20 results on '"Rubino, Armido"'
Search Results
2. Anamnesi ed esame obiettivo
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ALESSIO, MARIA, RUBINO, ARMIDO, F. Parizzi, PRINCIPI N. , RUBINO A. , VIERUCCI A., Alessio, Maria, F., Parizzi, and Rubino, Armido
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- 2012
3. Il bambino, il pediatra e la società contemporanea
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, G. Andria, E. Del Giudice, and Rubino, Armido
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- 2008
4. Prefazione
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, G. Andria, E. Del Giudice, and Rubino, Armido
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- 2008
5. Prefazione
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, S. M. G. Adamo, and Rubino, Armido
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- 2008
6. Dove va la pediatria
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RUBINO, ARMIDO and Rubino, Armido
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- 2008
7. Presentazione
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, A. Pisacane, I. Continisio, and Rubino, Armido
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- 2007
8. Thirty years of the Union of National European Paediatric Societies and Associations (UNEPSA)
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Betke K, Ehrich JH, Janda J, Katz M, RUBINO, ARMIDO, Betke, K, Ehrich, Jh, Janda, J, Katz, M, and Rubino, Armido
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- 2007
9. Anamnesi ed esame obiettivo
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, IORIO, RAFFAELE, BERNI CANANI, ROBERTO, Careddu P., Rubino, Armido, Iorio, Raffaele, and BERNI CANANI, Roberto
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- 2002
10. Gastroenterologia-Patologie del fegato
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, IORIO, RAFFAELE, BERNI CANANI, ROBERTO, Careddu, Rubino, Armido, Iorio, Raffaele, and BERNI CANANI, Roberto
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- 2002
11. Pediatria preventiva e sociale
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, IORIO, RAFFAELE, BERNI CANANI, ROBERTO, Careddu P., Rubino, Armido, Iorio, Raffaele, and BERNI CANANI, Roberto
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- 2002
12. Enteric Cryptosporidiosis in pediatric HIV-1 Infection
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GUARINO, ALFREDO, SPAGNUOLO, MARIA IMMACOLATA, BERNI CANANI, ROBERTO, DI BENEDETTO, LUIGI, RUBINO, ARMIDO, Castaldo A, Russo S, Tarallo L, Guarino, Alfredo, Castaldo, A, Russo, S, Spagnuolo, MARIA IMMACOLATA, BERNI CANANI, Roberto, Tarallo, L, DI BENEDETTO, Luigi, and Rubino, Armido
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Enteric cryptosporidiosis is a frequent problem in adults with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, but little is known of its features in children. The aim of this study was to investigate the incidence and the clinical features of cryptosporidiosis in HIV-infected children. METHODS: Thirty-five children with symptomatic HIV infection were screened every 2 months, and in case of diarrhea, for the presence of Cryptosporidium. Intestinal function tests were performed, and the fecal osmotic gap was measured in children with cryptosporidiosis. RESULTS: Seventy episodes of diarrhea occurred in 16 children in a median period of 17 months. Cryptosporidium was detected in five cases, all with full-blown acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Cryptosporidiosis was significantly more protracted than any other form of diarrhea and was associated with dehydration and severe weight loss. Intestinal function was not modified during cryptosporidiosis. Osmotic gap values were consistent with secretory rather than osmotic diarrhea. In four cases, recovery was observed without specific treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Enteric cryptosporidiosis is a severe problem in advanced stages of HIV infection. It does not induce intestinal malabsorption. It induces diarrhea of secretory type. Recovery may be observed independently of therapy.
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- 1997
13. Pediatria generale e specialistica. Gastroenterologia
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RUBINO, ARMIDO, IORIO, RAFFAELE, S. Guandalini, Gaburro, Rubino, Armido, S., Guandalini, and Iorio, Raffaele
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- 1997
14. Human serum immunoglobulin counteracts rotaviral infection in Caco-2 cells
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GUARINO, ALFREDO, BRUZZESE, EUGENIA, NITSCH, LUCIO, RUBINO, ARMIDO, CASOLA A, SAINI M, Guarino, Alfredo, Casola, A, Bruzzese, Eugenia, Saini, M, Nitsch, Lucio, and Rubino, Armido
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Rotavirus ,PASSIVE PROTECTION ,GASTROENTERITIS ,Cell Survival ,Immunization, Passive ,Administration, Oral ,Immunoglobulins ,CHILDREN ,Virus Replication ,Rotavirus Infections ,VP7 ,Capsid ,INDUCED DIARRHEA ,MOLECULAR-BASIS ,NEUTRALIZATION ,Humans ,ASSAY ,Capsid Proteins ,MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODIES ,Caco-2 Cells ,Child ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect ,Antigens, Viral - Abstract
Oral administration of human serum immunoglobulin reduces the duration of diarrhea and of rotaviral excretion in children. To investigate the in vitro effects of immunoglobulin on virus-enterocyte interaction, Caco-2 cells were infected with Rotavirus strain SA11. Immunoglobulin was added prior to and at various times postinfection. Indirect immunofluorescence was performed with an antibody against VP-6 rotaviral antigen. Cell viability and monolayer transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) were monitored. Immunofluorescence showed a perinuclear distribution in 90% of cells. Rotavirus infection induced a progressive decrease in TEER and a parallel reduction in cell viability, depending on viral load. Preincubation of the virus with immunoglobulin prevented cell infection as judged by immunofluorescence. Immunoglobulin addition to infected cells partially prevented the decrease in TEER and induced a later shift of TEER toward increasing values, suggesting restoration of monolayer's integrity. The efficacy of immunoglobulin depended on its concentration and on the time of its addition. These results indicate that immunoglobulin is effective in preventing infection and in reducing cell damage, through a direct anti-Rotavirus action and may indicate that immunoglobulin should be administered in the early phase of diarrhea, to reduce the severity of Rotavirus infection.
