22 results on '"Scarcia G."'
Search Results
2. CD34+ cells in peripheral blood of healthy human beings and allergic subjects: clue to acute and minimal persistent inflammation
- Author
-
Mastrandrea, F., Coradduzza, G., De Vita, L., Minardi, A., Scarcia, G., Marcucci, F., and Parmiani, S.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. IgE responses to Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus native major allergens Der p 1 and Der p 2 during long-term specific immunotherapy
- Author
-
Mastrandrea, F., Serio, G., Minardi, A., Coradduzza, G., Rossi, N., Scarcia, G., Maietta, G., Iacobelli, A., Lamanna, C., and Tursi, A.
- Published
- 1997
4. Identification of nematodes associated with Rhyncophorus ferrugineus in South ltaly
- Author
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Fanelli E., Oreste M., Troccoli A., Scarcia G., Vovlas A., Trisciuzzi N., Tarasco E., and De Luca F.
- Subjects
DNA amplification ,nematode fauna ,red palm weevil ,sequencing - Published
- 2017
5. Occurrence of Sheraphelenchus sucus (Nematoda: Aphelenchoidinae) and Panagrellus sp. (Rhabditida: Panagrolaimidae) associated to pomegranate decaying fruit in Italy
- Author
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Fanelli E., Troccoli A., Vovlas N., Scarcia G., Mincuzzi A., Sanzani S.M., Ippolito A., and De Luca F.
- Subjects
18S rRNA gene ,Sheraphelenchus sucus ,molecular analysis ,phylogenesis ,Panagrolaimidae ,D2-D3 expansion domains - Abstract
Two different nematode species were recovered from pomegranate decaying fruit in two localities in Southern Italy: the mycetophagus nematode Sheraphelenchus sucus and a bacterial feeder nematode belonging to the Panagrolaimidae (Rhabditida) family. Morphometrics of the Italian population of S. sucus closely resemble that of the type population, whereas some differences were found when compared with another population from Iran. Molecular characterization of the Italian S. sucus using the 18S rRNA gene, D2-D3 expansion domains of the 28S rDNA, the ITS region, and the partial mitochondrial COI were carried out. Sequences of the 18S rRNA gene, the D2-D3 domains, and the ITS were analyzed using several methods for inferring phylogeny to reconstruct the relationships among Sheraphelenchus and Bursaphelenchus species. The bacterial feeder Panagrellus sp. was characterized at the molecular level only. The D2-D3 expansion domains and ITS sequences of this Italian panagrolaimid were determined. The D2-D3 sequences of the Italian panagrolaimid showed 99% similarity with the corresponding sequence of Panagrellus sp. associated with Rhynchophorus ferrugineus. This is the first report on the tritrophic association of S. sucus and Rhabditida that uses both insects and pomegranate fruit as hosts.
- Published
- 2017
6. L'OPERA DI REDAZIONE DEL DIZIONARIO PERSIANO—ITALIANO
- Author
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D'Erme, G. M., Piemontese, A. M., Scarcia, G., and Vercellin, G.
- Published
- 1973
7. Caratterizzazione di Sheraphelenchus entomophagus Nickle, 1970 (Nematoda: Aphelenchoidinae) associato a melograno in Italia
- Author
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Fanelli E., Troccoli A., Vovlas N., Scarcia G., Mincuzzi A.M., Sanzani S.M., Ippolito A., and De Luca F.
- Subjects
no key words - Abstract
no abstract
- Published
- 2016
8. Biodiversità della nematofauna associata a Rhynchophorus ferrugineus
- Author
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Scarcia G., Fanelli E., Oreste M., Troccoli A., Vovlas A., Trisciuzzi N., Tarasco E., and De Luca F.
