remaining 29 centers (78,4%), fluorescence is utilized in all laparoscopic colorectal resections by 72.4% of surgeons and only for selected cases by the remaining 27.6%, while 62.1% of respondents do not use fluorescence in open surgery (unless the perfusion is macroscopically uncertain with the naked eye, in which case 41.4% of them do). The survey also suggests that there is no agreement on dilution, dosing and timing, as many different practices are adopted based on personal judgment. Only approximately half of the surgeons reported a reduced leak rate with fluorescence perfusion assessment, but 65.5% of them strongly believe that this technique will become a minimum requirement for colorectal surgery in the future. Conclusion The survey confirms that fluorescence is becoming a widely used technique in colorectal surgery. However, both the indications and methods still vary considerably; furthermore, the surgeons' perceptions of the results are insufficient to consider this technology essential. This survey emphasizes the need for further research to reach recommendations based on solid scientific evidence.
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- 2021
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13. Rosaceae, Brassicaceae and pollen beetles: exploring relationships and evolution in an anthophilous beetle lineage (Nitidulidae, Meligethes-complex of genera) using an integrative approach
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Meike Liu, Min Huang, Andrew Richard Cline, Emiliano Mancini, Andrea Scaramuzzi, Simone Paradisi, Paolo Audisio, Davide Badano, and Simone Sabatelli
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Pollen beetles ,Rosaceae ,Brassicaceae ,Evolution ,Host-shift ,Palaearctic region ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Abstract Background Meligethes are pollen-beetles associated with flowers of Rosaceae as larvae. This genus currently consists of 63 known species in two subgenera, Meligethes and Odonthogethes, predominantly occurring in the eastern Palaearctic. We analyzed 74 morphological and ecological characters (169 states) of all species, as well as of 11 outgroup species from 7 Meligethinae genera (including Brassicogethes), to investigate their phylogeny. We also conducted a parallel molecular analysis on 9 Meligethes, 9 Odonthogethes, 3 Brassicogethes and 2 Meligethinus species based on DNA sequence data from mitochondrial (COI, 16S) and nuclear (CAD) genes. Results Morphological phylogenetic reconstructions supported the monophyly of the whole genus and clades corresponding to purported subgenera Meligethes s.str. and Odonthogethes. Main species-groups were mostly confirmed, however some unresolved polytomies remained. Molecular data placed members of Brassicogethes (including 42 mostly W Palearctic species associated with Brassicaceae) as sister to Odonthogethes, with this clade being sister to Meligethes s.str. This phylogenetic scenario suggests that monophyletic Meligethes s.str., Odonthogethes and Brassicogethes should be regarded alternatively as three subgenera of a monophyletic Meligethes, or three genera in a monophyletic genus-complex, with mutually monophyletic Brassicogethes and Odonthogethes. Molecular analyses estimated the origin of this lineage at ca. 14–15 Mya from a common stem including Meligethinus. Conclusions We hypothesize that the ancestor of Meligethes specialized on Rosaceae in the Middle Miocene (likely in Langhian Age) and subsequently radiated during Late Miocene and Plio-Pleistocene maintaining a trophic niche on this plant family. This radiation was primarily due to geographic isolation in E Asiatic mountain systems. Combined evidence from morphology, ancestral state parsimony reconstruction of host-plant associations and molecular evidence suggested that Rosoideae (Rosa spp.) represented the ancestral hosts of Meligethes s.str., followed by an independent shift of ancestral Odonthogethes (ca. 9–15 Mya) on Rubus (Rosoideae) and members of Rosaceae Spiraeoideae. Other ancestral Odonthogethes probably shifted again on the unrelated plant family Brassicaceae (maybe 8–14 Mya in S China), allowing a rapid westward radiation of the Brassicogethes clade.
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- 2021
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14. Fixational eye movements abnormalities and rate of visual acuity and stereoacuity improvement with part time patching
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Matteo Scaramuzzi, Jordan Murray, Paolo Nucci, Aasef G. Shaikh, and Fatema F. Ghasia
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Residual amblyopia is seen in 40% of amblyopic patients treated with part-time patching. Amblyopic patients with infantile onset strabismus or anisometropia can develop fusion maldevelopment nystagmus syndrome (FMNS). The purpose of this study was to understand the effects of presence of FMNS and clinical subtype of amblyopia on visual acuity and stereo-acuity improvement in children treated with part-time patching. Forty amblyopic children who had fixation eye movement recordings and at least 12 months of follow-up after initiating part-time patching were included. We classified amblyopic subjects per the fixational eye movements characteristics into those without any nystagmus, those with FMNS and patients with nystagmus without any structural anomalies that do not meet the criteria of FMNS or idiopathic infantile nystagmus. We also classified the patients per the clinical type of amblyopia. Patching was continued until amblyopia was resolved or no visual acuity improvement was noted at two consecutive visits. Children with anisometropic amblyopia and without FMNS have a faster improvement and plateaued sooner. Regression was only seen in patients with strabismic/mixed amblyopia particularly those with FMNS. Patients with FMNS had improvement in visual acuity but poor stereopsis with part-time patching and required longer duration of treatment.
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- 2021
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15. Integrated Supply Chain Projects and multifunctional local development: the creation of a Perfume Valley in Tuscany
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Silvia Scaramuzzi, Giovanni Belletti, and Paola Biagioni
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Local development ,Integrated Supply Chain Project ,Multifunctionality ,Rural development policy ,Rural tourism ,Business Model Canvas ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Agricultural industries ,HD9000-9495 - Abstract
Abstract Marginal rural areas are undergoing major pressures from the effects of globalization, especially when no alternative has been found to conventional extensive agriculture and a lack of investments and vision squeezes the income of farmers. The objective of the paper is to show how Integrated Supply Chain Projects (Progetti Integrati di Filiera (PIF)), Italian rural policy tools funded in the framework of EU’s Rural Development Policy, can integrate supply chain innovation and territorial integrated strategies, fostering a multifunctional development of marginal rural areas towards a newly discovered identity. The case study is the PIF “Flora Aromatica Santa Luce” funded by the Tuscany Regional Administration RDP in 2016. The project aims at creating a new supply chain of organic aromatic plants in the Santa Luce Valley (PI). The integration is based, on the one side, on the creation and valorization of the new supply chain product, represented by an organic cosmetic line made with lavender essential oil, and, on the other side, on the territorial development of the Valley, in an economic, social, environmental and touristic perspective. From a theoretical point of view, the approach used was based on the new rural development paradigm, assuming that the processes of broadening, deepening and regrounding, together compose the main axis of rural development. The canvas model was used in order to identify a business model for the new supply chain and the territorial development of the area, while, at the methodological level, a participatory action research (PAR) approach was adopted. Results show how a supply chain project (like a PIF) can enhance innovation and stable commercial relationships within the supply chain and support processes of vertical and horizontal coordination, but also stimulate extended territorial strategies supporting the integration processes between agriculture, processing and other economic activities following a territorial multifunctional development logic. At the same time, key benefits for the policymaker and local administrations can also be identified in particular for marginal rural areas where farmers and other local actors are weaker and collective action is more difficult. Thanks to the PAR approach, a PIF can stimulate participation of farmers to relevant RDP measures but also allow convergence of individual actions towards wider regional and local strategic objectives.
