30 results on '"Farfalla A"'
Search Results
2. Acute alcohol intoxication and expectations reshape the spatiotemporal functional architecture of executive control
- Author
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Farfalla Ribordy Lambert, Corentin A. Wicht, Michael Mouthon, and Lucas Spierer
- Subjects
Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
While the deleterious effects of acute ethyl alcohol intoxication on executive control are well-established, the underlying spatiotemporal brain mechanisms remain largely unresolved. In addition, since the effects of alcohol are noticeable to participants, isolating the effects of the substance from those related to expectations represents a major challenge. We addressed these issues using a double-blind, randomized, parallel, placebo-controlled experimental design comparing the behavioral and electrical neuroimaging acute effects of 0.6 vs 0.02 g/kg alcohol intake recorded in 65 healthy adults during an inhibitory control Go/NoGo task. Topographic ERP analyses of covariance with self-reported dose expectations allowed to dissociate their neurophysiological effects from those of the substance.While alcohol intoxication increased response time variability and post-error slowing, bayesian analyses indicated that it did not modify commission error rates. Functionally, alcohol induced topographic ERP modulations over the periods of the stimulus-locked N2 and P3 components, arising from pre-supplementary motor and anterior cingulate areas. In contrast, alcohol decreased the strength of the response-locked anterior cingulate error-related component but not its topography. This pattern indicates that alcohol had a locally specific influence within the executive control network, but disrupted performance monitoring processes via global strength-based mechanisms.We further revealed that alcohol-related expectations induced temporally specific functional modulations of the early N2 stimulus-locked medio-lateral prefrontal activity, a processing phase preceding those influenced by the actual alcohol intake.Our collective findings thus not only reveal the mechanisms underlying alcohol-induced impairments in impulse control and error processing, but also dissociate substance- from expectations- related functional effects.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Improvement of Allocentric Spatial Memory Resolution in Children from 2 to 4 Years of Age
- Author
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Lambert, Farfalla Ribordy, Lavenex, Pierre, and Lavenex, Pamela Banta
- Abstract
Allocentric spatial memory, the memory for locations coded in relation to objects comprising our environment, is a fundamental component of episodic memory and is dependent on the integrity of the hippocampal formation in adulthood. Previous research from different laboratories reported that basic allocentric spatial memory abilities are reliably observed in children after 2 years of age. Based on work performed in monkeys and rats, we had proposed that the functional maturation of direct entorhinal cortex projections to the CA1 field of the hippocampus might underlie the emergence of basic allocentric spatial memory. We also proposed that the protracted development of the dentate gyrus and its projections to the CA3 field of the hippocampus might underlie the development of high-resolution allocentric spatial memory capacities, based on the essential contribution of these structures to the process known as pattern separation. Here, we present an experiment designed to assess the development of spatial pattern separation capacities and its impact on allocentric spatial memory performance in children from 18 to 48 months of age. We found that: (1) allocentric spatial memory performance improved with age, (2) as compared to younger children, a greater number of children older than 36 months advanced to the final stage requiring the highest degree of spatial resolution, and (3) children that failed at different stages exhibited difficulties in discriminating locations that required higher spatial resolution abilities. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that improvements in human spatial memory performance might be linked to improvements in pattern separation capacities.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Functionalized Carbon Nanostructures Versus Drug Resistance: Promising Scenarios in Cancer Treatment
- Author
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Manuela Curcio, Annafranca Farfalla, Federica Saletta, Emanuele Valli, Elvira Pantuso, Fiore Pasquale Nicoletta, Francesca Iemma, Orazio Vittorio, and Giuseppe Cirillo
- Subjects
carbon nanostructures ,carbon nanohybrids ,cancer therapy ,multi-drug resistance ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
Carbon nanostructures (CN) are emerging valuable materials for the assembly of highly engineered multifunctional nanovehicles for cancer therapy, in particular for counteracting the insurgence of multi-drug resistance (MDR). In this regard, carbon nanotubes (CNT), graphene oxide (GO), and fullerenes (F) have been proposed as promising materials due to their superior physical, chemical, and biological features. The possibility to easily modify their surface, conferring tailored properties, allows different CN derivatives to be synthesized. Although many studies have explored this topic, a comprehensive review evaluating the beneficial use of functionalized CNT vs G or F is still missing. Within this paper, the most relevant examples of CN-based nanosystems proposed for MDR reversal are reviewed, taking into consideration the functionalization routes, as well as the biological mechanisms involved and the possible toxicity concerns. The main aim is to understand which functional CN represents the most promising strategy to be further investigated for overcoming MDR in cancer.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Development of Allocentric Spatial Memory Abilities in Children from 18 months to 5 Years of Age
- Author
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Ribordy, Farfalla, Jabes, Adeline, and Lavenex, Pamela Banta
- Abstract
Episodic memories for autobiographical events that happen in unique spatiotemporal contexts are central to defining who we are. Yet, before 2 years of age, children are unable to form or store episodic memories for recall later in life, a phenomenon known as infantile amnesia. Here, we studied the development of allocentric spatial memory, a fundamental component of episodic memory, in two versions of a real-world memory task requiring 18 month- to 5-year-old children to search for rewards hidden beneath cups distributed in an open-field arena. Whereas children 25-42-months-old were not capable of discriminating three reward locations among 18 possible locations in absence of local cues marking these locations, children older than 43 months found the reward locations reliably. These results support previous findings suggesting that allocentric spatial memory, if present, is only rudimentary in children under 3.5 years of age. However, when tested with only one reward location among four possible locations, children 25-39-months-old found the reward reliably in absence of local cues, whereas 18-23-month-olds did not. Our findings thus show that the ability to form a basic allocentric representation of the environment is present by 2 years of age, and its emergence coincides temporally with the offset of infantile amnesia. However, the ability of children to distinguish and remember closely related spatial locations improves from 2 to 3.5 years of age, a developmental period marked by persistent deficits in long-term episodic memory known as childhood amnesia. These findings support the hypothesis that the differential maturation of distinct hippocampal circuits contributes to the emergence of specific memory processes during early childhood. (Contains 3 tables and 6 figures.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Reducing Overdose Through Policy Interventions: ASTHO's Recommendations for State and Territorial Health Officials and Agencies.
