518 results on '"Battista, F"'
Search Results
202. Effects of beta-blockers with or without vasodilating properties on central blood pressure: A meta-analysis of randomized trials in hypertension.
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Pucci, G., Ranalli, M., Battista, F., Anastasio, F., Crapa, M., and Schillaci, G.
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- 2014
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203. Excess pressure is independently related to Lv mass and concentric geometry in essential hypertension.
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Pucci, G., Hametner, B., Battista, F., Anastasio, F., Wassertheurer, S., and Schillaci, G.
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- 2014
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204. Morning blood pressure surge, blood pressure variability and aortic stiffness in essential hypertension.
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Pucci, G., Battista, F., Bilo, G., Parati, G., and Schillaci, G.
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- 2013
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205. Cardio-ankle vascular index, left ventricular systolic dysfunction and inappropriate left ventricular mass.
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Schillaci, G., Battista, F., and Pucci, G.
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- 2013
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206. Reproducibility of carotid-to-femoral pulse wave velocity measurement: Quantitative effects of distance and transit time assessment.
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Battista, F., Pucci, G., and Schillaci, G.
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- 2012
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207. Relationship between short-term blood pressure variability and large-artery stiffness in human hypertension.
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Parati, G., Bilo, G., Pucci, G., Laurent, S., Macquin-Mavier, I., Boutouyrie, P., Battista, F., Settimi, L., Desamericq, G., Dolbeau, G., Faini, A., Salvi, P., Mannarino, E., and Schillaci, G.
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- 2012
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208. Cuff and tonometer based device for assessment of carotid to femoral pulse wave velocity: Validation according to Artery Society Guidelines.
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Butlin, M., Bozec, E., Millet-Amaury, E., Pucci, G., Battista, F., Qasem, A., Schillaci, G., Boutouyrie, P., and Avolio, A.
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- 2012
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209. Blood pressure-independent association between aortic characteristic impedance and left ventricular mass in hypertension.
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Pucci, G., Battista, F., Settimi, L., Hametner, B., Wassertheurer, S., and Schillaci, G.
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- 2012
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210. Variations of wave reflection indexes induced by acute blood pressure changes at different arm heights.
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Pucci, G., Gavish, B., Battista, F., Settimi, L., Mannarino, E., and Schillaci, G.
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- 2011
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211. Foliar application of specific yeast derivative enhances anthocyanins accumulation and gene expression in Sangiovese cv (Vitis vinifera L.).
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Pastore, C., Allegro, G., Valentini, G., Pizziolo, A., Battista, F., Spinelli, F., and Filippetti, I.
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YEAST , *ANTHOCYANINS , *GENE expression , *VITIS vinifera , *BIOSYNTHESIS - Abstract
The effect of elicitors on secondary metabolism in vines is receiving much interest, since it has been shown that they are able to increase the accumulation of phenolics, especially anthocyanins. This research aims to investigate the biochemical and molecular effects of the application of a commercial yeast derivative (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) on the accumulation of anthocyanins in potted Sangiovese vines. Experiments were performed on three consecutive years and the yeast derivative was applied at the beginning and at the end of veraison. Technological ripening, accumulation of anthocyanins and expression of the main genes involved in their biosynthesis were assessed. Technological ripening proceeded in a similar way in both treated and untreated berries in the three years. A significant increase in the concentration of anthocyanins was instead detected, following the induction by the yeast derivative of the expression of the genes involved in their biosynthesis. The research highlights the possibility of applying a specific inactivated yeast to increase the anthocyanin concentration even under the current climate change conditions, in Sangiovese, a cultivar extremely sensitive to high temperatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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212. Reliability of an isometric and isokinetic strength testing protocol of the knee and ankle in young adults.
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Gobbo, S., Bergamin, M., Bullo, V., Bergamo, M., Bocalini, D. S., di Blasio, A., Cugusi, L., Roma, E., Battista, F., Alberton, C. L., Neunhaeuserer, D. l., Frizziero, A., Vendramin, B., Duregon, F., and Ermolao, A.
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ISOMETRIC exercise , *COLLEGE students , *ISOKINETIC exercise , *RANGE of motion of joints , *KNEE , *MUSCLE strength testing , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *T-test (Statistics) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INTRACLASS correlation - Abstract
Background: Isokinetic dynamometers are becoming very common in assessing muscle strength and pathology, both in research and clinical practice, but for most of those devices reliability studies are still needed to support their extended use. The aim of this study is to assess the test-retest reliability also in health adults. Methods: Thirty adults (13 male and 17 females; mean age 25.4 ± 2.7 years) were recruited among University students. They participated to two testing sessions (7 day apart) in which they performed isokinetic and isometric strength assessment of the knee and ankle flexion and extension. Results: All variable showed an Intra-class correlation coefficient higher than 0.7 (isometric knee extension 0.96; isokinetic knee extension 0.96; isokinetic knee flexion 0.97; isometric ankle right flexion pl and flexion do 0.75-0.96; isometric ankle left flexion pl and flexion do 0.78-0.97; isokinetic ankle right flexion pl and flexion do 0.88-0.73; isokinetic ankle right flexion pl and flexion do 0.88-0.85) and paired-sample t-test showed no significant difference. Moreover, most of the recorded values were included within the upper and lower limits of agreement. Conclusion: Multi-joint evaluation system is a reliable device to assess knee and ankle isokinetic and isometric strength among healthy adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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213. The Effect of Exercise Training on Irisin Secretion in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: A Systematic Review
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Marco Vecchiato, Emanuele Zanardo, Francesca Battista, Giulia Quinto, Chiara Bergia, Stefano Palermi, Federica Duregon, Andrea Ermolao, Daniel Neunhaeuserer, Vecchiato, M., Zanardo, E., Battista, F., Quinto, G., Bergia, C., Palermi, S., Duregon, F., Ermolao, A., and Neunhaeuserer, D.
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diabetes ,diabete ,exercise prescription ,FNDC5 ,high-intensity interval training ,physical activity ,General Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Irisin is a myokine considered to be a potential mediator of exercise-induced energy metabolism and its secretion is known to promote the browning of beige fat cells in white adipose tissue. However, it is currently not known which exercise protocol is the best to enhance irisin concentration in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Objective: The purpose of this study is to provide a review investigating the irisin response to different exercise training modalities and intensities in T2D. Methods: A systematic literature search was performed in May 2022. Results: After the selection process from 938 articles, six studies were included. Selected papers presented different exercise training interventions regarding intensity and modality. One study reported no significant differences in serum irisin levels after exercise training, whereas the other five showed a higher increase in serum irisin levels after exercise training with higher differences in irisin secretion after high-intensity training (HIT). No consideration was possible on exercise modalities. Conclusions: The impact of training intensity and modality was found to be partly discordant but data seem to suggest that HIT promotes greater irisin secretion. Despite the limited evidence, HIT, both in interval and continuous modalities, could be suggested as valid exercise training to increase circulating irisin in patients with T2D.
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- 2023
214. Arts-therapies in the pedagogical and educational fields as tool to promote inclusion
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G. Aleandri, F. Battista, L.V. Fielden Burns, R. Marfil Carmona, K. Gherab Martín, Aleandri, G., and Battista, F.
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- 2022
215. Encapsulating properties of sulfobutylether-β-cyclodextrin toward a thrombin-derived antimicrobial peptide
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Serena Cozzolino, Roland Winter, Pompea Del Vecchio, Filomena Battista, Eugenio Notomista, Rosario Oliva, Luigi Petraccone, Oliva, R., Battista, F., Cozzolino, S., Notomista, E., Winter, R., Del Vecchio, P., and Petraccone, L.
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Circular dichroism ,Chemistry ,Antimicrobial peptides ,Peptide ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Antimicrobial ,01 natural sciences ,Combinatorial chemistry ,Fluorescence ,DSC ,010406 physical chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Differential scanning calorimetry ,Membrane ,Liposomes ,Isothermal titration calorimetry ,Cyclodextrin ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Antimicrobial peptide ,0210 nano-technology ,Lipid bilayer - Abstract
The pharmacological application of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) is seriously limited as they are not chemically and physically stable. Their encapsulation could represent a way to protect AMPs improving their pharmacological properties. In this study, the complex between the sulfobutylether-b-cyclodextrin (SBE-b-CD) and the antimicrobial peptide (P)GKY20 and its effect on a lipid bilayer have been characterized by a combination of calorimetric (ITC, DSC) and spectroscopic (fluorescence, Circular Dichroism) techniques. The results obtained indicate that the (P)GKY20 form a 1:1 inclusion complex with the anionic SBE-b-CD. Our ITC experiments revealed that the interaction process is entropically driven and that the enthalpy change only slightly contributes to the free energy change. Finally, differential scanning calorimetry data revealed that the peptide, even in the presence of SBE-b-CD, is still able to perturb the bacterial model membrane composed of DPPC/DPPG (8/2 mol mol-1). This work demonstrated that, in principle, SBE-b-CD could be used as efficient encapsulating agent for the (P)GKY20 or other antimicrobial peptides, rendering possible their pharmacological applications.