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- 2020
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16. Fixational eye movements abnormalities and rate of visual acuity and stereoacuity improvement with part time patching
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Scaramuzzi, Matteo, Murray, Jordan, Nucci, Paolo, Shaikh, Aasef G., and Ghasia, Fatema F.
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- 2021
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17. Rosaceae, Brassicaceae and pollen beetles: exploring relationships and evolution in an anthophilous beetle lineage (Nitidulidae, Meligethes-complex of genera) using an integrative approach
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Liu, Meike, Huang, Min, Cline, Andrew Richard, Mancini, Emiliano, Scaramuzzi, Andrea, Paradisi, Simone, Audisio, Paolo, Badano, Davide, and Sabatelli, Simone
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- 2021
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18. ICG fluorescence imaging in colorectal surgery: a snapshot from the ICRAL study group
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Baiocchi, Gian Luca, Guercioni, Gianluca, Vettoretto, Nereo, Scabini, Stefano, Millo, Paolo, Muratore, Andrea, Clementi, Marco, Sica, Giuseppe, Delrio, Paolo, Longo, Graziano, Anania, Gabriele, Barbieri, Vittoria, Amodio, Pietro, Di Marco, Carlo, Baldazzi, Gianandrea, Garulli, Gianluca, Patriti, Alberto, Pirozzi, Felice, De Luca, Raffaele, Mancini, Stefano, Pedrazzani, Corrado, Scaramuzzi, Matteo, Scatizzi, Marco, Taglietti, Lucio, Motter, Michele, Ceccarelli, Graziano, Totis, Mauro, Gennai, Andrea, Frazzini, Diletta, Di Mauro, Gianluca, Capolupo, Gabriella Teresa, Crafa, Francesco, Marini, Pierluigi, Ruffo, Giacomo, Persiani, Roberto, Borghi, Felice, de Manzini, Nicolò, and Catarci, Marco
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- 2021
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19. Observations of Galactic and Extra-galactic Sources From the BOOMERANG and SEST Telescopes
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Coble, K., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Contaldi, C. R., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., Farese, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Jones, W. C., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Nyman, L., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Polenta, G., Pongetti, F., Prunet, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., and Scaramuzzi, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present millimeter-wave observations of three extra-galactic and six Galactic sources in the Southern sky. Observations were made at 90, 150, 240 and 400 GHz with resolutions of 18, 10, 14 and 12 arcmin respectively during the 1998 Antarctic long duration balloon flight of BOOMERANG. Observations were also made with the SEST telescope, at 90 and 150 GHz with resolutions of 57 and 35 arcsec respectively. These observations can be used for calibrations of Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) experiments as well as an understanding of the physical processes of the sources., Comment: 19 pages, submitted to ApJS
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- 2003
20. BOOMERANG: A Balloon-borne Millimeter Wave Telescope and Total Power Receiver for Mapping Anisotropy in the Cosmic Microwave Background
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Crill, B. P., Ade, P. A. R., Artusa, D. R., Bhatia, R. S., Bock, J. J., Boscaleri, A., Cardoni, P., Church, S. E., Coble, K., deBernardis, P., deTroia, G., Farese, P., Ganga, K. M., Giacometti, M., Haynes, C. V., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jones, W. C., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P. V., Mauskopf, P. D., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Paine, C. G., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Polenta, G., Pongetti, F., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., and Turner, A. D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe BOOMERANG; a balloon-borne microwave telescope designed to map the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) at a resolution of 10' from the Long Duration Balloon (LDB) platform. The millimeter-wave receiver employs new technology in bolometers, readout electronics, cold re-imaging optics, millimeter-wave filters, and cryogenics to obtain high sensitivity to CMB anisotropy. Sixteen detectors observe in 4 spectral bands centered at 90, 150, 240 and 410 GHz. The wide frequency coverage, the long duration flight, the optical design and the observing strategy provide strong rejection of systematic effects. We report the flight performance of the instrument during a 10.5 day stratospheric balloon flight launched from McMurdo Station, Antarctica that mapped ~2000 square degrees of the sky., Comment: 42 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Ap J, Revised
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- 2002
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21. The BOOMERanG experiment and the curvature of the Universe
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Masi, S., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Contaldi, C. R., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., De Gasperis, G., De Troia, G., Farese, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Jones, W. C., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Natoli, P., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Polenta, G., Pongetti, F., Prunet, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., and Vittorio, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the BOOMERanG experiment and its main result, i.e. the measurement of the large scale curvature of the Universe. BOOMERanG is a balloon-borne microwave telescope with sensitive cryogenic detectors. BOOMERanG has measured the angular distribution of the Cosmic Microwave Background on $\sim 3%$ of the sky, with a resolution of $\sim 10$ arcmin and a sensitivity of $\sim 20 \mu K$ per pixel. The resulting image is dominated by hot and cold spots with rms fluctuations $\sim 80 \mu K$ and typical size of $\sim 1^o$. The detailed angular power spectrum of the image features three peaks and two dips at $\ell = (213^{+10}_{-13}), (541^{+20}_{-32}), (845^{+12}_{-25})$ and $\ell = (416^{+22}_{-12}), (750^{+20}_{-750})$, respectively. Such very characteristic spectrum can be explained assuming that the detected structures are the result of acoustic oscillations in the primeval plasma. In this framework, the measured pattern constrains the density parameter $\Omega$ to be $0.85 < \Omega < 1.1$ (95% confidence interval). Other cosmological parameters, like the spectral index of initial density fluctuations, the density parameter for baryons, dark matter and dark energy, are detected or constrained by the BOOMERanG measurements and by other recent CMB anisotropy experiments. When combined with other cosmological observations, these results depict a new, consistent, cosmological scenario., Comment: Proc. of the Erice School on "Neutrinos in Astro, Particle and Nuclear Physics", 18.-26. September 2001, Amand Faessler, Jan Kuckei eds, "Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics", vol. 48
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- 2002
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22. Multiple Peaks in the Angular Power Spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background: Significance and Consequences for Cosmology
