220 research outputs found

    Conservazione e gestione della naturalità negli ecosistemi marino-costieri. Il trapianto delle praterie di Posidonia oceanica

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    Dal 1980 ad oggi, ogni 30 minuti, si è persa un’area ricoperta di fanerogame marine equivalente ad 1 campo di calcio cioè, nel tempo di gioco di una partita, 3 campi di fanerogame marine scompaiono”. Nell’area mediterranea, le praterie di Posidonia oceanica, uno degli ecosistemi marini di maggior pregio, sono oggi in forte regressione, principalmente a causa delle diverse pressioni antropiche che insistono sulla fascia costiera. Accanto alle numerose azioni di protezione, si è ultimamente sviluppata l’idea di tutelare le praterie anche mediante interventi di trapianto, in grado sia di accelerare la lenta colonizzazione della prateria sia di favorire il ripristino dell’ecosistema degradato. Nel lavoro “Il trapianto delle praterie di Posidonia oceanica”, ISPRA presenta una rassegna delle informazioni ad oggi disponibili su tale tematica, derivanti sia dall’analisi critica della letteratura scientifica esistente e degli aspetti normativi vigenti, sia da specifiche esperienze tecniche maturate in alcuni casi studio. Tale manuale può inoltre costituire un valido strumento di supporto per tecnici e amministratori coinvolti nella gestione della fascia costiera e nella tutela degli ecosistemi ivi presenti

    All that glitters is not gold! Job insecurity and well-being in STEM research fellows: a latent profile analysis

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    International audienceJob insecurity is now one of the major stressors affecting well-being at work. In academia, researchers appear to be in the most precarious position. To explore the relationship between job insecurity and well-being at work, we analyzed a sample of research fellows belonging to STEM disciplines in Italy. Using a latent profile approach, we identified three “hidden” subgroups: “Safe & Sound”; “Safe not so Sound” and “Neither Safe or Sound.” Compared to previous studies, our results show that even within a population of STEM researchers that tends to have good levels of employability and mobility, there are subgroups of people characterized by greater job insecurity and low work commitment, who suffer from emotional exhaustion and cynicism at work level, i.e., more exposed to the risk of burnout

    Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes vary in different canine soft tissue sarcoma histological types

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    Soft tissue sarcomas (STSs) are conventionally viewed as poorly immunogenic tumors; however, some human STSs have recently been reported to elicit an immune response, thus representing potential candidates for immunotherapy. Data regarding immune cell infiltrates in canine STSs are limited and reported without tumor-type stratification. The aim of this study was to retrospectively assess tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in canine STSs of 5 different histotypes. Eighty-seven canine STSs were collected: 22 perivascular wall tumors (PWTs), 19 liposarcomas, 17 fibrosarcomas, 16 myxosarcomas, and 13 leiomyosarcomas. The tumors were graded and immunolabeled for CD3, CD20, and FoxP3, and slides were scanned. T-cell, B-cell, Treg, and total TIL densities were quantified with QuPath software and expressed as cells/mm2. The B/T-cells ratio and Treg/T-cell proportions were calculated. Total TIL densities were higher in PWTs and myxosarcomas (median = 225 and 303, respectively). PWTs had higher T-cell density but lower Treg proportion (median = 152 and 7.6% respectively). Myxosarcomas had higher Treg densities and B/T-cell ratios (median = 24.4 and 1.57, respectively). No association with grade was found among STSs as a group. In myxosarcomas, higher grade was significantly associated with higher total TILs, and CD20+ and FoxP3+ cell densities (p <.05). The results suggest that PWTs and myxosarcomas may represent the most immunogenic STS types. Myxosarcomas elicit a B-cell and Treg-rich immune response; PWTs stimulate a T-cell-rich and Treg-poor reaction. The immune system response may contribute to the more aggressive behavior of myxosarcomas and the more indolent course of PWTs

    Potential role of Hepatozoon canis in a fatal systemic disease in a puppy

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    Canine hepatozoonosis caused by Hepatozoon canis is an emerging disease in Europe. Clinical pictures vary from subclinical to life-threatening and non-specific clinical signs are predominantly reported. A 2-month-old female puppy originating from Southern Italy was adopted and moved to Northern Italy. Then, the dog was brought to a local veterinary practice for gastrointestinal signs, migrating lameness and pruritic dermatitis, and then tested positive for Hepatozoon spp. gamonts at the blood smear. After treatment with imidocarb dipropionate and doxycycline, the dog showed an initial clinical improvement. However, gastrointestinal signs recurred, and diffuse superficial pyoderma appeared on the thoracolumbar region, along with fever, lethargy, and weight loss. Eight months from the first onset of clinical signs, the dog was referred to a veterinary clinic and subjected to complete blood count, urine and fecal analysis, along with abdominal ultrasonography, whole-body CT and gastroduodenal endoscopy. Skin biopsies and blood samples were subjected to a PCR-coupled sequencing protocol, which scored both positive for H. canis. Alterations were consistent with a pre-existing cholangiohepatitis and multiple acquired extrahepatic shunts secondary to portal hypertension. The dog was euthanatized due to a clinical worsening two months later. The potential role of H. canis in the systemic disease observed, clinic-pathological findings and epizootiological implications are discusse

    Induced sputum is a reproducible method to assess airway inflammation in asthma.