- Author
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Pless, Victoria, McClure, JoAnne, Davis, Maggie, Farfalla, Jennifer, Onufrey, Yaryna, Humm, Kayley, Ranade, Richa, and Terzian, Mary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Dextran-Curcumin Nanoparticles as a Methotrexate Delivery Vehicle: A Step Forward in Breast Cancer Combination Therapy
- Author
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Manuela Curcio, Giuseppe Cirillo, Paola Tucci, Annafranca Farfalla, Emilia Bevacqua, Orazio Vittorio, Francesca Iemma, and Fiore Pasquale Nicoletta
- Subjects
polyphenol conjugate ,self-assembling nanoparticles ,curcumin ,breast cancer ,synergism ,Medicine ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
With the aim to effectively deliver methotrexate (MTX) to breast cancer cells, we designed a nanocarrier system (DC) derived from the self-assembly of a dextran-curcumin conjugate prepared via enzyme chemistry with immobilized laccase acting as a solid biocatalyst. Nanoparticles consisted of homogeneously dispersed nanospheres with a mean diameter of 290 nm, as characterized by combined transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering investigations. DC was able to control the MTX release overtime (t1/2 value of 310 min), with cell internalization studies proving its presence inside MCF-7 cytoplasm. Finally, improved MTX efficacy was obtained in viability assays, and attributed to the synergy of curcumin moieties and loaded MTX as underlined by a combination index (CI) < 1.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Magnetic Graphene Oxide Nanocarrier for Targeted Delivery of Cisplatin: A Perspective for Glioblastoma Treatment
- Author
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Sami A. Makharza, Giuseppe Cirillo, Orazio Vittorio, Emanuele Valli, Florida Voli, Annafranca Farfalla, Manuela Curcio, Francesca Iemma, Fiore Pasquale Nicoletta, Ahmed A. El-Gendy, Gerardo F. Goya, and Silke Hampel
- Subjects
magnetic targeting ,graphene oxide ,maghemite ,glioblastoma ,cisplatin ,Medicine ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
Selective vectorization of Cisplatin (CisPt) to Glioblastoma U87 cells was exploited by the fabrication of a hybrid nanocarrier composed of magnetic γ-Fe2O3 nanoparticles and nanographene oxide (NGO). The magnetic component, obtained by annealing magnetite Fe3O4 and characterized by XRD measurements, was combined with NGO sheets prepared via a modified Hummer’s method. The morphological and thermogravimetric analysis proved the effective binding of γ-Fe2O3 nanoparticles onto NGO layers. The magnetization measured under magnetic fields up to 7 Tesla at room temperature revealed superparamagnetic-like behavior with a maximum value of MS = 15 emu/g and coercivity HC ≈ 0 Oe within experimental error. The nanohybrid was found to possess high affinity towards CisPt, and a rather slow fractional release profile of 80% after 250 h. Negligible toxicity was observed for empty nanoparticles, while the retainment of CisPt anticancer activity upon loading into the carrier was observed, together with the possibility to spatially control the drug delivery at a target site.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Graphene Oxide Functional Nanohybrids with Magnetic Nanoparticles for Improved Vectorization of Doxorubicin to Neuroblastoma Cells
- Author
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Luigi Lerra, Annafranca Farfalla, Beatriz Sanz, Giuseppe Cirillo, Orazio Vittorio, Florida Voli, Marion Le Grand, Manuela Curcio, Fiore Pasquale Nicoletta, Anna Dubrovska, Silke Hampel, Francesca Iemma, and Gerardo F. Goya
- Subjects
graphene oxide ,iron oxide nanoparticles ,magnetic targeting ,nanohybrids ,synergism ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
With the aim to obtain a site-specific doxorubicin (DOX) delivery in neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells, we designed an hybrid nanocarrier combining graphene oxide (GO) and magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (MNPs), acting as core elements, and a curcumin–human serum albumin conjugate as functional coating. The nanohybrid, synthesized by redox reaction between the MNPs@GO system and albumin bioconjugate, consisted of MNPs@GO nanosheets homogeneously coated by the bioconjugate as verified by SEM investigations. Drug release experiments showed a pH-responsive behavior with higher release amounts in acidic (45% at pH 5.0) vs. neutral (28% at pH 7.4) environments. Cell internalization studies proved the presence of nanohybrid inside SH-SY5Y cytoplasm. The improved efficacy obtained in viability assays is given by the synergy of functional coating and MNPs constituting the nanohybrids: while curcumin moieties were able to keep low DOX cytotoxicity levels (at concentrations of 0.44–0.88 µM), the presence of MNPs allowed remote actuation on the nanohybrid by a magnetic field, increasing the dose delivered at the target site.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The human hippocampus beyond the cognitive map: Evidence from a densely amnesic patient