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de Bernardis, P., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Contaldi, C. R., Crill, B. P., De Troia, G., Farese, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Jones, W. C., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Polenta, G., Pongetti, F., Prunet, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., and Scaramuzzi, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Three peaks and two dips have been detected in the power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background from the BOOMERANG experiment, at $\ell \sim 210, 540, 840$ and $\ell \sim 420, 750$, respectively. Using model-independent analyses, we find that all five features are statistically significant and we measure their location and amplitude. These are consistent with the adiabatic inflationary model. We also calculate the mean and variance of the peak and dip locations and amplitudes in a large 7-dimensional parameter space of such models, which gives good agreement with the model-independent estimates, and forecast where the next few peaks and dips should be found if the basic paradigm is correct. We test the robustness of our results by comparing Bayesian marginalization techniques on this space with likelihood maximization techniques applied to a second 7-dimensional cosmological parameter space, using an independent computational pipeline, and find excellent agreement: $\Omega_{\rm tot} = 1.02^{+0.06}_{-0.05}$ {\it vs.} $1.04 \pm 0.05$, $\Omega_b h^2 = 0.022^{+0.004}_{-0.003}$ {\it vs.} $0.019^{+0.005}_{-0.004}$, and $n_s = 0.96^{+0.10}_{-0.09}$ {\it vs.} $0.90 \pm 0.08$. The deviation in primordial spectral index $n_s$ is a consequence of the strong correlation with the optical depth., Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Ap.J
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- 2001
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23. The BOOMERANG North America Instrument: a balloon-borne bolometric radiometer optimized for measurements of cosmic background radiation anisotropies from 0.3 to 4 degrees
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Piacentini, F., Ade, P. A. R., Bathia, R., Bock, J. J., Boscaleri, A., Cardoni, P., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., Del Castillo, H., de Troia, G., Farese, P., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E. F., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Lange, A. E., Masi, S., Mauskopf, P. D., Miglio, L., Netterfield, C. B., Palangio, P., Pascale, E., Raccanelli, A., Rao, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J., and Scaramuzzi, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the BOOMERANG North America (BNA) instrument, a balloon-borne bolometric radiometer designed to map the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation with 0.3 deg resolution over a significant portion of the sky. This receiver employs new technologies in bolometers, readout electronics, millimeter-wave optics and filters, cryogenics, scan and attitude reconstruction. All these subsystems are described in detail in this paper. The system has been fully calibrated in flight using a variety of techniques which are described and compared. It has been able to obtain a measurement of the first peak in the CMB angular power spectrum in a single balloon flight, few hours long, and was a prototype of the BOOMERANG Long Duration Balloon (BLDB) experiment., Comment: 40 pages, 22 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2001
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24. A measurement by BOOMERANG of multiple peaks in the angular power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background
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Netterfield, C. B., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Contaldi, C. R., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., Farese, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Jones, W. C., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Pongetti, F., Prunet, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., and Scaramuzzi, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
This paper presents a measurement of the angular power spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background from l=75 to l=1025 (~10' to 5 degrees) from a combined analysis of four 150 GHz channels in the BOOMERANG experiment. The spectrum contains multiple peaks and minima, as predicted by standard adiabatic-inflationary models in which the primordial plasma undergoes acoustic oscillations. These results significantly constrain the values of Omega_tot, Omega_b h^2, Omega_c h^2 and n_s., Comment: changes to reflect version accepted by ApJ
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- 2001
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25. Noise estimation in CMB time-streams and fast map-making. Application to the BOOMERanG98 data
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Prunet, S., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., De Gasperis, G., De Troia, G., Farese, P. C., Ferreira, P. G., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Pongetti, F., Rao, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., and Vittorio, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe here an iterative method for jointly estimating the noise power spectrum from a CMB experiment's time-ordered data, together with the maximum-likelihood map. We test the robustness of this method on simulated Boomerang datasets with realistic noise., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, to appear in proc. of the MPA/ESO/MPA conference "Mining the Sky", Garching, July 31 - August 4 2000
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- 2001
26. Foregrounds in the BOOMERANG-LDB data: a preliminary rms analysis
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Masi, S., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J., Boscaleri, A., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Mauskopf, P. D., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Prunet, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., and Scaramuzzi, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a preliminary analysis of the BOOMERanG LDB maps, focused on foregrounds. BOOMERanG detects dust emission at moderately low galactic latitudes ($b > -20^o$) in bands centered at 90, 150, 240, 410 GHz. At higher Galactic latitudes, we use the BOOMERanG data to set conservative upper limits on the level of contamination at 90 and 150 GHz. We find that the mean square signal correlated with the IRAS/DIRBE dust template is less than 3% of the mean square signal due to CMB anisotropy.
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- 2000
27. First results from the BOOMERanG experiment
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de Bernardis, P., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B. P., De Gasperis, G., De Troia, G., Farese, P. C., Ferreira, P. G., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Pongetti, F., Prunet, S., Rao, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., and Vittorio, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the first results from the BOOMERanG experiment, which mapped at 90, 150, 240 and 410 GHz a wide (3%) region of the microwave sky with minimal local contamination. From the data of the best 150 GHz detector we find evidence for a well defined peak in the power spectrum of temperature fluctuations of the Cosmic Microwave Background, localized at $\ell = 197 \pm 6$, with an amplitude of $(68 \pm 8) \mu K_{CMB}$. The location, width and amplitude of the peak is suggestive of acoustic oscillations in the primeval plasma. In the framework of inflationary adiabatic cosmological models the measured spectrum allows a Bayesian estimate of the curvature of the Universe and of other cosmological parameters. With reasonable priors we find $\Omega = (1.07 \pm 0.06)$ and $n_s = (1.00 \pm 0.08)$ (68%C.L.) in excellent agreement with the expectations from the simplest inflationary theories. We also discuss the limits on the density of baryons, of cold dark matter and on the cosmological constant., Comment: Proc. of the CAPP2000 conference, Verbier, 17-28 July 2000
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- 2000
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28. Detection of anisotropy in the Cosmic Microwave Background at horizon and sub-horizon scales with the BOOMERanG experiment
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de Bernardis, P., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B. P., De Gasperis, G., De Troia, G., Farese, P. C., Ferreira, P. G., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Pongetti, F., Prunet, S., Rao, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., and Vittorio, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
BOOMERanG has recently resolved structures on the last scattering surface at redshift $\sim$ 1100 with high signal to noise ratio. We review the technical advances which made this possible, and we focus on the current results for maps and power spectra, with special attention to the determination of the total mass-energy density in the Universe and of other cosmological parameters.