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    To evaluate the reproducibility of induced sputum analysis, and to estimate the sample size required to obtained reliable results, sputum was induced by hypertonic saline inhalation in 29 asthmatic subjects on two different days. The whole sample method was used for analysis, and inflammatory cells were counted on cytospin slides. Reproducibility, expressed by intra-class correlation coefficients, was good for macrophages (+0.80), neutrophils (+0.85), and eosinophils (+0.87), but not for lymphocytes (+0.15). Detectable differences were 5.5% for macrophages, 0.6% for lymphocytes, 5.2% for neutrophils, and 3.0% for eosinophils. We conclude that analysis of induced sputum is a reproducible method to study airway inflammation in asthma. Sample sizes greater than ours give little improvement in the detectable difference of eosinophil percentages

    Keeping Pathologists in the Loop and an Adaptive F1-Score Threshold Method for Mitosis Detection in Canine Perivascular Wall Tumours

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    : Performing a mitosis count (MC) is the diagnostic task of histologically grading canine Soft Tissue Sarcoma (cSTS). However, mitosis count is subject to inter- and intra-observer variability. Deep learning models can offer a standardisation in the process of MC used to histologically grade canine Soft Tissue Sarcomas. Subsequently, the focus of this study was mitosis detection in canine Perivascular Wall Tumours (cPWTs). Generating mitosis annotations is a long and arduous process open to inter-observer variability. Therefore, by keeping pathologists in the loop, a two-step annotation process was performed where a pre-trained Faster R-CNN model was trained on initial annotations provided by veterinary pathologists. The pathologists reviewed the output false positive mitosis candidates and determined whether these were overlooked candidates, thus updating the dataset. Faster R-CNN was then trained on this updated dataset. An optimal decision threshold was applied to maximise the F1-score predetermined using the validation set and produced our best F1-score of 0.75, which is competitive with the state of the art in the canine mitosis domain

    Interdural cavernous sinus dermoid cyst in a child: case report

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    Interdural dermoid cysts (DCs) of the cavernous sinus (CS), located between the outer (dural) and inner layer (membranous) of the CS lateral wall, are rare lesions in children. The authors report on a 5-year-old boy with third cranial nerve palsy and exophthalmos who underwent gross-total removal of an interdural DC of the right CS via a frontotemporal approach. The patient had a good outcome and no recurrence at the 12-month follow-up. To the best of the authors' knowledge this is the second pediatric case of interdural DC described in the literature

    Deep learning for necrosis detection using canine perivascular wall tumour whole slide images

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    Necrosis seen in histopathology Whole Slide Images is a major criterion that contributes towards scoring tumour grade which then determines treatment options. However conventional manual assessment suffers from inter-operator reproducibility impacting grading precision. To address this, automatic necrosis detection using AI may be used to assess necrosis for final scoring that contributes towards the final clinical grade. Using deep learning AI, we describe a novel approach for automating necrosis detection in Whole Slide Images, tested on a canine Soft Tissue Sarcoma (cSTS) data set consisting of canine Perivascular Wall Tumours (cPWTs). A patch-based deep learning approach was developed where different variations of training a DenseNet-161 Convolutional Neural Network architecture were investigated as well as a stacking ensemble. An optimised DenseNet-161 with post-processing produced a hold-out test F1-score of 0.708 demonstrating state-of-the-art performance. This represents a novel first-time automated necrosis detection method in the cSTS domain as well specifically in detecting necrosis in cPWTs demonstrating a significant step forward in reproducible and reliable necrosis assessment for improving the precision of tumour grading

    SGCD Missense Variant in a Lagotto Romagnolo Dog with Autosomal Recessively Inherited Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy

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    An 8-month-old female Lagotto Romagnolo dog was presented for a 1-month history of an initial severe reluctance to move, rapidly progressing to a marked stiff gait and progressive muscular weakness and evolving to tetraparesis, which persuaded the owner to request euthanasia. A primary muscle pathology was supported by necropsy and histopathological findings. Macroscopically, the muscles were moderately atrophic, except for the diaphragm and the neck muscles, which were markedly thickened. Histologically, all the skeletal muscles examined showed atrophy, hypertrophy, necrosis with calcification of the fibers, and mild fibrosis and inflammation. On immunohistochemistry, all three dystrophin domains and sarcoglycan proteins were absent. On Western blot analysis, no band was present for delta sarcoglycan. We sequenced the genome of the affected dog and compared the data to more than 900 control genomes of different dog breeds. Genetic analysis revealed a homozygous private protein-changing variant in the SGCD gene encoding delta- sarcoglycan in the affected dog. The variant was predicted to induce a SGCD:p.(Leu242Pro) change in the protein. In silico tools predicted the change to be deleterious. Other 770 Lagotto Romagnolo dogs were genotyped for the variant and all found to be homozygous wild type. Based on current knowledge of gene function in other mammalian species, including humans, hamsters, and dogs, we propose the SGCD missense variant as the causative variant of the observed form of muscular dystrophy in the index case. The absence of the variant allele in the Lagotto Romagnolo breeding population indicates a rare allele that has appeared recently
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