- Author
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Pamela A Banta Lavenex, Françoise eColombo, Farfalla eRibordy Lambert, and Pierre eLavenex
- Subjects
Amnesia ,spatial memory ,interference ,declarative memory ,medial temporal lobe ,Memory capacity ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
We tested a densely amnesic patient (P9), with bilateral hippocampal damage resulting from an autoimmune disorder, and 12 age- and sex-matched controls on a series of memory tasks designed to characterize allocentric spatial learning and memory abilities. We compared P9’s ability to perform spatial memory tasks with her ability to perform non-spatial, color memory tasks. First, P9’s performance was impaired as compared to controls even in the simplest versions of an allocentric spatial memory task, in which she had to find repeatedly over ten trials the same location(s) of one, two or three illuminating foot pad(s) among 23 pads distributed in an open-field arena. In contrast, she performed as well as controls when she had to find repeatedly over ten trials the same one, two or three pad(s) marked by color cue(s), whose locations varied between trials. Second, P9’s performance was severely impaired in working memory tasks, when she had to learn on a trial-unique basis and remember the location(s) or the color(s) of one, two or three pad(s), while performing an interfering task during the one-minute interval separating encoding and retrieval. Without interference during the retention interval of the trial-unique tasks, P9’s performance was partially preserved in the color tasks, whereas it remained severely impaired in the allocentric spatial tasks. Detailed behavioral analyses indicate that P9’s memory representations are more limited than those of controls both in their precision (metric coding) and in the number of items that can be maintained in memory (capacity). These findings are consistent with the theory that the hippocampus contributes to the integration or binding of multiple items, in order to produce high-resolution/high-capacity representations of spatial and non-spatial information in the service of short-term/working and long-term memory.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Exposure Assessment at a Pullet Barn - A Case Study.
- Author
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Farfalla, Alexandra and Achutan, Chandran
- Subjects
- *
AIR analysis , *HUMAN growth , *POULTRY , *DUST , *AMMONIA , *OCCUPATIONAL exposure , *INDOOR air pollution , *HEALTH status indicators , *BIOACCUMULATION , *RESPIRATION , *AGRICULTURAL laborers - Abstract
Poultry production is an integral part of agriculture and of the U.S. economy, accounting for millions of eggs and chicken products consumed annually. Most ubiquitous to the poultry industry from farm production to research are broiler and layer poultry operations, with pullet operations at the forefront. Although essential to the cycles of production, there is a dearth of evidence regarding the occupational exposure risks of pullet production. The aim of this case study was to measure total dust and ammonia levels during the growth cycle of pullets. Ammonia and total dust concentrations were measured as single day measurements at three different points of time during the 16.5-week growth cycle of pullet flocks using two fixed sampling stations configured to represent the breathing zone height of poultry workers. As birds grew from chicks to hens, concentrations of total dust and ammonia increased. Notably, from 3 weeks-of-age to 9 weeks-of-age concentrations of total dust increased from 1.1–1.2 mg/m3 to 16.0–18.0 mg/m3; and from 9 weeks-of-age to 15 weeks-of-age, dust concentrations reached 43.0–50.0 mg/m3. Concentrations of ammonia also increased from 9 weeks to 15 weeks from 1.1–2.7 ppm to 22.0–30.0 ppm. Both levels of ammonia and total dust reached levels that have the potential to induce adverse health effects among farmers raising pullets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Antipsychotic drug and body weight set-point
- Author
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Khazaal, Yasser, Chatton, Anne, Claeys, Fabian, Ribordy, Farfalla, Zullino, Daniele, and Cabanac, Michel
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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13. Whole-lung densitometry versus visual assessment of emphysema
- Author
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Cavigli, Edoardo, Camiciottoli, Gianna, Diciotti, Stefano, Orlandi, Ilaria, Spinelli, Cheti, Meoni, Eleonora, Grassi, Luca, Farfalla, Carmela, Pistolesi, Massimo, Falaschi, Fabio, and Mascalchi, Mario
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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14. Implementing a Needs Assessment to Advance Health Equity in Overdose Prevention and Surveillance Initiatives.