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- 1996
15. Familial and environmental influences on body composition and body fat distribution in childhood in southern Italy
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ESPOSITO DEL PUENTE A., DE FILIPPO E., PERI M. R., CALDARA A., CASO G., VALERIO G., DI MAIO S., SCALFI, LUCA, CONTALDO, FRANCO, FRANZESE, ADRIANA, RUBINO, ARMIDO, ESPOSITO DEL PUENTE, A., Scalfi, Luca, DE FILIPPO, E., Peri, M. R., Caldara, A., Caso, G., Contaldo, Franco, Valerio, G., Franzese, Adriana, DI MAIO, S., and Rubino, Armido
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Children ,Adult ,Male ,Anthropometry ,Blood Pressure ,Diet Records ,White People ,Body Mass Index ,Fat distribution ,Skinfold Thickness ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Adipose Tissue ,Italy ,Body Composition ,Electric Impedance ,Body Constitution ,Humans ,Female ,Obesity ,Child - Abstract
Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 1994 Sep;18(9):596-601. ABSTRACT The aim of this paper was to evaluate the factors affecting body fat excess and distribution in prepubertal age. A cross-sectional survey was carried out on children attending the 4th grade of a primary school in Naples. Eighty-eight per cent of the total sample was examined: 52 girls, 58 boys; mean age = 9.6 yrs(s.e. +/- 0.10). Each child underwent a medical examination, anthropometric measurements and bio-impedance analysis of body composition. The parents were asked to fill in a questionnaire that included demographic data, family history, parent's weight and height, child's perinatal history and his or her involvement in sports activities. Data were analyzed by multiple linear regression. The results showed a direct correlation between parental BMI and children's anthropometric measurements: the children's BMI correlated with the fathers' (P =0.02) and mothers' BMI (P = 0.027); the children's waist/hip ratio correlated with the fathers' BMI (P = 0.07); the children's subscapular skinfolds correlated with the father's (P = 0.07) and mothers' BMI (P = 0.02); the children's triceps skinfolds correlated with the fathers' BMI (P = 0.004). Among congenital factors,sex was shown to be correlated with the children's waist/hip ratio (P = 0.05)with a lower ratio in the female, indicating a sex influence on body fat distribution even in prepubertal age. The children's BMI correlated with their waist/hip ratio (P = 0.001). Children's systolic blood pressure showed a positive correlation with triceps (P = 0.04) and subscapular (P = 0.05) skinfolds thickness % FAT-PLI (P = 0.02).(
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- 1994
16. Oral Immunoglobulins for Treatment of Acute Rotaviral Gastroenteritis
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F M Ruggeri, M B Canani, Alfredo Guarino, Gianfranco Donelli, Fabio Albano, Stefania Russo, Roberto Berni Canani, Armido Rubino, Guarino, Alfredo, BERNI CANANI, Roberto, S., Russo, Albano, Francesca, M., Berni Canani, Ruggieri, F. M., G., Donelli, and Rubino, Armido
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Administration, Oral ,Immunoglobulins ,Immunoglobulin E ,medicine.disease_cause ,Rotavirus Infections ,Group B ,law.invention ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Oral administration ,Rotavirus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,biology ,business.industry ,Infant ,Gastroenteritis ,Diarrhea ,Child, Preschool ,Acute Disease ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Viral disease ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Objective. Preliminary evidence has been reported on the antirotavirus effect of human serum immunoglobulin administered orally. The aim was to see whether such treatment might be effective in rotavirus acute gastroenteritis. Methods. A prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled study was performed. Ninety-eight children admitted with acute gastroenteritis were enrolled and randomly assigned to groups A (treated) and B (control). Children in group A received a single oral dose of 300 mg/kg body weight of human serum immunoglobulin. Parameters of efficacy were clinical condition, frequency and consistency of stools, duration of diarrhea, duration of viral excretion, and length of hospital stay. Antirotaviral activity was determined in the immunoglobulin preparation by a specific neutralization assay. Results. Seventy-one of the 98 children enrolled had rotaviral gastroenteritis; 36 belonged to group A. Children who received immunoglobulin had significantly faster clinical improvement of clinical condition and stool pattern than control children. Mean total duration of rotaviral diarrhea was 76 hours in group A and 131 in group B (P < .01). Viral excretion lasted 114 and 180 hours, respectively (P < .01). Hospital stay was significantly reduced in children in group A. Neutralizing antibodies against rotavirus were detected in the immunoglobulin preparation. Conclusion. Oral administration of immunoglobulin is associated with a faster recovery from acute gastroenteritis and should be given to children hospitalized with this illness.