- Subjects
no key words - Abstract
no abstract
- Published
- 2016
9. Adherence issues related to sublingual immunotherapy as perceived by allergists
- Author
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Scurati, S., Frati, F., Passalacqua, G., Puccinelli, P., Hilaire, C., Incorvaia, C., D Avino, G., Comi, R., Lo Schiavo, M., Pezzuto, F., Montera, C., Pio, A., Teresa Ielpo, M., Cellini, F., Vicentini, L., Pecorari, R., Aresu, T., Capra, L., Benedictis, E., Bombi, C., Zauli, D., Vanzi, A., Alberto Paltrinieri, C., Bondioli, A., Paletta, I., Ventura, D., Mei, F., Paolini, F., Colangelo, C., Cavallucci, E., Cucinelli, F., Tinari, R., Ermini, G., Beltrami, V., Novembre, E., Begliomini, C., Marchese, E., Solito, E., Ammannati, V., Molino, G., Galli, E., Baldassini, M., Di Michele, L., Calvani, M., Gidaro, M., Venuti, A., Li Bianchi, E., Benassi, F., Pocobelli, D., Zangari, P., Rocco, M. G., Lo Vecchio, A., Pingitore, G., Grimaldi, O., Schiavino, D., Perrone, N., Antonietta Frieri, M., Di Rienzo, V., Tripodi, S., Scarpa, A., Tomsic, M., Bonaguro, R., Enrico Senna, G., Sirena, A., Turatello, F., Crescioli, S., Favero, E., Billeri, L., Chieco Bianchi, F., Gemignani, C., Zanforlin, M., Angiola Crivellaro, M., Hendrick, B., Maltauro, A., Masieri, S., Elisabetta Conte, M., Fama, M., Pozzan, M., Bonadonna, P., Casanova, S., Vallerani, E., Schiappoli, M., Borghesan, F., Giro, G., Casotto, S., Berardino, L., Zanoni, G., Ariano, R., Aquilina, R., Pellegrino, R., Marsico, P., Del Giudice, A., Narzisi, G., Tomaselli, V., Fornaca, G., Favro, M., Loperfido, B., Gallo, C., Buffoni, S., Gani, F., Raviolo, P., Faggionato, S., Truffelli, T., Vivalda, L., Albano, M., Enzo Rossi, R., Lattuada, G., Bona, F., Quaglio, L., Chiesa, A., Trapani, M., Seminara, R., Cucchi, B., Oderda, S., Borio, G., Galeasso, G., Garbaccio, P., Marco, A., Marengo, F., Cadario, G., Manzoni, S., Vinay, C., Curcio, A., Silvestri, A., Peduto, A., Riario-Sforza, G. G., Maria Forgnone, A., Barocelli, P., Tartaglia, N., Feyles, G., Giacone, A., Ricca, V., Guida, G., Nebiolo, F., Bommarito, L., Heffler, E., Vietti, F., Galimberti, M., Savi, E., Pappacoda, A., Bottero, P., Porcu, S., Felice, G., Berra, D., Francesca Spina, M., Pravettoni, V., Calamari, A. M., Varin, E., Iemoli, E., Lietti, D., Ghiglioni, D., Alessandro Fiocchi, Tosi, A., Poppa, M., Caviglia, A., Restuccia, M., Russello, M., Alciato, P., Manzotti, G., Ranghino, E., Luraschi, G., Rapetti, A., Rivolta, F., Allegri, F., Terracciano, L., Agostinis, F., Paolo Piras, P., Ronchi, G., Gaspardini, G., Caria, V., Tolu, F., Fantasia, D., Carta, P., Moraschini, A., Quilleri, R., Santelli, A., Prandini, P., Del Giudice, G., Apollonio, A., Bonazza, L., Teresa Franzini, M., Branchi, S., Zanca, M., Rinaldi, S., Catelli, L., Zanoletti, T., Cosentino, C., Della Torre, F., Cremonte, L., Musazzi, D., Suli, C., Rivolta, L., Ottolenghi, A., Marino, G., Sterza, G., Sambugaro, R., Orlandini, A., Minale, P., Voltolini, S., Bignardi, D., Omodeo, P., Tiri, A., Milani, S., Ronchi, B., Licardi, G., Bruni, P., Scibilia, J., Schroeder, J., Crosti, F., Maltagliati, A., Alesina, M. R., Mosca, M., Leone, G., Napolitano, G., Di Gruttola, G., Scala, G., Mascio, S., Valente, A., Marchetiello, I., Catello, R., Gazulli, A., Del Prete, A., Varricchio, A. M., Carbone, A., Forestieri, A., Stillitano, M., Leonetti, L., Tirroni, E., Castellano, F., Abbagnara, F., Romano, F., Levanti, C., Cilia, M., Longo, R., Ferrari, A., Merenda, R., Di Ponti, A., Guercio, E., Surace, L., Ammendola, G., Tansella, F., Peccarisi, L., Stragapede, L., Minenna, M., Granato, M., Fuiano, N., Pannofino, A., Ciuffreda, S., Giannotta, A., Morero, G., D Oronzio, L., Taddeo, G., Nettis, E., Cinquepalmi, G., Lamanna, C., Mastrandrea, F., Minelli, M., Salamino, F., Muratore, L., Latorre, F., Quarta, C., Ventura, M., D Ippolito, G., Giannoccaro, F., Dambra, P., Pinto, L., Triggiani, M., Munno, G., Manfredi, G., Lonero, G., Damiano, V., Errico, G., Di