29 results on '"Citro, M"'
Search Results
2. Non-Molecular Information Transfer from Thyroxine to Frogs : By Means of Homoeopathic Preparation and Electronic Processing
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Endler, P. C., Pongratz, W., Smith, C. W., Schulte, J., Senekowitsch, F., Citro, M., and Bastide, Madeleine, editor
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- 1997
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3. Transfer of Information from Molecules by Means of Electronic Amplification — Preliminary Results
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Citro, M., Smith, C. W., Scott-Morley, A., Pongratz, W., Endler, P. C., Endler, P. C., editor, and Schulte, J., editor
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- 1994
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4. P–735 Spontaneous pregnancies among infertile couples during assisted reproduction lockdown for COVID–19 pandemic
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Morini, D, primary, Melli, B, additional, Santi, D, additional, Spaggiari, G, additional, Citro, M C, additional, Lutzoni, R, additional, Simoni, M, additional, Aguzzoli, L, additional, and Villani, M T, additional
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- 2021
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5. Symptoms of alcohol abuse: The first warning sign of cancer development risk
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Bifulco, M., primary, Citro, M., additional, and Abate, M., additional
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- 2018
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6. Latest Improvements in Industrial Selective Emitter Technology with Laser Diffusion
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Hammer, D., Olkowska-Oetzel, J., Voigt, O., Mäckel, H., Klinke, V., Citro, M., Habenicht, H., Varner, K., Weiss-Wallrath, H., Amiri, S., Nguyen, V., Krümberg, S., Bertsch, S., Winter, P., Keller, S., and Fath, P.
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Wafer-Based Silicon Solar Cells and Materials Technology ,Silicon Solar Cell Improvements - Abstract
27th European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition; 1516-1518, In this contribution we will present the transfer of the successful C.LAS laser diffusion technology from Czochralski silicon to multicrystalline silicon. This technology features, in addition to a standard solar cell process, a local laser diffusion beneath the front contacts after the POCl3 diffusion. This reduces the contact resistance considerably and thus allows for a higher sheet resistance between the contact fingers. A higher sheet resistance can increase the open circuit voltage and short circuit current by effectively reducing recombination in the emitter, leading to an efficiency gain of 0.3 % absolute in production. For multicrystalline silicon several additional physical effects need to be taken into account for a successful emitter formation process: (i) the surface of acidic etched multicrystalline wafers is less regular than the alkaline textured surface of Cz wafers leading to a different laser in-coupling and internal heat transfer influencing the laser emitter formation, (ii) for non-optimized laser parameters metal impurities within the lasered region can be redistributed and harm the sensitive space charge region and (iii) the quality of multicrystalline silicon varies spatially and over different wafer suppliers, which requires the process to be robust against these variations. This presentation will feature a comprehensive theoretical and experimental analysis of these effects and show how our welladjusted process, consisting of a furnace diffusion combined with a subsequent laser diffusion can effectively deal with these fundamental issues. This analysis is conducted using state of the art simulation and characterization methods.
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- 2012
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7. Industrial Low-Pressure Phosphorus Diffusion for High Performance and Excellent Uniformity
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Mühlbauer, M., Piechulla, A., Voyer, C., Citro, M., Dahl, R., and Fath, P.
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Manufacturing Issues and Processing ,Wafer-based Silicon Solar Cells and Materials Technology - Abstract
26th European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition; 2028-2030, Centrotherm photovoltaic AG manufactures diffusion furnaces for the production of crystalline solar cells. One of our developments is the low-pressure diffusion furnace that outperforms the original equipment. Compared to the established atmospheric-pressure diffusion the main advantage of the low-pressure diffusion is the reduced wafer-to-wafer distance without losses in sheet resistance uniformity, cycle time and efficiency. In this paper, we specifically evaluate the high-throughput diffusion furnace to realize uniform phosphorous emitters for 156 x 156 mm2 p-type mono-crystalline silicon solar cells. The sheet resistance and the doping profile were characterized using four-point probe measurements and ECV (Electrochemical Capacitance Voltage) analysis respectively. The new low-pressure tube furnace is designed to obtain phosphorous emitters with sheet resistances in the 53 – 100 /sq range and a wafer uniformity of less than 3 % with single loading in SiC long flat boats. Electrical properties of the emitter solar cell structure with 60 /sq were characterized. This new equipment for low-pressure diffusion provides superior boat uniformities and doping profiles. About 50 years of development in diffusion tube furnaces resulted in an enhanced low-pressure tube system. The newly designed diffusion furnace enables customers to reduce the slot distance compared to the standard one (4.72 mm) by half (2.38 mm) or more (2 mm) and therefore increase the throughput up to 2500 or 3000 wafers per cycle respectively.