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- 2000
29. CMB Analysis of Boomerang & Maxima & the Cosmic Parameters {Omega_tot,Omega_b h^2,Omega_cdm h^2,Omega_Lambda,n_s}
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Bond, J. R., Ade, P., Balbi, A., Bock, J., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B., de Bernardis, P., Farese, P., Ferreira, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hanany, S., Hivon, E., Hristov, V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A., Lange, A., Lee, A., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mauskopf, P., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Netterfield, B., Oh, S., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Prunet, S., Rabii, B., Rao, S., Richards, P., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., Sigurdson, K., Smoot, G., Stompor, R., Winant, C., and Wu, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We show how estimates of parameters characterizing inflation-based theories of structure formation localized over the past year when large scale structure (LSS) information from galaxy and cluster surveys was combined with the rapidly developing cosmic microwave background (CMB) data, especially from the recent Boomerang and Maxima balloon experiments. All current CMB data plus a relatively weak prior probability on the Hubble constant, age and LSS points to little mean curvature (Omega_{tot} = 1.08\pm 0.06) and nearly scale invariant initial fluctuations (n_s =1.03\pm 0.08), both predictions of (non-baroque) inflation theory. We emphasize the role that degeneracy among parameters in the L_{pk} = 212\pm 7 position of the (first acoustic) peak plays in defining the $\Omega_{tot}$ range upon marginalization over other variables. Though the CDM density is in the expected range (\Omega_{cdm}h^2=0.17\pm 0.02), the baryon density Omega_bh^2=0.030\pm 0.005 is somewhat above the independent 0.019\pm 0.002 nucleosynthesis estimate. CMB+LSS gives independent evidence for dark energy (Omega_\Lambda=0.66\pm 0.06) at the same level as from supernova (SN1) observations, with a phenomenological quintessence equation of state limited by SN1+CMB+LSS to w_Q<-0.7 cf. the w_Q=-1 cosmological constant case., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figs., in Proc. IAU Symposium 201 (PASP), CITA-2000-65
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- 2000
30. The Cosmic Background Radiation circa nu2K
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Bond, J. R., Pogosyan, D., Prunet, S., collaboration, the MaxiBoom, Ade, P., Balbi, A., Bock, J., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B., de Bernardis, P., Farese, P., Ferreira, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hanany, S., Hivon, E., Hristov, V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A., Lange, A., Lee, A., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mauskopf, P., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Netterfield, B., Oh, S., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Rabii, B., Rao, S., Richards, P., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., Smoot, G., Stompor, R., Winant, C., and Wu, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the implications of cosmic microwave background (CMB) observations and galaxy and cluster surveys of large scale structure (LSS) for theories of cosmic structure formation, especially emphasizing the recent Boomerang and Maxima CMB balloon experiments. The inflation-based cosmic structure formation paradigm we have been operating with for two decades has never been in better shape. Here we primarily focus on a simplified inflation parameter set, {omega_b,omega_{cdm},Omega_{tot}, Omega_\Lambda,n_s,\tau_C, \sigma_8}. Combining all of the current CMB+LSS data points to the remarkable conclusion that the local Hubble patch we can access has little mean curvature (Omega_{tot}=1.08\pm 0.06) and the initial fluctuations were nearly scale invariant (n_s=1.03\pm 0.08), both predictions of (non-baroque) inflation theory. The baryon density is found to be slightly larger than that preferred by independent Big Bang Nucleosynthesis estimates (omega_b=0.030\pm 0.005 cf. 0.019\pm 0.002). The CDM density is in the expected range (omega_{cdm}=0.17 \pm 0.02). Even stranger is the CMB+LSS evidence that the density of the universe is dominated by unclustered energy akin to the cosmological constant (Omega_\Lambda=0.66\pm 0.06), at the same level as that inferred from high redshift supernova observations. We also sketch the CMB+LSS implications for massive neutrinos., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figs., in Proc. Neutrino 2000 (Elsevier), CITA-2000-63
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- 2000
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31. The Quintessential CMB, Past & Future
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Bond, J. R., Pogosyan, D., Prunet, S., Sigurdson, K., collaboration, the MaxiBoom, Ade, P., Balbi, A., Bock, J., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B., de Bernardis, P., Farese, P., Ferreira, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hanany, S., Hivon, E., Hristov, V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A., Lange, A., Lee, A., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mauskopf, P., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Netterfield, B., Oh, S., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Rabii, B., Rao, S., Richards, P., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., Smoot, G., Stompor, R., Winant, C., and Wu, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The past, present and future of cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy research is discussed, with emphasis on the Boomerang and Maxima balloon experiments. These data are combined with large scale structure (LSS) information and high redshift supernova (SN1) observations to explore the inflation-based cosmic structure formation paradigm. Here we primarily focus on a simplified inflation parameter set, {omega_b,omega_{cdm},Omega_{tot}, Omega_Q,w_Q, n_s,tau_C, sigma_8}. After marginalizing over the other cosmic and experimental variables, we find the current CMB+LSS+SN1 data gives Omega_{tot}=1.04\pm 0.05, consistent with (non-baroque) inflation theory. Restricting to Omega_{tot}=1, we find a nearly scale invariant spectrum, n_s =1.03 \pm 0.07. The CDM density, omega_{cdm}=0.17\pm 0.02, is in the expected range, but the baryon density, omega_b=0.030\pm 0.004, is slightly larger than the current nucleosynthesis estimate. Substantial dark energy is inferred, Omega_Q\approx 0.68\pm 0.05, and CMB+LSS Omega_Q values are compatible with the independent SN1 estimates. The dark energy equation of state, parameterized by a quintessence-field pressure-to-density ratio w_Q, is not well determined by CMB+LSS (w_Q<-0.3 at 95%CL), but when combined with SN1 the resulting w_Q<-0.7 limit is quite consistent with the w_Q=-1 cosmological constant case. Though forecasts of statistical errors on parameters for current and future experiments are rosy, rooting out systematic errors will define the true progress., Comment: 14 pages, 3 figs., in Proc. CAPP-2000 (AIP), CITA-2000-64
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- 2000
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32. Cosmology from Maxima-1, Boomerang and COBE/DMR CMB Observations
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Jaffe, A. H., Ade, P. A. R., Balbi, A., Bock, J. J, Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., Farese, P., Ferreira, P. G., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hanany, S., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Lange, A. E., Lee, A. T., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Oh, S., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Prunet, S., Rabii, B., Rao, S., Richards, P. L., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., Smoot, G. F., Stompor, R., Winant, C. D., and Wu, J. H. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent results from BOOMERANG-98 and MAXIMA-1, taken together with COBE-DMR, provide consistent and high signal-to-noise measurements of the CMB power spectrum at spherical harmonic multipole bands over $2<\ell\lta800$. Analysis of the combined data yields 68% (95%) confidence limits on the total density, $\Omega_{\rm {tot}}\simeq 1.11 \pm 0.07 (^{+0.13}_{-0.12})$, the baryon density, $\Omega_b h^2\simeq 0.032^{+0.005}_{-0.004} (^{+0.009}_{-0.008})$, and the scalar spectral tilt, $n_s\simeq1.01^{+0.09}_{-0.07} (^{+0.17}_{-0.14})$. These data are consistent with inflationary initial conditions for structure formation. Taken together with other cosmological observations, they imply the existence of both non-baryonic dark matter and dark energy in the universe., Comment: 5 Pages, 2 Figures, Changes to match published version
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- 2000
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33. First Estimations of Cosmological Parameters From BOOMERANG
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Lange, A. E., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., Farese, P., Ferreira, P., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Prunet, S., Rao, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., and Sforna, D.