- Author
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Winston, Tiffany R., Reed, Minda, Roberts, Marissa, Panjwani, Aashna, Farfalla, Jennifer, Pless, Victoria, Miles, Ayana, Rooks-Peck, Cherie, and Underwood, Natasha L.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,DRUG overdose ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,RESEARCH funding ,NEEDS assessment ,HEALTH equity ,QUALITY assurance ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Objectives: State, local, and federal agencies have expanded efforts to address the root causes of overdoses, including health inequity and related social determinants of health. As an Overdose Data to Action (OD2A) technical assistance provider, the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO) conducted the first national needs assessment to understand capacity and technical assistance needs of OD2A jurisdictions in advancing health equity. Methods: ASTHO designed and disseminated the OD2A Recipient Health Equity Needs Assessment (RHENA) to 66 OD2A-funded jurisdictions from February to March 2022. OD2A principal investigators and staff were contacted via email and asked to complete the needs assessment within 6 weeks. One coder manually coded open-ended responses, conducted a thematic analysis on the qualitative data, and performed a simple frequency analysis on the quantitative data. Results: Fifty-two jurisdictions (78.8%) responded, including 36 states, 12 cities/counties, and 2 territories. Most jurisdictions (n = 46; 88.5%) reported having a formal or informal health equity lead in place. Common barriers included a lack of access to data sources (n = 37; 71.2%), lack of partnerships (n = 20; 38.5%), and lack of funding (n = 14; 26.9%). Respondents reported needing more information sharing among jurisdictions and partner organizations, coaching on best practices, and routine discussions such as peer-to-peer learning sessions. Conclusion: Findings suggest that gaps remain in programmatic policies and principles to address inequities in overdose prevention. Results are being used to identify additional technical assistance opportunities, jurisdictional capacity, and approaches to advance health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. RACISM IN SOCCER? PERCEPTION OF CHALLENGES OF BLACK AND WHITE PLAYERS BY WHITE REFEREES, SOCCER PLAYERS, AND FANS1,2
- Author
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Wagner-Egger, Pascal, Gygax, Pascal, and Ribordy, Farfalla
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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16. Strategy to Action: Incorporating CDC's 10 Evidence-Based Strategies in Overdose Prevention and Surveillance Efforts.
- Author
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Desai, Rishika, Merski, Alyssa, and Farfalla, Jennifer
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Combining antioxidant hydrogels with self-assembled microparticles for multifunctional wound dressings.
- Author
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di Luca, Mariagrazia, Curcio, Manuela, Valli, Emanuele, Cirillo, Giuseppe, Voli, Florida, Butini, Maria Eugenia, Farfalla, Annafranca, Pantuso, Elvira, Leggio, Antonella, Nicoletta, Fiore Pasquale, Tavanti, Arianna, Iemma, Francesca, and Vittorio, Orazio
- Abstract
A multi-functional composite to be employed as a dressing material was prepared by combining hydrogel and microparticle systems. For the synthesis of the hydrogel counterpart, a free radical polymerization was carried out using a gelatin–curcumin conjugate, previously obtained through immobilized laccase catalysis, and polyethylene glycol dimethacrylate as a functional element, plasticizer, and crosslinker. The hydrogel was found to possess high water affinity, biocompatibility, and the ability to reduce the H
2 O2 -induced oxidative stress on MRC-5 cells by 30%. The spherical microparticle system (mean diameter of 1.75 μm) was prepared by self-assembly of a keratin-methacrylated polyethylene glycol-40 stearate derivative synthesized by a free radical reaction. The final composite, prepared by absorption of microparticles on the hydrogel system, was found to be effective as a support for enhanced cell growth (3.5 times). Furthermore, a reduction of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus proliferation by 1 log10 CFU was reached taking advantage of the sustained release of the antimicrobial quercetin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Preconception Health Indicators for Public Health Surveillance.
- Author
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Robbins, Cheryl L., D'angelo, Denise, Zapata, Lauren, Boulet, Sheree L., Sharma, Andrea J., Adamski, Alys, Farfalla, Jennifer, Stampfel, Caroline, Verbiest, Sarah, and Kroelinger, Charlan
- Subjects
HEALTH status indicators ,PRECONCEPTION care ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,WOMEN'S health ,DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
In response to an expressed need for more focused measurement of preconception health (PCH), we identify a condensed set of PCH indicators for state and national surveillance.Objectives: We used a systematic process to evaluate, prioritize, and select 10 PCH indicators that maternal and child health programs can use for surveillance. For each indicator, we assessed prevalence, whether it was addressed by professional recommendations, Healthy People 2020 objectives, or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention winnable battles, measurement simplicity, data completeness, and stakeholders' input.Methods: Fifty PCH indicators were evaluated and prioritized. The condensed set includes indicators that rely on data from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (Results: n = 4) and the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (n = 6). The content encompasses heavy alcohol consumption, depression, diabetes, folic acid intake, hypertension, normal weight, recommended physical activity, current smoking, unwanted pregnancy, and use of contraception. Having a condensed set of PCH indicators can facilitate surveillance of reproductive-aged women's health status that supports monitoring, comparisons, and benchmarking at the state and national levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]Conclusions: - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The 'when' and the 'where' of single-trial allocentric spatial memory performance in young children: Insights into the development of episodic memory.
