567 results on '"Capozza P"'
Search Results
2. Gender diversity in European firms and the R&D-innovation-productivity nexus
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Capozza, Claudia and Divella, Marialuisa
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- 2024
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3. Utility of pathologist panels for achieving consensus in NASH histologic scoring in clinical trials: Data from a phase 3 study.
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Sanyal, Arun, Anstee, Quentin, Ratziu, Vlad, Kowdley, Kris, Rinella, Mary, Harrison, Stephen, Resnick, Murray, Capozza, Thomas, Sawhney, Sangeeta, Shelat, Nirav, Younossi, Zobair, and Loomba, Rohit
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Humans ,Consensus ,Pathologists ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Reproducibility of Results ,Inflammation ,Fibrosis - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Liver histopathologic assessment is the accepted surrogate endpoint in NASH trials; however, the scoring of NASH Clinical Research Network (CRN) histologic parameters is limited by intraobserver and interobserver variability. We designed a consensus panel approach to minimize variability when using this scoring system. We assessed agreement between readers, estimated linear weighted kappas between 2 panels, compared them with published pairwise kappa estimates, and addressed how agreement or disagreement might impact the precision and validity of the surrogate efficacy endpoint in NASH trials. METHODS: Two panels, each comprising 3 liver fellowship-trained pathologists who underwent NASH histology training, independently evaluated scanned whole slide images, scoring fibrosis, inflammation, hepatocyte ballooning, and steatosis from baseline and month 18 biopsies for 100 patients from the precirrhotic NASH study REGENERATE. The consensus score for each parameter was defined as agreement by ≥2 pathologists. If consensus was not reached, all 3 pathologists read the slide jointly to achieve a consensus score. RESULTS: Between the 2 panels, the consensus was 97%-99% for steatosis, 91%-93% for fibrosis, 88%-92% for hepatocyte ballooning, and 84%-91% for inflammation. Linear weighted kappa scores between panels were similar to published NASH CRN values. CONCLUSIONS: A panel of 3 trained pathologists independently scoring 4 NASH CRN histology parameters produced high consensus rates. Interpanel kappa values were comparable to NASH CRN metrics, supporting the accuracy and reproducibility of this method. The high concordance for fibrosis scoring was reassuring, as fibrosis is predictive of liver-specific outcomes and all-cause mortality.
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- 2024
4. The effect of on-site and on-call nurse on exclusive breastfeeding in two different hospital settings: a prospective observational cohort study
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Giuseppe Latorre, Domenico Martinelli, Manuela Capozza, Francesca Maria Grosso, Nicola Laforgia, and Maria Elisabetta Baldassarre
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Breastfeeding ,On-site nurse ,On-call nurse ,Rooming in ,Mother-newborn dyad ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Abstract Background Exclusive breastfeeding during postpartum hospitalization is very important for ensuring the success of breastfeeding at home. The aim of the study is to determine if the on-site nurse in rooming in improves exclusive breastfeeding ratio. Methods We conducted a prospective observational cohort study to evaluate exclusive breastfeeding during the first three months of life in two Neonatology Units in the South of Italy with different hospital settings: Ente Ecclesiastico Miulli of Acquaviva delle Fonti with on-site nurse h24 (on-site group) and Policlinico of Bari with nurse available on call h24 from Neonatology Unit (on-call group). Results A total of 564 mother-baby dyads were admitted from 3 January to 31 March 2018 (299 in on-site group and 265 in on-call group). In the overall population, exclusive breastfeeding rate was 76.4% at 90-days, confirming the role of nurse and rooming in, independently of modality of setting. Considering the way of delivery, in infants from cesarean section there were higher rates for exclusive breastfeeding at 30 and 90 days of life in on-site group. Conclusions We can assume that the presence of a nurse h24 could better identify breastfeeding problems. Our study suggests the role of on-site nurse during rooming in to encourage exclusive breastfeeding until three months of life in mothers who underwent caesarean section.
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- 2024
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5. The effect of on-site and on-call nurse on exclusive breastfeeding in two different hospital settings: a prospective observational cohort study
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Latorre, Giuseppe, Martinelli, Domenico, Capozza, Manuela, Grosso, Francesca Maria, Laforgia, Nicola, and Baldassarre, Maria Elisabetta
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- 2024
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6. Comparison of “IN-REC-SUR-E” and LISA in preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome: a randomized controlled trial (IN-REC-LISA trial)
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Vento, Giovanni, Paladini, Angela, Aurilia, C., Ozdemir, S. Alkan, Carnielli, V. P., Cools, F., Costa, S., Cota, F., Dani, C., Davis, P. G., Fattore, S., Fè, C., Finer, N., Fusco, F. P., Gizzi, C., Herting, E., Jian, M., Lio, A., Lista, G., Mosca, F., Nobile, S., Perri, A., Picone, S., Pillow, J. J., Polglase, G., Pasciuto, T., Pastorino, R., Tana, M., Tingay, D., Tirone, C., van Kaam, A. H., Ventura, M. L., Aceti, A., Agosti, M., Alighieri, G., Ancora, G., Angileri, V., Ausanio, G., Aversa, S., Balestri, E., Baraldi, E., Barbini, M. C., Barone, C., Beghini, R., Bellan, C., Berardi, A., Bernardo, I., Betta, P., Binotti, M., Bizzarri, B., Borgarello, G., Borgione, S., Borrelli, A., Bottino, R., Bracaglia, G., Bresesti, I., Burattini, I., Cacace, C., Calzolari, F., Campagnoli, M. F., Capasso, L., Capozza, M., Capretti, M. G., Caravetta, J., Carbonara, C., Cardilli, V., Carta, M., Castoldi, F., Castronovo, A., Cavalleri, E., Cavigioli, F., Cecchi, S., Chierici, V., Cimino, C., Cocca, F., Cocca, C., Cogo, P., Coma, M., Comito, V., Condò, V., Consigli, C., Conti, R., Corradi, M., Corsello, G., Corvaglia, L. T., Costa, A., Coscia, A., Cresi, F., Crispino, F., D’Amico, P., De Cosmo, L., De Maio, C., Del Campo, G., Di Credico, S., Di Fabio, S., Di Nicola, P., Di Paolo, A., Di Valerio, S., Distilo, A., Duca, V., Falcone, A., Falsaperla, R., Fasolato, V. A., Fatuzzo, V., Favini, F., Ferrarello, M. P., Ferrari, S., Nastro, F. Fiori, Forcellini, C. A., Fracchiolla, A., Gabriele, A., Galdo, F., Gallini, F., Gangemi, A., Gargano, G., Gazzolo, D., Gentile, M. P., Ghirardello, S., Giardina, F., Giordano, L., Gitto, E., Giuffrè, M., Grappone, L., Grasso, F., Greco, I., Grison, A., Guglielmino, R., Guidotti, I., Guzzo, I., La Forgia, N., La Placa, S., La Torre, G., Lago, P., Lanciotti, L., Lavizzari, A., Leo, F., Leonardi, V., Lestingi, D., Li, J., Liberatore, P., Lodin, D., Lubrano, R., Lucente, M., Luciani, S., Luvarà, D., Maffei, G., Maggio, A., Maggio, L., Maiolo, K., Malaigia, L., Mangili, G., Manna, A., Maranella, E., Marciano, A., Marcozzi, P., Marletta, M., Marseglia, L., Martinelli, D., Martinelli, S., Massari, S., Massenzi, L., Matina, F., Mattia, L., Mescoli, G., Migliore, I. V., Minghetti, D., Mondello, I., Montano, S., Morandi, G., Mores, N., Morreale, S., Morselli, I., Motta, M., Napolitano, M., Nardo, D., Nicolardi, A., Nider, S., Nigro, G., Nuccio, M., Orfeo, L., Ottaviano, C., Paganin, P., Palamides, S., Palatta, S., Paolillo, P., Pappalardo, M. G., Pasta, E., Patti, L., Paviotti, G., Perniola, R., Perotti, G., Perrone, S., Petrillo, F., Piazza, M. S., Piccirillo, A., Pierro, M., Piga, E., Pingitore, G. A., Pisu, S., Pittini, C., Pontiggia, F., Pontrelli, G., Primavera, A., Proto, A., Quartulli, L., Raimondi, F., Ramenghi, L., Rapsomaniki, M., Ricotti, A., Rigotti, C., Rinaldi, M., Risso, F. M., Roma, E., Romanini, E., Romano, V., Rosati, E., Rosella, V., Rulli, I., Salvo, V., Sanfilippo, C., Sannia, A., Saporito, A., Sauna, A., Scapillati, E., Schettini, F., Scorrano, A., Mantelli, S. Semeria, Sepporta, V., Sindico, P., Solinas, A., Sorrentino, E., Spaggiari, E., Staffler, A., Stella, M., Termini, D., Terrin, G., Testa, A., Tina, G., Tirantello, M., Tomasini, B., Tormena, F., Travan, L., Trevisanuto, D., Tuling, G., Tulino, V., Valenzano, L., Vedovato, S., Vendramin, S., Villani, P. E., Viola, S., Viola, V., Vitaliti, G., Vitaliti, M., Wanker, P., Yang, Y., Zanetta, S., and Zannin, E.