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Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
The anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation contains information about the contents and history of the universe. We report new limits on cosmological parameters derived from the angular power spectrum measured in the first Antarctic flight of the BOOMERANG experiment. Within the framework of inflation-motivated adiabatic cold dark matter models, and using only weakly restrictive prior probabilites on the age of the universe and the Hubble expansion parameter $h$, we find that the curvature is consistent with flat and that the primordial fluctuation spectrum is consistent with scale invariant, in agreement with the basic inflation paradigm. We find that the data prefer a baryon density $\Omega_b h^2$ above, though similar to, the estimates from light element abundances and big bang nucleosynthesis. When combined with large scale structure observations, the BOOMERANG data provide clear detections of both dark matter and dark energy contributions to the total energy density $\Omega_{\rm {tot}}$, independent of data from high redshift supernovae., Comment: As submitted to PRD, revised longer version with an additional figure
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- 2000
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34. A Flat Universe from High-Resolution Maps of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation
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de Bernardis, P., Ade, P. A. R., Bock, J. J., Bond, J. R., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Coble, K., Crill, B. P., De Gasperis, G., Farese, P. C., Ferreira, P. G., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hivon, E., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Lange, A. E., Martinis, L., Masi, S., Mason, P., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, A., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Pogosyan, D., Prunet, S., Rao, S., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scaramuzzi, F., Sforna, D., and Vittorio, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The blackbody radiation left over from the Big Bang has been transformed by the expansion of the Universe into the nearly isotropic 2.73K Cosmic Microwave Background. Tiny inhomogeneities in the early Universe left their imprint on the microwave background in the form of small anisotropies in its temperature. These anisotropies contain information about basic cosmological parameters, particularly the total energy density and curvature of the universe. Here we report the first images of resolved structure in the microwave background anisotropies over a significant part of the sky. Maps at four frequencies clearly distinguish the microwave background from foreground emission. We compute the angular power spectrum of the microwave background, and find a peak at Legendre multipole $\ell_{peak}=(197 \pm 6)$, with an amplitude $DT_{200}=(69 \pm 8)\mu K$. This is consistent with that expected for cold dark matter models in a flat (euclidean) Universe, as favoured by standard inflationary scenarios.
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- 2000
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35. Social Learning in Food Quality Governance – Evidences from Geographical Indications Amendments
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Hanna Edelmann, Xiomara Fernanda Quiñones-Ruiz, Marianne Penker, Silvia Scaramuzzi, Kristina Broscha, Philippe Jeanneaux, Giovanni Belletti, and Andrea Marescotti
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geographical indications ,food ,social learning ,amendment ,management and transition framework ,france ,italy ,Political institutions and public administration (General) ,JF20-2112 - Abstract
Food producers can define collective quality standards and legally protect the origin, characteristics, traditions and the reputation of a place-based product through geographical indications (GIs). Producers, processors and other relevant actors in the GI production system codify and adapt their production rules via the GI Product Specification and possible amendments. Based on the Management and Transition Framework (Pahl-Wostl et al. 2010), we developed a framework to analyze the role of social learning in food quality governance and adaptation. We analyzed as case studies two cheeses protected by a Protected Designation of Origin, Laguiole (France) and Bitto (Italy). They were selected according to diverse institutional contexts, existing amendments of the Product Specification, and access to documents and interviewees willing and capable to recall the amendment processes. A comparative case study approach served to analyze the amendment processes embedded in different arenas for social learning. Actors amended their Product Specification due to both system-internal (e.g., locally generated knowledge, negotiation processes) and external (e.g., market evolution, new breeds/varieties) pressures. In the two cases, there have been social learning processes among local producers, with diverging outcomes. The results shed light on the dynamic interactions of the drivers for amendments, knowledge generation and integration processes, social learning and negotiation, learning outcomes as well as re–evaluation and re-negotiation. The design of multi-level social learning arenas can help protecting the product identity of evolving social-ecological systems and may contribute to a consistent and long-term strategy going beyond short-term local pressures.
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- 2020
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36. Part time patching treatment outcomes in children with amblyopia with and without fusion maldevelopment nystagmus: An eye movement study.