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- 2011
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8. A pilot feasibility study of a questionnaire to determine European union-wide CAM use
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Eardley, S., Bishop, F. L., Cardini, F., Santos-Rey, K., Jong, Miek C., Ursoniu, S., Dragan, S., Hegyi, G., Uehleke, B., Vas, J., Jupaneant, O., Citro, M. C., Fønnebø, V., Quandt, S. A., Lewith, G., Eardley, S., Bishop, F. L., Cardini, F., Santos-Rey, K., Jong, Miek C., Ursoniu, S., Dragan, S., Hegyi, G., Uehleke, B., Vas, J., Jupaneant, O., Citro, M. C., Fønnebø, V., Quandt, S. A., and Lewith, G.
- Abstract
Background: No questionnaire specifically measuring the core components of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use has been validated for use across European Union (EU) countries. We aimed to determine the face validity, acceptability and the participants' comprehension of a pre-existing questionnaire designed to measure 'CAM use', to provide a comparative, standardised questionnaire for use by health care providers, policy makers and purchasers throughout Europe. Methods: Established procedures were employed to translate the questionnaire into 4 EU languages. The translated questionnaires were piloted on 50 healthy adults from each country who may never have used CAM. 10 participants per country also took part in audio-recorded think aloud interviews about the questionnaire. The interviews were transcribed and analysed in the language in which they were conducted; findings were summarised in English. Questionnaire data were pooled across countries, and patterns of completion and missing data were analysed. Results: The questionnaire was translated into Italian, Spanish, Dutch and Romanian. The mean age of the participants was 43.6 years. 34% were male, 87.4% were either light or heavy CAM users, and 12.6% were non-users. Qualitative analysis identified common problems across countries including a 'hard-to-read' layout, misunderstood terminology and uncertainty in choosing response options. Quantitative analysis confirmed that a substantial minority of respondents failed to follow questionnaire instructions and that some questions had substantial rates of missing data. Conclusions: The I-CAM-Q has low face validity and low acceptability, and is likely to produce biased estimates of CAM use if applied in England, Romania, Italy, The Netherlands or Spain. Further work is required to develop the layout, terms, some response options and instructions for completion before it can be used across the EU. © 2012 S. Karger AG, Basel., Source: Scopus
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- 2012
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9. PHARMACOLOGICAL FREQUENCY TRANSFER ON ANIMAL AND VEGETAL MODELS
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VINATTIERI, C., primary, PICARD, G., additional, and CITRO, M., additional
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- 1998
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10. PHARMACOLOGICAL FREQUENCY TRANSFER
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CITRO, M., primary
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- 1998
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11. Rhabdomyolysis: a case study exploring the possible side effect of lipid lowering medication by a HIV positive patient taking a protease inhibitor.
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De Carvalho D, Citro M, and Tibbles A
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This case study explores the incidence of rhabdomyolysis in a HIV positive patient that was taking a lipid lowering drug and a protease inhibitor concurrently while under chiropractic treatment for generalized muscular soreness. Dyslipidemia is a very common problem both in the general and HIV population, with many patients being prescribed lipid lowering drugs. While extremely rare, adverse effects of lipid lowering drugs have been documented to include myopathy such as rhabdomyolysis. It is imperative that chiropractors are aware of the possible adverse side effect of lipid lowering drug therapy in their patients complaining of musculoskeletal pain. It is even more important that chiropractors treating the HIV population are aware of the potential interactions between these medications and protease inhibitors to cause myopathy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
12. Esterase-Sensitive Nitric Oxide Donors of the Diazeniumdiolate Family: In Vitro Antileukemic Activity
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Saavedra, J. E., Shami, P. J., Wang, L. Y., Davies, K. M., Booth, M. N., Citro, M. L., and Keefer, L. K.