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- 2024
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7. Interventions for anxiety and depression in patients with atopic dermatitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Hartono, Stella P., Chatrath, Sheena, Aktas, Ozge N, Kubala, Stephanie A, Capozza, Korey, Myles, Ian A., Silverberg, Jonathan I., and Schwartz, Alan
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- 2024
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8. Neonatal outcomes and follow-up of children born to women with pregnancy-associated cancer: a prospective observational study
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Capozza, Michele Antonio, Romano, Alberto, Mastrangelo, Stefano, Attinà, Giorgio, Maurizi, Palma, Costa, Simonetta, Vento, Giovanni, Scambia, Giovanni, and Ruggiero, Antonio
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- 2024
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9. Comparison of 'IN-REC-SUR-E' and LISA in preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome: a randomized controlled trial (IN-REC-LISA trial)
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Giovanni Vento, Angela Paladini, C. Aurilia, S. Alkan Ozdemir, V. P. Carnielli, F. Cools, S. Costa, F. Cota, C. Dani, P. G. Davis, S. Fattore, C. Fè, N. Finer, F. P. Fusco, C. Gizzi, E. Herting, M. Jian, A. Lio, G. Lista, F. Mosca, S. Nobile, A. Perri, S. Picone, J. J. Pillow, G. Polglase, T. Pasciuto, R. Pastorino, M. Tana, D. Tingay, C. Tirone, A. H. van Kaam, M. L. Ventura, A. Aceti, M. Agosti, G. Alighieri, G. Ancora, V. Angileri, G. Ausanio, S. Aversa, E. Balestri, E. Baraldi, M. C. Barbini, C. Barone, R. Beghini, C. Bellan, A. Berardi, I. Bernardo, P. Betta, M. Binotti, B. Bizzarri, G. Borgarello, S. Borgione, A. Borrelli, R. Bottino, G. Bracaglia, I. Bresesti, I. Burattini, C. Cacace, F. Calzolari, M. F. Campagnoli, L. Capasso, M. Capozza, M. G. Capretti, J. Caravetta, C. Carbonara, V. Cardilli, M. Carta, F. Castoldi, A. Castronovo, E. Cavalleri, F. Cavigioli, S. Cecchi, V. Chierici, C. Cimino, F. Cocca, C. Cocca, P. Cogo, M. Coma, V. Comito, V. Condò, C. Consigli, R. Conti, M. Corradi, G. Corsello, L. T. Corvaglia, A. Costa, A. Coscia, F. Cresi, F. Crispino, P. D’Amico, L. De Cosmo, C. De Maio, G. Del Campo, S. Di Credico, S. Di Fabio, P. Di Nicola, A. Di Paolo, S. Di Valerio, A. Distilo, V. Duca, A. Falcone, R. Falsaperla, V. A. Fasolato, V. Fatuzzo, F. Favini, M. P. Ferrarello, S. Ferrari, F. Fiori Nastro, C. A. Forcellini, A. Fracchiolla, A. Gabriele, F. Galdo, F. Gallini, A. Gangemi, G. Gargano, D. Gazzolo, M. P. Gentile, S. Ghirardello, F. Giardina, L. Giordano, E. Gitto, M. Giuffrè, L. Grappone, F. Grasso, I. Greco, A. Grison, R. Guglielmino, I. Guidotti, I. Guzzo, N. La Forgia, S. La Placa, G. La Torre, P. Lago, L. Lanciotti, A. Lavizzari, F. Leo, V. Leonardi, D. Lestingi, J. Li, P. Liberatore, D. Lodin, R. Lubrano, M. Lucente, S. Luciani, D. Luvarà, G. Maffei, A. Maggio, L. Maggio, K. Maiolo, L. Malaigia, G. Mangili, A. Manna, E. Maranella, A. Marciano, P. Marcozzi, M. Marletta, L. Marseglia, D. Martinelli, S. Martinelli, S. Massari, L. Massenzi, F. Matina, L. Mattia, G. Mescoli, I. V. Migliore, D. Minghetti, I. Mondello, S. Montano, G. Morandi, N. Mores, S. Morreale, I. Morselli, M. Motta, M. Napolitano, D. Nardo, A. Nicolardi, S. Nider, G. Nigro, M. Nuccio, L. Orfeo, C. Ottaviano, P. Paganin, S. Palamides, S. Palatta, P. Paolillo, M. G. Pappalardo, E. Pasta, L. Patti, G. Paviotti, R. Perniola, G. Perotti, S. Perrone, F. Petrillo, M. S. Piazza, A. Piccirillo, M. Pierro, E. Piga, G. A. Pingitore, S. Pisu, C. Pittini, F. Pontiggia, G. Pontrelli, A. Primavera, A. Proto, L. Quartulli, F. Raimondi, L. Ramenghi, M. Rapsomaniki, A. Ricotti, C. Rigotti, M. Rinaldi, F. M. Risso, E. Roma, E. Romanini, V. Romano, E. Rosati, V. Rosella, I. Rulli, V. Salvo, C. Sanfilippo, A. Sannia, A. Saporito, A. Sauna, E. Scapillati, F. Schettini, A. Scorrano, S. Semeria Mantelli, V. Sepporta, P. Sindico, A. Solinas, E. Sorrentino, E. Spaggiari, A. Staffler, M. Stella, D. Termini, G. Terrin, A. Testa, G. Tina, M. Tirantello, B. Tomasini, F. Tormena, L. Travan, D. Trevisanuto, G. Tuling, V. Tulino, L. Valenzano, S. Vedovato, S. Vendramin, P. E. Villani, S. Viola, V. Viola, G. Vitaliti, M. Vitaliti, P. Wanker, Y. Yang, S. Zanetta, and E. Zannin
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Preterm infants ,Lung recruitment ,HFOV ,INRECSURE ,LISA ,Surfactant ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Surfactant is a well-established therapy for preterm neonates affected by respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). The goals of different methods of surfactant administration are to reduce the duration of mechanical ventilation and the severity of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD); however, the optimal administration method remains unknown. This study compares the effectiveness of the INtubate-RECruit-SURfactant-Extubate (IN-REC-SUR-E) technique with the less-invasive surfactant administration (LISA) technique, in increasing BPD-free survival of preterm infants. This is an international unblinded multicenter randomized controlled study in which preterm infants will be randomized into two groups to receive IN-REC-SUR-E or LISA surfactant administration. Methods In this study, 382 infants born at 24+0–27+6 weeks’ gestation, not intubated in the delivery room and failing nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) or nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) during the first 24 h of life, will be randomized 1:1 to receive IN-REC-SUR-E or LISA surfactant administration. The primary outcome is a composite outcome of death or BPD at 36 weeks’ postmenstrual age. The secondary outcomes are BPD at 36 weeks’ postmenstrual age; death; pulse oximetry/fraction of inspired oxygen; severe intraventricular hemorrhage; pneumothorax; duration of respiratory support and oxygen therapy; pulmonary hemorrhage; patent ductus arteriosus undergoing treatment; percentage of infants receiving more doses of surfactant; periventricular leukomalacia, severe retinopathy of prematurity, necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis; total in-hospital stay; systemic postnatal steroids; neurodevelopmental outcomes; and respiratory function testing at 24 months of age. Randomization will be centrally provided using both stratification and permuted blocks with random block sizes and block order. Stratification factors will include center and gestational age (24+0 to 25+6 weeks or 26+0 to 27+6 weeks). Analyses will be conducted in both intention-to-treat and per-protocol populations, utilizing a log-binomial regression model that corrects for stratification factors to estimate the adjusted relative risk (RR). Discussion This trial is designed to provide robust data on the best method of surfactant administration in spontaneously breathing preterm infants born at 24+0–27+6 weeks’ gestation affected by RDS and failing nCPAP or NIPPV during the first 24 h of life, comparing IN-REC-SUR-E to LISA technique, in increasing BPD-free survival at 36 weeks’ postmenstrual age of life. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05711966. Registered on February 3, 2023.