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Matteo Scaramuzzi, Jordan Murray, Jorge Otero-Millan, Paolo Nucci, Aasef G Shaikh, and Fatema F Ghasia
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
PURPOSE:We investigated how the abnormalities of fixation eye movements (FEMs) of the amblyopic eye were linked with treatment outcomes following part-time patching therapy in children with amblyopia. METHODS:We recruited 53 patients, with at least 12 months of patching, and measured FEMs at the end of treatment. Subjects were classified based on FEM waveforms (those without nystagmus = 21, those with nystagmus without fusion maldevelopment nystagmus (FMN) = 21, and those with FMN = 11) and based on clinical type of amblyopia (anisometropic = 18, strabismic = 6, and mixed = 29). The treatment outcomes such as duration of treatment of receiving part-time patching therapy, visual acuity and stereo-acuity deficits at the end of treatment were determined. Bivariate contour ellipse area (BCEA), fast (fixational saccade/quick phases), and slow (inter-saccadic drifts/slow phases) FEMs of the fellow and amblyopic eye were analyzed. RESULTS:Anisometropic group had less residual amblyopia (0.23±0.19logMAR acuity) compared to strabismic/mixed (0.36±0.26) groups (p = 0.007). Treatment duration in patients without nystagmus was lower (12.6±9.5months) compared to nystagmus without FMN (25.6±23.2) and FMN (29.5±20.4) groups (p = 0.006). Patients without nystagmus had better stereopsis at the end of treatment (2.3±0.84logarcsecs) compared to nystagmus without FMN (2.6±0.84) group (p = 0.003). The majority of patients with FMN (8/11) had absent stereopsis. BCEA of the amblyopic eye was higher in patients with greater residual visual acuity deficits in patients without nystagmus. No such association was seen in Nystagmus no FMN and FMN groups. Increased amplitude of fast FEMs, increased eye position variance and eye velocity of slow FEMs were seen in patients who had received longer duration of part time patching therapy and in those with greater residual amblyopia, and poor stereopsis at the end of treatment. CONCLUSIONS:Assessment of FEM waveforms and fast and slow FEM characteristics are important measures while describing fixation instability in amblyopia. Several FEM abnormalities were associated with stereo-acuity and visual acuity deficits and treatment duration in patients with amblyopia treated with part time patching therapy.
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- 2020
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37. BOOMERanG: a scanning telescope for 10 arcminutes resolution CMB maps
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Masi, S., Ade, P. A. R., Artusa, R., Bock, J. J., Boscaleri, A., Crill, B. P., de Bernardis, P., De Troia, G., Farese, P. C., Giacometti, M., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Lange, A. E., Lee, A. T., Martinis, L., Mason, P. V., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, F., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Richards, P. L., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., and Scaramuzzi, F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The BOOMERanG experiment is a stratospheric balloon telescope intended to measure the Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropy at angular scales between a few degrees and ten arcminutes. The experiment features a wide focal plane with 16 detectors in the frequency bands centered at 90, 150, 220, 400 GHz, with FWHM ranging between 18 and 10 arcmin. It will be flown on a long duration (7-14 days) flight circumnavigating Antarctica at the end of 1998. The instrument was flown with a reduced focal plane (6 detectors, 90 and 150 GHz bands, 25 to 15 arcmin FWHM) on a qualification flight from Texas, in August 1997. A wide (~300 sq. deg, i.e. about 5000 independent beams at 150 GHz) sky area was mapped in the constellations of Capricornus, Aquarius, Cetus, with very low foreground contamination. The instrument was calibrated using the CMB dipole and observations of Jupiter. The LDB version of the instrument has been qualified and shipped to Antarctica., Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures
- Published
- 1999
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38. Mapping the CMB Sky: The BOOMERANG experiment
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de Bernardis, P., Ade, P. A. R., Artusa, R., Bock, J. J., Boscaleri, A., Crill, B. P., De Troia, G., Farese, P. C., Giacommetti, M., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Lange, A. E., Lee, A. T., Masi, S., Martinis, L., Mason, P. V., Mauskopf, P. D., Melchiorri, F., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Richards, P. L., Ruhl, J. E., and Scaramuzzi, F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the BOOMERanG experiment, a stratospheric balloon telescope intended to measure the Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropy at angular scales between a few degrees and ten arcminutes. The experiment has been optimized for a long duration (7 to 14 days) flight circumnavigating Antarctica at the end of 1998. A test flight was performed on Aug.30, 1997 in Texas. The level of performance achieved in the test flight was satisfactory and compatible with the requirements for the long duration flight., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 1999
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39. Measurement of a Peak in the Cosmic Microwave Background Power Spectrum from the North American test flight of BOOMERANG
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Mauskopf, P. D., Ade, P. A. R., de Bernardis, P., Bock, J. J., Borrill, J., Boscaleri, A., Crill, B. P., DeGasperis, G., De Troia, G., Farese, P., Ferreira, P. G., Ganga, K., Giacometti, M., Hanany, S., Hristov, V. V., Iacoangeli, A., Jaffe, A. H., Lange, A. E., Lee, A. T., Masi, S., Melchiorri, A., Melchiorri, F., Miglio, L., Montroy, T., Netterfield, C. B., Pascale, E., Piacentini, F., Richards, P. L., Romeo, G., Ruhl, J. E., Scannapieco, E., Scaramuzzi, F., Stompor, R., and Vittorio, N.
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Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We describe a measurement of the angular power spectrum of anisotropies in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) from 0.3 degrees to ~10 degrees from the North American test flight of the BOOMERANG experiment. BOOMERANG is a balloon-borne telescope with a bolometric receiver designed to map CMB anisotropies on a Long Duration Balloon flight. During a 6-hour test flight of a prototype system in 1997, we mapped > 200 square degrees at high galactic latitudes in two bands centered at 90 and 150 GHz with a resolution of 26 and 16.6 arcmin FWHM respectively. Analysis of the maps gives a power spectrum with a peak at angular scales of ~1 degree with an amplitude ~70 uK., Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure LaTeX, emulateapj.sty
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- 1999
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40. Integrated Supply Chain Projects and multifunctional local development: the creation of a Perfume Valley in Tuscany
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Scaramuzzi, Silvia, Belletti, Giovanni, and Biagioni, Paola
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- 2020
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41. Effects of Heat Stress on Follicular Physiology in Dairy Cows
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Fabio De Rensis, Roberta Saleri, Irina Garcia-Ispierto, Rex Scaramuzzi, and Fernando López-Gatius
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follicular cooling ,graafian follicle ,oocyte competence ,ovulation failure ,temperature differential ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Follicular organization starts during mid-to-late fetal life with the formation of primordial follicles. The bilateral interplay between the oocyte and adjoining somatic cells during follicular growth and ovulation may be sensitive to heat stress (HS). Mechanisms giving rise to pre-ovulatory temperature gradients across reproductive tissues are mostly regulated by the pre-ovulatory follicle, and because the cooling of the gonads and genital tract depends on a counter-current transfer system of heat, HS may be considered a major factor impairing ovulation, fertilization and early embryo development. There is evidence of a long-lasting influence of HS on oogenesis and final follicular maturation. Follicular stages that are susceptible to HS have not been precisely determined. Therefore, the aim of this review was to describe the influence of HS during the staged follicular development in dairy cattle, from the activation of primordial follicles to ovulation. Some clinical prospects are also considered.
