11 results on '"Carfora R"'
Search Results
2. VACCINAZIONE DTPA NELLA DONNA IN GRAVIDANZA – PERCORSO NELL’AZIENDA USL DI FERRARA
- Author
-
Cova, M., Brosio, F., Bertoni, L., Ferioli, S., Cucchi, A., Carfora, R., De Togni, A., Mascellani, M., Cosenza, G., and Gabutti, G.
- Subjects
Socio-culturale - Published
- 2017
3. Assessment of urinary mutagens presence in a population of non smokers
- Author
-
Silvia Lupi, Scapoli, M., Cervato, K., Pizzo, F., Rizzello, R., Carfora, R., Gigli, F., Pavanello, S., Clonfero, E., and Gregorio, P.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Salmonella typhimurium ,Mutagenicity Tests ,Health Behavior ,Middle Aged ,Urine ,Diet ,Sex Factors ,Italy ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Air Pollution ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Smoking Cessation ,Aged ,Life Style ,Mutagens ,Indoor - Abstract
The paper presents the early results of a study involving a group of 312 non smoking and not professionally exposed subjects (144 males and 168 females) in order to evaluate the probable presence of urinary mutagens possibly derived from aspecific exposures. Urine samples were assayed by the Ames test on the YG1024 Salmonella typhimurium strain in the presence of S9 mix with plate incorporation method with preincubation. At the moment of sample collection, the subjects were invited to fill a questionnaire on their main characteristics and lifestyle. On the basis of laboratory data analysis, it emerged that, on 288 samples with a valuable mutagenic activity, 20 urinary extracts (8 of which were males and 12 were females) showed mutagenicity levels twice as much as spontaneous revertants. Diet and indoor exposure to passive smoking, fireplace and cooking fume exposure seemed to play a major role among the lifestyle behaviours investigated in generating positive mutagenic response with a statistically significant difference between positive and negative samples induction (Chi square, P = 0.0057 and P = 0.0168 respectively). After correction of induced revertants by means of creatinine excretion determination, it appeared that females, who had the higher mean urinary mutagenic activity, showed a mutagenicity level twice as much as men (364 ± 491 revertants/mmole creatinine for males against 605 ± 868 revertants/mmole creatinine in females, Mann-Whitney U-test, z = -3.97, P inf. 0.0001) possibly in consequence of their greater cooking fumes exposure. The study, that carefully evaluated the characteristics of involved subjects, reveals the presence, even though modest, of mutagens in urine of an apparently not significantly exposed population. In addition, standardization of method leads to suppose little feasible a confounding influence of considered features. Moreover, it would be therefore rather interesting to study the effect of low exposure time persistence., Journal of Preventive Medicine and Hygiene, Vol 48, No 3 (2007)
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessment of urinary mutagens presence in a population of non smokers
- Author
-
Lupi, S, Scapoli, M, Cervato, K, Pizzo, F, Rizzello, R, Carfora, R, Gigli, F, Pavanello, S, Clonfero, E, Gregorio, P, Lupi, S, Scapoli, M, Cervato, K, Pizzo, F, Rizzello, R, Carfora, R, Gigli, F, Pavanello, S, Clonfero, E, and Gregorio, P
- Abstract
The paper presents the early results of a study involving a group of 312 non smoking and not professionally exposed subjects (144 males and 168 females) in order to evaluate the probable presence of urinary mutagens possibly derived from aspecific exposures. Urine samples were assayed by the Ames test on the YG1024 Salmonella typhimurium strain in the presence of S9 mix with plate incorporation method with preincubation. At the moment of sample collection, the subjects were invited to fill a questionnaire on their main characteristics and lifestyle. On the basis of laboratory data analysis, it emerged that, on 288 samples with a valuable mutagenic activity, 20 urinary extracts (8 of which were males and 12 were females) showed mutagenicity levels twice as much as spontaneous revertants. Diet and indoor exposure to passive smoking, fireplace and cooking fume exposure seemed to play a major role among the lifestyle behaviours investigated in generating positive mutagenic response with a statistically significant difference between positive and negative samples induction (Chi square, P = 0.0057 and P = 0.0168 respectively). After correction of induced revertants by means of creatinine excretion determination, it appeared that females, who had the higher mean urinary mutagenic activity, showed a mutagenicity level twice as much as men (364 ± 491 revertants/mmole creatinine for males against 605 ± 868 revertants/mmole creatinine in females, Mann-Whitney U-test, z = -3.97, P inf. 0.0001) possibly in consequence of their greater cooking fumes exposure. The study, that carefully evaluated the characteristics of involved subjects, reveals the presence, even though modest, of mutagens in urine of an apparently not significantly exposed population. In addition, standardization of method leads to suppose little feasible a confounding influence of considered features. Moreover, it would be therefore rather interesting to study the effect of low exposure time persistence.