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- 2019
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216. Simulation of the thermal performance of a geometrically complex Double-Skin Facade for hot climates: EnergyPlus vs. OpenFOAM
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F. Battista, S. El Ahmar, Antonio Fioravanti, El Ahmar, S., Battista, F., and Fioravanti, A.
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energyplus vs. openFOAM ,Computer science ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Building simulation ,Complex geometry ,Physical phenomena ,thermal performance ,simulation ,double-skin facades ,hot climates ,021105 building & construction ,Thermal ,021108 energy ,business.industry ,Building and Construction ,Structural engineering ,CFD ,complex geometry ,Double-Skin Facades ,EnergyPlus ,Double-skin facade ,Double-Skin Facade ,business ,Cfd software ,Energy (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Simulating the thermal performance of Double-Skin Facades (DSFs) is a complex issue faced by many architects who attempt to utilise them for energy-saving, acoustic, and aesthetic benefits. EnergyPlus is among the most widely used building simulation programs, and its capability of simulating DSFs is controversial which derives the need for further investigation. DSFs are usually designed with flat surfaces, and thus the simulations performed in previous studies to verify the accuracy of EnergyPlus were almost always dealing with simple flat facades. This paper presents a preliminary investigation into the reliability of EnergyPlus in simulating the thermal performance of a geometrically complex unconventional DSF. The increase of geometrical complexity increases the challenge of DSF simulation. Using CFD, the paper also aims at having a better understanding of the thermal performance of the DSF which was not possible using only EnergyPlus. A numerical experiment is performed in which two models of a DSF are compared; one simulated with EnergyPlus and the other with OpenFOAM CFD software. The average cavity temperature and the volume flow rate of the air at the outlets are compared. Results of the comparison showed minor differences between them, which gives a positive indication of the potential of EnergyPlus in handling complex geometries with complex physical phenomena. Conducting physical experiments on built prototypes to verify the results represents both the main limitation of this work and its future plan. The paper discusses some of the challenges that prevent architects from using CFD, and how they can be addressed, then ends with some design recommendations for DSFs in hot climatic contexts.
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- 2019
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217. Development of machine learning models to prognosticate chronic shunt-dependent hydrocephalus after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage
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Sergio Nappini, Eleonora Becattini, Tommaso Matteuzzi, Giovanni Muscas, Salvatore Mangiafico, Francesca Battista, Simone Orlandini, B. Carangelo, Leonardo Renieri, Alessandro Della Puppa, Antonio Laiso, Nicola Limbucci, Muscas G., Matteuzzi T., Becattini E., Orlandini S., Battista F., Laiso A., Nappini S., Limbucci N., Renieri L., Carangelo B.R., Mangiafico S., and Della Puppa A.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Subarachnoid hemorrhage ,Prognostic models ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Original Article - Vascular Neurosurgery - Other ,Risk Factors ,Shunt-dependency ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neuroradiology ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Hydrocephalu ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Matthews correlation coefficient ,Prognosis ,Cerebrospinal Fluid Shunts ,Hydrocephalus ,Random forest ,Surgery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Artificial intelligence ,Neurosurgery ,business ,Prognostic model ,computer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Shunt (electrical) - Abstract
Background Shunt-dependent hydrocephalus significantly complicates subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), and reliable prognosis methods have been sought in recent years to reduce morbidity and costs associated with delayed treatment or neglected onset. Machine learning (ML) defines modern data analysis techniques allowing accurate subject-based risk stratifications. We aimed at developing and testing different ML models to predict shunt-dependent hydrocephalus after aneurysmal SAH. Methods We consulted electronic records of patients with aneurysmal SAH treated at our institution between January 2013 and March 2019. We selected variables for the models according to the results of the previous works on this topic. We trained and tested four ML algorithms on three datasets: one containing binary variables, one considering variables associated with shunt-dependency after an explorative analysis, and one including all variables. For each model, we calculated AUROC, specificity, sensitivity, accuracy, PPV, and also, on the validation set, the NPV and the Matthews correlation coefficient (ϕ). Results Three hundred eighty-six patients were included. Fifty patients (12.9%) developed shunt-dependency after a mean follow-up of 19.7 (± 12.6) months. Complete information was retrieved for 32 variables, used to train the models. The best models were selected based on the performances on the validation set and were achieved with a distributed random forest model considering 21 variables, with a ϕ = 0.59, AUC = 0.88; sensitivity and specificity of 0.73 (C.I.: 0.39–0.94) and 0.92 (C.I.: 0.84–0.97), respectively; PPV = 0.59 (0.38–0.77); and NPV = 0.96 (0.90–0.98). Accuracy was 0.90 (0.82–0.95). Conclusions Machine learning prognostic models allow accurate predictions with a large number of variables and a more subject-oriented prognosis. We identified a single best distributed random forest model, with an excellent prognostic capacity (ϕ = 0.58), which could be especially helpful in identifying low-risk patients for shunt-dependency.
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- 2020
218. Insights into the Action Mechanism of the Antimicrobial Peptide Lasioglossin III
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Pompea Del Vecchio, Filomena Battista, Roland Winter, Rosario Oliva, Luigi Petraccone, Battista, F., Oliva, R., Vecchio, P. D., Winter, R., and Petraccone, L.
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0301 basic medicine ,Circular dichroism ,Cell Membrane Permeability ,Lipid Bilayers ,Peptide ,lcsh:Chemistry ,antimicrobial peptides ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Spectroscopy ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Liposome ,lipid domains ,Phosphatidylglycerols ,General Medicine ,Bees ,Computer Science Applications ,Spectrophotometry ,Phosphatidylcholines ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,fluorescence ,medicine.symptom ,Antimicrobial peptide ,calorimetry ,Intracellular ,Pore Forming Cytotoxic Proteins ,liposomes ,Antimicrobial peptides ,Gram-Positive Bacteria ,Article ,Catalysis ,Inorganic Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gram-Negative Bacteria ,leakage assay ,medicine ,Animals ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Mode of action ,Molecular Biology ,POPC ,Lipid domain ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Cell Membrane ,Organic Chemistry ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,circular dichroism ,030104 developmental biology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,chemistry ,Mechanism of action ,Biophysics ,Lasioglossin LL-III ,Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides - Abstract
Lasioglossin III (LL-III) is a cationic antimicrobial peptide derived from the venom of the eusocial bee Lasioglossum laticeps. LL-III is extremely toxic to both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, and it exhibits antifungal as well as antitumor activity. Moreover, it shows low hemolytic activity, and it has almost no toxic effects on eukaryotic cells. However, the molecular basis of the LL-III mechanism of action is still unclear. In this study, we characterized by means of calorimetric (DSC) and spectroscopic (CD, fluorescence) techniques its interaction with liposomes composed of a mixture of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-rac-phosphoglycerol (POPG) lipids as a model of the negatively charged membrane of pathogens. For comparison, the interaction of LL-III with the uncharged POPC liposomes was also studied. Our data showed that LL-III preferentially interacted with anionic lipids in the POPC/POPG liposomes and induces the formation of lipid domains. Furthermore, the leakage experiments showed that the peptide could permeabilize the membrane. Interestingly, our DSC results showed that the peptide-membrane interaction occurs in a non-disruptive manner, indicating an intracellular targeting mode of action for this peptide. Consistent with this hypothesis, our gel-retardation assay experiments showed that LL-III could interact with plasmid DNA, suggesting a possible intracellular target.
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- 2021
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219. A nutraceutical combination reduces left ventricular mass in subjects with metabolic syndrome and left ventricular hypertrophy: A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
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Ferruccio Galletti, Francesca Battista, Giorgio Bosso, Angela Iannuzzi, Giuseppe Schillaci, Giacomo Pucci, Nadia Brambilla, Giampaolo Giacovelli, Cristina Vitalini, Valeria Fazio, Valentina Mercurio, Gaetano Vaudo, Massimo D'Amato, Domenico Bonaduce, Mercurio, V., Pucci, G., Bosso, G., Fazio, V., Battista, F., Iannuzzi, A., Brambilla, N., Vitalini, C., D'Amato, M., Giacovelli, G., Vaudo, G., Schillaci, G., Galletti, F., and Bonaduce, D.