- Published
- 2021
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42. Evaluation of Micro Satellite Instability and Mismatch Repair Status in Different Solid Tumors: A Multicenter Analysis in a Real World Setting
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Umberto Malapelle, Paola Parente, Francesco Pepe, Caterina De Luca, Pasquale Pisapia, Roberta Sgariglia, Mariantonia Nacchio, Gianluca Gragnano, Gianluca Russo, Floriana Conticelli, Claudio Bellevicine, Elena Vigliar, Antonino Iaccarino, Claudia Covelli, Mariangela Balistreri, Celeste Clemente, Giovanni Perrone, Angela Danza, Fabio Scaramuzzi, Matteo Fassan, Giancarlo Troncone, and Paolo Graziano
- Subjects
predictive molecular pathology ,IHC ,fully automated RT-PCR ,microfluidic ,MMR ,MSI ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) play a key role in the treatment of advanced stage colorectal cancer (CRC) patients featuring a deficient DNA mismatch repair (dMMR) system or a high microsatellite instability (MSI-H) profile. However, beyond the established role in CRC patients, ICIs have highly proven efficacy in other solid tumors featuring MSI-H/dMMR status represented by endometrial, gastric, ovarian, prostatic, and pancreatic carcinomas (EC, GC, OC, PrC, and PaC). Our aim was to compare the concordance rates among the Idylla™ MSI test, TapeStation 4200, and immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis in assessing MSI-H/dMMR status in EC, GC, OC, PrC, and PaC patients. The Sanger sequencing-based Titano MSI test was used in discordant cases. One hundred and eighty-five cases (n = 40 PrC, n = 39 GC, n = 38 OC, n = 35 PaC, and n = 33 EC) were retrospectively selected. MMR protein expression was evaluated by IHC. After DNA quality and quantity evaluations, the IdyllaTM and TapeStation 4200 platforms were adopted for the evaluation of MSI status. Remarkably, compared to IHC, the Idylla™ platform achieved a global concordance rate of 94.5% (154/163) for the microsatellite stable (MSS)/proficient MMR (pMMR) cases and 77.3% (17/22) for the MSI-H/dMMR cases. Similarly, a global concordance rate of 91.4% (149/163) and 68.2% (15/22) for MSS/pMMR and MSI-H/dMMR cases was also identified between IHC and the TapeStation 4200 microfluidic system. In addition, a global concordance of 93.1% (148/159) and 69.2% (18/26) for MSS/pMMR and MSI-H/dMMR cases was observed between the Idylla™ and TapeStation 4200 platforms. Discordant cases were analyzed using the Titano MSI kit. Overall, our data pinpointed a central role for molecular techniques in the diagnostic evaluation of dMMR/MSI-H status not only in CRC patients but also in other types of solid tumors.
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
43. The Post-Surgical Long-Term Behaviour of Lung Carcinoid Tumours
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Tancredi, Antonio, Muscarella, Lucia Anna, la Torre, Annamaria, Scaramuzzi, Roberto, Valori, Vanna Maria, Fazio, Vito Michele, and Scaramuzzi, Gerardo
- Published
- 2015
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44. Experimental Observation of Flat Bands in One-Dimensional Chiral Magnonic Crystals.
- Author
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Tacchi, Silvia, Flores-Farías, Jorge, Petti, Daniela, Brevis, Felipe, Cattoni, Andrea, Scaramuzzi, Giuseppe, Girardi, Davide, Cortés-Ortuño, David, Gallardo, Rodolfo A., Albisetti, Edoardo, Carlotti, Giovanni, and Landeros, Pedro
- Published
- 2023
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45. The effect of nutrition and metabolic status on the development of follicles, oocytes and embryos in ruminants
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J. Dupont, R.J. Scaramuzzi, and M. Reverchon
- Subjects
nutrients ,metabolic hormones ,ovary ,mechanism of action ,ruminant ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
The impact of nutrition and energy reserves on the fertility of ruminants has been extensively described. However, the metabolic factors and the molecular mechanisms involved in the interactions between nutrition and ovarian function are still poorly understood. These factors could be hormonal (either reproductive and/or metabolic) and/or dietary and metabolic (glucose, amino acids and fatty acids). In this review, we briefly summarize the impact of those nutrients (fatty acids, glucose and amino acids) and metabolic hormones (insulin/IGF-I, growth hormone, T3/4, ghrelin, apelin and the adipokines (leptin, adiponectin and resistin)) implicated in the development of ovarian follicles, oocytes and embryos in ruminants. We then discuss the current hypotheses on the mechanisms of action of these factors on ovarian function. We particularly describe the role of some energy sensors including adenosine monophosphate-activated kinase and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors in the ovarian cells.
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- 2014
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46. Nutrition et métabolisme : quel lien avec le développement folliculaire et embryonnaire ches les mammifères ?
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J. DUPONT, R.J. SCARAMUZZI, and P. FROMENT
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Animal culture ,SF1-1100 ,Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling ,SH1-691 - Abstract
L’influence du poids et des apports énergétiques sur la fertilité chez les animaux, mais aussi chez l’Homme est reconnue depuis très longtemps. Les animaux ou individus en mauvaise condition, ou perdant du poids, ont généralement des performances reproductives décevantes. Les pertes économiques associées à l’infertilité sont parfois importantes, et dépassent chez le bovin largement le coût de l’insémination et de la semence. De nombreux arguments suggèrent que l’influence de la nutrition sur la reproduction s’exerce par l’intermédiaire des composants du régime alimentaire comme les lipides, le glucose, les acides aminés et les minéraux au niveau de l’axe hypothalamo-hypophysaire et aussi directement au niveau des gonades. Ces effets nutritionnels peuvent aussi s’exercer par une modulation des hormones du métabolisme comme l’insuline, l’insulin-like growth factor 1, l’hormone de croissance, la ghréline, les hormones thyroïdiennes ou encore les hormones produites et secrétées par le tissu adipeux blanc. Dans cette revue nous rapportons les effets connus de ces nutriments et hormones métaboliques sur le développement folliculaire, les cellules ovariennes, la qualité ovocytaire ainsi que sur le développement embryonnaire précoce en prenant l’exemple de différentes espèces de mammifères.
