1,487 research outputs found

    LAS REDES DE PODER DEL KAPUDAN PASHA ULUC ALI: CULTURA POLITICA Y PRACTICAS DIPLOMATICAS EN EL MEDITERRANEO DEL SIGLO XVI

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    The Calabrian Gian Dionigi Galeni, alias Ulu\ue7 Ali (1518-1587), was a Christian convert to Islam who played a leading role during the political clash that opposed the Spanish Monarchy to the Ottoman Empire in the sixteenth-century Mediterranean. This study, rather than focusing on his wanderings at sea as an Algerian corsair at the expense of Christian galleys and coastlines, highlights his process of socio-political assimilation into the Ottoman context. In the same way, the research emphasises how he consolidated, exercised, and maintained a high level of decision-making power at the Sublime Porte. The analysis of his political figure, which is analysed through the administrative and military positions he held in the Ottoman Empire, offers a great opportunity to explore a wide network of patronage relationships that not only facilitated his rise, but also allowed him to control the Ottoman Mediterranean policy as Kapudan Pasha (first admiral). Therefore, by using a social network analysis approach, the case of Ulu\ue7 Ali becomes a unique prism to retrace the history of the sixteenth-century Mediterranean. Far from being a traditional biography that focuses on the individual, this research is presented as a study that used the individual to cast new lights on the social relationships that characterized his context. Starting from a careful examination of Ulu\ue7 Ali's career, therefore, I shall enrich the understanding of a series of phenomena that defined the modern Mediterranean space, including social mobility and cross-cultural diplomacy

    The Role of Gut Microbiota Biomodulators on Mucosal Immunity and Intestinal Inflammation

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    Alterations of the gut microbiota may cause dysregulated mucosal immune responses leading to the onset of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) in genetically susceptible hosts. Restoring immune homeostasis through the normalization of the gut microbiota is now considered a valuable therapeutic approach to treat IBD patients. The customization of microbe-targeted therapies, including antibiotics, prebiotics, live biotherapeutics and faecal microbiota transplantation, is therefore considered to support current therapies in IBD management. In this review, we will discuss recent advancements in the understanding of host-microbe interactions in IBD and the basis to promote homeostatic immune responses through microbe-targeted therapies. By considering gut microbiota dysbiosis as a key feature for the establishment of chronic inflammatory events, in the near future it will be suitable to design new cost-effective, physiologic, and patient-oriented therapeutic strategies for the treatment of IBD that can be applied in a personalized manner

    EXPERIENCES OF UAV SURVEYS APPLIED TO ENVIRONMENTAL RISK MANAGEMENT

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    In this paper the results of some surveys carried out in an area of Apulian territory affected by serious environmental hazard are presented. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) are emerging as a key engineering tool for future environmental survey tasks. UAVs are increasingly seen as an attractive low-cost alternative or supplement to aerial and terrestrial photogrammetry due to their low cost, flexibility, availability and readiness for duty. In addition, UAVs can be operated in hazardous or temporarily inaccessible locations, that makes them very suitable for the assessment and management of environmental risk conditions. In order to verify the reliability of these technologies an UAV survey and A LIDAR survey have been carried outalong about 1 km of coast in the Salento peninsula, near the towns of San Foca, Torre dellOrso and SantAndrea( Lecce, Southern Italy). This area is affected by serious environmental risks due to the presence of dangerous rocky cliffs named falesie. The UAV platform was equipped with a photogrammetric measurement system that allowed us to obtain a mobile mapping of the fractured fronts of dangerous rocky cliffs. UAV-images data have been processed using dedicated software (AgisoftPhotoscan). The point clouds obtained from both the UAV and LIDAR surveys have been processed using Cloud Compare software, with the aim of testing the UAV results with respect to the LIDAR ones. The total error obtained was of centimeter-order that is a very satisfactory result. The environmental information has been arranged in an ArcGIS platform in order to assess the risk levels. The possibility to repeat the survey at time intervals more or less close together depending on the measured levels of risk and to compare the output allows following the trend of the dangerous phenomena. In conclusion, for inaccessible locations of dangerous rocky bodies the UAV survey coupled with GIS methodology proved to be a key engineering tool for the management of environmental risks

    Combining Revealed and Stated Preferences to design a new urban park in a metropolitan area of North-Western Italy

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    Inclusive and participatory decision-making is a sustainable option for governments and decision-makers to support real transformation and planning of policies and actions. Investigating and gathering the various views and opinions of stakeholders and citizens is particularly effective because it opens up a range of possibilities in co-constructing the city of the future. Among urban areas requiring planning, Urban Green Infrastructures (UGIs) represent spaces designed to improve the character of neighborhoods, as well as to increase the well-being of users. To achieve these goals, planners should adopt a design approach in which UGIs projects are shaped by local community concerns rather than by market conventions in urban design. Focusing on green recreational areas, this study employs an integrated approach combining Revealed (RP) and Stated Preferences (SP) to investigate citizens' preferences regarding urban parks. In particular, the experiment combines Travel Cost Method (TCM) and Discrete Choice Experiment (DCE) for supporting a requalification project in an ex-industrial area of Turin (Italy). In this way, it was possible to understand which facilities can contribute to increasing the citizens’ well-being and the overall efficiency of the UGIs provision and maintenance. The proposed methodology represents an operational and replicable procedure to support different renewal projects in which citizens' opinions are crucial for developing long-term sustainable socio-ecological plans and actions