Leo, E., Manzari, F., Spagna, V., Arsieni, A., Matarrese, A., Mazzarella, G., Scarcia, G., Scarano, R., Ferrannini, A., Pastore, A., Maionchi, P., Filannino, L., Tria, M., Giuliano, G., Damiani, E., Scichilone, N., Marchese, M., Lucania, A., Marino, M., Strazzeri, L., Tumminello, S., Vitale, G. I., Gulotta, S., Gragotto, G., Zambito, M., Greco, D., Valenti, G., Licitra, G., Cannata, E., Filpi, R., Contraffatto, M., Sichili, S., Randazzo, S., Scarantino, G., Lo Porto, B., Pavone, F., Di Bartolo, C., Paternò, A., Rapisarda, F., Laudani, E., Leonardi, S., Padua, V., Cabibbo, G., Marino Guzzardi, G., Deluca, F., Agozzino, C., Pettinato, R., Ghini, M., Scurati S., Frati F., Passalacqua G., Puccinelli P., Hilaire C., Incorvaia C., D'Avino G., Comi R., Lo Schiavo M., Pezzuto F., Montera C., Pio A., Teresa Ielpo M., Cellini F., Vicentini L., Pecorari R., Aresu T., Capra L., De Benedictis E., Bombi C., Zauli D., Vanzi A., Alberto Paltrinieri C., Bondioli A., Paletta I., Ventura D., Mei F., Paolini F., Colangelo C., Cavallucci E., Cucinelli F., Tinari R., Ermini G., Beltrami V., Novembre E., Begliomini C., Marchese E., Solito E., Ammannati V., Molino G., Galli E., Baldassini M., Di Michele L., Calvani M., Gidaro M., Venuti A., Li Bianchi E., Benassi F., Pocobelli D., Zangari P., De Rocco M.G., Lo Vecchio A., Pingitore G., Grimaldi O., Schiavino D., Perrone N., Antonietta Frieri M., Di Rienzo V., Tripodi S., Scarpa A., Tomsic M., Bonaguro R., Enrico Senna G., Sirena A., Turatello F., Crescioli S., Favero E., Billeri L., Chieco Bianchi F., Gemignani C., Zanforlin M., Angiola Crivellaro M., Hendrick B., Maltauro A., Masieri S., Elisabetta Conte M., Fama M., Pozzan M., Bonadonna P., Casanova S., Vallerani E., Schiappoli M., Borghesan F., Giro G., Casotto S., Berardino L., Zanoni G., Ariano R., Aquilina R., Pellegrino R., Marsico P., Del Giudice A., Narzisi G., Tomaselli V., Fornaca G., Favro M., Loperfido B., Gallo C., Buffoni S., Gani F., Raviolo P., Faggionato S., Truffelli T., Vivalda L., Albano M., Enzo Rossi R., Lattuada G., Bona F., Quaglio L., Chiesa A., Trapani M., Seminara R., Cucchi B., Oderda S., Borio G., Galeasso G., Garbaccio P., De Marco A., Marengo F., Cadario G., Manzoni S., Vinay C., Curcio A., Silvestri A., Peduto A., Riario-Sforza G.G., Maria Forgnone A., Barocelli P., Tartaglia N., Feyles G., Giacone A., Ricca V., Guida G., Nebiolo F., Bommarito L., Heffler E., Vietti F., Galimberti M., Savi E., Pappacoda A., Bottero P., Porcu S., Felice G., Berra D., Francesca Spina M., Pravettoni V., Calamari A.M., Varin E., Iemoli E., Lietti D., Ghiglioni D., Fiocchi A., Tosi A., Poppa M., Caviglia A., Restuccia M., Russello M., Alciato P., Manzotti G., Ranghino E., Luraschi G., Rapetti A., Rivolta F., Allegri F., Terracciano L., Agostinis F., Paolo Piras P., Ronchi G., Gaspardini G., Caria V., Tolu F., Fantasia D., Carta P., Moraschini A., Quilleri R., Santelli A., Prandini P., Del Giudice G., Apollonio A., Bonazza L., Teresa Franzini M., Branchi S., Zanca M., Rinaldi S., Catelli L., Zanoletti T., Cosentino C., Della Torre F., Cremonte L., Musazzi D., Suli C., Rivolta L., Ottolenghi A., Marino G., Sterza G., Sambugaro R., Orlandini A., Minale P., Voltolini S., Bignardi D., Omodeo P., Tiri A., Milani S., Ronchi B., Licardi G., Bruni P., Scibilia J., Schroeder J., Crosti F., Maltagliati A., Alesina M.R., Mosca M., Leone G., Napolitano G., Di Gruttola G., Scala G., Mascio S., Valente A., Marchetiello I., Catello R., Gazulli A., Del Prete A., Varricchio A.M., Carbone A., Forestieri A., Stillitano M., Leonetti L., Tirroni E., Castellano F., Abbagnara F., Romano F., Levanti C., Cilia M., Longo R., Ferrari A., Merenda R., Di Ponti A., Guercio E., Surace L., Ammendola G., Tansella F., Peccarisi L., Stragapede L., Minenna M., Granato M., Fuiano N., Pannofino A., Ciuffreda S., Giannotta A., Morero G., D'Oronzio L., Taddeo G., Nettis E., Cinquepalmi G., Lamanna C., Mastrandrea F., Minelli M., Salamino F., Muratore