- Published
- 2007
5. La monetazione di Capua nella fase longobarda: qualche considerazione
- Author
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R. Vitale, P. Carfora, R. Ciccarelli, A. Parente, M.G. Pezone, G. Pignatelli, R. Vitale, N. Busino, Maria Gabriella Pezone, and Vitale, R.
- Subjects
Capua, Longobardi, monetazione - Abstract
Questo contributo si sofferma sulla monetazione longobarda di Capua, la città fondata nel IX secolo sulle rive del fiume Volturno: attualmente sono attribuite a Capua su presupposti sufficientemente solidi solo gli esemplari in argento, mentre le monete di rame sono considerate più tarde, prevalentemente della fase normanna. La monetazione longobarda della città viene qui esaminata soprattutto in riferimento a quella di Benevento, perché Capua era parte del Ducato-Principato beneventano: sullo sfondo vengono sinteticamente richiamate alcune delle principali serie dell'epoca, quali le serie autonome di Toscana, o serie papali-imperiali, che possono concorrere all'interpretazione dell'esile ma non trascurabile, principalmente sul piano politico, monetazione di Capua al tempo dei Landonidi.
- Published
- 2022
6. Hearing loss in beta-thalassemia: Systematic review
- Author
-
Immacolata Tartaglione, Roberta Carfora, Davide Brotto, Maria Rosaria Barillari, Giuseppe Costa, Silverio Perrotta, Renzo Manara, Tartaglione, I., Carfora, R., Brotto, D., Barillari, M. R., Costa, G., Perrotta, S., and Manara, R.
- Subjects
Iron-chelation ,Hearing loss ,Thalassemia ,Medicine ,Review ,General Medicine ,Hearing lo ,hearing loss - Abstract
In the last half century, the life expectancy of beta-thalassemia patients has strikingly increased mostly due to regular blood transfusions and chelation treatments. The improved survival, however, has allowed for the emergence of comorbidities, such as hearing loss, with a non-negligible impact on the patients’ quality of life. This thorough review analyzes the acquired knowledge regarding hearing impairment in this hereditary hemoglobinopathy, aiming at defining its prevalence, features, course, and possible disease- or treatment-related pathogenic factors. Following PRISMA criteria, we retrieved 60 studies published between 1979 and 2021. Diagnostic tools and criteria, forms of hearing impairment, correlations with beta-thalassemia phenotypes, age and sex, chelation treatment and laboratory findings including iron overload, were carefully searched, analyzed and summarized. In spite of the relatively high number of studies in the last 40 years, our knowledge is rather limited, and large prospective studies with homogeneous diagnostic tools and criteria are required to define all the aforementioned issues. According to the literature, the overall prevalence rate of hearing impairment is 32.3%; age, sex, and laboratory findings do not seem to correlate with hearing deficits, while the weak relationship with clinical phenotype and chelation treatment seems to highlight the presence of further yet to be identified pathogenic factors.
- Published
- 2021
7. Piperazinium Poly(Ionic Liquid)s as Solid Electrolytes for Lithium Batteries.
- Author
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Gallastegui A, Lingua G, Lopez-Larrea N, Carfora R, Pasini D, Mantione D, and Mecerreyes D
- Subjects
- Piperazines chemistry, Molecular Structure, Ionic Liquids chemistry, Lithium chemistry, Electric Power Supplies, Electrolytes chemistry, Polymers chemistry, Polymers chemical synthesis
- Abstract
Poly(ionic liquid)s combine the unique properties of ionic liquids (ILs) within ionic polymers holding significant promise for energy storage applications. It is reported here the synthesis and characterization of a new family of poly(ionic liquid)s synthesized from cationic piperazinium ionic liquid monomers. The cationic poly(acrylamide piperazinium) in combination with sulfonamide anions like bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl) imide (TFSI) and bis(fluorosulfonyl) imide (FSI) are characterized as solid polymer electrolytes. The polymer electrolytes in combination with pyrrolidonium ILs and LiFSI show high ionic conductivity, 5×10
-3 S cm-1 at 100 °C. Piperazinium polymer electrolytes show excellent compatibility with lithium metal reversible plating and stripping at high current density and low temperature 40 °C., (© 2024 The Author(s). Macromolecular Rapid Communications published by Wiley‐VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Dose escalation of adalimumab as a strategy to overcome anti-drug antibodies: A case report of infantile-onset inflammatory bowel disease.