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- 1994
- Full Text
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17. Comparative Effects of Atrial Natriuretic Peptide and E. coli Heat-Stable Toxin on Rat Intestinal Transport
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Armido Rubino, L Tarallo, Roberto Berni Canani, Agostino Nocerino, M Iafusco, Francesco Raimondi, Alfredo Guarino, Guarino, Alfredo, Tarallo, L, BERNI CANANI, Roberto, Nocerino, A, Iafusco, M, Raimondi, Francesco, Rubino, Armido, and Rubino, A.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brush border ,Bacterial Toxins ,Biology ,Enterotoxins ,Chlorides ,Atrial natriuretic peptide ,Intestinal mucosa ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Rats, Wistar ,Cyclic GMP ,Binding Sites ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Sodium ,Guanylate cyclase activity ,Gastroenterology ,Biological Transport ,Water-Electrolyte Balance ,NPR1 ,NPR2 ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Mechanism of action ,Guanylate Cyclase ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,cardiovascular system ,Secretagogue ,medicine.symptom ,Atrial Natriuretic Factor ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
Conflicting data have been published in favor of or against a secretory effect of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) in the intestine. The reported effects resemble that of Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin (ST). In this work the effects of ANP were studied in well established experimental systems and compared with that of ST. Both peptides induced a prompt secretion of water, Na, and Cl with no effects on K net transport in the in vivo rat perfused jejunum. The addition of ST, but not of ANP, evoked an increase of short circuit current in rat intestinal mucosa mounted in Ussing chambers. ST induced a significant increase in guanylate cyclase activity in intestinal homogenates, whereas ANP showed no effect. No binding sites for ANP were detected in basolateral or brush border membranes, nor in isolated enterocytes by a suction filtration technique. In conclusion, ANP acts as a short-lived intestinal secretagogue in the rat. Its mechanism of action is different from that of E. coli ST and appears to be indirect, since is not mediated by specific intestinal receptors and is not evident in vitro.
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- 1992
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18. In vivo and in vitro efficacy of octreotide for treatment of enteric cryptosporidios
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A, Guarino, R, Berni Canani, M I, Spagnuolo, M, Bisceglia, M C, Boccia, A, Rubino, Guarino, Alfredo, BERNI CANANI, Roberto, Spagnuolo, MARIA IMMACOLATA, Bisceglia, Massimo, Boccia, Mc, and Rubino, Armido
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Male ,Fatal Outcome ,Gastrointestinal Agents ,Diarrhea, Infantile ,Cryptosporidiosis ,Humans ,Infant ,Female ,Caco-2 Cells ,Octreotide - Abstract
Previous evidence suggested a role of enterotoxin in the pathophysiology of cryptosporidiosis. If so, antisecretory drugs should be effective in reducing diarrhea. We evaluated the in vivo and in vitro efficacy of octreotide, which possesses antisecretory effects, for cryptosporidial diarrhea. Two children with severe cryptosporidial diarrhea were treated with octreotide. The volume modifications and chemical composition of stools were determined. Fecal supernatant was added to Caco-2 cell monolayers mounted in Ussing chambers with or without serosal octreotide and electrical parameters were monitored. Octreotide was effective in reducing the stool volume and fecal Na+ concentration. Fecal supernatant induced an enterotoxin-like increase in transepithelial potential difference. Octreotide induced a dose-dependent decrease in basal potential difference, consistent with an absorptive effect. In cells pretreated with octreotide, fecal supernatant induced an increase in the potential difference, whose magnitude and duration were significantly reduced compared to untreated cells. These results provide in vivo and in vitro evidence for the secretory nature of cryptosporidial diarrhea and for the efficacy of octreotide through a direct interaction with the enterocyte.