L., Latorre F., Quarta C., Ventura M., D'Ippolito G., Giannoccaro F., Dambra P., Pinto L., Triggiani M., Munno G., Manfredi G., Lonero G., Damiano V., Errico G., Di Leo E., Manzari F., Spagna V., Arsieni A., Matarrese A., Mazzarella G., Scarcia G., Scarano R., Ferrannini A., Pastore A., Maionchi P., Filannino L., Tria M., Giuliano G., Damiani E., Scichilone N., Marchese M., Lucania A., Marino M., Strazzeri L., Tumminello S., Vitale G.I., Gulotta S., Gragotto G., Zambito M., Greco D., Valenti G., Licitra G., Cannata E., Filpi R., Contraffatto M., Sichili S., Randazzo S., Scarantino G., Lo Porto B., Pavone F., Di Bartolo C., Paterno A., Rapisarda F., Laudani E., Leonardi S., Padua V., Cabibbo G., Marino Guzzardi G., Deluca F., Agozzino C., Pettinato R., Ghini M., Scurati S, Frati F, Passalacqua G, Puccinelli P, Hilaire C, Incorvaia I, D'Avino G, Comi R, Lo Schiavio M, Pezzuto F, Montera C, Pio A, Ielpo MT, Cellini F, Vicentini L, Pecorari R, Aresu T, Capra L, De Benedictis E, Bombi C, Zauli D, and et al
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,genetic structures ,efficacy ,Alternative medicine ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Adherence, Cost, Efficacy, Side effects, Sublingual immunotherapy ,Settore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato Respiratorio ,sublingual immunotherapy ,ALLERGEN ,cost ,medicine ,Subcutaneous immunotherapy ,Sublingual immunotherapy ,adherence ,Clinical efficacy ,Intensive care medicine ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,sublingual immunoterapy ,Original Research ,Asthma ,AEROALLERGENS ,side effects ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,medicine.disease ,Slit ,eye diseases ,Clinical trial ,Patient Preference and Adherence ,immunotherapy ,sense organs ,Allergists ,ADHERENCE TO TREATMENT ,business ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Silvia Scurati1, Franco Frati1, Gianni Passalacqua2, Paola Puccinelli1, Cecile Hilaire1, Cristoforo Incorvaia3, Italian Study Group on SLIT Compliance 1Scientific and Medical Department, Stallergenes, Milan, Italy; 2Allergy and Respiratory Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Genoa; 3Allergy/Pulmonary Rehabilitation, ICP Hospital, Milan, ItalyObjectives: Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is a viable alternative to subcutaneous immunotherapy to treat allergic rhinitis and asthma, and is widely used in clinical practice in many European countries. The clinical efficacy of SLIT has been established in a number of clinical trials and meta-analyses. However, because SLIT is self-administered by patients without medical supervision, the degree of patient adherence with treatment is still a concern. The objective of this study was to evaluate the perception by allergists of issues related to SLIT adherence.Methods: We performed a questionnaire-based survey of 296 Italian allergists, based on the adherence issues known from previous studies. The perception of importance of each item was assessed by a VAS scale ranging from 0 to 10.Results: Patient perception of clinical efficacy was considered the most important factor (ranked 1 by 54% of allergists), followed by the possibility of reimbursement (ranked 1 by 34%), and by the absence of side effects (ranked 1 by 21%). Patient education, regular follow-up, and ease of use of SLIT were ranked first by less than 20% of allergists.Conclusion: These findings indicate that clinical efficacy, cost, and side effects are perceived as the major issues influencing patient adherence to SLIT, and that further improvement of adherence is likely to be achieved by improving the patient information provided by prescribers.Keywords: adherence, sublingual immunotherapy, efficacy, cost, side effects
- Published
- 2010
10. Testimonianze d'Asia Orientale a Samarcanda: ieri e oggi
- Author
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Compareti, M., Cristoforetti, Simone, and Scarcia, G.