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart Ventricles ,Placebo-controlled study ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Nutraceutical combination ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Left ventricular hypertrophy ,Placebo ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nutraceutical ,Double-Blind Method ,Echocardiography ,Metabolic syndrome ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Policosanol ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Blood pressure ,Dietary Supplements ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Lipid profile ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Increased left ventricular mass (LVM) is often present in metabolic syndrome (MS), also in the setting of well-controlled blood pressure (BP). Aim of the present study was to evaluate the efficacy of a nutraceutical combination of berberine, red yeast rice extract and policosanol (Armolipid Plus™, AP) in reducing LVM in patients with MS and left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH).In this multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, 158 patients with MS (IDF criteria) and LVH (LVM48 g/mOne-hundred-and-forty-five patients (AP n = 74, placebo n = 71) completed the study. A significant percentage reduction in LVM was observed in AP group vs baseline (-2.7%, p 0.0001), and compared to placebo (-4.1%, p 0.0001), and remained significant after adjustment for age, sex, baseline systolic BP and BMI and their changes during the study period. The proportion of subjects showing LVM reduction was higher in AP group than in the placebo group (57% vs 28%, adjusted p = 0.007). Treatment with AP was associated with improvement of lipid profile.24-week of treatment with AP is associated with a significant reduction in LVM in subjects with MS and LVH, in addition to favourable effects on lipid profile, and could represent an effective strategy aiming at reducing the associated cardiovascular risk. The trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov with ID NCT02295176.
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- 2019
220. Exact regularized point particle (ERPP) method for particle-laden wall-bounded flows in the two-way coupling regime
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Carlo Massimo Casciola, Paolo Gualtieri, J.-P. Mollicone, F. Battista, R. Messina, Battista, F., Mollicone, J. -P., Gualtieri, P., Messina, R., and Casciola, C. M.
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fluid flow ,particle ,Point particle ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Impulse (physics) ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,symbols.namesake ,0103 physical sciences ,numerical methods ,particle/fluid flow ,Viscous stress tensor ,010306 general physics ,Stokes number ,Physics ,Turbulence ,Mechanical Engineering ,Fluid Dynamics (physics.flu-dyn) ,Reynolds number ,Mechanics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Vorticity ,Condensed Matter Physics ,3. Good health ,Mechanics of Materials ,Drag ,symbols - Abstract
The Exact Regularized Point Particle (ERPP) method is extended to treat the interphase momentum coupling between particles and fluid in the presence of walls by accounting for the vorticity generation due to the particles close to solid boundaries. The ERPP method overcomes the limitations of other methods by allowing the simulation of an extensive parameter space (Stokes number, mass loading, particle-to-fluid density ratio and Reynolds number) and of particle spatial distributions that are uneven (few particles per computational cell). The enhanced ERPP method is explained in detail and validated by considering the global impulse balance. In conditions when particles are located close to the wall, a common scenario in wall-bounded turbulent flows, the main contribution to the total impulse arises from the particle-induced vorticity at the solid boundary. The method is applied to direct numerical simulations of particle-laden turbulent pipe flow in the two-way coupling regime to address the turbulence modulation. The effects of the mass loading, the Stokes number and the particle-to-fluid density ratio are investigated. The drag is either unaltered or increased by the particles with respect to the uncoupled case. No drag reduction is found in the parameter space considered. The momentum stress budget, which includes an extra stress contribution by the particles, provides the rationale behind the drag behaviour. The extra stress produces a momentum flux towards the wall that strongly modifies the viscous stress, the culprit of drag at solid boundaries., Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics
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- 2019
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221. Efficacy of a nutraceutical combination on lipid metabolism in patients with metabolic syndrome: A multicenter, double blind, randomized, placebo controlled trial
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Giampaolo Giacovelli, Cristina Vitalini, Ferruccio Galletti, Francesca Battista, Giorgio Bosso, Giacomo Pucci, Valentina Mercurio, Massimo D'Amato, Valeria Fazio, Marco Gentile, Giuseppe Schillaci, Domenico Bonaduce, Nadia Brambilla, Galletti, F., Fazio, V., Gentile, M., Schillaci, G., Pucci, G., Battista, F., Mercurio, V., Bosso, G., Bonaduce, D., Brambilla, N., Vitalini, C., D'Amato, M., and Giacovelli, G.
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Male ,Berberine ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Placebo-controlled study ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Fatty Alcohol ,Gastroenterology ,Placebos ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,High-density lipoprotein ,lcsh:RC620-627 ,Metabolic Syndrome ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Middle Aged ,Left Ventricular ,lcsh:Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,Cholesterol ,Treatment Outcome ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Female ,Fatty Alcohols ,Human ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Placebo ,LDL ,03 medical and health sciences ,Double-Blind Method ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Lovastatin ,education ,Policosanol ,Aged ,business.industry ,Research ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Cholesterol, LDL ,Hypertrophy ,medicine.disease ,Lipid Metabolism ,chemistry ,Insulin Resistance ,Dietary Supplements ,Metabolic syndrome ,Lipid profile ,business - Abstract
Background Nutraceuticals represent a new therapeutic frontier in the treatment of metabolic syndrom (MetS) and related cardiovascular risk factors. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential beneficial effects of Armolipid Plus (AP) (berberine 500 mg, red yest rice, monacolin K 3 mg and policosanol 10 mg) on insulin resistance, lipid profile, particularly on small and dense LDL cholesterol (sdLDL-C), representing the most atherogenic components, as well as its effects on high sensitivity C-reactive protein, a notable marker of cardiovascular risk, blood pressure and cardiac remodeling in subjects affected by MetS, with left ventricular hypertrophy. Methods The study was a prospective, multi-center, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trial. One hundred and fifty eight patients, aged between 28 and 76 years old, were enrolled and randomized to receive either one tablet of AP or placebo (PL) once daily for 24 weeks. Anthropometric and vital parameters, total cholesterol (tot-C), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), triglyceridemia (TG), non-HDL cholesterol (NHDL-C) and sdLDL-C were evaluated. Results After 24 weeks of treatment, the analysis performed on 141 subjects (71 in AP arm and 70 in PL arm), showed a significant improvement of lipid profile in the AP group, with reduction in tot-C (− 13.2 mg/dl), LDL-C (− 13.9 mg/dl) and NHDL-C (− 15.3 mg/dl) and increase in HDL-C (+ 2.0 mg/dl). These changes were equally significant compared with placebo (tot-C: AP − 13.2 mg/dL vs PL + 2.7 mg/dL, p
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- 2019
222. Two-Hundred-Newton Laboratory-Scale Hybrid Rocket Testing for Paraffin Fuel-Performance Characterization
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Francesco Battista, Raffaele Savino, G. Elia, M. Invigorito, Carmine Carmicino, Stefano Mungiguerra, G. D. Di Martino, Daniele Cardillo, Di Martino, G. D., Mungiguerra, S., Carmicino, C., Savino, R., Cardillo, D., Battista, F., Invigorito, M., and Elia, G.
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020301 aerospace & aeronautics ,business.product_category ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Nuclear engineering ,Paraffin fuel ,Nozzle ,Aerospace Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Injector ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Chamber pressure ,law.invention ,Characterization (materials science) ,Fuel Technology ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Rocket ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Mass flow rate ,Rocket engine ,business - Abstract
A series of firing tests have been performed on a laboratory-scale hybrid rocket engine of 200 N class, fed with gaseous oxygen through a converging nozzle injector, to assess the mechanical feasibility and regression rate of a newly developed paraffin-based fuel. Such an injector configuration, by producing recirculation at the motor head hand, has been already demonstrated to influence the standard fuels regression rate, which yields an increase with the port diameter at given mass flux. In this study, paraffin-fuel regression rate dependence on the mass flux and grain port diameter in the form of a power function is determined to be similar to that established with polymeric fuels, despite the different mechanism of consumption that involves the fuel surface liquid-layer instability other than the vaporization typical of classical polymers. Comparison with some data in the literature is presented. Data retrieved from the testing campaign are compared with numerical results obtained by adopting a simple but efficient modeling strategy and a commercial solver. The numerical solution gives evidence of the recirculating flow at the injector exit, which is also responsible for the paraffin contamination observed in the motor prechamber. A good agreement is found with chamber pressure experimentally measured.
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- 2019
223. Testing 1kN Paraffin-Based Hybrid Rocket Engine
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D. Cardillo, F. Battista, M. Fragiacomo, G. D. Di Martino, Giandomenico Festa, Stefano Mungiguerra, R. Savino, Cardillo, D., Battista, F., Fragiacomo, M., Di Martino, G. D., Festa, Giandomenico, Mungiguerra, Stefano, and Savino, R.