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We have designed a novel prodrug class that is stable in neutral aqueous media but releases bioactive nitric oxide (NO) on metabolism by esterase. Diazeniumdiolates of structure R
2 N−N(O)&dbd;N−OR, in which R = Na, were reacted with BrCH2 OAc to convert the spontaneously NO-releasing salts1a (R2 N = diethylamino) and1b (R2 N = pyrrolidino) to prodrugs2a (AcOM-DEA/NO) and2b (AcOM-PYRRO/NO), respectively, where R = CH2 OAc. In contrast to anions1a and1b (half-lives in pH 7.4 phosphate at 37 °C of 2 min and 3 s, respectively),2a and2b showed only minimal decomposition after 16 h under these conditions. Very rapid hydrolysis occurred in the presence of porcine liver esterase, however, with free anion1a being observed as an intermediate in the esterase-induced generation of NO from2a . The potential utility of this prodrug class is illustrated with a comparison of1 and2 as antiproliferative agents in NO-sensitive human leukemia cell lines HL-60 and U937. While the 72-h IC50 's for1a and1b (which generate NO throughout the medium) in HL-60 cell cultures were >600 μM, those of2a and2b were 8.3 and 6.4 μM, respectively. This result is consistent with our hypothesis that2 is selectively hydrolyzed to1 and thence to NO intracellularly. For U937 cells, the 72-h IC50 for both2a and2b was 53 μM. By contrast, relatively high antiproliferative IC50 's (>100 μM in U937 cells) were observed for analogues in which R = CH2 CH2 SC(O)Me, from which acetyl and 2-mercaptoethyl groups must be successively cleaved to free the NO-releasing diazeniumdiolate function. Within 24 h at initial concentrations of 50 μM,2a and2b induced apoptosis in 50% and 57% of the HL-60 cells, respectively (35% and 40% of the U937 cells, respectively). The data reveal significant in vitro antileukemic activity on the part of these novel compounds. Moreover, their substantial ease-of-handling advantages over the anionic diazeniumdiolates from which they are derived suggest their use as convenient agents for probing the biological roles of NO.- Published
- 2000
13. Nitric Oxide-Releasing Polymers Containing the [N(O)NO]<SUP>-</SUP> Group
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Smith, D. J., Chakravarthy, D., Pulfer, S., Simmons, M. L., Hrabie, J. A., Citro, M. L., Saavedra, J. E., Davies, K. M., Hutsell, T. C., Mooradian, D. L., Hanson, S. R., and Keefer, L. K.
- Abstract
Ions of structure X[N(O)NO]- display broad-spectrum pharmacological activity that correlates with the rate and extent of their spontaneous, first-order decomposition to nitric oxide when dissolved. We report incorporation of this functional group into polymeric matrices that can be used for altering the time course of nitric oxide release and/or targeting it to tissues with which the polymers are in physical contact. Structural types prepared include those in which the [N(O)NO]- group is attached to heteroatoms in low molecular weight species that are noncovalently distributed throughout the polymeric matrix, in groupings pendant to the polymer backbone, and in the polymer backbone itself. They range in physical form from films that can be coated onto other surfaces to microspheres, gels, powders, and moldable resins. Chemiluminescence measurements confirm that polymers to which the [N(O)NO]- group is attached can serve as localized sources of nitric oxide, with one prototype providing sustained NO release for 5 weeks in pH 7.4 buffer at 37 °C. The latter composition, a cross-linked poly(ethylenimine) that had been exposed to NO, inhibited the in vitro proliferation of rat aorta smooth muscle cells when added as a powder to the culture medium and showed potent antiplatelet activity when coated on a normally thrombogenic vascular graft situated in an arteriovenous shunt in a baboon's circulatory system. The results suggest that polymers containing the [N(O)NO]- functional group may hold considerable promise for a variety of biomedical applications in which local delivery of NO is desired.
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- 1996
14. A Nitric Oxide-Releasing Polydiazeniumdiolate Derived from Acetonitrile
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Arnold, E. V., Citro, M. L., Keefer, L. K., and Hrabie, J. A.
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Acetonitrile, frequently used as a solvent in reactions of nitric oxide (NO) with amines and other nucleophiles to introduce the [N(O)NO]- (diazeniumdiolate) functional group, has itself been shown to react with NO in the presence of strong base to yield methane trisdiazeniumdiolate ( 1 ), presumably via an intermediate trisdiazeniumdiolated imidate. Aqueous hydrolysis of1 does not follow simple first-order kinetics and produces mixtures of NO and nitrous oxide in ratios that vary with solution pH.- Published
- 2002
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15. The Specific Determination of Air-Borne Hydrogen Chloride.
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AIR FORCE ROCKET PROPULSION LAB EDWARDS AFB CA, Dee, L. A., Citro, M. F., Ziege, G. E., AIR FORCE ROCKET PROPULSION LAB EDWARDS AFB CA, Dee, L. A., Citro, M. F., and Ziege, G. E.