- Published
- 2016
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47. The 'Ram Effect': A 'Non-Classical' Mechanism for Inducing LH Surges in Sheep.
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Claude Fabre-Nys, Audrey Chanvallon, Joëlle Dupont, Lionel Lardic, Didier Lomet, Stéphanie Martinet, and Rex J Scaramuzzi
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
During spring sheep do not normally ovulate but exposure to a ram can induce ovulation. In some ewes an LH surge is induced immediately after exposure to a ram thus raising questions about the control of this precocious LH surge. Our first aim was to determine the plasma concentrations of oestradiol (E2) E2 in anoestrous ewes before and after the "ram effect" in ewes that had a "precocious" LH surge (starting within 6 hours), a "normal" surge (between 6 and 28h) and "late» surge (not detected by 56h). In another experiment we tested if a small increase in circulating E2 could induce an LH surge in anoestrus ewes. The concentration of E2 significantly was not different at the time of ram introduction among ewes with the three types of LH surge. "Precocious" LH surges were not preceded by a large increase in E2 unlike "normal" surges and small elevations of circulating E2 alone were unable to induce LH surges. These results show that the "precocious" LH surge was not the result of E2 positive feedback. Our second aim was to test if noradrenaline (NA) is involved in the LH response to the "ram effect". Using double labelling for Fos and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) we showed that exposure of anoestrous ewes to a ram induced a higher density of cells positive for both in the A1 nucleus and the Locus Coeruleus complex compared to unstimulated controls. Finally, the administration by retrodialysis into the preoptic area, of NA increased the proportion of ewes with an LH response to ram odor whereas treatment with the α1 antagonist Prazosin decreased the LH pulse frequency and amplitude induced by a sexually active ram. Collectively these results suggest that in anoestrous ewes NA is involved in ram-induced LH secretion as observed in other induced ovulators.
- Published
- 2016
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48. Nanostructured SBA-15 silica as an adjuvant in immunizations with hepatitis B vaccine
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Karina Scaramuzzi, Denise Cristina André Oliveira, Luciana Vieira Carvalho, Denise Vilarinho Tambourgi, Elisabeth Christina Nunes Tenório, Marisa Rizzi, Juliana Mussalem, Márcia Carvalho de Abreu Fantini, Viviane Fongaro Botosso, and Osvaldo Augusto Sant´Anna
- Subjects
Hepatitis B ,Oral vaccination ,Adjuvants ,Immunological memory ,Medicine - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objective: To evaluate the applicability of SBA-15 silica as an adjuvant in immunizations with purified particles of the viral protein HBsAg, the main component of hepatitis B vaccine, Butang®, produced by Instituto Butantan. Methods: BALB/c mice orally or subcutaneously received 0.5 μg of HBsAg adsorbed/encapsulated to SBA-15 or adsorbed to Al(OH)3. To assess the secondary immune response, a subcutaneous booster was administered 30 days after the first immunization. Individual serum and fecal samples of each group were periodically collected for specific antibody titration by ELISA. Results: Analysis of secretory IgA showed that mice orally primed with HBsAg on SBA-15 had increased levels of specific antibodies in primary and secondary immune responses. Specific serum IgA and IgG titers in HBsAg:SBA-15-orally immunized mice reached higher levels after the booster, demonstrating the effectiveness of oral vaccination with the use of silica. All immunized groups showed higher IgG1 levels. Conclusion: Our results clearly indicate the promising use of SBA-15 as an adjuvant, especially in oral immunizations.
- Published
- 2011
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49. New insights into the influence of breed and time of the year on the response of ewes to the ‘ram effect’
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A. Chanvallon, L. Sagot, E. Pottier, N. Debus, D. François, T. Fassier, R.J. Scaramuzzi, and C. Fabre-Nys
- Subjects
seasonality ,sheep ,ram effect ,anoestrus ,breed ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
Exposure of anoestrous ewes to rams induces an increase in LH secretion, eventually leading to ovulation. This technique therefore is an effective, low-cost and hormone-free way of mating sheep outside the breeding season. However, the use of this technique is limited by the variability of the ewes’ responses. In this study, our objective was to understand more completely the origins of this variability and to determine the relative roles of breed, the point in time during anoestrus and the depth of anoestrus on the response to the ‘ram effect’. In the first experiment, the pattern of anoestrus on the basis of the concentration of progesterone determined weekly, was determined in four breeds including two less seasonal (Mérinos d'Arles and Romane), one highly seasonal (Mouton Vendéen) and one intermediate (Île-de-France) breeds. Anoestrus was longer and deeper in Mouton Vendéen and Île-de-France than in Romane or Mérinos d'Arles. In the second experiment, we used the same four breeds and tested their hypophyseal response to a challenge with a single dose of 75 ng gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in early, mid and late anoestrus, and then we examined their endocrine and ovarian responses to the ‘ram effect’. Most (97%) ewes responded to GnRH and most (93%) showed a short-term increase in LH pulsatility following the ‘ram effect’. The responses in both cases were higher in females that went on to ovulate, suggesting that the magnitude of the hypophyseal response to a GnRH challenge could be a predictor of the response to the ‘ram effect’. As previously observed, the best ovarian response was in Mérinos d'Arles at the end of anoestrus. However, there was no relationship between the proportion of females in the flock showing spontaneous ovulation and the response to the ‘ram effect’ of anoestrous ewes from the same flock.
- Published
- 2011
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50. Effect of season on luteal activity during the post partum period of dairy cows in temperate areas
- Author
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F. De Rensis, F. López-Gatius, T. Capelli, E. Molina, M. Techakumphu, and R.J. Scaramuzzi
- Subjects
progesterone ,heat stress ,season ,dairy cow ,Ovsynch ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
Seasonal effects on luteal activity during post partum were evaluated in two consecutive studies in 253 dairy cows in Northern Italy. In study 1, plasma progesterone concentrations were determined on days 14, 21, 28, 35, 42, 49 and 56 post partum and in study 2 cows were synchronized and inseminated at a fixed time using two regimes based on the ‘Ovsynch’ protocol. Study 1: Animals were classified as luteal (progesterone >1.5 ng/ml in at least two consecutive samples) or non-luteal (progesterone
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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