- Author
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Ribordy Lambert, Farfalla, Lavenex, Pierre, and Banta Lavenex, Pamela
- Abstract
Allocentric spatial memory, 'where' with respect to the surrounding environment, is one of the three fundamental components of episodic memory: what, where, when. Whereas basic allocentric spatial memory abilities are reliably observed in children after 2 years of age, coinciding with the offset of infantile amnesia, the resolution of allocentric spatial memory acquired over repeated trials improves from 2 to 4 years of age. Here, we first show that single-trial allocentric spatial memory performance improves in children from 3.5 to 7 years of age, during the typical period of childhood amnesia. Second, we show that large individual variation exists in children's performance at this age. Third, and most importantly, we show that improvements in single-trial allocentric spatial memory performance are due to an increasing ability to spatially and temporally separate locations and events. Such improvements in spatial and temporal processing abilities may contribute to the gradual offset of childhood amnesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The human hippocampus beyond the cognitive map: evidence from a densely amnesic patient.
- Author
-
Banta Lavenex, Pamela A., Colombo, Françoise, Lambert, Farfalla Ribordy, and Lavenex, Pierre
- Subjects
HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) ,COGNITIVE ability ,ANOMIA ,AUTOIMMUNE diseases ,PERFORMANCE - Abstract
We tested a densely amnesic patient (P9), with bilateral hippocampal damage resulting from an autoimmune disorder, and 12 age- and sex-matched controls on a series of memory tasks designed to characterize allocentric spatial learning and memory abilities. We compared P9's ability to perform spatial memory tasks with her ability to perform non-spatial, color memory tasks. First, P9's performance was impaired as compared to controls even in the simplest versions of an allocentric spatial memory task, in which she had to find repeatedly over 10 trials the same location(s) of one, two or three illuminating foot pad(s) among 23 pads distributed in an open-field arena. In contrast, she performed as well as controls when she had to find repeatedly over 10 trials the same one, two or three pad(s) marked by color cue(s), whose locations varied between trials. Second, P9's performance was severely impaired in working memory tasks, when she had to learn on a trial-unique basis and remember the location(s) or the color(s) of one, two or three pad(s), while performing an interfering task during the 1-min interval separating encoding and retrieval. Without interference during the retention interval of the trial-unique tasks, P9's performance was partially preserved in the color tasks, whereas it remained severely impaired in the allocentric spatial tasks. Detailed behavioral analyses indicate that P9's memory representations are more limited than those of controls both in their precision (metric coding) and in the number of items that can be maintained in memory (capacity). These findings are consistent with the theory that the hippocampus contributes to the integration or binding of multiple items, in order to produce high-resolution/high-capacity representations of spatial and non-spatial information in the service of short-term/working and long-term memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Relevance of Health Warnings on Cigarette Packs: A Psycholinguistic Investigation.
- Author
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Gygax, PascalMark, Bosson, Marlène, Gay, Christelle, and Ribordy, Farfalla
- Subjects
ANTISMOKING movement ,SOCIAL movements ,TOBACCO use ,SMOKING ,MEDICAL communication ,HEALTH risk communication ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Although most research on the effect of tobacco warnings has been focused on attitude changes following the presentation of tobacco warnings, this paper takes a somewhat new perspective by investigating cognitive processing of tobacco warnings by adolescents of different ages (i.e., 14-, 16-, and 18-year-olds). More specifically, this paper investigates the way adolescents encode different textual elements presented in tobacco warnings. By means of a standard psycholinguist paradigm (i.e., sentence evaluation paradigm), we evaluated tobacco warnings differing along three variables: (1) severity, (2) time consequence and (3) target (health vs. others). Our main result demonstrated noticeable differences between the age groups and between smoking experiences in the cognitive processing of tobacco warnings. Our experimental paradigm represents an important step in identifying the mechanisms through which certain types of written warnings are cognitively processed, which in turn may well set a critical base for understanding decision makers' responses to risky behaviors such as smoking and for constructing adequate health warnings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Doxorubicin-Loaded Gold Nanoarchitectures as a Therapeutic Strategy against Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma.