    Prevalence of hepatitis E virus in Italian pig herds. Preliminary results

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    Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is the causative agent of hepatitis E, and is an unenveloped positive sense single-stranded RNA wus. Swine HEV strains are genetically closely related to human strains from the same area, suggesting the occurrence of zoonotic transmission. Recently, human cases of hepatitis E have been linked to the consumption of raw or undercooked meat or organs from deer, wild boars or p1gs. The disease is now considered an emerging food-borne transmitted zoonosis. During 2006, a pilot investigation was performed to determine the prevalence of HEV in pig farms located in Northern Italy. 274 faecal samples were collected from healthy fattening animals (3-4 and 8-9 months of age) and from healthy breeding animals (gilts and sows) from 6 different farms, and analyzed using a Nested-RT-PCR targeting the open reading frame 2 (ORF2) region. Stool samples were suspended in water, and viral RNA extraction was performed using a commercial kit. Extracted viral RNA was subjected to RT-PCR amplification using degenerate primers conA 1-conS1 for the first amplification, and degenerate primers conA2-conS2 for the nested PCR, yielding a final fragment of 145 bp. HEV RNA was detected in sixty-nine of the 274 (25.2%) examined samples. None of the six farms resulted negative and the prevalence within the farms ranged between 2% and 60.5% For the characterization of the strains, randomly selected positive samples were subjected to nucleotide sequencing, and aligned with those present in the NCBI Data Bank Sequence analysis showed that all stra1ns were Swine Hepatitis E belonging to Genotype 3. These preliminary results confirm that swine HEV is widespread in Italian swine farms

    Antibiotic resistance patterns of faecal indicator organisms and occurrence of Salmonella spp. in wild boar (Sus scrofa scrofa) in Italy.

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    In order to monitor antibiotic resistance in faecal indicator organisms and evaluate the occurrence of Salmonella spp., faeces from 110 wild boars (Sus scrota scrota), killed during a demographic control program in two different regional parks in Bologna province, were collected from September 2002 to June 2003. A single isolate of Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium from each sample was tested for antibiotic susceptibility using the agar diffusion method recommended by CLSI (formerly, NCCLS). A total of 110 E. coli, 48 E. faecium and 5 E. faecalis strains were isolated and submitted to antibiotic susceptibility tests. Antibiotic resistance patterns were similar in wild boar populations from both parks. Multiple antibiotic-resistance to ciprofloxacin, rifampin and erythromycin was found with h1gh frequency in Enterococcus spp strains. E. coli isolates showed a low antibiotic resistance level. Two Salmonella arizonae and one Salmonella spp. strains, isolated from wild boars of one park, didn\u27t show any resistance concerning the antibiotics tested

    Safety of vedolizumab in liver transplant recipients : a systematic review

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    Background: The management of inflammatory bowel disease in patients who have previously undergone liver transplantation can be a clinical challenge. There are serious concerns among physicians regarding the use of biologics for treating such immuno-compromised patients. Objective: We performed a systematic review on vedolizumab therapy in transplant recipients to assess its safety. Methods: PubMed/Embase/Scopus were searched up to November 2018 to identify papers regarding liver transplant recipients and therapy with vedolizumab. Primary outcomes were adverse events. Secondary outcomes were liver transplant and inflammatory bowel disease outcomes. Results: Eight studies (31 patients) were included. Nine out of 31 patients experienced an infection within a mean follow-up time ranging from 5\u201320 months. No malignancies were reported. Inflammatory bowel disease clinical response was experienced by 20/26 patients. Abnormalities in liver tests were recorded in 2/22 patients. Conclusion: Vedolizumab may be considered safe for treating inflammatory bowel disease in liver transplant recipients. Caution is recommended for patients with an unstable liver graft function

    Probiotic Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium Strains Counteract Adherent-Invasive Escherichia coli (AIEC) Virulence and Hamper IL-23/Th17 Axis in Ulcerative Colitis, but Not in Crohn's Disease

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    Hypersecretion of proinflammatory cytokines and dysregulated activation of the IL-23/Th17 axis in response to intestinal microbiota dysbiosis are key factors in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). In this work, we studied how Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains affect AIEC-LF82 virulence mechanisms and the consequent inflammatory response linked to the CCR6-CCL20 and IL-23/Th17 axes in Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) patients. All Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains significantly reduced the LF82 adhesion and persistence within HT29 intestinal epithelial cells, inhibiting IL-8 secretion while not affecting the CCR6-CCL20 axis. Moreover, they significantly reduced LF82 survival within macrophages and dendritic cells, reducing the secretion of polarizing cytokines related to the IL-23/Th17 axis, both in healthy donors (HD) and UC patients. In CD patients, however, only B. breve Bbr8 strain was able to slightly reduce the LF82 persistence within dendritic cells, thus hampering the IL-23/Th17 axis. In addition, probiotic strains were able to modulate the AIEC-induced inflammation in HD, reducing TNF-\u3b1 and increasing IL-10 secretion by macrophages, but failed to do so in IBD patients. Interestingly, the probiotic strains studied in this work were all able to interfere with the IL-23/Th17 axis in UC patients, but not in CD patients. The different interaction mechanisms of probiotic strains with innate immune cells from UC and CD patients compared to HD suggest that testing on CD-derived immune cells may be pivotal for the identification of novel probiotic strains that could be effective also for CD patients
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