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- 1998
19. Production of Escherichia coli STa-like heat-stable enterotoxin by Citrobacter freundii isolated from humans
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Armido Rubino, B Malamisura, G. Capano, Alfredo Guarino, Maria Alessio, Stefano Guandalini, Guarino, Alfredo, Capano, Guglielmo, B., Malamisura, Alessio, Maria, Guandalini, Stefano, and Rubino, Armido
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Diarrhea ,Microbiology (medical) ,Hot Temperature ,medicine.drug_class ,Bacterial Toxins ,Normal component ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Enterotoxin ,Cross Reactions ,medicine.disease_cause ,Monoclonal antibody ,Microbiology ,Enterotoxins ,Citrobacter ,Escherichia coli ,medicine ,Humans ,Heat-stable enterotoxin ,biology ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Infant ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,biology.organism_classification ,Citrobacter freundii ,Child, Preschool ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article - Abstract
Citrobacter species are often present in the stools of children and are generally considered a normal component of the intestinal microflora. Previous reports suggested that they might act as enteric pathogens. Aiming at defining the role of Citrobacter species in inducing diarrhea, we looked for their presence in the stools of 328 children with diarrhea and in 108 controls. Citrobacter strains were isolated from 46 patients (14%) and 7 controls (6.5%) (P less than 0.05). All isolates were tested for heat-stable (ST) and heat-labile (LT) enterotoxin. No LT-producing organisms were found. Three C. freundii strains, all isolated from children with diarrhea, elaborated an enterotoxin detected by the suckling mouse assay. A crude extract was prepared by acetone precipitation and a sequential ultrafiltration technique. The enterotoxin was heat stable, and its estimated molecular weight was between 2,000 and 10,000. Citrobacter enterotoxin was soluble in methanol and stable at acid and neutral pHs but not above pH 8, and its activity was destroyed by treatment with 2-mercaptoethanol. Citrobacter enterotoxin was inactive in the 18-h rabbit ileal loop test. All these characteristics closely resemble STa produced by Escherichia coli. The time course of Citrobacter enterotoxin-induced intestinal secretion in suckling mice was similar to that of E. coli STa. The enterotoxin produced by C. freundii cross-reacted with monoclonal antibodies raised against E. coli STa. These results suggest that C. freundii is capable of inducing diarrhea through the production of an E. coli-like STa, and its presence in the stools of patients with diarrhea should be considered as that of a possible etiologic agent.
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- 1987
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20. Characteristics and mechanism of action of a heat-stable enterotoxin produced by Klebsiella pneumoniae from infants with secretory diarrhea
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Alfredo Guarino, G. Capano, Armido Rubino, L Tarallo, M Migliavacca, Maria Alessio, Stefano Guandalini, Fabrizio Gentile, Guarino, Alfredo, Guandalini, Stefano, Alessio, Maria, F., Gentile, L., Tarallo, Capano, Guglielmo, Migliavacca, Maurizio, and Rubino, Armido
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Diarrhea ,Klebsiella ,Klebsiella pneumoniae ,Bacterial Toxins ,Enterotoxin ,medicine.disease_cause ,digestive system ,Ion Channels ,Microbiology ,Enterotoxins ,Intestinal mucosa ,medicine ,Cyclic AMP ,Heat-stable enterotoxin ,Humans ,Secretory diarrhea ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Child ,Escherichia coli ,Cyclic GMP ,biology ,Toxin ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,biology.organism_classification ,Enterobacteriaceae ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxins (ST) are classified into STa and STb according to their physicochemical and biologic characteristics. STa induces diarrhea, activating the guanylate cyclase-cGMP system. ST-like enterotoxins can be produced by bacteria other than E. coli, including Klebsiella pneumoniae. A Klebsiella ST has previously been shown to share some chemical and immunologic characteristics with E. coli ST. Aiming to define better the nature of Klebsiella ST, we have screened 237 children with diarrhea and 179 controls for ST-producing Klebsiella, using the SMA. We detected 26 Klebsiella strains from patients, two of which were positive in the SMA, and 36 from controls, all negative for ST. A partial purification was performed using an acetone precipitation followed by ultrafiltration and gel filtration techniques. Klebsiella toxin was heat-stable, methanol-soluble, sensitive to mercaptoethanol, active at acid pH values, but not at pH greater than 8. The time course of Klebsiella toxin in the SMA resembled that of E. coli STa. Klebsiella ST caused reduced Na absorption and net Cl secretion in rabbit ileal mucosa mounted in Ussing chambers. It was found to increase the cGMP but not the cAMP concentration. Finally, Klebsiella ST did not react with anti-E. coli STa MAb in a competitive ELISA. We conclude that K. pneumoniae may induce diarrhea through the production of an STa similar but not identical to E. coli STa.
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- 1989
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