- Author
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Ung, Caitlin, Tsoli, Maria, Liu, Jie, Cassano, Domenico, Pocoví-Martínez, Salvador, Upton, Dannielle H., Ehteda, Anahid, Mansfeld, Friederike M., Failes, Timothy W., Farfalla, Annafranca, Katsinas, Christopher, Kavallaris, Maria, Arndt, Greg M., Vittorio, Orazio, Cirillo, Giuseppe, Voliani, Valerio, Ziegler, David S., and Hoskins, Clare
- Subjects
DOXORUBICIN ,WESTERN immunoblotting ,GOLD ,GLIOMAS ,APOPTOSIS ,PASSIFLORA ,SERUM albumin ,CELL proliferation ,NANOPARTICLES - Abstract
Simple Summary: Diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas (DIPGs) are the most aggressive high-grade gliomas known to affect children. Due to the infiltrative nature of the DIPG tumours in the brainstem, they are very difficult to treat. Unfortunately, children succumb to their disease within 1–2 years from their diagnosis. Novel therapeutic treatments are, thus, urgently needed. Using primary cultures and orthotopic models of DIPG, we evaluated the therapeutic efficacy of passionfruit like nanoarchitectures functionalized with human serum albumin and loaded with doxorubicin (NA-HSA-Dox). We found that NA-HSA-Dox were significantly effective at penetrating DIPG spheroids and subsequently at reducing the proliferation and colony formation in DIPG cells. Although an antitumour effect was not observed in orthotopic models of DIPG, NA-HSA-Dox was well tolerated. These study demonstrates the importance of employing brain tumour orthotopic models for the identification of novel therapies and the need to develop treatments that effectively cross the blood brain barrier. Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Gliomas (DIPGs) are highly aggressive paediatric brain tumours. Currently, irradiation is the only standard treatment, but is palliative in nature and most patients die within 12 months of diagnosis. Novel therapeutic approaches are urgently needed for the treatment of this devastating disease. We have developed non-persistent gold nano-architectures (NAs) functionalised with human serum albumin (HSA) for the delivery of doxorubicin. Doxorubicin has been previously reported to be cytotoxic in DIPG cells. In this study, we have preclinically evaluated the cytotoxic efficacy of doxorubicin delivered through gold nanoarchitectures (NAs-HSA-Dox). We found that DIPG neurospheres were equally sensitive to doxorubicin and doxorubicin-loaded NAs. Colony formation assays demonstrated greater potency of NAs-HSA-Dox on colony formation compared to doxorubicin. Western blot analysis indicated increased apoptotic markers cleaved Parp, cleaved caspase 3 and phosphorylated H2AX in NAs-HSA-Dox treated DIPG neurospheres. Live cell content and confocal imaging demonstrated significantly higher uptake of NAs-HSA-Dox into DIPG neurospheres compared to doxorubicin alone. Despite the potency of the NAs in vitro, treatment of an orthotopic model of DIPG showed no antitumour effect. This disparate outcome may be due to the integrity of the blood-brain barrier and highlights the need to develop therapies to enhance penetration of drugs into DIPG. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Acute alcohol intoxication and expectations reshape the spatiotemporal functional architecture of executive control.
- Author
-
Ribordy Lambert, Farfalla, Wicht, Corentin A., Mouthon, Michael, and Spierer, Lucas
- Subjects
- *
ALCOHOLIC intoxication , *ETHANOL , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *BAYESIAN analysis , *RESPONSE inhibition - Abstract
While the deleterious effects of acute ethyl alcohol intoxication on executive control are well-established, the underlying spatiotemporal brain mechanisms remain largely unresolved. In addition, since the effects of alcohol are noticeable to participants, isolating the effects of the substance from those related to expectations represents a major challenge. We addressed these issues using a double-blind, randomized, parallel, placebo-controlled experimental design comparing the behavioral and electrical neuroimaging acute effects of 0.6 vs 0.02 g/kg alcohol intake recorded in 65 healthy adults during an inhibitory control Go/NoGo task. Topographic ERP analyses of covariance with self-reported dose expectations allowed to dissociate their neurophysiological effects from those of the substance. While alcohol intoxication increased response time variability and post-error slowing, bayesian analyses indicated that it did not modify commission error rates. Functionally, alcohol induced topographic ERP modulations over the periods of the stimulus-locked N2 and P3 components, arising from pre-supplementary motor and anterior cingulate areas. In contrast, alcohol decreased the strength of the response-locked anterior cingulate error-related component but not its topography. This pattern indicates that alcohol had a locally specific influence within the executive control network, but disrupted performance monitoring processes via global strength-based mechanisms. We further revealed that alcohol-related expectations induced temporally specific functional modulations of the early N2 stimulus-locked medio-lateral prefrontal activity, a processing phase preceding those influenced by the actual alcohol intake. Our collective findings thus not only reveal the mechanisms underlying alcohol-induced impairments in impulse control and error processing, but also dissociate substance- from expectations- related functional effects. • ERPs were recorded during a Go/NoGo task after 0.6 g/kg acute alcohol intoxication. • Alcohol induced topographic ERP modulations of the preSMA/ACC N2 and P3 components. • Alcohol induced global field power ERP modulations of the ACC ERN component. • Alcohol-related expectations modulated early mediolateral PFC N2 component. • Spatiotemporal dissociation of the effect of alcohol from those of the related expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Functionalized Carbon Nanostructures Versus Drug Resistance: Promising Scenarios in Cancer Treatment.