- Subjects
Samarcanda ,Senmurv ,Kurzin ,Sergeevich - Published
- 2010
11. Increased CD34+ cell peripheral traffic appears to be an unique feature of the allergic inflammation
- Author
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Mastrandrea, F., Coradduzza, G., Resta, F., Cadario, G., Rollo, M. -A, Marengo, F., Mazza, P., Pajno, G., Di Pasquale, G., Minardi, A., Scarcia, G., and Gabriella Serio
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Fever ,Allergy ,Antigens, CD34 ,Mobilization ,Infections ,CD34+ cell ,Bone Marrow ,Cell Movement ,Stress, Physiological ,Allergic inflammation ,Hypersensitivity ,Humans ,Cell Lineage ,Hematopoietic precursor cell ,Infectious diseases ,Infectious inflammation ,Peripheral traffic ,Progenitor cell ,Stem cell ,Inflammation ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Female - Abstract
Evidence has been cumulated during the last years concerning the immaturity of the cells involved in the local and systemic aspects of allergic inflammation. Hematopoietic precursors (HPC) are mobilized from the bone matrix as multipotent cells or, more often, as progenitors that, after the initial white-lineage commitment reach through the peripheral blood (PB) their final destinations constituted by the target organs of allergy. Although several studies have investigated the CD34+ cells traffic and location at the level of the inflamed peripheral mucosae in allergic populations, limited information is available on their behaviour on the time-course of infectious diseases. The current study thus was designed to asses the peripheral traffic of CD34+ HPC during the infectious inflammation. To this end CD34+ HPCs have been enumerated, by flow-cytometric techniques, in PB of 24 adult healthy beings (Group A), 24 adult subjects with symptomatic extrinsic allergy (Group B) and in PB of 24 adult patients hospitalised for febrile infectious pathology (Group C). CD34+ cell values ranged 0.01-0.08% with a median of 0.03 in Group A. In Group B values ranged 0.17-0.75% with a median of 0.28 and in Group C values ranged 0.00-0.12% with a median of 0.07. Variance analysis test among the three groups was statistically significant (p0.001) supporting the conclusion that CD34+ HPC mobilizing and increased peripheral traffic is an unique feature of the allergic inflammation.
- Published
- 2005
12. IgE responses to <em>Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus</em> native major allergens Der p 1 and Der p 2 during long-term specific immunotherapy.
- Author
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Mastrandrea, F., Serio, G., Minardi, A., Coradduzza, G., Rossi, N., Scarcia, G., Maietta, G., Lacobelli, A., Lamanna, C., and Tursi, A.
- Subjects
DERMATOPHAGOIDES pteronyssinus ,IMMUNOGLOBULIN E ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,ALLERGENS ,IMMUNOTHERAPY ,ASTHMA - Abstract
We investigated by enzyme linked immunoassay( ELISA )the IgE response to whole extract of the housedust mite Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (Dp) and to the native major allergens, Der p 1 and Der p 2, in sera from 18 adult patients (group A) with Dp-allergic asthma before (t
0 ) and 1,2,3 and 4 t1 -t4 ) years after subcutaneous specific immunotherapy (SIT). A qualitative reduction (P=0.05) of the IgE responses to Dp and Der p 2 was observed from t1 to t4 , but a highly statistical significant decrease at t3 (P<0.01). With regard to Der p 1 IgE values, the immunotherapy induced a significant decrease (P<0.01) at t3 , but not before. In group A, the IgE responses to Der p 1 and Der p 2 were not correlated at t0 (rs = 0.31; P = 0.21) but were correlated at t3 (rs =0.78; P0.001). We also examined sera from 14 adult patients (group B, same SIT schedule as group A) who were without respiratory symptoms at the end of the third year (t3 ) of Dp SIT. At this time (t3 ), there were no significant differences in Der p 1 and Der p 2 IgE levels between group A and group B. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Specific sublingual immunotherapy in atopic dermatitis. Results of a 6-year follow-up of 35 consecutive patients
- Author
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Mastrandrea, F., Gabriella Serio, Minelli, M., Minardi, A., Scarcia, G., Coradduzza, G., and Parmiani, S.
14. T-cell receptor Vβ repertoire in mite-allergic subjects after sublingual immunotherapy
- Author
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Mastrandrea, F., Coradduzza, G., Gabriella Serio, Scarcia, G., and Minardi, A.