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- 2024
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10. Case report: A second case of cerebral cavernous malformation after high-dose chemotherapy for medulloblastoma
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Maria Grazia Pionelli, Federica Mazio, Maria Elena Errico, Carmela Russo, Adriana Cristofano, Eugenio Maria Covelli, Vittoria Donofrio, Maria Capasso, Michele Antonio Capozza, Fabiola De Gregorio, Serena Ruotolo, Massimo Eraldo Abate, and Giuseppe Cinalli
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cerebral cavernous malformation ,cavernous hemangioma ,cavernoma ,medulloblastoma ,high-dose chemotherapy ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
The development of cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) is a well-recognized sequela of irradiation to the brain in pediatric tumors, particularly in medulloblastoma, glioma, and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. So far, only one case of cerebral cavernoma after chemotherapy with autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) has been described. We describe a case of a patient with medulloblastoma aged 18 months at the time of oncological diagnosis who was treated with high-dose chemotherapy followed by HSCT and who developed CCM two years later. The patient was not treated for vascular malformation since he remained asymptomatic until now and is regularly followed with neuro-radiological check-ups. This represents the second case of acquired cavernoma developed in a patient who has not received radiation therapy.
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- 2024
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11. Assessing the Burden of Atopic Dermatitis in Portugal through Patient-Centered Experiences
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Michelle Tu, Freya Moxham, Alan Schwartz, Joana Camilo, and Korey Capozza
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Cost of Illness ,Decision Making, Shared ,Dermatitis, Atopic/epidemiology ,Dermatitis, Atopic/therapy ,Patient Education ,Portugal ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Introduction: Adult patients and caregivers of children with atopic dermatitis experience high physical, mental, and financial burden in Portugal. We outline the experience of atopic dermatitis management and how the current medical care model impacts patient-centered concerns such as financial burden, quality of life, disease burden, and treatment satisfaction. Methods: We conducted a survey of 419 Portuguese adults and caregivers of children to capture the experience of managing atopic dermatitis in Portugal. Results: Respondents reported average satisfaction with treatment, with a mean satisfaction rating of 3.15/5.00 (SD = 0.77). Adults reported slightly better control of atopic dermatitis symptoms (mean = 56.6) than pediatric patients (mean = 55.9, caregiver reported). Nearly 34% of adults and 39% of caregivers of children and adolescents indicated that their healthcare providers asked about their priorities at the last medical visit. Additionally, only 40% of adult patients and 32% of caregivers reported that patient training was offered to them. Respondents seeing dermatologists reported higher satisfaction than those seeing other healthcare providers (p = 0.01) but there were no differences in long-term control of symptoms by provider type (p = 0.85) when controlling for severity. Portuguese adult patients scored 0.86/1.00 on the EQ-5D (where 0 = death and 1 = perfect health). Financial concern was high as nearly 80% of patients and caregivers reported using savings, borrowing money, and/or reducing spending to cover atopic dermatitis-related costs. Conclusion: Portuguese patients with atopic dermatitis and caregivers experience financial burden, lower health-related quality of life, higher disease burden, and treatment satisfaction issues with their current medical care. These factors often deteriorate as the disease’s severity increases. Providers, researchers and policymakers should focus on better addressing patient-centered concerns for individuals suffering from atopic dermatitis to improve care and health outcomes.
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- 2024
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12. Development of a thin-layer chromatography gel-overlay α-glucosidase inhibition assay
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Capozza, Giuliana P., Salazar, Mario O., Ramallo, I. Ayelen, and Furlan, Ricardo L. E.
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- 2023
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13. Transport endowment, knowledge spillovers and firm performance in emerging economies
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Bergantino, Angela Stefania, Capozza, Claudia, and Spiru, Ada
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- 2023
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14. Interventions for anxiety and depression in patients with atopic dermatitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Stella P. Hartono, Sheena Chatrath, Ozge N Aktas, Stephanie A Kubala, Korey Capozza, Ian A. Myles, Jonathan I. Silverberg, and Alan Schwartz
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Atopic dermatitis ,Eczema ,Anxiety ,Depression ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease that is associated with anxiety and depression. Few studies have addressed interventions for symptoms of anxiety and depression in this population. To determine the efficacy of interventions for anxiety and depression in patients with AD. PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PsycINFO were searched from inception to November 2023. English-language studies published in peer-reviewed journals evaluating the effect of interventions on anxiety and/or depression using validated assessment tools on patients with AD were included. Titles, abstracts, and articles were screened by at least two independent reviewers. Of 1410 references that resulted in the initial search, 17 studies were included. Fourteen of these studies are randomized controlled trials, while the other 3 studies are prospective controlled trials with pre and post-test designs. Data were extracted using a standardized extraction form, and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed. To accommodate trials with multiple interventions (each compared to a control group), we conducted a mixed-effects meta-analysis with the trial as a random effect. Prespecified outcomes were changes in symptoms of anxiety and depression in patients with AD as evaluated using standardized assessment tools. Of the 17 studies included in this systematic review, 7 pharmacological intervention studies with 4723 participants examining 5 different medications were included in a meta-analysis. Of these studies, only 1 study evaluated medications prescribed to treat anxiety and/or depression; the rest evaluated medications prescribed to treat AD. Meta-analysis of all the pharmacological interventions resulted in significant improvement in anxiety, depression, and combined anxiety-depression scale scores (standardized mean difference [95% CI]: − 0.29 [− 0.49 to − 0.09], − 0.27 [− 0.45 to − 0.08], − 0.27 [− 0.45 to − 0.08]) respectively. The 10 non-pharmacological studies with 2058 participants showed general improvement in anxiety but not depression. A meta-analysis of the non-pharmacological interventions was not conducted due to variable approaches and limited data. Pharmacological interventions designed to improve AD were found to improve anxiety and depression in patients with moderate-severe disease. More comprehensive studies on non-pharmacological and pharmacological interventions that primarily target anxiety and depression are needed.
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- 2024
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15. TOPLINE RESULTS FROM A NEW ANALYSIS OF THE REGENERATE TRIAL OF OBETICHOLIC ACID FOR THE TREATMENT OF NONALCOHOLIC STEATOHEPATITIS
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Sanyal, Arun J, Loomba, Rohit, Anstee, Quentin M, Ratziu, Vlad, Kowdley, Kris V, Rinella, Mary E, Sheikh, Muhammad Y, Trotter, James F, Knapple, Whitfield L, Lawitz, Eric J, Abdelmalek, Manal F, Newsome, Philip N, Hansen, Bettina E, Mathurin, Philippe, Dufour, Jean-Francois, Berrey, M Michelle, Shiff, Steven J, Sawhney, Sangeeta, Capozza, Thomas, Leyva, Rina, Harrison, Stephen A, and Younossi, Zobair M
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Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Gastroenterology & Hepatology ,Clinical sciences - Published
- 2023
16. Investigation on intense axial magnetic field shielding with a large melt cast processed Bi-2212 tube
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Dbeyssi, Alaa, Froelich, Bertold, Espi, Maria Carmen Mora, Maas, Frank, Capozza, Luigi, Noll, Oliver, Wang, Yadi, and Lin, Dexu
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The feasibility of shielding axial magnetic fields up to 1.4~T, using a Bi-2212 hollow cylinder, is investigated at a temperature of 4.2~K. The residual magnetic flux density along the axis of the tube is measured at external fields of 1~T and 1.4~T. The shielding factor, defined as the ratio between the applied and the residual magnetic flux densities at the center of the tube, is measured to be $32\times 10^4$ at 1~T and $12\times 10^3$ at 1.4~T. The induced current density is evaluated from the measurements taking the thickness of the tube into account. The stability of the measurements over time is also addressed. Numerical simulations for the external and the residual magnetic flux densities are performed and compared to the experimental results. The study shows a high shielding performance of the Bi-2212 superconductor tube at 4.2~K up to 1.4~T., Comment: 11 pages, 19 figures
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- 2022
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17. Neonatal outcomes and follow-up of children born to women with pregnancy-associated cancer: a prospective observational study
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Michele Antonio Capozza, Alberto Romano, Stefano Mastrangelo, Giorgio Attinà, Palma Maurizi, Simonetta Costa, Giovanni Vento, Giovanni Scambia, and Antonio Ruggiero
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Cancer ,Pregnancy ,Antineoplastic agents ,Perinatal outcomes ,Congenital abnormalities ,Prenatal exposure delayed effects ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 - Abstract
Abstract Background During the last decade, there has been a growing number of cases of children born from pregnancy-associated cancer (PAC), however there are currently insufficient data on the follow up to be observed in this category of newborns. Objective of the study was to evaluate the neonatal outcomes of infants born to mother with PAC, the potential adverse effect of chemotherapy during pregnancy and the risk of metastasis to the fetus. Methods Maternal clinical data and neonatal outcomes of child born to mothers diagnosed with PAC were collected; infants were divided into those were and were not exposed to chemotherapy during fetal life and their outcomes were compered. Results A total of 37 newborn infants from 36 women with PAC were analyzed. Preterm delivery occurred in 83.8% of the cases. No significant differences in neonatal outcomes were found between infants who were and were not exposed to chemotherapy during pregnancy. The median follow-up period was 12 months. Conclusions PAC treatment during the second or third trimester does not seem to be dangerous for the fetus, however infants born from PAC must be carefully evaluated for to rule out the consequences of chemotherapy and exclude the presence of metastasis. Long-term follow-up, especially in children exposed to chemotherapy, should be encouraged to obtain relevant data on long-term toxicity.