- Author
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Curcio, Manuela, Farfalla, Annafranca, Saletta, Federica, Valli, Emanuele, Pantuso, Elvira, Nicoletta, Fiore Pasquale, Iemma, Francesca, Vittorio, Orazio, Cirillo, Giuseppe, and Parisi, Filippo
- Subjects
- *
DRUG resistance , *NANOSTRUCTURES , *CANCER treatment , *MULTIDRUG resistance , *CARBON , *FULLERENES - Abstract
Carbon nanostructures (CN) are emerging valuable materials for the assembly of highly engineered multifunctional nanovehicles for cancer therapy, in particular for counteracting the insurgence of multi-drug resistance (MDR). In this regard, carbon nanotubes (CNT), graphene oxide (GO), and fullerenes (F) have been proposed as promising materials due to their superior physical, chemical, and biological features. The possibility to easily modify their surface, conferring tailored properties, allows different CN derivatives to be synthesized. Although many studies have explored this topic, a comprehensive review evaluating the beneficial use of functionalized CNT vs G or F is still missing. Within this paper, the most relevant examples of CN-based nanosystems proposed for MDR reversal are reviewed, taking into consideration the functionalization routes, as well as the biological mechanisms involved and the possible toxicity concerns. The main aim is to understand which functional CN represents the most promising strategy to be further investigated for overcoming MDR in cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Dextran-Curcumin Nanoparticles as a Methotrexate Delivery Vehicle: A Step Forward in Breast Cancer Combination Therapy.
- Author
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Curcio, Manuela, Cirillo, Giuseppe, Tucci, Paola, Farfalla, Annafranca, Bevacqua, Emilia, Vittorio, Orazio, Iemma, Francesca, and Nicoletta, Fiore Pasquale
- Subjects
DEXTRAN ,BREAST cancer ,CANCER treatment ,METHOTREXATE ,TRANSMISSION electron microscopy ,NANOPARTICLES - Abstract
With the aim to effectively deliver methotrexate (MTX) to breast cancer cells, we designed a nanocarrier system (DC) derived from the self-assembly of a dextran-curcumin conjugate prepared via enzyme chemistry with immobilized laccase acting as a solid biocatalyst. Nanoparticles consisted of homogeneously dispersed nanospheres with a mean diameter of 290 nm, as characterized by combined transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering investigations. DC was able to control the MTX release overtime (t
1/2 value of 310 min), with cell internalization studies proving its presence inside MCF-7 cytoplasm. Finally, improved MTX efficacy was obtained in viability assays, and attributed to the synergy of curcumin moieties and loaded MTX as underlined by a combination index (CI) < 1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Combining Carbon Nanotubes and Chitosan for the Vectorization of Methotrexate to Lung Cancer Cells.
- Author
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Cirillo, Giuseppe, Vittorio, Orazio, Kunhardt, David, Valli, Emanuele, Voli, Florida, Farfalla, Annafranca, Curcio, Manuela, Spizzirri, Umile Gianfranco, and Hampel, Silke
- Subjects
CARBON nanotubes ,LUNG cancer ,SCANNING transmission electron microscopy ,METHOTREXATE ,CHITOSAN - Abstract
A hybrid system composed of multi-walled carbon nanotubes coated with chitosan was proposed as a pH-responsive carrier for the vectorization of methotrexate to lung cancer. The effective coating of the carbon nanostructure by chitosan, quantified (20% by weight) by thermogravimetric analysis, was assessed by combined scanning and transmission electron microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (N1s signal), respectively. Furthermore, Raman spectroscopy was used to characterize the interaction between polysaccharide and carbon counterparts. Methotrexate was physically loaded onto the nanohybrid and the release profiles showed a pH-responsive behavior with higher and faster release in acidic (pH 5.0) vs. neutral (pH 7.4) environments. Empty nanoparticles were found to be highly biocompatible in either healthy (MRC-5) or cancerous (H1299) cells, with the nanocarrier being effective in reducing the drug toxicity on MRC-5 while enhancing the anticancer activity on H1299. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Magnetic Graphene Oxide Nanocarrier for Targeted Delivery of Cisplatin: A Perspective for Glioblastoma Treatment.
- Author
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Makharza, Sami A., Cirillo, Giuseppe, Vittorio, Orazio, Valli, Emanuele, Voli, Florida, Farfalla, Annafranca, Curcio, Manuela, Iemma, Francesca, Nicoletta, Fiore Pasquale, El-Gendy, Ahmed A., Goya, Gerardo F., and Hampel, Silke
- Subjects
GRAPHENE oxide ,CISPLATIN ,THERAPEUTICS ,NANOCARRIERS ,MAGNETIC nanoparticles ,MAGNETIC fields - Abstract
Selective vectorization of Cisplatin (CisPt) to Glioblastoma U87 cells was exploited by the fabrication of a hybrid nanocarrier composed of magnetic γ-Fe
2 O3 nanoparticles and nanographene oxide (NGO). The magnetic component, obtained by annealing magnetite Fe3 O4 and characterized by XRD measurements, was combined with NGO sheets prepared via a modified Hummer's method. The morphological and thermogravimetric analysis proved the effective binding of γ-Fe2 O3 nanoparticles onto NGO layers. The magnetization measured under magnetic fields up to 7 Tesla at room temperature revealed superparamagnetic-like behavior with a maximum value of MS = 15 emu/g and coercivity HC ≈ 0 Oe within experimental error. The nanohybrid was found to possess high affinity towards CisPt, and a rather slow fractional release profile of 80% after 250 h. Negligible toxicity was observed for empty nanoparticles, while the retainment of CisPt anticancer activity upon loading into the carrier was observed, together with the possibility to spatially control the drug delivery at a target site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Chitosan–Quercetin Bioconjugate as Multi‐Functional Component of Antioxidants and Dual‐Responsive Hydrogel Networks.