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A number of techniques potentially applicable to the quantitative measurement of gaseous hydrogen chloride were surveyed. Selection of the device described herein, a small glass tube filled with AgNO3-coated particles, was based on its unique specificity, simplicity, and sensitivity. Laboratory evaluation of this device under varied simulated atmospheric conditions including humidity and chemical interference (e.g., NO2, NaCl particles) indicates that it may be useful for field measurement of air-borne HCl resulting from the combustion of large quantities of solid propellant. (Author)
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- 1969
16. CAM use in Europe – The patients’ perspective. Part II: A pilot feasibility study of a questionnaire to determine EU wide CAM use
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Vas, J., Jupaneant, O., Uehleke, B., Lewith, G., Fø, nnebø, Santos-rey, K., Ursoniu, S., Quandt, S., Eardley, S., Jong, M., Hegyi, G., Dragan, S., Cardini, F., Bishop, F., and Citro, M.
17. JS-K, a glutathione/glutathione S-transferase-activated nitric oxide donor of the diazeniumdiolate class with potent antineoplastic activity
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Shami, P. J., Saavedra, J. E., Wang, L. Y., Challice Bonifant, Diwan, B. A., Singh, S. V., Gu, Y., Fox, S. D., Buzard, G. S., Citro, M. L., Waterhouse, D. J., Davies, K. M., Ji, X., and Keefer, L. K.
18. Mangostanin, a Xanthone Derived from Garcinia mangostana Fruit, Exerts Protective and Reparative Effects on Oxidative Damage in Human Keratinocytes
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Mario Abate, Cristina Pagano, Milena Masullo, Marianna Citro, Simona Pisanti, Sonia Piacente, Maurizio Bifulco, Abate, M., Pagano, C., Masullo, M., Citro, M., Pisanti, S., Piacente, S., and Bifulco, M.
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mangostanin ,apoptosis ,Apoptosi ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Cosmeceutical ,Garcinia mangostana ,cosmeceuticals ,Article ,RS1-441 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine ,Medicine ,oxidative stress - Abstract
The fruit of Garcinia mangostana (mangosteen) is known in ancient traditional Asian medicine for its antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory and anticancer activities. These effects are mainly due to the action of polyphenols known as xanthones, which are contained in the pericarp of the fruit. In recent years, there has been a growing interest from pharmaceutical companies in formulating new topicals based on mangosteen full extracts to prevent skin aging. However, the molecules responsible for these effects and the mechanisms involved have not been investigated so far. Here, the arils and shells of Garcinia mangostana were extracted with chloroform and methanol, and the extracts were further purified to yield 12 xanthone derivatives. Their effects were evaluated using in vitro cultures of human epidermal keratinocytes. After confirming the absence of cytotoxicity, we evaluated the antioxidant potential of these compounds, identifying mangostanin as capable of both protecting and restoring oxidative damage induced by H2O2. We showed how mangostanin, by reducing the generation of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), prevents the activation of AKT (protein kinase B), ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase), p53, and other cellular pathways underlying cell damage and apoptosis activation. In conclusion, our study is the first to demonstrate that mangostanin is effective in protecting the skin from the action of free radicals, thus preventing skin aging, confirming a potential toward its development in the nutraceutical and cosmeceutical fields.
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- 2022
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19. Gas-exchange deficit and systemic hypoperfusion in COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 young adult patients with pneumonia.
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Franchini S, Mette F, Landoni G, Setti E, Ferrante L, Calcaterra B, Pagliula G, Barbieri A, Fontani D, Borio G, Citro M, Farolfi F, Suma G, Monti G, Colombo S, Dagna L, Rovere-Querini P, DE Cobelli F, Castagna A, Ciceri F, Zangrillo A, Tresoldi M, Secchi A, and Etteri M
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- Humans, Young Adult, Lactic Acid, Emergency Service, Hospital, COVID-19, Pneumonia complications, Sepsis
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Background: Lung damage leading to gas-exchange deficit and sepsis leading to systemic hypoperfusion are well-known features of severe pneumonia. Although frequently described in COVID-19, their prognostic impact in COVID-19-related pneumonia versus COVID-19-unrelated pneumonia has never been compared. This study assesses fundamental gas-exchange and hemodynamic parameters and explores their prognostic impact in COVID-19 pneumonia and non-COVID-19 pneumonia., Methods: We prospectively evaluated arterial pO
2 /FiO2 , alveolar to arterial O2 gradient, shock index, and serum lactate in 126 COVID-19 pneumonia patients, aged 18-65, presenting to the emergency department with acute, non-hypercapnic respiratory failure. As a control group we identified 1:1 age-, sex-, and pO2 /FiO2 -matched COVID-19-urelated pneumonia patients. Univariate and multivariable predictors of 30-day survival were identified in both groups., Results: COVID-19 patients showed lower arterial serum lactate concentration (P<0.001) and shock index (P<0.001) values as compared to non-COVID-19 patients. While we did not observe differences in lactate concentration or in shock index values in deceased vs. surviving COVID-19 patients (P=0.7 and P=0.6, respectively), non-COVID-19 deceased patients showed significantly higher lactate and shock index than non-COVID-19 survivors (P<0.001 and P=0.03). The pO2 /FiO2 was the most powerful determinant of survival by Cox regression multivariate analysis in COVID-19 patients (P=0.006), while it was lactate in non-COVID-19 patients (P=0.001)., Conclusions: As compared to COVID19-unrelated pneumonia, COVID-19 pneumonia outcome seems more strictly correlated to the extent of lung damage, rather than to the systemic circulatory and metabolic derangements typical of sepsis.- Published
- 2024
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20. PEGALUS: predictivity of elderly age, arterial gas analysis, and lung ultrasound. A new prognostic score for COVID-19 patients in the emergency department-an observational prospective study.