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COMBUSTION ,DESIGN ,HYBRID ROCKET PROPULSION - Abstract
The present paper describes the design and testing activities carried out on a 1000 N hybrid rocket demonstrator, including a preliminary data assessment. Gaseous oxygen and a paraffin-based solid fuel represent the hybrid propellants. The demonstrator configuration and the design logic are presented first. Later, the experimental results of the test campaign are reported. Results include numerous acquisitions, such as chamber pressure, temperatures and thrust. A preliminary assessment of the experimental data is finally discussed. The demonstrator provided a stable combustion in all the testing conditions and performances in line with the expectations. Throttling capability of the test article was also demonstrated.
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- 2019
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224. Low-protein diets for chronic kidney disease patients: the Italian experience
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L. Oldrizzi, Piergiorgio Bolasco, Giuliano Brunori, Luca De Nicola, Lucia Di Micco, Adamasco Cupisti, Serena Torraca, Battista Fabio Viola, Roberto Minutolo, Vincenzo Bellizzi, Francesco Locatelli, Domenico Santoro, Biagio Di Iorio, Marcora Mandreoli, Stefania Caria, Giacomo Garibotto, Enrico Fiaccadori, Giorgina Barbara Piccoli, Giuseppe Quintaliani, Giovanni Cancarini, Bellizzi, Vincenzo, Cupisti, Adamasco, Locatelli, Francesco, Bolasco, Piergiorgio, Brunori, Giuliano, Cancarini, Giovanni, Caria, Stefania, DE NICOLA, Luca, Di Iorio, Biagio R, Di Micco, Lucia, Fiaccadori, Enrico, Garibotto, Giacomo, Mandreoli, Marcora, Minutolo, Roberto, Oldrizzi, Lamberto, Piccoli, Giorgina B, Quintaliani, Giuseppe, Santoro, Domenico, Torraca, Serena, and Viola, Battista F.
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Nephrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nephrotic Syndrome ,Low protein ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Psychological intervention ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Diabetes Complications ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Chronic kidney disease ,Internal medicine ,Correspondence ,Diet, Protein-Restricted ,medicine ,Humans ,Nephrology, Low protein diet, Chronic kidney disease, amino acids ,Medical nutrition therapy ,Amino Acids ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Intensive care medicine ,Dialysis ,business.industry ,Sodium, Dietary ,medicine.disease ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Low protein diet ,Malnutrition ,Nutrition Assessment ,Italy ,Phosphorus, Dietary ,Dietary Proteins ,Energy Metabolism ,business ,Nephrotic syndrome ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background Nutritional treatment has always represented a major feature of CKD management. Over the decades, the use of nutritional treatment in CKD patients has been marked by several goals. The first of these include the attainment of metabolic and fluid control together with the prevention and correction of signs, symptoms and complications of advanced CKD. The aim of this first stage is the prevention of malnutrition and a delay in the commencement of dialysis. Subsequently, nutritional manipulations have also been applied in association with other therapeutic interventions in an attempt to control several cardiovascular risk factors associated with CKD and to improve the patient's overall outcome. Over time and in reference to multiple aims, the modalities of nutritional treatment have been focused not only on protein intake but also on other nutrients. Discussion This paper describes the pathophysiological basis and rationale of nutritional treatment in CKD and also provides a report on extensive experience in the field of renal diets in Italy, with special attention given to approaches in clinical practice and management. Summary Italian nephrologists have a longstanding tradition in implementing low protein diets in the treatment of CKD patients, with the principle objective of alleviating uremic symptoms, improving nutritional status and also a possibility of slowing down the progression of CKD or delaying the start of dialysis. A renewed interest in this field is based on the aim of implementing a wider nutritional therapy other than only reducing the protein intake, paying careful attention to factors such as energy intake, the quality of proteins and phosphate and sodium intakes, making today’s low-protein diet program much more ambitious than previous. The motivation was the reduction in progression of renal insufficiency through reduction of proteinuria, a better control of blood pressure values and also through correction of metabolic acidosis. One major goal of the flexible and innovative Italian approach to the low-protein diet in CKD patients is the improvement of patient adherence, a crucial factor in the successful implementation of a low-protein diet program.
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- 2016
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225. On Continuity in the Historic Center of Naples
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IZZO, FERRUCCIO, N. Di Battista, F. Izzo, A. Pálffy, and Izzo, Ferruccio
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Centro Antico di Napoli ,archivi d'arte contemporanea ,Architettura contemporanea e città storica - Abstract
The essay investigate the continuity in time and space of Naples' Hisotric Center and identifies those places of discontinuity in the built fabric of the historic city which display the conditions of uprooting. it documents a research consisted in questioning this realities and puting them in a position to renew their roots in their part of the city, continuing its culture into the present.
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- 2012
226. Determinants of Longitudinal Changes in Exercise Blood Pressure in a Population of Young Athletes: The Role of BMI.
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Battista F, Vecchiato M, Chernis K, Faggian S, Duregon F, Borasio N, Ortolan S, Pucci G, Ermolao A, and Neunhaeuserer D
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Aim: Higher exercise blood pressure in adults correlates with many cardiometabolic markers. The aim of this study was to investigate the main determinants of longitudinal variations in exercise blood pressure in young athletes., Methods: A longitudinal retrospective study was conducted on adolescent athletes who underwent at least two sport-related pre-participation screening visits, including exercise testing with a standardized incremental ramp protocol on treadmill. Blood pressure was assessed at rest (SBP
rest ), at the 3rd minute of exercise (SBP3min ), and at peak exercise (SBPpeak ). Predictors of blood pressure response (i.e., respective changes vs. baseline (Δ)) were determined by multivariate regression models after adjustment for age, sex, follow-up duration, related baseline SBP values, characteristics of sport, and ΔBMI., Results: A total of 351 young athletes (mean age at baseline 13 ± 2 years, 54% boys, average follow-up duration 3.4 ± 2.2 years) were enrolled. BMI increased by 1.5 ± 1.8 kg/m2 ( p < 0.001) during follow-up. At baseline, mean SBPrest was 103 ± 14 mmHg, mean SBP3min 124 ± 18 mmHg, and mean SBPpeak 154 ± 23 mmHg. A significant between-visit increase in SBPrest (ΔSBPrest 7.0 ± 17.4 mmHg; p < 0.001), ΔSBP3min (4.8 ± 11 mmHg, p < 0.001), and ΔSBPpeak (11.7 ± 24 mmHg, p < 0.001) was observed. ΔSBP3min was significantly predicted by male sex ( p < 0.01), baseline BMI ( p < 0.01), ΔBMI ( p < 0.01), and number of practiced sports ( p < 0.05), whereas ΔSBPpeak was positively predicted by male gender ( p < 0.01), baseline BMI ( p < 0.05), and ΔBMI ( p < 0.01) and negatively by baseline resting heart rate ( p < 0.01). In a logistic regression model, ΔBMI was the only independent determinant of passing from a lower to an upper quartile of SBP3min ( p < 0.001), while ΔBMI and male sex were independent determinants of moving to a higher quartile of SBPpeak ( p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Increase in BMI during development and male sex are independent determinants of the increase in exercise blood pressure, both at light and maximal intensity, in a population of adolescent athletes.- Published
- 2025
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227. A Survey on the Criteria Used to Judge (Fake) News in Italian Population.
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Battista F, Lanciano T, and Curci A
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- Humans, Italy, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Aged, Adolescent, Surveys and Questionnaires standards, Deception, Judgment
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Introduction: Fake news detection falls within the field of deception detection and, consequently, can be problematic due to no consensus on which cues increase the detection accuracy and because people's ability to detect is poor., Methods: The present study aimed to investigate the criteria used by general population to establish if a given news item is true or fake by surveying a sample of the Italian population. We recruited 329 participants who had to reply to some questions on which criteria they used to conclude a given news item was true. The same questions were also asked to investigate the ones used for fake news judgments., Results and Conclusion: Our results showed that, overall, people use similar criteria (e.g., reliability of the source and presence of scientific references) to conclude that news is true versus fake, although their use rates differ for true and fake news., (© 2025 The Author(s). Brain and Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2025
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228. Reproducibility of daytime hypertension, night-time hypertension, and nocturnal blood pressure dipping patterns in young to middle age patients with stage 1 hypertension.