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- 2024
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18. Progression of myocardial fibrosis and functional clinical status in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: a study with cardiac magnetic resonance
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Capozza Paola, Strata Elisabetta, Barison Andrea, Pingitore Alessandro, Aquaro Giovanni, Todiere Giancarlo, and Lombardi Massimo
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2011
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19. Hidden gems: a pilot project to solicit and reward patients’ and caregivers’ ideas for research
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Moxham, Freya, Cutaran, Christine, Sadocha, Jakub, and Capozza, Korey
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- 2023
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20. Bi-HPDO3A as a novel contrast agent for X-ray computed tomography
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Rizzo, Rebecca, Capozza, Martina, Carrera, Carla, and Terreno, Enzo
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- 2023
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21. Atopic dermatitis in Spain: Patient and caregiver experiences with disease burden, care and treatments
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Korey Capozza, Michelle Tu, Alan Schwartz, and África Luca de Tena Smith
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Published
- 2024
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22. Specialist care and mental health is associated with long-term control of atopic dermatitis symptoms: A cross-sectional survey of patients and caregivers in the United States
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Albert C. Chong, MPH, Alan Schwartz, PhD, Wendy Smith Begolka, MBS, Kathryn Z. Tullos, RN, and Korey Capozza, MPH
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atopic dermatitis ,mental health ,specialist ,United States ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Published
- 2023
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23. Hidden gems: a pilot project to solicit and reward patients’ and caregivers’ ideas for research
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Freya Moxham, Christine Cutaran, Jakub Sadocha, and Korey Capozza
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Atopic dermatitis ,Patient-centered research ,AD ,Research competition ,Big ideas ,Patient insights ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Patients and caregivers investigate a wide range of approaches to address the signs and symptoms of their condition. Such investigation could lead to new treatment insights or avenues for research. However, currently there are few channels through which patients and families can share the results of their personal experiences; they need a platform to share their insights with the research community. Methodology Two non-profit organizations, Global Parents for Eczema Research and the International Alliance of Dermatology Patient Organizations, developed a project to pioneer new ways for patients and caregivers to share their personal insights for research and for researchers and treatment developers to learn about those ideas. This project, the “Big Ideas for AD Research”, was a global challenge that awarded prizes and recognition to patients’ and caregivers’ research hypotheses related to atopic dermatitis management, treatment, and prevention. Results The Challenge was open for 5 weeks and received 70 submissions from 11 countries. Entries were judged by two separate panels of experts that included both researchers and patients and caregivers. Winners were awarded with a monetary prize, recognized on social media, and connected by Global Parents for Eczema Research staff to an appropriate research group to help further their ideas. Conclusion The Big Ideas for Eczema Challenge provided a proof of concept for a novel approach to bridging the gap between patients/caregivers and researchers/clinicians by developing a platform to garner the best ideas from the patient community for research. This model could be further leveraged by other patient groups to help solicit patients’ and caregivers’ ideas for research.
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- 2023
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24. Bi-HPDO3A as a novel contrast agent for X-ray computed tomography
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Rebecca Rizzo, Martina Capozza, Carla Carrera, and Enzo Terreno
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract A new bismuth-based CT agent was synthesized through a facile synthesis strategy. The in vitro stability, toxicity and CT performance were evaluated. The in vivo imaging performance was investigated using three different doses (0.5, 1.2 and 5 mmol/kg) and the result obtained at 1.2 mmol/kg was compared with the clinically approved CT agent iopamidol at the same dosage.
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- 2023
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25. Ancillary Treatment Referrals and Visits After Breast Cancer Surgery in a Sociodemographically Diverse Population
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Chan, Vernice H. Y., Heller, Danielle R., Berger, Elizabeth R., Capozza, Scott, Greenup, Rachel A., and Sanft, Tara B.
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- 2023
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26. PANDA Phase One
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Barucca, G., Davì, F., Lancioni, G., Mengucci, P., Montalto, L., Natali, P. P., Paone, N., Rinaldi, D., Scalise, L., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Liu, Z., Liu, C., Liu, B., Shen, X., Sun, S., Zhao, G., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Alkakhi, W., Bökelmann, S., Coen, S., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Frech, J., Freudenreich, V., Fritsch, M., Grochowski, J., Hagdorn, R., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kümmel, M., Küßner, M., Li, J., Linzen, L., Maldaner, S., Oppotsch, J., Pankonin, S., Pelizäus, M., Pflüger, S., Reher, J., Reicherz, G., Schnier, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wenzel, C., Wiedner, U., Denizli, H., Er, N., Keskin, U., Yerlikaya, S., Yilmaz, A., Beck, R., Chauhan, V., Hammann, C., Hartmann, J., Ketzer, B., Müllers, J., Salisbury, B., Schmidt, C., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Pantea, D., Rimjaem, S., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michałek, M., Poznański, P., Płażek, J., Korcyl, K., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Firlej, M., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Moron, J., Swientek, K., Terlecki, P., Korcyl, G., Lalik, R., Malige, A., Moskal, P., Nowakowski, K., Przygoda, W., Rathod, N., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Dzhygadlo, R., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Heinz, A., Jiang, P., Karabowicz, R., Koch, S., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Orth, H., Peters, K., Ritman, J., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Barabanov, M. Yu., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Galoyan, A., Golovanov, G., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Olshevskiy, A. G., Piskun, A. A., Samartsev, A., Shimanski, S., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Verkheev, A., Vodopianov, A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Miehling, D., Pfaffinger, M., Seth, K., Xiao, T., Ali, A., Hamdi, A., Himmelreich, M., Krebs, M., Nakhoul, S., Nerling, F., Gianotti, P., Lucherini, V., Bracco, G., Bodenschatz, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Brück, L., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Düren, M., Erlen, T., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Hofmann, J., Kegel, S., Khalid, F., Köseoglu, I., Kripko, A., Kühn, W., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Orsich, P., Pereira-de-Lira, J., Sachs, M., Schmidt, M., Schubert, R., Strickert, M., Wasem, T., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Glazier, D., Ireland, D., Seitz, B., Kappert, R., Kavatsyuk, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Rodin, V., Kalita, K., Huang, G., Liu, D., Peng, H., Qi, H., Sun, Y., Zhou, X., Kunze, M., Azizi, K., Olgun, A. T., Tavukoglu, Z., Derichs, A., Dosdall, R., Esmail, W., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Jokhovets, L., Kannika, J., Kulessa, P., Orfanitski, S., Perez-Andrade, G., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Rosenthal, E., Schadmand, S., Schmitz, R., Scholl, A., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Stockmanns, T., Veretennikov, D., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zhou, Y., Cao, X., Hu, Q., Liang, Y., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Lauth, W., Leithoff, H. H., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Petersen, J., Pochodzalla, J., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Bleser, S., Bölting, M., Capozza, L., Dbeyssi, A., Ehret, A., Klasen, R., Kliemt, R., Maas, F., Motzko, C., Noll, O., Piñeiro, D. Rodríguez, Schupp, F., Steinen, M., Wolff, S., Zimmermann, I., Kazlou, D., Korzhik, M., Missevitch, O., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Golubev, A., Kantsyrev, A., Kirin, D. Y., Kristi, N., Ladygina, E., Luschevskaya, E., Matveev, V. A., Panjushkin, V., Stavinskiy, A. V., Balashoff, A., Boukharov, A., Bukharova, M., Malyshev, O., Vishnevsky, E., Bonaventura, D., Brand, P., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Kellers, J., Khoukaz, A., Klostermann, D., Mannweiler, C., Vestrick, S., Bumrungkoh, D., Herold, C., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Manasatitpong, K., Nasawad, T., Pongampai, S., Simantathammakul, T., Srisawad, P., Wongprachanukul, N., Yan, Y., Yu, C., Zhang, X., Zhu, W., Antokhin, E., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Kuyanov, I. A., Pivovarov, S., Pyata, E., Tikhonov, Y., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Lattery, M., Boca, G., Duda, D., Finger, M., Finger, Jr., M., Kveton, A., Prochazka, I., Slunecka, M., Volf, M., Jary, V., Korchak, O., Marcisovsky, M., Neue, G., Novy, J., Tomasek, L., Tomasek, M., Virius, M., Vrba, V., Abramov, V., Bukreeva, S., Chernichenko, S., Derevschikov, A., Ferapontov, V., Goncharenko, Y., Levin, A., Maslova, E., Melnik, Y., Meschanin, A., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Moiseev, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Belostotski, S., Fedotov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Cederwall, B., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Gandhi, K., Rai, A. K., Godre, S., Crede, V., Dobbs, S., Eugenio, P., Bussa, M. P., Spataro, S., Calvo, D., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Mazza, G., Wheadon, R., Iazzi, F., Lavagno, A., Akram, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Regina, J., Rieger, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Tarasiuk, J., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Amsler, C., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Zimmermann, S., Fischer, C. S., Haidenbauer, J., Hanhart, C., Lutz, M. F. M., and Ryan, Sinéad M.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) in Darmstadt, Germany, provides unique possibilities for a new generation of hadron-, nuclear- and atomic physics experiments. The future antiProton ANnihilations at DArmstadt (PANDA or $\overline{\rm P}$ANDA) experiment at FAIR will offer a broad physics programme, covering different aspects of the strong interaction. Understanding the latter in the non-perturbative regime remains one of the greatest challenges in contemporary physics. The antiproton-nucleon interaction studied with PANDA provides crucial tests in this area. Furthermore, the high-intensity, low-energy domain of PANDA allows for searches for physics beyond the Standard Model, e.g. through high precision symmetry tests. This paper takes into account a staged approach for the detector setup and for the delivered luminosity from the accelerator. The available detector setup at the time of the delivery of the first antiproton beams in the HESR storage ring is referred to as the \textit{Phase One} setup. The physics programme that is achievable during Phase One is outlined in this paper., Comment: 35 pages, 15 figures