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Borio G, Tentori S, Farolfi F, Suma GV, Rienzo P, D'ambrosio A, Citro M, Antonini M, and Maffi P
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- Humans, Aged, Prospective Studies, Prognosis, Emergency Service, Hospital, Lung diagnostic imaging, COVID-19
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Background: Periodic surges of COVID-19 patients seeking care in the hospital environment overwhelm systems reduce the availability of resources for treatment of non-COVID-19 cases (Zheng et al. in J Hosp Infect 106:325-329, 2020). Hospital flow and resource management could be greatly enhanced by differentiating patients who are likely at risk of adverse clinical outcomes from those who could safely be discharged after evaluation and managed outside of the hospital setting (Sun et al. in J Infect Dis 223:38-46, 2021). Herein, we propose a prognostic score named PEGALUS (Predictivity of Elderly age, arterial blood Gas Analysis and Lung UltraSound) that could potentially help clinicians properly and rapidly choose the appropriate allocation of COVID-19 patients admitted to the emergency department (ED)., Methods: This observational prospective study enrolled COVID-19 patients who were admitted to the ED of IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital (HSR)., Results: 230 COVID-19 patients were enrolled and 30-day follow-up data was collected. Composite outcome was death or need for oro-tracheal intubation (OTI). 50 patients (21.5%) reached the outcome during the observational period. In multivariate Cox analysis, age, PO
2 /FiO2 ratio, pCO2 , duration of symptoms, and lung ultrasound evaluation were significantly associated with the adverse outcome. We obtained a new scorecard (PEGALUS) according to the hazard ratio of the identified predictors. PEGALUS score performed well in predicting the composite outcome (AUC 0.866, 95% IC 0.812-0.921; p < 0.001). Kaplan-Meier showed that a PEGALUS score < 7 was associated with a good 30-day prognosis (survival rate 97.5%), compared to a PEGALUS score of 7-11 (survival rate 85.9%; p log-rank 0.009) and PEGALUS score > 11 (survival rate 49.3%; p log-rank < 0.001)., Conclusions: PEGALUS score performed at the admission can predict adverse outcomes in patients with COVID-19. The systematic application of this score might permit a more accurate and rapid treatment allocation in this setting., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Società Italiana di Medicina Interna (SIMI).)- Published
- 2022
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21. Keratinocytes Migration Promotion, Proliferation Induction, and Free Radical Injury Prevention by 3-Hydroxytirosol.
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Abate M, Citro M, Pisanti S, Caputo M, and Martinelli R
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- Antioxidants pharmacology, Cells, Cultured, Epidermis drug effects, Humans, Hydrogen Peroxide adverse effects, Keratinocytes cytology, Keratinocytes drug effects, Oxidants adverse effects, Phenylethyl Alcohol pharmacology, Signal Transduction, Wound Healing, Cell Movement, Cell Proliferation, Epidermis physiology, Free Radical Scavengers pharmacology, Free Radicals adverse effects, Keratinocytes physiology, Phenylethyl Alcohol analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
3-hydroxytyrosol (HT) is the main phenolic compound found in olive oil with known antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and antimicrobial properties in several dermatological conditions, both when taken in the form of olive oil or pure in cosmeceutical formulations. To date, its direct effect on the wound healing process and the molecular mechanisms involved have not yet been elucidated. Thus, in the present study, we aimed to explore its effects in vitro in epidermal keratinocyte cultures focusing on the molecular mechanism implied. HT was able to induce keratinocyte proliferation in the low micromolar range, increasing the expression of cyclin dependent kinases fundamental for cell cycle progression such as CDK2 and CDK6. Furthermore, it increased cell migration through the activation of tissue remodeling factors such as matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) protein. Then, we evaluated whether HT also showed antioxidant activity at this concentration range, protecting from H
2 O2 -induced cytotoxicity. The HT prevented the activation of ATM serine/threonine kinase (ATM), Checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1), Checkpoint kinase 2 (Chk2), and p53, reducing the number of apoptotic cells. Our study highlighted novel pharmacological properties of HT, providing the first evidence of its capability to induce keratinocyte migration and proliferation required for healing processes and re-epithelialization.- Published
- 2021
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22. Gene Expression Analysis of Mevalonate Kinase Deficiency Affected Children Identifies Molecular Signatures Related to Hematopoiesis.