- Author
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Ancona S, Signa S, Longo C, Cangemi G, Carfora R, Drago E, La Rosa A, Crocco M, Chiaro A, Gandullia P, and Arrigo S
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Adalimumab therapeutic use, Adalimumab adverse effects, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Antibodies, Steroids therapeutic use, Infliximab therapeutic use, Abscess, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
- Abstract
Background: Treatment of infantile-onset inflammatory bowel disease (IO-IBD) is often challenging due to its aggressive disease course and failure of standard therapies with a need for biologics. Secondary loss of response is frequently caused by the production of anti-drug antibodies, a well-known problem in IBD patients on biologic treatment. We present a case of IO-IBD treated with therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM)-guided high-dose anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy, in which dose escalation monitoring was used as a strategy to overcome anti-drug antibodies., Case Summary: A 5-mo-old boy presented with a history of persistent hematochezia from the 10
th d of life, as well as relapsing perianal abscess and growth failure. Hypoalbuminemia, anemia, and elevated inflammatory markers were also present. Endoscopic assessment revealed skip lesions with deep colic ulcerations, inflammatory anal sub-stenosis, and deep fissures with persistent abscess. A diagnosis of IO-IBD Crohn-like was made. The patient was initially treated with oral steroids and fistulotomy. After the perianal abscess healed, adalimumab (ADA) was administered with concomitant gradual tapering of steroids. Clinical and biochemical steroid-free remission was achieved with good trough levels. After 3 mo, antibodies to ADA (ATA) were found with undetectable trough levels; therefore, we optimized the therapy schedule, first administering 10 mg weekly and subsequently up to 20 mg weekly (2.8 mg/kg/dose). After 2 mo of high-dose treatment, ATA disappeared, with concomitant high trough levels and stable clinical and biochemical remission of the disease., Conclusion: TDM-guided high-dose ADA treatment as a monotherapy overcame ATA production. This strategy could be a good alternative to combination therapy, especially in very young patients., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (©The Author(s) 2023. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Hearing Loss in Beta-Thalassemia: Systematic Review.
- Author
-
Tartaglione I, Carfora R, Brotto D, Barillari MR, Costa G, Perrotta S, and Manara R
- Abstract
In the last half century, the life expectancy of beta-thalassemia patients has strikingly increased mostly due to regular blood transfusions and chelation treatments. The improved survival, however, has allowed for the emergence of comorbidities, such as hearing loss, with a non-negligible impact on the patients' quality of life. This thorough review analyzes the acquired knowledge regarding hearing impairment in this hereditary hemoglobinopathy, aiming at defining its prevalence, features, course, and possible disease- or treatment-related pathogenic factors. Following PRISMA criteria, we retrieved 60 studies published between 1979 and 2021. Diagnostic tools and criteria, forms of hearing impairment, correlations with beta-thalassemia phenotypes, age and sex, chelation treatment and laboratory findings including iron overload, were carefully searched, analyzed and summarized. In spite of the relatively high number of studies in the last 40 years, our knowledge is rather limited, and large prospective studies with homogeneous diagnostic tools and criteria are required to define all the aforementioned issues. According to the literature, the overall prevalence rate of hearing impairment is 32.3%; age, sex, and laboratory findings do not seem to correlate with hearing deficits, while the weak relationship with clinical phenotype and chelation treatment seems to highlight the presence of further yet to be identified pathogenic factors.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Auditory cortex hypoperfusion: a metabolic hallmark in Beta Thalassemia.