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- 2021
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27. Humoral Immune Response in Immunized Sheep with Bovine Coronavirus Glycoproteins Delivered via an Adenoviral Vector
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Annamaria Pratelli, Paolo Capozza, Sergio Minesso, Maria Stella Lucente, Francesco Pellegrini, Maria Tempesta, Valentina Franceschi, Canio Buonavoglia, and Gaetano Donofrio
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bovine coronavirus ,vaccine ,immune response ,Medicine - Abstract
Bovine coronavirus (BCoV) is distributed globally and mainly causes different clinical manifestations: enteric diarrhea in calves, winter dysentery in adults, and respiratory symptoms in cattle of all ages. Low mortality and high morbidity are the hallmarks of BCoV infection, usually associated with substantial economic losses for the livestock industry. Vaccination, combined with the implementation of biosecurity measures, is the key strategy for the prevention of infections. This pilot study evaluates the immunogenicity of a recombinant vaccine containing two BCoV antigens (S and M) in sheep, compared to vaccines containing only the M or S protein. Three groups of sheep were inoculated intramuscularly at day 0 and day 21 with recombinant adenoviruses expressing BCoV S protein (AdV-BCoV-S), BCoV M protein (AdV-BCoV-M), or both proteins (AdV-BCoV-S + M). Serum antibodies were evaluated using immunofluorescence (IF) and serum neutralization (SN) tests. Moderate seroconversion was observed by day 21, but serum antibodies detected via SN increased from 1:27.5 (day 21) to 1:90 (day 28) in sheep inoculated with the recombinant AdV expressing both the S- and M-BCoV proteins. Based on the SN results, a repeated-measures ANOVA test indicated a more significant difference in immune response between the three groups (F = 20.47; p < 0.001). The experimental investigation produced satisfactory results, highlighting that the S + M recombinant vaccine was immunogenic, stimulating a valid immune response. Despite some inherent limitations, including a small sample size and the absence of challenge tests, the study demonstrated the efficacy of the immune response induced via the recombinant vaccine containing both S and M proteins compared to that induced via the individual proteins S or M.
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- 2024
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28. Diagnosis of Septic Body Cavity Effusion in Dogs and Cats: Cytology vs. Bacterial Culture
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Marta Medardo, Paolo Capozza, Walter Bertazzolo, Saverio Paltrinieri, Piera Anna Martino, Vito Martella, and Nicola Decaro
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septic exudate ,diagnostic accuracy ,cytology ,culturomics ,pets ,MALDI-TOF ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
The elective test for the determination of the effusions etiopathogenesis is represented by physico-chemical analysis and cytology. Nevertheless, the bacterial culture and antibiotic sensitivity tests are crucial for setting therapy and for the outcome. This study compared cytology with microbiology in the etiologic diagnosis of exudative body cavity effusions in dogs and cats collected from October 2018 to October 2022. All samples underwent aerobic and anaerobic culture and cytology examination. Bacterial identifications were confirmed using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry, whereas cytological samples were blindly evaluated either in May Grunwald-Giemsa (MGG) or Gram-stained samples by two board-certified clinical pathologists. A moderate agreement (κ = 0.454) between cytology and bacterial culture was revealed. The sensitivity of the cytological evaluation in our study ranged from 38.5% to 67.9%, and the specificity ranged from 88.9% to 100%, depending on the type of the effusion, so cytology may not be representative of the etiopathogenesis, whereas bacterial culture can misidentify or fail to isolate the correct pathogen for difficult in vitro growing due to the presence of inhibitory substances or contamination. Cytology and bacterial culture results for exudative body cavity effusions in dogs and cats can be misleading if conducted separately, so these two tests should be performed together to increase diagnostic accuracy.
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- 2024
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29. Similarities and Differences in the Perception of Atopic Dermatitis Burden Between Patients, Caregivers, and Independent Physicians (AD-GAP Survey)
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Paller, Amy S., Weidinger, Stephan, Capozza, Korey, Pink, Andrew E., Tang, Mark, Guillaume, Xavier, Praestgaard, Amy, Leclerc, Marjorie, Chuang, Chien-Chia, Thomas, Ryan B., and Prescilla, Randy
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- 2023
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30. Brain positron emission tomography (PET) and cognitive abnormalities one year after COVID-19
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Ferrucci, Roberta, Cuffaro, Luca, Capozza, Antonella, Rosci, Chiara, Maiorana, Natale, Groppo, Elisabetta, Reitano, Maria Rita, Poletti, Barbara, Ticozzi, Nicola, Tagliabue, Luca, Silani, Vincenzo, and Priori, Alberto
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- 2023
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31. Delivery of Cancer Survivorship Education to Community Healthcare Professionals
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Pariser, Ashley C., Brita, Javin, Harrigan, Maura, Capozza, Scott, Khairallah, Angela, and Sanft, Tara B.
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- 2023
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32. Study of Two-Photon Exchange via the Beam Transverse Single Spin Asymmetry in Electron-Proton Elastic Scattering at Forward Angles over a Wide Energy Range
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Gou, B., Arvieux, J., Aulenbacher, K., Ríos, D. Balaguer, Baunack, S., Becker, D., Capozza, L., Deconinck, W., Diefenbach, J., Frascaria, R., Gorchtein, M., Gläser, B., von Harrach, D., Imai, Y., Kabuß, E. M., Kothe, R., Kowalski, S., Kunne, R., Maas, F. E., Merkel, H., Espí, M. C. Mora, Morlet, M., Müller, U., Ong, S., Schilling, E., Weinrich, C., van de Wiele, J., Zambrana, M., and Zimmermann, I.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We report on a new measurement of the beam transverse single spin asymmetry in electron-proton elastic scattering, $A^{ep}_{\perp}$, at five beam energies from 315.1 MeV to 1508.4 MeV and at a scattering angle of $30^{\circ} < \theta < 40^{\circ}$. The covered $Q^2$ values are 0.032, 0.057, 0.082, 0.218, 0.613 (GeV/c)$^2$. The measurement clearly indicates significant inelastic contributions to the two-photon-exchange (TPE) amplitude in the low-$Q^2$ kinematic region. No theoretical calculation is able to reproduce our result. Comparison with a calculation based on unitarity, which only takes into account elastic and $\mathrm{\pi N}$ inelastic intermediate states, suggests that there are other inelastic intermediate states such as $\mathrm{\pi \pi N}$, $\mathrm{K \Lambda}$ and $\mathrm{\eta N}$. Covering a wide energy range, our new high-precision data provide a benchmark to study those intermediate states., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures
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- 2020
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33. Significant burden of post-COVID exertional dyspnoea in a South-Italy region: knowledge of risk factors might prevent further critical overload on the healthcare system
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Emanuela Resta, Eustachio Cuscianna, Paola Pierucci, Carlo Custodero, Vincenzo Solfrizzi, Carlo Sabbà, Chiara Maria Palmisano, Federica Barratta, Maria Luisa De Candia, Maria Grazia Tummolo, Elena Capozza, Sonia Lomuscio, Lucrezia De Michele, Silvio Tafuri, Onofrio Resta, and Gennaro Mariano Lenato
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post-COVID syndrome ,healthcare burden ,healthcare capacity ,post-COVID exertional dyspnoea ,fatigue ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundExertional dyspnoea in post-COVID syndrome is a debilitating manifestation, requiring appropriate comprehensive management. However, limited-resources healthcare systems might be unable to expand their healthcare-providing capacity and are expected to be overwhelmed by increasing healthcare demand. Furthermore, since post-COVID exertional dyspnoea is regarded to represent an umbrella term, encompassing several clinical conditions, stratification of patients with post-COVID exertional dyspnoea, depending on risk factors and underlying aetiologies might provide useful for healthcare optimization and potentially help relieve healthcare service from overload. Hence, we aimed to investigate the frequency, functional characterization, and predictors of post-COVID exertional dyspnoea in a large cohort of post-COVID patients in Apulia, Italy, at 3-month post-acute SARS-CoV-2 infection.MethodsA cohort of laboratory-confirmed 318 patients, both domiciliary or hospitalized, was evaluated in a post-COVID Unit outpatient setting. Post-COVID exertional dyspnoea and other post-COVID syndrome manifestations were collected by medical history. Functional characterization of post-COVID exertional dyspnoea was performed through a 6-min walking test (6-mwt). The association of post-COVID exertional dyspnoea with possible risk factors was investigated through univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis.ResultsAt medical evaluation, post-COVID exertional dyspnoea was reported by as many as 190/318 patients (59.7%), showing relatively high prevalence also in domiciliary-course patients. However, functional characterization disclosed a 6-mwt-based desaturation walking drop in only 24.1% of instrumental post-COVID exertional dyspnoea patients. Multivariate analysis identified five independent predictors significantly contributing to PCED, namely post-COVID-fatigue, pre-existing respiratory co-morbidities, non-asthmatic allergy history, age, and acute-phase-dyspnoea. Sex-restricted multivariate analysis identified a differential risk pattern for males (pre-existing respiratory co-morbidities, age, acute-phase-dyspnoea) and females (post-COVID-fatigue and acute-phase-dyspnoea).ConclusionOur findings revealed that post-COVID exertional dyspnoea is characterized by relevant clinical burden, with potential further strain on healthcare systems, already weakened by pandemic waves. Sex-based subgroup analysis reveals sex-specific dyspnoea-underlying risk profiles and pathogenic mechanisms. Knowledge of sex-specific risk-determining factors might help optimize personalized care management and healthcare resources.