15. CD34+ hemopoietic precursor and stem cells traffic in peripheral blood of celiac patients is significantly increased but not directly related to epithelial damage severity
- Author
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Mastrandrea, F., Semeraro, F. P., Coradduzza, G., Manelli, M., Scarcia, G., Pezzuto, F., and gabriella serio
16. La plus ancienne inscription sogdienne
- Author
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Grenet, Frantz, Archéologies d'Orient et d'Occident et Sciences des textes (AOROC), École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS Paris), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), COMPARETI M., RAFFETTA P., SCARCIA G., and Grenet, Frantz
- Subjects
[SHS.ARCHEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,civilisations orientales ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,sogdienne ,Asie ,Inscription - Published
- 2006
17. Molecular profiling of nematode associates with Rhynchophorus ferrugineus in southern Italy.
- Author
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De Luca F, Fanelli E, Oreste M, Scarcia G, Troccoli A, Vovlas A, Trisciuzzi N, and Tarasco E
- Abstract
A survey of nematodes associated with the red palm weevil Rhynchophorus ferrugineus was conducted in southern Italy in 2015 and 2016 in order to create a species inventory and obtain data about nematode biodiversity. A total of 70 insect samples (pupae and adults) were collected from infested Phoenix canariensis , Phoenix dactylifera , and Chamaerops humilis palms in three Italian Regions: sampling took place at 11 locations in Apulia, 1 in Basilicata, and 1 in Sardinia regions. Individual insects were dissected to determine nematode presence, and different nematode species were also recovered from red palm weevil cocoons collected at the sites in Apulia. Individual nematodes were molecularly identified by sequencing the ITS, D2-D3 expansion domains of the 28SrRNA gene and the mitochondrial COI and inferring the phylogenetic relationships. The insect-associated nematofauna identified belonged to the families Rhabditidae, Cephalobidae, and Diplogastridae. Just two nematode species, Teratorhabditis synpapillata and Mononchoides macrospiculum , were always found in association with adult insects and cocoons taken from all sampling sites. This paper reports on the biodiversity of the nematodes associated with R. ferrugineus and on current knowledge of the specific habitat of specialized and divergent entomophilic nematodes., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Occurrence of Sheraphelenchus sucus (Nematoda: Aphelenchoidinae) and Panagrellus sp. (Rhabditida: Panagrolaimidae) Associated with Decaying Pomegranate Fruit in Italy.
- Author
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Fanelli E, Troccoli A, Vovlas N, Scarcia G, Mincuzzi A, Sanzani SM, Ippolito A, and De Luca F
- Abstract
Two different nematode species were recovered from pomegranate decaying fruit in two localities in Southern Italy: the mycetophagus nematode Sheraphelenchus sucus and a bacterial feeder nematode belonging to the Panagrolaimidae (Rhabditida) family. Morphometrics of the Italian population of S. sucus closely resemble that of the type population, whereas some differences were found when compared with another population from Iran. Molecular characterization of the Italian S. sucus using the 18S rRNA gene, D2-D3 expansion domains of the 28S rDNA, the ITS region, and the partial mitochondrial COI were carried out. Sequences of the 18S rRNA gene, the D2-D3 domains, and the ITS were analyzed using several methods for inferring phylogeny to reconstruct the relationships among Sheraphelenchus and Bursaphelenchus species. The bacterial feeder Panagrellus sp. was characterized at the molecular level only. The D2-D3 expansion domains and ITS sequences of this Italian panagrolaimid were determined. The D2-D3 sequences of the Italian panagrolaimid showed 99% similarity with the corresponding sequence of Panagrellus sp. associated with Rhynchophorus ferrugineus . This is the first report on the tritrophic association of S. sucus and Rhabditida that uses both insects and pomegranate fruit as hosts.
- Published
- 2017
19. CD34+ hemopoietic precursor and stem cells traffic in peripheral blood of celiac patients is significantly increased but not directly related to epithelial damage severity.