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Pisanti S, Citro M, Abate M, Caputo M, and Martinelli R
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- Child, Gene Expression, Hematopoiesis genetics, Humans, Inflammation, Protein Prenylation, Mevalonate Kinase Deficiency genetics
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Mevalonate kinase deficiency (MKD) is a rare autoinflammatory genetic disorder characterized by recurrent fever attacks and systemic inflammation with potentially severe complications. Although it is recognized that the lack of protein prenylation consequent to mevalonate pathway blockade drives IL1β hypersecretion, and hence autoinflammation, MKD pathogenesis and the molecular mechanisms underlaying most of its clinical manifestations are still largely unknown. In this study, we performed a comprehensive bioinformatic analysis of a microarray dataset of MKD patients, using gene ontology and Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) tools, in order to identify the most significant differentially expressed genes and infer their predicted relationships into biological processes, pathways, and networks. We found that hematopoiesis linked biological functions and pathways are predominant in the gene ontology of differentially expressed genes in MKD, in line with the observed clinical feature of anemia. We also provided novel information about the molecular mechanisms at the basis of the hematological abnormalities observed, that are linked to the chronic inflammation and to defective prenylation. Considering the broad and unspecific spectrum of MKD clinical manifestations and the difficulty in its diagnosis, a better understanding of MKD molecular bases could be translated to the clinical level to facilitate diagnosis, and improve management and therapy., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2021
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23. Psychological Stress and Cancer: New Evidence of An Increasingly Strong Link.
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Abate M, Citro M, Caputo M, Pisanti S, and Martinelli R
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To date stress, a highly complex process that disrupts homeostasis and involves environmental and psychosocial factors, is considered as one of the most crucial factor that affects our daily life, especially urban dweller's life. Clinical and experimental studies widely support the notion that adrenergic stimulation due to chronic stress affects inflammation and metabolism. In this work, supported by several recent scientific evidences, we show how stress plays a positive role in cancer initiation, progression and cancer metastasis, a negative role for anti-tumor immune function and therapy response. Understanding the intricacies of this interaction could provide an additional help on how act in cancer prevention and therapy.
- Published
- 2020
24. Correlation of the two most frequent HLA haplotypes in the Italian population to the differential regional incidence of Covid-19.
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Pisanti S, Deelen J, Gallina AM, Caputo M, Citro M, Abate M, Sacchi N, Vecchione C, and Martinelli R
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- COVID-19, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Gene Frequency, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetics, Population, Geography, HLA-A Antigens genetics, HLA-B Antigens genetics, HLA-C Antigens genetics, HLA-DRB1 Chains genetics, Haplotypes, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2, Translational Research, Biomedical, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections genetics, Coronavirus Infections immunology, HLA Antigens genetics, Pneumonia, Viral genetics, Pneumonia, Viral immunology
- Abstract
Background: Understanding how HLA polymorphisms may affect both susceptibility, course and severity of Covid-19 infection could help both at the clinical level to identify individuals at higher risk from the disease and at the epidemiological one to explain the differences in the epidemic trend among countries or even within a specific country. Covid-19 disease in Italy showed a peculiar geographical distribution from the northern most affected regions to the southern ones only slightly touched., Methods: In this study we analysed the regional frequencies for the most common Italian haplotypes from the Italian Bone Marrow Donor Registry (HLA-A, -B, -C and -DRB1 at four-digit level). Then we performed Pearson correlation analyses among regional haplotypes estimated frequency in the population and Covid-19 incidence and mortality., Results: In this study we found that the two most frequent HLA haplotypes in the Italian population, HLA-A*:01:01g-B*08:01 g-C*07:01g-DRB1*03:01g and HLA-A*02.01g-B*18.01g-C*07.01g-DRB1*11.04g, had a regional distribution overlapping that of Covid-19 and showed respectively a positive (suggestive of susceptibility) and negative (suggestive of protection) significant correlation with both Covid-19 incidence and mortality., Conclusions: Based on these results, in order to define such HLA haplotypes as a factor effectively associated to the disease susceptibility, the creation of national networks that can collect patients' samples from all regions for HLA typing should be highly encouraged.