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- 2023
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34. Technical Design Report for the PANDA Endcap Disc DIRC
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Panda Collaboration, Davi, F., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Liu, B., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Erlen, T., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Freudenreich, V., Fritsch, M., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Leiber, S., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pitka, A., Reicherz, G., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sersin, S., Sohl, L., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Hartmann, J., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Pantea, D., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Jaworowski, J., Krawczyk, M., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michalek, M., Plazek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Swientek, K., Biernat, J., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Przygoda, W., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wronska, A., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Marinescu, D. Nicmorus, Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Veis, N. Divani, Dzhygadlo, R., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Karabowicz, R., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Löchner, S., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Nakhoul, S., Orth, H., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Galoyan, A., Golovanov, G., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Lobanov, V. I., Malyshev, V., Olshevskiy, A. G., Piskun, A. A., Samartsev, A., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Verkheev, A., Vodopianov, A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zinchenko, A., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Miehling, D., Pfaffinger, M., Stelter, S., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Ali, A., Hamdi, A., Krebs, M., Nerling, F., Akishina, V., Gorbunov, S., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Bracco, G., Bodenschatz, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Di Pietro, V., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Düren, M., Etzelmüller, E., Föhl, K., Galuska, M., Geßler, T., Gutz, E., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Kesselkaul, M., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, J. S., Liang, Y., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Quagli, T., Riccardi, A., Rieke, J., Schmidt, M., Schnell, R., Stenzel, H., Strickert, M., Thöring, U., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Tiemens, M., van der Weele, J. C., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Sohlbach, H., Bai, M., Bianchi, L., Büscher, M., Derichs, A., Dosdall, R., Erven, A., Fracassi, V., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Jokhovets, L., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Lai, A., Lehrach, A., Mikirtychyants, M., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Rosenthal, E., Schadmand, S., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zhou, Y., Li, Z., Ma, X., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Aycock, A., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Zambrana, M., Ahmadi, H., Ahmed, S., Bleser, S., Capozza, L., Cardinali, M., Dbeyssi, A., Ehret, A., Fröhlich, B., Grasemann, P., Haasler, S., Izard, D., Jorge, J., Khaneft, D., Klasen, R., Kliemt, R., Köhler, J., Leithoff, H. H., Lin, D., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Michel, M., Espi, M. C. Mora, Morales, C. Morales, Motzko, C., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Pineiro, D. Rodriguez, Steinen, M., Walaa, E., Wolff, S., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Korzhik, M., Missevitch, O., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Kirin, D. Y., Matveev, V. A., Stavinskiy, A. V., Balashoff, A., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Chandratre, V., Datar, V., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Parmar, A., Rai, A. K., Roy, B., Sonika, G., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A. K., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Khoukaz, A., Wessels, J. P., Herold, C., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Srisawad, P., Yan, Y., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Antokhin, E., Barnyakov, M., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kuyanov, I. A., Onuchin, A. P., Pivovarov, S., Pyata, E., Serednyakov, S., Tikhonov, Y., Kunne, R., Marchand, D., Ramstein, B., van de Wiele, J., Wang, Y., Boca, G., Burian, V., Finger, M., Nikolovova, A., Pesek, M., Peskova, M., Pfeffer, M., Prochazka, I., Slunecka, M., Gallus, P., Jary, V., Novy, J., Tomasek, M., Virius, M., Vrba, V., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Levin, A., Melnik, Y., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Veretennikov, D., Zhdanov, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Godre, S., Bussa, M. P., Marcello, S., Spataro, S., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Calvo, D., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Mazza, G., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Martin, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Pettersson, J., Regina, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Diaz, J., Chackara, V. Pothodi, Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Steinschaden, D., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zimmermann, S., and Zmeskal, J.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
PANDA (anti-Proton ANnihiliation at DArmstadt) is planned to be one of the four main experiments at the future international accelerator complex FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research) in Darmstadt, Germany. It is going to address fundamental questions of hadron physics and quantum chromodynamics using cooled antiproton beams with a high intensity and and momenta between 1.5 and 15 GeV/c. PANDA is designed to reach a maximum luminosity of 2x10^32 cm^2 s. Most of the physics programs require an excellent particle identification (PID). The PID of hadronic states at the forward endcap of the target spectrometer will be done by a fast and compact Cherenkov detector that uses the detection of internally reflected Cherenkov light (DIRC) principle. It is designed to cover the polar angle range from 5{\deg} to 22{\deg} and to provide a separation power for the separation of charged pions and kaons up to 3 standard deviations (s.d.) for particle momenta up to 4 GeV/c in order to cover the important particle phase space. This document describes the technical design and the expected performance of the novel PANDA Disc DIRC detector that has not been used in any other high energy physics experiment (HEP) before. The performance has been studied with Monte-Carlo simulations and various beam tests at DESY and CERN. The final design meets all PANDA requirements and guarantees suffcient safety margins., Comment: TDR for Panda/Fair to be published
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- 2019
35. Similarities and Differences in the Perception of Atopic Dermatitis Burden Between Patients, Caregivers, and Independent Physicians (AD-GAP Survey)
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Amy S. Paller, Stephan Weidinger, Korey Capozza, Andrew E. Pink, Mark Tang, Xavier Guillaume, Amy Praestgaard, Marjorie Leclerc, Chien-Chia Chuang, Ryan B. Thomas, and Randy Prescilla
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Atopic dermatitis ,Quality of life ,Best–worst scaling ,Dupilumab ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Atopic dermatitis (AD)—a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by intense itching—can have a detrimental impact on quality of life (QoL). We report results of a quantitative assessment of pediatric patient, caregiver, and physician perceptions of AD burden in children and adolescents. Methods Pediatric patients (aged 6–11 [children] or 12–17 [adolescents] years) with moderate-to-severe AD, their caregivers, and independent physicians were recruited in 13 countries. Caregivers and their children/adolescents completed an online survey about the impact of AD on 16 key items of patient QoL. Physicians completed surveys on their patients aged 6–11 and 12–17 years. Best–worst scaling was used to rank the importance of the QoL items. Results Overall, 1447 children/adolescents with moderate-to-severe AD (aged 6–11 years: 701; 12–17 years: 746), 1447 caregivers, and 1092 physicians participated. Patients and caregivers in both age groups ranked disturbed sleep as the most important QoL item, followed by feeling ashamed because of AD. Independent physicians ranked feeling ashamed because of AD as the most important QoL item for both age groups, followed by disturbed sleep for those aged 6–11 years and being singled out for those aged 12–17 years. The relative importance of the 16 QoL items to patients was strongly aligned between patients in both age groups and their caregivers, but somewhat less so between patients and physicians. Between-country differences were more apparent in physician- versus patient-/caregiver-reported results. Conclusion The most burdensome QoL items were impact of AD on sleep and feeling ashamed. Caregivers and physicians correctly identified the QoL items most burdensome to patients. However, patient and caregiver perceptions were generally more closely aligned than patient and physician perceptions. Between-country differences in perceptions (particularly for physicians) were observed, probably due to multifactorial reasons, necessitating further evaluation. Video Abstract (MP4 42,877 kb) Infographic
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- 2023
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36. Patients’ and Caregivers’ Experiences Navigating the Burden of Atopic Dermatitis in Argentina
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Korey Capozza, Michelle Tu, Alan Schwartz, Jodi L. Johnson, and Mónica Ladner