- Author
-
Manara R, Ponticorvo S, Perrotta S, Barillari MR, Costa G, Brotto D, Di Concilio R, Ciancio A, De Michele E, Carafa PA, Canna A, Russo AG, Troisi D, Caiazza M, Ammendola F, Roberti D, Santoro C, Picariello S, Valentino MS, Inserra E, Carfora R, Cirillo M, Raimo S, Santangelo G, di Salle F, Esposito F, and Tartaglione I
- Subjects
- Audiometry, Pure-Tone, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Auditory Cortex, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural etiology, beta-Thalassemia
- Abstract
Background: Sensorineural hearing loss in beta-thalassemia is common and it is generally associated with iron chelation therapy. However, data are scarce, especially on adult populations, and a possible involvement of the central auditory areas has not been investigated yet. We performed a multicenter cross-sectional audiological and single-center 3Tesla brain perfusion MRI study enrolling 77 transfusion-dependent/non transfusion-dependent adult patients and 56 healthy controls. Pure tone audiometry, demographics, clinical/laboratory and cognitive functioning data were recorded., Results: Half of patients (52%) presented with high-frequency hearing deficit, with overt hypoacusia (Pure Tone Average (PTA) > 25 dB) in 35%, irrespective of iron chelation or clinical phenotype. Bilateral voxel clusters of significant relative hypoperfusion were found in the auditory cortex of beta-thalassemia patients, regardless of clinical phenotype. In controls and transfusion-dependent (but not in non-transfusion-dependent) patients, the relative auditory cortex perfusion values increased linearly with age (p < 0.04). Relative auditory cortex perfusion values showed a significant U-shaped correlation with PTA values among hearing loss patients, and a linear correlation with the full scale intelligence quotient (right side p = 0.01, left side p = 0.02) with its domain related to communication skills (right side p = 0.04, left side p = 0.07) in controls but not in beta-thalassemia patients. Audiometric test results did not correlate to cognitive test scores in any subgroup., Conclusions: In conclusion, primary auditory cortex perfusion changes are a metabolic hallmark of adult beta-thalassemia, thus suggesting complex remodeling of the hearing function, that occurs regardless of chelation therapy and before clinically manifest hearing loss. The cognitive impact of perfusion changes is intriguing but requires further investigations., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Assessment of urinary mutagens presence in a population of non smokers.
- Author
-
Lupi S, Scapoli M, Cervato K, Pizzo F, Rizzello R, Carfora R, Gigli F, Pavanello S, Clonfero E, and Gregorio P
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Air Pollution, Indoor adverse effects, Diet, Female, Humans, Italy, Life Style, Male, Middle Aged, Mutagenicity Tests, Salmonella typhimurium, Sex Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Behavior, Mutagens analysis, Smoking Cessation, Urine chemistry
- Abstract
The paper presents the early results of a study involving a group of 312 non smoking and not professionally exposed subjects (144 males and 168 females) in order to evaluate the probable presence of urinary mutagens possibly derived from aspecific exposures. Urine samples were assayed by the Ames test on the YG1024 Salmonella typhimurium strain in the presence of S9 mix with plate incorporation method with preincubation. At the moment of sample collection, the subjects were invited to fill a questionnaire on their main characteristics and lifestyle. On the basis of laboratory data analysis, it emerged that, on 288 samples with a valuable mutagenic activity, 20 urinary extracts (8 of which were males and 12 were females) showed mutagenicity levels twice as much as spontaneous revertants. Diet and indoor exposure to passive smoking, fireplace and cooking fume exposure seemed to play a major role among the lifestyle behaviours investigated in generating positive mutagenic response with a statistically significant difference between positive and negative samples induction (Chi square, P = 0.0057 and P = 0.0168 respectively). After correction of induced revertants by means of creatinine excretion determination, it appeared that females, who had the higher mean urinary mutagenic activity, showed a mutagenicity level twice as much as men (364 +/- 491 revertants/mmole creatinine for males against 605 +/- 868 revertants/mmole creatinine in females, Mann-Whitney U-test, z = -3.97, P < 0.0001) possibly in consequence of their greater cooking fumes exposure. The study, that carefully evaluated the characteristics of involved subjects, reveals the presence, even though modest, of mutagens in urine of an apparently not significantly exposed population. In addition, standardization of method leads to suppose little feasible a confounding influence of considered features. Moreover, it would be therefore rather interesting to study the effect of low exposure time persistence.
- Published
- 2007
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