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Palatini P, Battista F, Mos L, Rattazzi M, Ermolao A, Vriz O, Mazzer A, and Saladini F
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- Humans, Adult, Reproducibility of Results, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Adolescent, Hypertension physiopathology, Hypertension diagnosis, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory methods, Blood Pressure physiology
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Objective: To investigate the reproducibility of ambulatory BP sub-periods and nocturnal dipping phenotypes assessed twice 3 months apart in young-to-middle-age untreated individuals screened for stage 1 hypertension., Design and Methods: We investigated 1096, 18-to-45-year old participants from the HARVEST. Their office BP was 145.8 ± 10.4/93.7 ± 5.7 mmHg. Office BP and 24 h BP were measured at baseline and after 3 months. Office, 24-h, daytime and night-time hypertensions, and nocturnal dipping patterns were defined according to the 2023 ESH guidelines. Between-recording agreement was evaluated with kappa statistics., Results: Reproducibility evaluated with weighted kappa was moderate for both 24 h hypertension ( K = 0.48) and daytime hypertension ( K = 0.50) and was only fair for night-time hypertension ( K = 0.36). Between-measurement agreement was even worse for isolated night-time hypertension ( K = 0.24), and was poor for office hypertension ( K = 0.14). The better reproducibility of daytime than night-time period was confirmed by the analysis of BP as continuous variable (all between-period differences, P < 0.001). Nondipping was present in 31.8%, and showed a fair agreement ( K = 0.28,). Poorer agreement was shown by extreme dipping ( K = 0.18) and reverse dipping ( K = 0.07)., Conclusions: These data show that within the ambulatory sub-periods, daytime hypertension has a better reproducibility than night-time hypertension. This suggests that the better association with adverse outcomes shown by sleep BP compared to wake BP in observational studies is not due to a better reproducibility of the former. The between-measurement agreement is even worse for isolated nocturnal hypertension and dipping patterns, especially for extreme and reverse dipping. Thus, these BP phenotypes should be confirmed with repeat ambulatory BP monitoring., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
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- 2025
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229. Application of Navigated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (nTMS) to Study the Visual-Spatial Network and Prevent Neglect in Brain Tumour Surgery.
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Bonaudo C, Castaldi E, Pedone A, Capelli F, Enderage Don S, Pieropan E, Bianchi A, Gobbo M, Maduli G, Fedi F, Baldanzi F, Troiano S, Maiorelli A, Muscas G, Battista F, Campagnaro L, De Pellegrin S, Amadori A, Fainardi E, Carrai R, Grippo A, and Della Puppa A
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Objective: Navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) has seldom been used to study visuospatial (VS) circuits so far. Our work studied (I) VS functions in neurosurgical oncological patients by using repetitive nTMS (rnTMS), (II) the possible subcortical circuits underneath, and (III) the correspondence between nTMS and direct cortical stimulation (DCS) during awake procedures. Methods: We designed a monocentric prospective study, adopting a protocol to use rnTMS for preoperative planning, including VS functions for lesions potentially involving the VS network, including neurosurgical awake and asleep procedures. nTMS-based-DTI tractography allowed the visualization of subcortical circuits. Statistical analyses on nTMS/DCS points were performed. Clinical results were collected pre- and postoperatively. Results: Finally, 27 patients with primitive intra-axial brain lesions were enrolled between April 2023 and March 2024. Specific tests and an experimental integrated VS test (VISA) were used. The clinical evaluation (at 5 ± 7, 30 ± 10, 90 ± 10 days after surgery) documented 33% of patients with neglect in the left hemisphere four days after surgery and, during the 3-month follow-up, preservation of visuospatial function/clinical recovery (90.62% in MMSE, 98.86% in the bell test, 80% in the clock test, and 98% in the OCS test). The surgical strategy was modulated according to the nTMS map. Subcortical bundles were traced to identify those most involved in these functions: SFLII > SLFII > SLFI. A comparison of the nTMS and DCS points in awake surgery (n = 10 patients) documented a sensitivity (Se) of 12%, a specificity (Sp) of 91.21%, a positive predictive value (PPV) of 42%, a negative predictive value (NPV) of 66%, and an accuracy of ~63.7%. Conclusions: Based on our preliminary results, nTMS is advantageous for studying cognitive functions, minimising neurological impairment. Further analyses are needed to validate our data.
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- 2024
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230. Diet and physical exercise in elderly people with obesity: The state of the art.
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Battista F, Bettini S, Verde L, Busetto L, Barrea L, and Muscogiuri G
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- Humans, Aged, Diet, Exercise Therapy methods, Obesity therapy, Obesity physiopathology, Exercise physiology, Aging physiology, Sarcopenia physiopathology, Sarcopenia therapy, Quality of Life
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Obesity is a disease that is assuming pandemic proportions in recent decades. With the advancement of medicine and increased access to care, average survival has increased, resulting in a larger number of elderly people. As a result, the amount of elderly people living with obesity is increasing, and the morbidity and impact of obesity on ageing implies severe limitations for these people. The link between obesity and ageing is not only epidemiological, but also strictly pathophysiological. Obesity accelerates the ageing process and ageing is characterised by pathophysiological mechanisms shared by obesity itself. Some examples of alterations shared by ageing and obesity are metabolic changes, sarcopenia and reduced functional capacity related to both loss of muscle strength and reduced cardiorespiratory fitness, as well as a general reduction in the perception of quality of life. The specific ability to antagonize these mechanisms through non-pharmacological treatment based on nutrition and exercise has always been one of the focal points of the international literature. Therefore, this review provides the state of the art on scientific knowledge regarding the main effects of an adequate nutritional plan and an individualised exercise prescription on the general health of elderly with obesity. In particular, this paper addresses the effect of nutrition and physical exercise on pathophysiological changes peculiar of ageing and obesity, providing also the scientific rational for nutritional and exercise prescription in the population., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare they have no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 European Federation of Internal Medicine. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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231. Sampling and collector biases as taphonomic filters: an overview.
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Battista F and Schultz CL
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- Humans, Selection Bias, Animals, Fossils, Paleontology methods
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Sampling (or sample) bias is a widespread concern in scientific research, across several disciplines. The concept of sampling bias originated in statistical studies. The consequence of a biased sample is that scientists will conclude about a population different from their target. In paleontology, sampling bias is typically related to fieldwork context. Human factors, known as sullegic (e.g. collection method, historic resampling) and trephic (transport, and curatorial processes) factors can generate bias. Other factor is the ugly fossil syndrome (i.e. choosing based on completeness of the specimens, or according to the researcher interest). Thus, sampling implies information loss. Biased samples add artificial results and can be considered an additional taphonomic filter. Therefore, sampling bias and the collector role and choices are frequently linked and almost indistinguishable. Compared to the treatment of this topic in other research fields, little related discussion has been held in vertebrate paleontology, especially regarding what happens at the interface between the biosphere, lithosphere, and anthroposphere, and during the transition between the anthroposphere and the patrisphere (museums). Numerous questions still arise. As a community, we must pay attention, to minimize the loss of information, from field activities to cataloging.
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- 2024
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232. Orally retrieved negative autobiographical events are associated with increased heart rate as compared with fabricated ones.
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Mangiulli I, Battista F, Otgaar H, Lanciano T, Piro A, Grassi D, Novielli N, Lanubile F, and Curci A
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While it is well-established that authentic emotional autobiographical memories elicit physiological responses, research suggests that this elicitation can also occur for fabricated autobiographical memories. Yet challenges arise from awareness discrepancies when considering two research fields: Participants in memory studies may be unaware of producing false memories, while liars are aware of fabricating false events. Hence, in two experiments, we compared the psychophysiological pattern of true autobiographical memories with fabricated memory narratives. Using noninvasive biometric devices to measure heart rate (HR) and skin conductance level (SCL), participants were tasked with recalling both true and fabricated negative and neutral autobiographical experiences in a written (Experiment 1) and oral (Experiment 2) way. While in Experiment 1, no statistically significant differences were detected in participants' physiological responses across different recall types, in Experiment 2 we found higher HR responses during the recollection of true negative memories as compared with true neutral and fabricated memory accounts. These latter findings confirm that negative autobiographical memories might be associated with increased HR responses when they are recalled verbally. Furthermore, they suggest that people's awareness of memory authenticity (i.e., recalling true versus fabricated events) may be linked to corresponding physiological reactions linked to specific recollections., Competing Interests: Declarations Conflict of interest All the authors listed in the current manuscript declare that they have no affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial interest or nonfinancial interest in the subject matter discussed in this manuscript. Ethical approval Before conducting the current experiments, the authors obtained approval from the Social and Societal Ethics Committee at KU Leuven (G-2022-5412-R2). Consent to participate Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the current research. Consent for publication Not applicable., (© 2024. The Psychonomic Society, Inc.)
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- 2024
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233. Serial cardiopulmonary exercise testing in young patients after one-and-half ventricle repair and Fontan procedure: a comparative study.