- Author
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Mastrandrea F, Semeraro FP, Coradduzza G, Manelli M, Scarcia G, Pezzuto F, and Serio G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antigens, CD34 analysis, Apoptosis, Celiac Disease immunology, Celiac Disease pathology, Cell Lineage, Child, Child, Preschool, Epithelium pathology, Female, Flow Cytometry, Hematopoietic Stem Cells chemistry, Humans, Immunity, Cellular, Killer Cells, Natural chemistry, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Lymphocyte Count, Lymphocyte Subsets chemistry, Male, Middle Aged, NF-kappa B physiology, Organ Specificity, Receptors, CXCR3 blood, Receptors, CXCR4 blood, Single-Blind Method, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory chemistry, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology, Th1 Cells chemistry, Th2 Cells chemistry, Toll-Like Receptors physiology, Young Adult, Celiac Disease blood, Hematopoietic Stem Cells pathology, Intestinal Mucosa pathology, Lymphocyte Subsets pathology
- Abstract
Celiac disease (CD) is a chronic inflammatory enteropathy of the small bowel resulting from a local TH1-mediated reaction to wheat gliadins and barley, rye and oat prolamins with the development of auto-antibodies to transglutaminases. As well as for other chronic inflammatory diseases, genetic background and environmental factors participate to pathogenesis. An increased traffic of CD34+ hemopoietic precursor and stem cells (HPC) has been reported in peripheral blood (PB) of subjects with allergic diseases that share in their pathogenesis immuno-mediated reactions, genetic and environmental factors. The aim of the present work was to investigate the CD34+ cell traffic and H2/H1 polarization of lymphoid T-cell lineage, in the peripheral blood of subjects with CD, by means of flow-cytometric techniques. Group A of control was of 20 healthy subjects, aged 5 to 58 years. Study population (Group B) was of twenty-eight patients, all females aged 13 to 70, receiving firstly a CD diagnosis at the SS Annunziata Hospital Digestive Physiopathology Out-standings' by means of clinical, serologic and small intestinal biopsy findings. Peripheral CD34+ HPCs were significantly increased in Group B (median value 0.16) when compared with Group A (median value 0.03) (p 0.0001) but did not correlate either with anti-transglutaminase (tTG) antibody levels (IgA: p 0.226; IgG: p 0.810) or with histological damage severity (p 0.41) that, on the contrary, was significantly related with anti-tTG IgA antibodies (p 0.027). Celiac circulating CD3+CD4+ lymphocytes expressed a chemokine-receptor pattern Th2-skewed in all but three patients investigated. Concluding, the CD34+ HPC highly increased peripheral traffic observed in celiac disease appears more related to a basic and emerging as common defect shared by chronic inflammatory diseases than to the gliadin-specific Th1 local reactions. Data are consistent with a potential NFkappaB deficiency and consequent prevalence of apoptotic versus survival programs leading to excessive cell-death; to replace lost cells a supplementary bone-marrow derived precursors supply, further to that physiologically provided by the gut stem cell "niches" that are cryptopatches, could be required.
- Published
- 2008
20. Increased CD34+ cell peripheral traffic appears to be an unique feature of the allergic inflammation.
- Author
-
Mastrandrea F, Coradduzza G, Resta F, Cadario G, Rollo MA, Marengo F, Mazza P, Pajno G, Di Pasquale G, Minardi A, Scarcia G, and Serio G
- Subjects
- Adult, Antigens, CD34 analysis, Cell Lineage, Cell Movement, Female, Fever physiopathology, Flow Cytometry, Humans, Infections complications, Inflammation etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Stress, Physiological physiopathology, Bone Marrow physiopathology, Hematopoietic Stem Cells physiology, Hypersensitivity complications, Inflammation physiopathology
- Abstract
Evidence has been cumulated during the last years concerning the immaturity of the cells involved in the local and systemic aspects of allergic inflammation. Hematopoietic precursors (HPC) are mobilized from the bone matrix as multipotent cells or, more often, as progenitors that, after the initial white-lineage commitment reach through the peripheral blood (PB) their final destinations constituted by the target organs of allergy. Although several studies have investigated the CD34+ cells traffic and location at the level of the inflamed peripheral mucosae in allergic populations, limited information is available on their behaviour on the time-course of infectious diseases. The current study thus was designed to asses the peripheral traffic of CD34+ HPC during the infectious inflammation. To this end CD34+ HPCs have been enumerated, by flow-cytometric techniques, in PB of 24 adult healthy beings (Group A), 24 adult subjects with symptomatic extrinsic allergy (Group B) and in PB of 24 adult patients hospitalised for febrile infectious pathology (Group C). CD34+ cell values ranged 0.01-0.08% with a median of 0.03 in Group A. In Group B values ranged 0.17-0.75% with a median of 0.28 and in Group C values ranged 0.00-0.12% with a median of 0.07. Variance analysis test among the three groups was statistically significant (p<0.001) supporting the conclusion that CD34+ HPC mobilizing and increased peripheral traffic is an unique feature of the allergic inflammation.