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- 2020
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25. 3-Hydroxytyrosol Promotes Angiogenesis In Vitro by Stimulating Endothelial Cell Migration.
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Abate M, Pisanti S, Caputo M, Citro M, Vecchione C, and Martinelli R
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- Cell Movement genetics, Cell Survival drug effects, Endothelial Cells metabolism, Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells, Humans, Matrix Metalloproteinase 2 metabolism, Neovascularization, Physiologic genetics, Phenylethyl Alcohol pharmacology, Phosphorylation, Proto-Oncogene Mas, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt metabolism, Signal Transduction genetics, Wound Healing drug effects, rho-Associated Kinases metabolism, src-Family Kinases metabolism, Cell Movement drug effects, Endothelial Cells drug effects, Neovascularization, Physiologic drug effects, Phenylethyl Alcohol analogs & derivatives, Signal Transduction drug effects, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 metabolism
- Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases, followed by strokes, represent the leading cause of mortality worldwide. Despite its success in preventing cardiovascular diseases, the therapeutic potential of 3-Hydroxytyrosol (HT) for treating ischemic diseases is yet to be investigated in detail, especially with regard to ischemic heart disease, which is a major challenge for humans. We assessed that low concentrations (1-5 µM) of HT, generally achieved after the ingestion of olive oil, stimulate endothelial cells migration and angiogenesis in an in vitro model. At early time points (1-6 h), HT induces the expression of different proteins such as proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src (Src), rho-associated protein kinase (ROCK) and matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) protein influencing cell adhesion, cytoskeletal dynamics and cell migration. We observed that at the same time, HT induces prominent vascular formation in the tube formation assay, accompanied by an increase in the expression of the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGF-R2) and PI3K-Akt-eNOS protein pathways, which are recognized for their central role in angiogenesis. Therefore, in addition to the proven capability of HT to regulate reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, through both direct scavenging properties and indirect antioxidant efficacy, our results revealed that HT promotes angiogenesis, arguing in favor of great pharma-nutritional potential in ischemic injuries.
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- 2020
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26. Reaction of nitric oxide at the beta-carbon of enamines. A new method of preparing compounds containing the diazeniumdiolate functional group.
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Hrabie JA, Arnold EV, Citro ML, George C, and Keefer LK
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- Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Models, Molecular, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet, Amines chemistry, Aza Compounds chemistry, Nitric Oxide chemistry
- Abstract
The reaction of nitric oxide (NO) with enamines has been investigated. Unlike previously reported reactions of NO as a free radical with alkenes, the electrophilic addition of NO to the beta-carbon of enamines results in the formation of compounds containing the diazeniumdiolate functional group (-[N(O)NO](-)). This reaction between NO and enamines has been shown to be quite general and a variety of enamine-derived diazeniumdiolates have been isolated and characterized. While enamines derived from aldehydes and ketones whose structures allow for sequential multiple electrophilic additions tended to undergo overreaction leading to unstable products, it has been shown that this complication may be overcome by suitable choice of reaction solvent. The products obtained may exist as zwitterionic iminium salts or as neutral species depending upon the structure of the parent enamine. The diazeniumdiolate derived from 1-(N-morpholino)cyclohexene is unique among the new compounds in that it spontaneously releases NO upon dissolution in buffered aqueous solution at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C. While the total quantity of NO released by this material (ca. 7% of the theoretical 2 moles) is apparently limited by a competing reaction in which it hydrolyzes to an alpha-diazeniumdiolated carbonyl compound and the parent amine, this feature may prove to be of great value in the development of multiaction pharmaceuticals based upon this new type of NO-releasing compound. Reports of enzymatic (oxidative) release of NO from previously known carbon-bound diazeniumdiolates also suggest that analogues of these compounds may be useful as pharmaceutical agents. This new method of introducing the relatively rarely studied diazeniumdiolate functional group into organic compounds should lead to further research into its chemical and biological properties.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Conversion of a polysaccharide to nitric oxide-releasing form. Dual-mechanism anticoagulant activity of diazeniumdiolated heparin.