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atopic dermatitis ,eczema ,caregiver burden ,disease burden ,financial stress ,health-related quality of life ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background and Objectives: Little is known about patients’ and caregivers’ experiences with atopic dermatitis (AD) in Argentina, so a survey was administered to learn more. Materials and Methods: A 53-item anonymous survey was administered in Spanish to adult AD patients (n = 334) and caregivers (n = 339) of pediatric AD patients in Argentina (total n = 673). Demographics, healthcare provider information, financial burden, disease severity, disease burden, level of disease-specific education, and experience with shared physician/patient decision making were collected. Linear and logistic regression models were used for statistical comparisons. Results: Survey respondents were overwhelmingly female (90.8%), as was the overall patient population (72.8%). Patients were seen mostly by healthcare specialists (66.8% dermatologists, 13.5% pediatricians, 7.7% allergists, and 7.2% general practitioners). Only 2.8% of respondents reported no symptoms, while 33.3%, 52.4%, and 11.5% reported mild, moderate, and severe AD disease, respectively. Anxiety/depression and pain/discomfort were the most impactful on respondents’ quality of life. Caregivers of children with moderate to severe AD and adult patients with severe AD reported a significant financial burden, including using savings or not purchasing food or other essentials to afford medical care. Few people reported receiving disease-specific education or having their own treatment priorities taken into consideration. For adult patients, receiving disease education and being asked about treatment priorities were associated with higher treatment satisfaction and AD control. Discussion: Mental health, pain/discomfort, and financial worries are the most important burdens for adult AD patients and caregivers of children with AD in Argentina. We recommend prioritizing disease-specific education and shared decision making to improve AD care in Argentina.
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- 2024
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37. How to puncture a biomembrane: elastic versus entropic rupture
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Capozza, Rosario, Giomi, Luca, Gonano, Carlo A., and De Angelis, Francesco
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter - Abstract
A very common strategy to penetrate the cell membrane and access the internal compartment, consists of using sharp tips or nano needles. However recent experiments of cell penetration by atomic force microscopy tips show, contrary to expectations, a weak dependence of penetration force on the curvature of the tip. Using molecular dynamics simulations and analytical arguments, here we show that membrane disruption can be driven either by elastic or entropic forces depending on the membrane size. Our findings have potentially relevant implications in tissue engineering and drug delivery, as they help assessing the effectiveness of the most common membranes penetration methods., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures
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- 2019
38. Asthma and Fixed Airways Obstruction: Real Life Aspects
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Enrico Buonamico, Andrea Portacci, Silvano Dragonieri, Vitaliano Nicola Quaranta, Fabrizio Diaferia, Elena Capozza, Luigi Macchia, and Giovanna Elisiana Carpagnano
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asthma ,severe asthma ,airways obstruction ,fixed obstruction ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
We aimed to evaluate asthmatic patients with fixed airways obstruction (FAO) and to verify the impact of follow-up in an asthma-dedicated outpatient clinic on symptoms control and spirometry compared to asthmatics without FAO. We enrolled 20 asthmatic FAO+ patients and 20 FAO− asthmatics at baseline (T0) and at a one-year follow-up visit (T1). FAO+ and FAO− groups were compared for anamnesis, FEV1, asthma control test (ACT) and their ΔT0–T1. FAO+ and FAO− groups did not differ for age, BMI, pack-years, allergy, T0 blood eosinophils, comorbidities or GINA therapy step at T0 and T1, whereas, in the FAO+ group, we found more patients with a delay >5 years between symptoms onset and correct asthma diagnosis (p < 0.05). ACT at T0 and ΔT0–T1, FEV1 at ΔT0–T1 and number of exacerbations at T0 and ΔT0–T1 did not differ between groups. Despite a widespread perception of FAO, per se, as a severity factor for asthma, we found similar severity profiles and amelioration after one year of treatment in the FAO+ and FAO− groups. The only factor linked to FAO development in our population was a delay in asthma diagnosis from respiratory symptoms onset, which may have led to airway remodeling. Physicians should characterize patients with FAO for avoiding misdiagnosis between asthma and other respiratory diseases and for establishing the appropriate therapy.
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- 2023
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39. Promoting Positive Attitudes toward Peers with Disabilities: The Role of Information and Imagined Contact
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Ginevra, Maria Cristina, Vezzali, Loris, Camussi, Elisabetta, Capozza, Dora, and Nota, Laura
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This prepost test experimental study examined the effectiveness of an intervention providing information about peers with sensory disability, intellectual disability, and behavioral difficulties (cognitive intervention), an intervention using imagined contact with peers with these disabilities (behavioral intervention), and an intervention combining information with imagined contact, against a no-intervention control condition. One hundred and forty-two typically developing children were randomly assigned to 1 of the 4 conditions. Measures of attitudes, stereotypes, and feelings toward and intentions to engage in contact with peers with sensory disability, intellectual disability, and behavioral difficulties were administered. Results revealed that the combined cognitive and behavioral intervention improved all outcome variables considered. The theoretical and practical implications of these results are discussed.
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- 2021
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40. Framework to leverage physical therapists for the assessment and treatment of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neurotoxicity (CIPN)
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Stoller, Stefanie, Capozza, Scott, Alberti, Paola, Lustberg, Maryam, and Kleckner, Ian R.
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- 2023
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41. Survey of topical exposure concerns for patients and caregivers dealing with atopic dermatitis
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Grace Ratley, Ashleigh A. Sun, Korey Capozza, Kelly Barta, and Ian A. Myles
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atopic dermatatis ,steroids ,patient survey ,triggers ,eczema ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
BackgroundDespite the recent expansion of treatment options in atopic dermatitis (AD), most management responsibilities fall on the patient and/or caregivers. Disease control often requires vigilance about and avoidance of common exposures, however the concerns for patients and caregivers living with AD have not been well enumerated.MethodsAn IRB approved survey was distributed to the public to evaluate the patient and caregiver concerns for topical exposures and potential triggers.Results323 people accessed the link to the survey with 259 providing response to at least one section of questions (response rate 80.2%). Results indicated that temperature and other weather related changes were the most common trigger. Nearly all respondents avoided at least one topical ingredient, with fragrances being the most common. Steroid exposure was common, however respondents expressed concerns about overall steroid exposure.ConclusionsOur results attempt to enumerate the daily topical exposure concerns for patients and caregivers living with AD. While our online survey is both limited and without mechanistic insights, our results provide insight to providers by highlighting the role of temperature in AD symptoms; identifying commonly perceived triggers; indicating the value of provider insight for topical product selection; and indicating that no specific aspect of topical corticosteroid exposure may alleviate the general steroid concerns for patients or caregivers.
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- 2023
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42. Nanomechanical Mapping of Three Dimensionally Printed Poly-ε-Caprolactone Single Microfibers at the Cell Scale for Bone Tissue Engineering Applications
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Marco Bontempi, Gregorio Marchiori, Mauro Petretta, Rosario Capozza, Brunella Grigolo, Gianluca Giavaresi, and Alessandro Gambardella
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PCL ,bone tissue engineering ,regenerative medicine ,orthopaedics ,resorbable polymers ,nanoindentation ,Technology - Abstract
Poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL) has been widely used in additive manufacturing for the construction of scaffolds for bone tissue engineering. However, its use is limited by its lack of bioactivity and inability to induce cell adhesion, hence limiting bone tissue regeneration. Biomimicry is strongly influenced by the dynamics of cell–substrate interaction. Thus, characterizing scaffolds at the cell scale could help to better understand the relationship between surface mechanics and biological response. We conducted atomic force microscopy-based nanoindentation on 3D-printed PCL fibers of ~300 µm thickness and mapped the near-surface Young’s modulus at loading forces below 50 nN. In this non-disruptive regime, force mapping did not show clear patterns in the spatial distribution of moduli or a relationship with the topographic asperities within a given region. Remarkably, we found that the average modulus increased linearly with the logarithm of the strain rate. Finally, a dependence of the moduli on the history of nanoindentation was demonstrated on locations of repeated nanoindentations, likely due to creep phenomena capable of hindering viscoelasticity. Our findings can contribute to the rational design of scaffolds for bone regeneration that are capable of inducing cell adhesion and proliferation. The methodologies described are potentially applicable to various tissue-engineered biopolymers.