- Author
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Cirillo, Giuseppe, Curcio, Manuela, Spizzirri, Umile Gianfranco, Vittorio, Orazio, Valli, Emanuele, Farfalla, Annafranca, Leggio, Antonella, Nicoletta, Fiore Pasquale, and Iemma, Francesca
- Subjects
HYDROGELS ,ANTIOXIDANT testing ,ANTIOXIDANTS - Abstract
Multifunctional hydrogels based on chitosan–quercetin (CHITQ) conjugate are prepared by a thermo‐induced radical procedure in the presence of N‐isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm), acrylamide (AAm), and N,N′‐methylenebis(acrylamide) (MEBA). At first, quercetin (Q) is grafted onto chitosan backbone with a functionalization degree of 275 mg of Q per gram of conjugate, as calculated by 1H‐NMR analyses to impart antioxidant properties to the polysaccharide. Then, a pH and temperature sensitive hydrogel was obtained by involving CHITQ and NIPAAm in the polymerization reaction. The accessibility of phenolic moieties is modified in response to the hydrogel swelling/deswelling, as confirmed by antioxidant tests performed at different temperatures. Dual stimuli‐responsive hydrogels are proposed for the delivery of caffeine as model drug. The release profiles of caffeine depict a system particularly performing as on/off device at acidic pH with excellent applicability prospects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Graphene Oxide Functional Nanohybrids with Magnetic Nanoparticles for Improved Vectorization of Doxorubicin to Neuroblastoma Cells.
- Author
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Lerra, Luigi, Farfalla, Annafranca, Sanz, Beatriz, Cirillo, Giuseppe, Vittorio, Orazio, Voli, Florida, Le Grand, Marion, Curcio, Manuela, Nicoletta, Fiore Pasquale, Dubrovska, Anna, Hampel, Silke, Iemma, Francesca, and Goya, Gerardo F.
- Subjects
- *
NEUROBLASTOMA , *GRAPHENE oxide , *CANCER cells , *DOXORUBICIN , *MAGNETIC fields , *GRAPHENE - Abstract
With the aim to obtain a site-specific doxorubicin (DOX) delivery in neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells, we designed an hybrid nanocarrier combining graphene oxide (GO) and magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (MNPs), acting as core elements, and a curcumin–human serum albumin conjugate as functional coating. The nanohybrid, synthesized by redox reaction between the MNPs@GO system and albumin bioconjugate, consisted of MNPs@GO nanosheets homogeneously coated by the bioconjugate as verified by SEM investigations. Drug release experiments showed a pH-responsive behavior with higher release amounts in acidic (45% at pH 5.0) vs. neutral (28% at pH 7.4) environments. Cell internalization studies proved the presence of nanohybrid inside SH-SY5Y cytoplasm. The improved efficacy obtained in viability assays is given by the synergy of functional coating and MNPs constituting the nanohybrids: while curcumin moieties were able to keep low DOX cytotoxicity levels (at concentrations of 0.44–0.88 µM), the presence of MNPs allowed remote actuation on the nanohybrid by a magnetic field, increasing the dose delivered at the target site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Electro-responsive graphene oxide hydrogels for skin bandages: The outcome of gelatin and trypsin immobilization.
- Author
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Di Luca, Mariagrazia, Vittorio, Orazio, Cirillo, Giuseppe, Curcio, Manuela, Czuban, Magdalena, Voli, Florida, Farfalla, Annafranca, Hampel, Silke, Nicoletta, Fiore Pasquale, and Iemma, Francesca
- Subjects
- *
GRAPHENE oxide , *POLYMERIZATION -- Methodology , *BIOCOMPATIBILITY , *POLYETHYLENE glycol , *TENSILE strength - Abstract
A free radical polymerization method was adopted for the fabrication of hybrid hydrogel films based on acrylamide and polyethylene glycol dimethacrylate as plasticizing and crosslinking agents, respectively, to be employed as smart skin bandages. Electro-sensitivity, biocompatibility and proteolytic properties were conferred to the final polymer networks by introducing graphene oxide (0.5% w/w), gelatin or trypsin (10% w/w) in the polymerization feed. The physical chemical and mechanical characterization of hybrid materials was performed by means of determination of protein content, Raman spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis and measurement of tensile strength. The evaluation of both water affinity and curcumin release profiles (analyzed by suitable mathematical modelling) upon application of an external electric stimulation in the 0–48 voltage range, confirmed the possibility to modulate the release kinetics. Proper proteolytic tests showed that the trypsin enzymatic activity was retained by 80% upon immobilization. Moreover, for all samples, we observed a viability higher than 94% in normal human fibroblast cells (MRC-5), while a reduction of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus CFU mL −1 (90%) was obtained with curcumin loaded samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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