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Vecchiato M, Mazzucato B, Battista F, Neunhaeuserer D, Quinto G, Aghi A, Varnier M, Gasperetti A, Di Salvo G, Vida V, Padalino MA, and Ermolao A
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Male, Female, Child, Follow-Up Studies, Exercise Tolerance physiology, Univentricular Heart surgery, Univentricular Heart physiopathology, Adolescent, Fontan Procedure, Exercise Test methods, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Heart Ventricles abnormalities, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery, Heart Defects, Congenital physiopathology
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Aim: The Fontan procedure is a palliative surgical treatment for different congenital heart diseases with a univentricular heart, but it has been associated with decreased exercise capacity, cardiovascular morbidity, and premature mortality. The one-and-half ventricle repair (1.5VR) was introduced as an alternative to the Fontan procedure, specifically for selected patients with borderline hypoplastic right ventricle (HRV), aiming for a more physiological circulation. Despite these efforts, the benefit of 1.5VR over Fontan circulation comparison on clinical and functional outcomes remains unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate and compare young patients with HRV after 1.5VR with those with functional single right or left ventricles (FSRV or FSLV) after Fontan palliation over a 10-year follow-up period., Methods and Results: In this retrospective observational study, serial cardiopulmonary exercise tests (CPETs) performed in patients with 1.5VR and Fontan circulation between September 2002 and March 2024 have been analysed. Only patients with at least 10 years of follow-up were considered. A total of 43 patients were included (age at baseline 8.6 ± 2.6 years): 21 with FSLV, 12 with FSRV, and 10 with 1.5VR. No differences in cardiorespiratory fitness and efficiency were shown at the first CPET assessment among the three groups. At 10-year follow-up, 1.5VR had higher cardiorespiratory fitness and efficiency compared to FSLV and FSRV patients., Conclusion: These findings suggest that the 1.5VR may provide superior long-term functional outcomes than the Fontan procedure in patients with borderline HRV. Further studies are needed to evaluate the impact on hard clinical endpoints., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.)
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- 2024
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234. Electrocorticography and navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation-tailored supratotal resection for epileptogenic low-grade gliomas.
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Battista F, Muscas G, Parenti A, Bonaudo C, Gadda D, Martinelli C, Carrai R, Amadori A, Grippo A, and Della Puppa A
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Objective: Epilepsy is commonly associated with low-grade gliomas (LGGs), impacting patients' well-being. While resection is the primary treatment, seizures can persist postoperatively in 27%-55% of cases. The authors aimed to evaluate an electrocorticography (ECoG) and navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS)-tailored supratotal resection (ETT-SpTR) for LGG in controlling seizures, preserving neurological function, and enhancing treatment effectiveness., Methods: The authors retrospectively analyzed a prospectively enrolled cohort of patients with LGG presenting with epileptic seizures with ictal/interictal activity on electroencephalography (EEG) who underwent resective surgery. The authors performed preoperative nTMS to identify functional cortical areas. ECoG was used to guide the removal of the high-risk epilepsy cortical areas (HREAs). Patients were divided into two groups: group I, the control group, underwent gross-total resection alone, whereas group II patients underwent removal of HREAs identified by ECoG (ETT-SpTR). Resection avoided functionally eloquent areas as identified on nTMS, checked with cortical mapping. Postoperative seizure outcome was assessed using the Engel classification., Results: Fifteen patients who underwent LGG resection between January and July 2023 were included. Among 24 identified nTMS-positive points, none were included in the resection. Overall, 73.3% of patients (11/15) showed positive intraoperative ECoG, with better outcomes in group II (85.7% Engel class IA) than in group I (25% Engel class IA) at the follow-up (p = 0.02, OR 0.5 [95% CI 0.035-7.10], RR 0.19 [95% CI 0.03-1.2]). Seizure control was significantly better in group II, with no notable differences in postoperative transient neurological deficits between the two groups (p = 0.45). No permanent neurological deficits were observed during follow-up. Statistical analysis revealed significant differences between the two groups (p < 0.05)., Conclusions: This preliminary study affirms the predictive value of TMS for postoperative neurological status and safety in epileptic patients. Intraoperative ECoG effectively identified peritumoral HREAs. ETT-SpTR significantly improved epileptic outcomes, preserving functions without permanent neurological worsening. Additional resection targets the HREAs in the temporal, frontal, and parietal lobes.
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- 2024
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235. First record of rhynchosaurs (Archosauromorpha: Rhynchosauria: Hyperodapedontinae) from the early Late Triassic Santacruzodon Assemblage Zone of the Santa Maria Supersequence, Brazil.
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Battista F, Martinelli AG, Ribeiro AM, de Andrade MB, and Schultz CL
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Rhynchosauria is a group of extinct, exclusively Triassic, terrestrial, and herbivorous archosauromorphs, characterized by a peculiar maxillary-mandibular apparatus. They reached global distribution during the Carnian, with the Hyperodapedontinae clade. The rhynchosaurian record from South America is included in the Ladinian-?earliest Carnian Dinodontosaurus Assemblage Zone (Pinheiros-Chiniquá Sequence, Brazil) and Tarjadia Assemblage Zone (Chañares Formation, Argentina), and for strictly Carnian Hyperodapedon Assemblage Zone (Lower Candelária Sequence, Brazil) and Ischigualasto Formation (Argentina). Here, we present the first record of Hyperodapedontinae from the Brazilian Early Carnian Santacruzodon Assemblage Zone (Santa Cruz Sequence). The most diagnostic elements belong to a nearly complete left pes, which presents a combination of hyperodapedontine traits. The presence of a second individual of cf. Hyperodapedontinae is based on a fragmentary, isolated left metatarsal IV. An isolated fragment of premaxilla could belong to the second specimen (based on preservation mode) or to a third individual. This new report fills a gap within the South American rhynchosaurian distribution, strengthening biostratigraphic correlation with other regions from Gondwana (i.e., Madagascar), where similar and coeval faunas are known. The inclusion of these specimens in a phylogenetic dataset resulted in low resolution results, due to missing data because postcranial characters for rhynchosaurs are still poorly explored., (© 2024 American Association for Anatomy.)
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- 2024
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236. Serum Myostatin is Associated With Central-to-Peripheral Arterial Stiffness Gradient in Healthy Adolescents: The MACISTE Study.
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Curcio R, Nunziangeli L, Nulli Migliola E, Battista F, D'Abbondanza M, Anastasio F, Crapa ME, Sanesi L, Pucci G, and Vaudo G
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- Humans, Male, Adolescent, Female, Carotid-Femoral Pulse Wave Velocity, Pulse Wave Analysis, Biomarkers blood, Cross-Sectional Studies, Healthy Volunteers, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Vascular Stiffness, Myostatin blood
- Abstract
Background: Myostatin is a protein compound, structurally related to the transforming growth factor-beta protein, which plays a pivotal role in regulating muscle growth and extracellular matrix production. It exerts both profibrotic and antihypertrophic effects on vascular smooth muscle cells. Aim of the study was to explore the potential association between serum myostatin levels (sMSTN) and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cf-PWV), carotid-radial pulse wave velocity (cr-PWV), and their ratio (PWVr), in a cohort of healthy adolescents., Methods: A cohort of 128 healthy subjects (mean age 17 ± 2 years, 59% male) was randomly selected from participants to the MACISTE (Metabolic And Cardiovascular Investigation at School, TErni) study. sMSTN was assessed utilizing an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. PWVs were measured in the supine position using high-fidelity applanation tonometry., Results: The mean cf-PWV was 5.1 ± 0.9 m/s, cr-PWV was 6.9 ± 0.9 m/s, and PWVr was 0.75 ± 0.12. PWVr exhibited a linear increase across increasing quartiles of sMSTN (0.71 ± 0.1, 0.74 ± 0.1, 0.7 ± 0.1, 0.77 ± 0.1, P for trend = 0.03), whereas the association between sMSTN and each single component of PWVr (cf-PWV, cr-PWV) did not attain statistical significance. Quartiles of sMSTN displayed a positive trend with serum HDL-cholesterol (P = 0.01) and a negative one with LDL-cholesterol (P = 0.01). In a multivariate linear model, the association between PWVr and sMSTN was independent of SBP values, age, sex, heart rate, BMI, HDL-cholesterol, and HOMA Index., Conclusions: In healthy adolescents, sMSTN showed independent associations with PWVr, a measure of central-to-peripheral arterial stiffness gradient. sMSTN may exert differential effects on the structural and functional properties of the arterial wall., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of American Journal of Hypertension, Ltd. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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237. The many faces of exercise intensity: a call to agree on definitions and provide standardized prescriptions.