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- 2023
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43. Selective intracellular delivery and intracellular recordings combined on MEA biosensors
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Cerea, Andrea, Caprettini, Valeria, Bruno, Giulia, Lovato, Laura, Melle, Giovanni, Tantussi, Francesco, Capozza, Rosario, Moia, Fabio, Dipalo, Michele, and De Angelis, Francesco
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Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Biological studies on in vitro cell cultures are of fundamental importance to investigate cells response to external stimuli, such as new drugs for treatment of specific pathologies, or to study communication between electrogenic cells. Although three-dimensional (3D) nanostructures brought tremendous improvements on biosensors used for various biological in vitro studies, including drug delivery and electrical recording, there is still a lack of multifunctional capabilities that could help gaining deeper insights in several bio-related research fields. In this work, the electrical recording of large cell ensembles and the intracellular delivery of few selected cells are combined on the same device by integrating microfluidics channels on the bottom of a multi-electrode array decorated with 3D hollow nanostructures. The novel platform allows to record intracellular-like action potentials from large ensembles of cardiomyocytes derived from human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (hiPSC) and from the HL-1 line, while different molecules are selectively delivered into single/few targeted cells. The proposed approach shows high potential for enabling new comprehensive studies that can relate drug effects to network level cell communication processes., Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures
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- 2018
44. Cell membrane disruption by vertical nanopillars: the role of membrane bending and traction forces
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Capozza, Rosario, Caprettini, Valeria, Gonano, Carlo A., Bosca, Alessandro, Moia, Fabio, Santoro, Francesca, and De Angelis, Francesco
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Physics - Biological Physics ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Quantitative Biology - Cell Behavior - Abstract
Gaining access to the cell interior is fundamental for many applications, such as electrical recording, drug and biomolecular delivery. A very promising technique consists of culturing cells on nano/micro pillars. The tight adhesion and high local deformation of cells in contact with nanostructures can promote the permeabilization of lipids at the plasma membrane, providing access to the internal compartment. However, there is still much experimental controversy regarding when and how the intracellular environment is targeted and the role of the geometry and interactions with surfaces. Consequently, we investigated, by coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations of the cell membrane, the mechanical properties of the lipid bilayer under high strain and bending conditions. We found out that a high curvature of the lipid bilayer dramatically lowers the traction force necessary to achieve membrane rupture. Afterwards, we experimentally studied the permeabilization rate of cell membrane by pillars with comparable aspect ratios but different sharpness values at the edges. The experimental data support the simulation results: even pillars with diameters in the micron range may cause local membrane disruption when their edges are sufficiently sharp. Therefore, the permeabilization likelihood is connected to the local geometric features of the pillars rather than diameter or aspect ratio. The present study can also provide significant contributions to the design of 3D biointerfaces for tissue engineering and cellular growth., Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Biomaterials
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- 2018
45. The P2 Experiment - A future high-precision measurement of the electroweak mixing angle at low momentum transfer
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Becker, Dominik, Bucoveanu, Razvan, Grzesik, Carsten, Kempf, Ruth, Imai, Kathrin, Molitor, Matthias, Tyukin, Alexey, Zimmermann, Marco, Armstrong, David, Aulenbacher, Kurt, Baunack, Sebastian, Beminiwattha, Rakitha, Berger, Niklaus, Bernhard, Peter, Brogna, Andrea, Capozza, Luigi, Dusa, Silviu Covrig, Deconinck, Wouter, Diefenbach, Jürgen, Erler, Jens, Gal, Ciprian, Gläser, Boris, Gou, Boxing, Gradl, Wolfgang, Gericke, Michael, Gorchtein, Mikhail, Imai, Yoshio, Kumar, Krishna S., Maas, Frank, Mammei, Juliette, Pan, Jie, Pandey, Preeti, Paschke, Kent, Perić, Ivan, Pitt, Mark, Rahman, Sakib, Riordan, Seamus, Piñeiro, David Rodríguez, Sfienti, Concettina, Sorokin, Iurii, Souder, Paul, Spiesberger, Hubert, Thiel, Michaela, Tyukin, Valery, and Weitzel, Quirin
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Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
This article describes the future P2 parity-violating electron scattering facility at the upcoming MESA accelerator in Mainz. The physics program of the facility comprises indirect, high precision search for physics beyond the Standard Model, measurement of the neutron distribution in nuclear physics, single-spin asymmetries stemming from two-photon exchange and a possible future extension to the measurement of hadronic parity violation. The first measurement of the P2 experiment aims for a high precision determination of the weak mixing angle to a precision of 0.14% at a four-momentum transfer of Q^2 = 4.5 10^{-3} GeV^2. The accuracy is comparable to existing measurements at the Z pole. It comprises a sensitive test of the standard model up to a mass scale of 50 TeV, extendable to 70 TeV. This requires a measurement of the parity violating cross section asymmetry -39.94 10^{-9} in the elastic electron-proton scattering with a total accuracy of 0.56 10^-9 (1.4 %) in 10,000 h of 150 \micro A polarized electron beam impinging on a 60 cm liquid H_2 target allowing for an extraction of the weak charge of the proton which is directly connected to the weak mixing angle. Contributions from gamma Z-box graphs become small at the small beam energy of 155 MeV. The size of the asymmetry is the smallest asymmetry ever measured in electron scattering with an unprecedented goal for the accuracy. We report here on the conceptual design of the P2 spectrometer, its Cherenkov detectors, the integrating read-out electronics as well as the ultra-thin, fast tracking detectors. There has been substantial theory work done in preparation of the determination of the weak mixing angle. The further physics program in particle and nuclear physics is described as well., Comment: Invited EPJ A Manuscript, many figures, large file size
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- 2018
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46. ASO Visual Abstract: Ancillary Treatment Referrals and Visits After Breast Cancer Surgery in a Sociodemographically Diverse Population
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Chan, Vernice H. Y., Heller, Danielle R., Berger, Elizabeth R., Capozza, Scott, Greenup, Rachel A., and Sanft, Tara B.
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- 2023
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47. Pyelo-ureteral junction obstruction in poorly functioning kidneys: Does conservative management play a role in pediatric patients?
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Angelo Zarfati, Ermelinda Mele, Maria Felicia Villani, Nicola Capozza, and Marco Castagnetti
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pyelo-ureteral junction obstruction ,conservative treatment ,surgery ,nephrectomy ,pyeloplasty ,pediatric ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundManagement of Pyelo-ureteral Junction Obstruction (PUJO) in poorly functioning kidneys in pediatric patients is still controversial, particularly regarding the role of conservative treatment.AimTo evaluate and present the outcomes of internal diversion and follow-up results of a small series of pediatric patients with UPJO in poorly functioning kidneys.Study designRetrospective review of 17 consecutive patients with unilateral PUJO in kidneys with Differential Renal Function (DRF)
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- 2023
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48. Glucose tolerance and markers of myocardial injury after an acute coronary syndrome: predictive role of the 1-h plus 2-h plasma glucose at the oral glucose tolerance test
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Zywicki, Viola, Capozza, Paola, Caravelli, Paolo, Del Prato, Stefano, and De Caterina, Raffaele
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- 2022
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49. Obstetric outcomes in pregnant COVID-19 women: the imbalance of von Willebrand factor and ADAMTS13 axis
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Grandone, Elvira, Vimercati, Antonella, Sorrentino, Felice, Colaizzo, Donatella, Ostuni, Angelo, Ceci, Oronzo, Capozza, Manuela, Tiscia, Giovanni, De Laurenzo, Antonio, Mastroianno, Mario, Cappucci, Filomena, Fischetti, Lucia, Margaglione, Maurizio, Cicinelli, Ettore, and Nappi, Luigi
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- 2022
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50. A novel hepadnavirus in domestic dogs
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Diakoudi, Georgia, Capozza, Paolo, Lanave, Gianvito, Pellegrini, Francesco, Di Martino, Barbara, Elia, Gabriella, Decaro, Nicola, Camero, Michele, Ghergo, Paola, Stasi, Fabio, Cavalli, Alessandra, Tempesta, Maria, Barrs, Vanessa R., Beatty, Julia, Bányai, Krisztián, Catella, Cristiana, Lucente, Maria S., Buonavoglia, Alessio, Fusco, Giovanna, and Martella, Vito
- Published
- 2022
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