- Author
-
Saavedra JE, Mooradian DL, Mowery KA, Schoenfisch MH, Citro ML, Davies KM, Meyerhoff ME, and Keefer LK
- Subjects
- Anticoagulants chemistry, Heparin chemistry, Humans, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors chemistry, Anticoagulants pharmacology, Heparin pharmacology, Nitric Oxide chemistry, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors pharmacology, Polysaccharides chemistry
- Abstract
We describe heparin/diazeniumdiolate conjugates that generate nitric oxide (NO) at physiological pH. Like the heparin from which they were prepared, they inhibit thrombin-induced blood coagulation. Unlike heparin, they can also inhibit and reverse ADP-induced platelet aggregation (as expected for an NO-releasing agent), suggesting potential utility as dual-action antithrombotics.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Nitric oxide-releasing polymers containing the [N(O)NO]- group.
- Author
-
Smith DJ, Chakravarthy D, Pulfer S, Simmons ML, Hrabie JA, Citro ML, Saavedra JE, Davies KM, Hutsell TC, Mooradian DL, Hanson SR, and Keefer LK
- Subjects
- Animals, Anions, Cell Division drug effects, Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Physical, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Kinetics, Luminescent Measurements, Male, Molecular Structure, Muscle, Smooth, Vascular cytology, Nitric Oxide chemistry, Nitrogen chemistry, Oxygen chemistry, Papio, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors chemistry, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors pharmacology, Thrombosis prevention & control, Nitric Oxide metabolism, Polymers chemistry, Polymers pharmacology
- Abstract
Ions of structure X[N(O)NO]- display broad-spectrum pharmacological activity that correlates with the rate and extent of their spontaneous, first-order decomposition to nitric oxide when dissolved. We report incorporation of this functional group into polymeric matrices that can be used for altering the time course of nitric oxide release and/or targeting it to tissues with which the polymers are in physical contact. Structural types prepared include those in which the [N(O)NO]- group is attached to heteroatoms in low molecular weight species that are noncovalently distributed throughout the polymeric matrix, in groupings pendant to the polymer backbone, and in the polymer backbone itself. They range in physical form from films that can be coated onto other surfaces to microspheres, gels, powders, and moldable resins. Chemiluminescence measurements confirm that polymers to which the [N(O)NO]- group is attached can serve as localized sources of nitric oxide, with one prototype providing sustained NO release for 5 weeks in pH 7.4 buffer at 37 degrees C. The latter composition, a cross-linked poly-(ethylenimine) that had been exposed to NO, inhibited the in vitro proliferation of rat aorta smooth muscle cells when added as a powder to the culture medium and showed potent antiplatelet activity when coated on a normally thrombogenic vascular graft situated in an arteriovenous shunt in a baboon's circulatory system. The results suggest that polymers containing the [N(O)NO]- functional group may hold considerable promise for a variety of biomedical applications in which local delivery of NO is desired.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. [The HLA system and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. A review and personal studies].
- Author
-
Citro M, Gadaleta G, Gamba Ansaldi S, Molinatti M, Salvetti E, and Bruni B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 genetics, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 metabolism, Female, HLA-A Antigens, HLA-B Antigens, HLA-C Antigens, HLA-DR Antigens, Histocompatibility Antigens Class II analysis, Humans, Major Histocompatibility Complex, Male, Middle Aged, Risk, Seasons, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 immunology, HLA Antigens analysis
- Abstract
Present knowledge regarding the HLA system and the association between HLA antigens and insulin-dependent type 1 diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is reviewed. The heterogeneity of diabetes, immunogenetically speaking, is emphasized. Results are reported for HLA typing in 18 cases of known IDDM recently diagnosed and observed at the Karen Bruni Diabetes Center in approximately one year (1981-82). The frequency of HLA antigens B7, B8 (in linkage disequilibrium with DR3), B15 (in linkage disequilibrium with DR4) and B18 was examined in comparison with a Piemontese control group. The X2 method was used for calculating the relative risk and statistic importance of the intensity of association. IDDM susceptibility in association with HLA-B18 was confirmed and resulted significantly higher in our cases in respect to controls. Correlations without, however, reliable importance, have also been found between HLA-B8 and B15. IDDM protection by HLA-B7 was not confirmed. Diabetes began during the winter, from October to February, in 10 out of 18 cases, and some were positively related to a previous respiratory viral infection. Previous virus infection was found in three B7-positive cases. The more frequent arousal of diabetic symptoms during the winter in subjects positive for HLA-B8 and B18 was confirmed in 7 out of 8 cases. This work demonstrates the current practicability of HLA typing of recently diagnosed insulin-dependent diabetic in a Diabetes Center. This element helps to a more correct classification--on a subclinical basis--of initial cases of type 1 and 2 diabetes and can be used for possible problems during the course of insulin therapy.
- Published
- 1983
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