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Faggian S, Centanini A, Quinto G, Vecchiato M, Ermolao A, Battista F, and Neunhaeuserer D
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- Humans, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Exercise Therapy standards, Terminology as Topic, Exercise physiology
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Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: none declared.
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- 2024
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238. Tailored exercise with telehealth monitoring improves adherence and global health in kidney transplant recipients.
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Vecchiato M, Duregon F, Zanardo E, Baioccato V, Quinto G, Livio A, Mazzucato B, Sarri C, Bellis L, Carella C, Cardillo M, Neunhaeuserer D, Ermolao A, and Battista F
- Abstract
Introduction: Tailored exercise prescription is a crucial intervention for kidney transplant recipients (KTRs). This longitudinal study investigates the impact on long-term effectiveness of exercise prescriptions over one year follow-up, implementing telehealth tools for exercise administration and adherence monitoring., Materials and Methods: KTRs were evaluated with clinical assessments including body composition, blood and urinary parameters, physical performance and quality of life at baseline (T0), after six (T6) and twelve (T12) months. The adherence to prescribed exercise training was monitored via video call interviews until T6 when the sample was divided into a group monitored via wearables (WG) and a group continuing video calls (VG) until T12., Results: Twenty-six KTRs completed the study. No changes in body composition and kidney function were reported. KTRs showed an improvement in lipid profile, systolic blood pressure, cardiorespiratory fitness and quality of life. WG showed no clinical differences compared to VG except for reported higher quality of life., Discussion: A good adherence to the exercise prescription was obtained with both monitoring methods (232 vs 253 min/week). This study reinforces the inclusion exercise training for KTRs to enhance physical fitness and reduce cardiovascular risk factors. These results emphasize the role of telehealth monitoring methods as motivators for adherence to long-term exercise prescriptions., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (© 2024 Vecchiato, Duregon, Zanardo, Baioccato, Quinto, Livio, Mazzucato, Sarri, Bellis, Carella, Cardillo, Neunhaeuserer, Ermolao and Battista.)
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- 2024
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239. Publisher Correction: Respiratory exchange ratio overshoot during exercise recovery: a promising prognostic marker in HfrEF.
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Vecchiato M, Neunhaeuserer D, Zanardo E, Quinto G, Battista F, Aghi A, Palermi S, Babuin L, Tessari C, Guazzi M, Gasperetti A, and Ermolao A
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- 2024
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240. Comparison of Cardiorespiratory Fitness Prediction Equations and Generation of New Predictive Model for Patients with Obesity.
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Vecchiato M, Aghi A, Nerini R, Borasio N, Gasperetti A, Quinto G, Battista F, Bettini S, DI Vincenzo A, Ermolao A, Busetto L, and Neunhaeuserer D
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Linear Models, Cardiorespiratory Fitness physiology, Exercise Test methods, Obesity physiopathology
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Purpose: Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is a critical marker of overall health and a key predictor of morbidity and mortality, but the existing prediction equations for CRF are primarily derived from general populations and may not be suitable for patients with obesity., Methods: Predicted CRF from different non-exercise prediction equations was compared with measured CRF of patients with obesity who underwent maximal cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET). Multiple linear regression was used to develop a population-specific nonexercise CRF prediction model for treadmill exercise including age, sex, weight, height, and physical activity level as determinants., Results: Six hundred sixty patients underwent CPET during the study period. Within the entire cohort, R2 values had a range of 0.24 to 0.46. Predicted CRF was statistically different from measured CRF for 19 of the 21 included equations. Only 50% of patients were correctly classified into the measured CRF categories according to predicted CRF. A multiple model for CRF prediction (mL·min -1 ) was generated ( R2 = 0.78) and validated using two cross-validation methods., Conclusions: Most used equations provide inaccurate estimates of CRF in patients with obesity, particularly in cases of severe obesity and low CRF. Therefore, a new prediction equation was developed and validated specifically for patients with obesity, offering a more precise tool for clinical CPET interpretation and risk stratification in this population., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American College of Sports Medicine.)
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- 2024
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241. Contrasting obesity: is something missing here? Comment.
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Battista F, Neunhaeuserer D, Vecchiato M, Quinto G, and Ermolao A
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- Humans, Body Mass Index, Obesity complications
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- 2024
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242. Sport climbing performance determinants and functional testing methods: A systematic review.
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Faggian S, Borasio N, Vecchiato M, Gatterer H, Burtscher M, Battista F, Brunner H, Quinto G, Duregon F, Ermolao A, and Neunhaeuserer D
- Abstract
Background: Sport climbing is becoming incredibly popular both in the general population and among athletes. No consensus exists regarding evidence-based sport-specific performance evaluation; therefore, this systematic review was aimed at analyzing determinants of sport climbing performance and evaluation methods by comparing climbers of different levels., Methods: PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science were searched up to December 20,2022. Studies providing the self-reported climbing ability associated with different functional outcomes in groups of climbers of contiguous performance levels were eligible., Results: 74 studies were finally included. Various methods have been proposed to evaluate determinants of sport climbing performance. Climbing-specific assessments were able to discriminate climbers of different levels when compared to general functional tests. Test validity resulted high for climbing-specific cardiorespiratory endurance as well as muscular-strength, -endurance, and -power; similarly, reliability was good except for cardiorespiratory endurance. Climbing-specific flexibility assessment resulted in high reliability but moderate validity, whereas balance showed low validity. Considerable conflicting evidence was found regarding anthropometric characteristics., Conclusion: The present analysis identified cardiorespiratory endurance as well as muscular-strength, -endurance, and -power as determinants of sport climbing performance. In contrast, balance, flexibility, and anthropometric characteristics seem to count less. This review also proposes an evidence-based Functional Sport Climbing test battery for assessing performance determinants, which includes tests that have been identified to be valid, reliable, and feasible. While athletes and coaches should rely on evidence-based and standardized evaluation methods, researchers may design specific large-scale trials as a resource for providing additional, homogenous, and comparable data to improve scientific evidence and professionalism in this popular sport discipline., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests., (Copyright © 2025. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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243. Functional frontal lobectomy in the surgical treatment of pharmacoresistant frontal lobe epilepsy: how I do it.
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Battista F, Esposito A, Muscas G, and Della Puppa A
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- Humans, Neuronavigation methods, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation methods, Treatment Outcome, Drug Resistant Epilepsy surgery, Drug Resistant Epilepsy diagnostic imaging, Epilepsy, Frontal Lobe surgery, Epilepsy, Frontal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Frontal Lobe surgery, Frontal Lobe diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Frontal lobe epilepsy is pharmacoresistant in 30% of cases, constituting 10-20% of epilepsy surgeries. For cases of no lesional epilepsy (negative MRI), frontal lobectomy is a crucial treatment, historically involving Frontal Anatomical Lobectomy (AFL) with a 33.3% complication risk and 55.7% seizure control., Methods: We describe Frontal Functional Lobectomy (FFL), in which the boundaries are defined on the patient's functional cortico-subcortical areas, recognized with advanced intraoperative technologies such as tractography and navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS)., Conclusions: The FFL allows for a broader resection with a lower rate of postoperative complications than the AFL., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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244. The reminiscence bump and the self: evidence from five studies on positive and negative memories.
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Curci A, Battista F, Lanciano T, d'Ovidio FD, and Conway MA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Adolescent, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Middle Aged, China, Music psychology, United States, Memory, Episodic, Mental Recall, Emotions
- Abstract
A plethora of studies have shown that people persistently remember public and personal events experienced during adolescence and early adulthood, particularly with a positive valence. In five studies, we investigate the reminiscence bump (RB) for positive and negative memories of public events (Studies 1 and 2), private events (Study 3), music-related events (Study 4), and cross-cultural memory differences (i.e., China and US) (Study 5). Participants retrieved either one positive or one negative memory, indicated their Age of Encoding, and provided secondary measures, i.e., memory vividness and rehearsal (Studies 1 and 3) and emotional intensity (Studies 2 and 4). About 10,000 memories were collected and positive memories appeared generally older than negative recollections, but the RB emerged for both positive and negative memories. Furthermore, the peak was earlier for positive memories of public events (<15 years old) than for negative memories (20-40 years), while no differences were found for private events or music-related experiences (15-25 years). Chinese had their RB later than US respondents. Finally, autobiographical recollections have moderate to low associations with secondary measures of phenomenological features of memory. These findings are consistent with the identity-formation theory, providing additional and important information on the development of the Self.
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- 2024
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245. The effect of mood on shaping belief and recollection following false feedback.