- Published
- 2005
21. T-cell receptor Vbeta repertoire in mite-allergic subjects after sublingual immunotherapy.
- Author
-
Mastrandrea F, Coradduzza G, Serio G, Scarcia G, and Minardi A
- Subjects
- Administration, Sublingual, Adult, Allergens immunology, Animals, Antigens, Dermatophagoides, Female, Glycoproteins immunology, Humans, Immunotherapy methods, Male, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta classification, Respiratory Hypersensitivity blood, Respiratory Hypersensitivity therapy, Allergens therapeutic use, Glycoproteins therapeutic use, Mites immunology, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta immunology, Respiratory Hypersensitivity immunology
- Abstract
Sublingual immunotherapy has been recognized as an alternative to injected immunotherapy for the treatment of allergic diseases. Even if compelling clinical evidence supports such a view, few studies are available on its mechanisms of action. This study was carried out to investigate the peripheral lymphocyte Vbeta repertoire of subjects with mite-allergic respiratory allergy who were either not treated or treated for 2 years with mite-specific sublingual immunotherapy. The T-cell receptor Vbeta distribution was studied by flow-cytometric techniques in three subject groups. Group A (untreated) included 19 subjects with symptomatic, mite-allergic, low to moderate asthma and/or rhinitis. Group B (treated) was made up of 10 asymptomatic subjects treated for 2 years with mite-specific sublingual-swallow immunotherapy for low to moderate asthma and/or rhinitis. Group C (controls) included 10 healthy subjects. The Vbeta usage was investigated with monoclonal antibodies specific to the diverse beta segments V3, V5a, V5b, V5c, V6a, V8a, V8b and V12a. The comparison between the group A and group C repertoires showed a lower expression (p < 0.05) of the beta V8b+ T-cell subset. The group B repertoire, when compared with group A, showed a significantly greater usage of the beta V5a (p <0.05), 8a (p <0.05) and 12a (p <0.01) segments. The significantly lower expression of beta V8b observed in the symptomatic untreated group was not present in the group that was asymptomatic after treatment. The oligoclonal expansion observed in the treated group was consistent with the development of suppressor T-cell and/or of Th1 clones but not with deletion mechanisms of induced tolerance.
- Published
- 2000
22. Specific sublingual immunotherapy in atopic dermatitis. Results of a 6-year follow-up of 35 consecutive patients.
- Author
-
Mastrandrea F, Serio G, Minelli M, Minardi A, Scarcia G, Coradduzza G, and Parmiani S
- Subjects
- Administration, Sublingual, Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Immunoglobulin A blood, Immunoglobulin E blood, Immunoglobulin G blood, Male, Retrospective Studies, Skin Tests, Dermatitis, Atopic therapy, Desensitization, Immunologic
- Abstract
Background: allergen-specific immunotherapy has proved to be effective in selected patients with IgE-mediated respiratory allergic diseases, and alternative routes of administration are being studied. Atopic Dermatitis (AD) is currently regarded as an allergic inflammatory disease., Methods: we conducted a cohort study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of sublingual-swallow immunotherapy (SLIT) in selected patients with allergic (extrinsic) AD. Thirty-five patients, 16 suffering from AD without respiratory allergic symptoms (Group A) and 19 with AD associated to mild asthma and/or rhinitis (Group B), were enrolled in the study. The severity of the skin lesions (eczema) was scored on a 0 to 4 scale (and subsequently related to the more recent SCORAD Index), where 0 indicated complete healing of the eczema and 4 indicated maximal spread of the lesions. Only patients with an eczema score of 1 to 3 were started on allergen-specific SLIT for 36 months. Eczema scores, symptoms and side effects were recorded every two months during the first 2 years and then after 36 months. After SLIT was completed, all patients attended 3 yearly follow-up visits to evaluate the long-term effects of the treatment. All patients followed a set of rules designed to control for identified confounding variables. All patients received ketotifen during the first 3 months of SLIT., Results: only the complete disappearance of skin lesions (score 0) was considered to indicate effectiveness. In Group A this was observed in 12.6% of the patients after 6 months of SLIT, in 31,2% after 12 months and 68.8% after 24 months. In Group B, eczema disappeared in 0% after 6 months, in 36.8% after 12 months and 73.7% after 24 months. No patients in Group A developed asthma during SLIT, and 1 patient developed asthma 3 years after immunotherapy had ended. Three focal reactions consisting of 2 cases of mild eczema and one case of diarrhoea were recorded. One case of urticaria, due to violation of the administration schedule was the only systemic reaction observed. No life-threatening reactions appeared at any time of the study., Conclusions: the outcomes obtained, taken into account the limitations of the study design, suggest that sublingual allergen-specific immunotherapy for the treatment of the extrinsic form of Atopic Dermatitis is safe and well tolerated by patients, and may favourably affect the natural course of the disease.
- Published
- 2000
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