18 research outputs found

    Raccomandazioni per l\u2019esecuzione della Curva Standard da Carico Orale di Glucosio (OGTT) per la diagnosi di Diabete Mellito

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    The Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT) is a fractional method which measures the body's ability to metabolize glucose. Despite its large-scale use, the OGTT is still not appropriately performed in most of the Italian laboratories, as proven by our previous recent survey. In particular, we have provided evidence for the variability for execution of the OGTT in Italian laboratories indicating a poor tendency to standardise the procedures and the methodologies. These findings have been a stimulus to promote an effective Nationwide educational campaign, in order to standardise the procedures for the diagnosis of altered glucose metabolism and diabetes. The present document reports therefore the recommendations concerning the OGTT performed for the classification of diabetes. These recommendations do not apply to the execution of the OGTT during pregnancy for diagnosing gestational diabetes mellitus

    The design, construction, and commissioning of the KATRIN experiment

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    The KArlsruhe TRItium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment, which aims to make a direct and model-independent determination of the absolute neutrino mass scale, is a complex experiment with many components. More than 15 years ago, we published a technical design report (TDR) [1] to describe the hardware design and requirements to achieve our sensitivity goal of 0.2 eV at 90% C.L. on the neutrino mass. Since then there has been considerable progress, culminating in the publication of first neutrino mass results with the entire beamline operating [2]. In this paper, we document the current state of all completed beamline components (as of the first neutrino mass measurement campaign), demonstrate our ability to reliably and stably control them over long times, and present details on their respective commissioning campaigns

    Attitudes and behavior of health care personnel regarding influenza vaccination

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    This paper reports the results of a study conducted by the Italian Association for Immune-prophylaxis promotion (AIPI) with the aim of surveying the attitudes and perceptions of Italian health care workers regarding the use and efficacy of influenza vaccine. The results clearly show that a high proportion of the questioned health care workers showed a general lack of concern about the severity of the disease. Doubts about vaccine efficacy and fear of post-vaccination side effects were also observed to have an important influence on the vaccination acceptance rates. These data underline the need for a systematic education program to provide influenza vaccination within the public and private health-care sectors in Italy

    A 1-year prospective survey of candidemia in Italy and changing epidemiology over one decade

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    PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to assess the epidemiology of candidemia and antifungal susceptibility profiles of Candida isolates in Italy through a prospective surveillance study and to evaluate changes compared to a previous survey performed in one Italian region (Lombardy) in 1997-1999. METHODS: A prospective laboratory-based surveillance of candidemia was performed in Italy from January to December 2009. For each case a questionnaire was filled in, and the first isolate was collected and tested for in vitro antifungal susceptibility. RESULTS: During our 12-month survey, 467 episodes of candidemia were reported from 34 centres (30 located in Lombardy) and 464 isolates collected. Candida albicans was the predominant species (overall incidence 50.4\ua0%), but the proportion varied considerably from 52.1\ua0% in Lombardy hospitals to 45.2\ua0% hospitals located outside this region. The second most frequent species was C. glabrata in Lombardy and C. parapsilosis in other regions. Comparison of the 1997-1999 and 2009 data on episodes of candidemia in Lombardy revealed a threefold increase in incidence (from 0.38 to 1.19 per 1,000 admissions), aging of infected patients, decline in crude mortality (from 35 to 27.1\ua0%) and an increased proportion of C. glabrata etiology (from 12.8 to 20.3\ua0%). Susceptibility testing confirmed the broad activity of amphotericin B and echinocandins. Decreased susceptibility to fluconazole was found in 24.9\ua0% of the tested isolates. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this latest survey confirm the high rate of candidemia in Italy and show changes in some of the epidemiological tracts, such as aging of infected patients, increased proportion of C. glabrata infections, increased diagnosis in medical wards, and improvement in patients' survival

    High-level expression of functional glutamate receptor channels in insect cells

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    We have expressed glutamate-gated ion channels in Spodoptera frugiperda Sf21 insect cells using a recombinant baculovirus system. Cells infected with recombinant baculoviruses encoding the alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate (AMPA)-selective glutamate receptor channel subunits GluR-B and GluR-D displayed specific high-affinity [3H]AMPA binding (apparent dissociation constant Kd of 15 nM for GluR-B and 40 nM for GluR-D) with pharmacological profiles typical of AMPA receptors. The binding reached maximal levels (Bmax of 15-30 pmol per mg of membrane protein) by 3-4 days postinfection. AMPA, glutamate and kainate triggered inward currents in GluR expressing cells, indicating assembly of functional homomeric channels. Formation of heteromeric GluR-B/D channels in doubly-infected cells was evident from the diagnostic current-voltage relations of AMPA-activated whole-cell currents. For the solubilization of the receptor, nonionic detergents Triton X-100, n-octyl-D-glucoside and n-dodecylmaltoside proved most effective. Detergent-solubilized receptor preparations were stable, retained their characteristic ligand-binding properties and bound to immobilized wheat germ lectin, demonstrating the glycosylation of insect cell-expressed GluR subunits. The expression level of 300-400 micrograms of receptor protein per liter of suspension culture should facilitate production of glutamate receptors for biochemical and structural studies

    Joint effect of obesity and TNFA variability on asthma: two international cohort studies

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    Obesity is a risk factor for asthma. Adipose tissue expresses pro-inflammatory molecules including tumour necrosis factor (TNF), and levels of TNF are also related to polymorphisms in the TNF-a (TNFA) gene. The current authors examined the joint effect of obesity and TNFA variability on asthma in adults by combining two population-based studies. The European Community Respiratory Health Survey and the Swiss Cohort Study on Air Pollution and Lung and Heart Disease in Adults used comparable protocols, questionnaires and measures of lung function and atopy. DNA samples from 9,167 participants were genotyped for TNFA -308 and lymphotoxin-a (LTA) +252 gene variants. Obesity and TNFA were associated with asthma when mutually adjusting for their independent effects (odds ratio (OR) for obesity 2.4, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.7–3.2; OR for TNFA -308 polymorphism 1.3, 95% CI 1.1–1.6). The association of obesity with asthma was stronger for subjects carrying the G/A and A/A TNFA -308 genotypes compared with the more common G/G genotype, particularly among nonatopics (OR for G/A and A/A genotypes 6.1, 95% CI 2.5–14.4; OR for G/G genotype 1.7, 95% CI 0.8–3.3). The present findings provide, for the first time, evidence for a complex pattern of interaction between obesity, a pro-inflammatory genetic factor and asthma
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