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Li C, Otgaar H, Battista F, Muris P, and Zhang Y
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Adolescent, Affect physiology, Mental Recall physiology, Feedback, Psychological physiology
- Abstract
The current study examined how mood affects the impact of false feedback on belief and recollection. In a three-session experiment, participants first watched 40 neutral mini videos, which were accompanied by music to induce either a positive or negative mood, or no music. Following a recognition test, they received false feedback to reduce belief in the occurrence of the events displayed in some of the videos (Session 2). This was followed by an immediate memory test and a delayed memory assessment one week later (Session 3). The results revealed that participants in negative mood reported higher belief scores compared to those in positive moods, despite an overall decline in belief scores for all groups following the false feedback. Notably, individuals in negative moods exhibited less reduction in their belief scores after encountering challenges, thereby maintaining a higher accuracy in their testimonies. Over time, a reduction in the clarity of participants' memory recall was observed, which correspondingly reduced their testimony accuracy. This study thus indicates that mood states play a role in shaping belief and memory recall under the influence of false feedback., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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246. Brain tumor surgery guided by navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation mapping for arithmetic calculation.
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Bonaudo C, Pedone A, Capelli F, Gori B, Baldanzi F, Fedi F, Troiano S, Maiorelli A, Masi G, Martinelli C, Pieropan E, Castaldi E, Capialbi NA, Enderage Don S, Battista F, Campagnaro L, Muscas G, Amadori A, Fainardi E, Carrai R, Grippo A, and Della Puppa A
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Adult, Aged, Young Adult, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation methods, Neuronavigation methods, Brain Mapping methods
- Abstract
Objective: The onco-functional balance represents the primary goal in neuro-oncology. The increasing use of navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) allows the noninvasive characterization of cortical functional anatomy, and its reliability for motor and language mapping has previously been validated. Calculation and arithmetic processing has not been studied with nTMS so far. In this study, the authors present their preliminary data concerning nTMS calculation., Methods: The authors designed a monocentric prospective study, adopting an internal protocol to use nTMS for preoperative planning, including arithmetic processing. When awake surgery was possible, according to the patients' conditions, nTMS points were used to guide direct cortical stimulation (DCS), i.e., the gold standard for cortical mapping. Navigated TMS-based tractography was used for surgical planning. Statistical analyses on the nTMS and DCS points were performed., Results: From February 2021 to October 2023, 61 procedures for nTMS calculation mapping were performed. The clinical evaluation, including pre- and postoperative evaluations (3 months after surgery), demonstrated a good clinical outcome with preservation of arithmetic function and recovery (92.8% of patients). Between the awake and asleep surgery groups, the postoperative clinical results were comparable at the 3-month follow-up, with > 90% of the patients achieving improved calculation function. The surgical strategy adopted was aimed at sparing nTMS positive points in asleep procedures, whereas nTMS and DCS positive points were not removed in awake procedures. Overall, 62% of the positive points for calculation functions were exposed by craniotomy and 85% were spared during surgery. None of the patients developed nTMS-related seizures. Diffusion tensor imaging fiber tracking based on nTMS positive points for calculation was used. The white matter fiber tracts involved in calculation functions were the arcuate fasciculus (56%) and frontal aslant tract (22%). When nTMS and DCS points were compared in awake surgery (n = 10 patients), a sensitivity of 31.71%, specificity of 85.76%, positive predictive value of 22.41%, negative predictive value of 90.64%, and accuracy of approximately 69% were achieved., Conclusions: Based on the authors' preliminary data, nTMS can be an advantageous tool to study cognitive functions, aimed at minimizing neurological impairment. The postoperative clinical outcome for patients who underwent operation with nTMS was very good. Considering these results, nTMS has proved to be a feasible method to map cognitive areas including those for calculation functions. Further analyses are needed to validate these data. Finally, other cognitive functions (e.g., visuospatial) may be explored with nTMS.
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- 2024
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247. Bubbles enable volumetric negative compressibility in metastable elastocapillary systems.
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Caprini D, Battista F, Zajdel P, Di Muccio G, Guardiani C, Trump B, Carter M, Yakovenko AA, Amayuelas E, Bartolomé L, Meloni S, Grosu Y, Casciola CM, and Giacomello A
- Abstract
Although coveted in applications, few materials expand when subject to compression or contract under decompression, i.e., exhibit negative compressibility. A key step to achieve such counterintuitive behaviour is the destabilisations of (meta)stable equilibria of the constituents. Here, we propose a simple strategy to obtain negative compressibility exploiting capillary forces both to precompress the elastic material and to release such precompression by a threshold phenomenon - the reversible formation of a bubble in a hydrophobic flexible cavity. We demonstrate that the solid part of such metastable elastocapillary systems displays negative compressibility across different scales: hydrophobic microporous materials, proteins, and millimetre-sized laminae. This concept is applicable to fields such as porous materials, biomolecules, sensors and may be easily extended to create unexpected material susceptibilities., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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248. Editorial: The impact of internal and external influences on memory and their relevance to legal decisions.
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Battista F, Mangiulli I, Otgaar H, and Curci A
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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- 2024
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249. Hydrogen and methane production through two stage anaerobic digestion of straw residues.
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Bertasini D, Battista F, Mancini R, Frison N, and Bolzonella D
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- Anaerobiosis, Fermentation, Methane, Bioreactors, Biofuels, Hydrogen, Fatty Acids, Volatile
- Abstract
Anaerobic digestion of agricultural waste can contribute to the European renewable energy needs. The 71% of the 20,000 anaerobic digestion plants in operation already uses these agro-waste as feedstock; part of these plants can be converted into two stage processes to produce hydrogen and methane in the same plant. Biomethane enriched in hydrogen can replace natural gas in grids while contributing to the sector decarbonisation. Straw is the most abundant agricultural residue (156 Mt/y) and its conventional final fate is uncontrolled soil disposal, landfilling, incineration or, in the best cases, composting. The present research work focuses on the fermentation of spent mushroom bed, an agricultural lignocellulosic byproduct, composed mainly from wheat straw. The substrate has been characterized and semi-continuous tests were performed evaluating the effect of the hydraulic retention time on hydrogen and volatile fatty acids production. It was found that all the tests confirmed the feasibility of the process even on this lignocellulosic substrate, and also, it was identified HRT 4.0 d as the best option to optimize the productivity of volatile fatty acids (17.09 gCODVFAs/(KgVS*d)), and HRT 6.0 d for hydrogen (7.98 LH
2 /(KgVS*d)). The fermentation effluent was used in biomethanation potential tests to evaluate how this process affects a subsequent digestion phase, reporting an increase in the energetical feedstock exploitation up to 30%., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests:Federico Battista reports financial support was provided by National Institute for Insurance against Accidents at Work. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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250. Intraoperative seizures during neuro-oncological supratentorial surgery: the role of prophylaxis with levetiracetam and intraoperative monitoring in a consecutive series of 353 patients.
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Battista F, Muscas G, Parenti A, Spalletti M, Martinelli C, Carrai R, Amadori A, and Della Puppa A
- Abstract
Background: The aim of this paper was to understand the role of prophylaxis with levetiracetam at skin incision in preventing convulsive intraoperative seizures (IOS) during neurosurgical procedures with and without intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM)., Methods: Authors retrospectively reviewed the Institutional database for cases of supratentorial brain tumors undergoing surgical resection performed from January 2021 to October 2022. Patients were operated on both under general anesthesia and awake, using motor-evoked potentials (MEP) and direct cortical stimulation for cortical mapping. 1000 mg ev of Levetiracetam before skin incision in case of a history of seizures was administrated. We excluded all infratentorial cases., Results: Three hundred fisty three consecutive cases were retrieved. IOS occurred in 22 patients (6.2%). Prophylaxis with Levetiracetam was administered in 149 patients, and IOS occurred in 16 cases (10.7%) in this group of patients. The IOS rate in the case of no Levetiracetam prophylaxis administration (3.5%) was significantly lower (P<0.001, OR=3.38 [1.35-8.45], RR=3.12 [1.32-7.41]). The Penfield technique stimulation evoked seven of all 22 IOS reported (31.8%) (P=0.006, RR 5.4 [1.44 -20.58], OR 21 [2.3-183.9]), and the train-of-five technique stimulation caused two of all registered IOS (8.7%) (P=0.2, RR 2.3 [0.99-5.67], OR 6.5 [0.55-76.17]). Transcranial MEPs evoked no IOS., Conclusions: Under levetiracetam prophylaxis, the IOS rate was not significantly lower than in the group of patients without Levetiracetam prophylaxis, regardless of the histology of the tumor and IONM. Neither the transcranial stimulation (MEP) nor train-of-five technique stimulation increases the risk of convulsive IOS, as Penfield technique stimulation does.
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- 2024
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