32 research outputs found

    L’anziano attivo. Proposte e riflessioni per la terza e la quarta età

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    Il problema della senilità si pone ormai in Italia, come in tutte le società avanzate, in termini assai diversi dal passato. I saggi compresi nel presente volume intervengono su tutti gli aspetti della senilità - da quelli psicologici, sanitari e affettivi a quelli assistenziali, economici e giuridici - per suggerire indicazioni operative e possibili soluzioni.- Indice #4- Prefazione, Marcello Pacini #10- Introduzione, Giuliano Urbani #12- Prima parte Per una nuova concezione della condizione anziana #20- L’età del tempo libero, Norberto Bobbio #22- L’anziano protagonista in una società che cambia, Gian Maria Capuani e Giannino Piana #26- La piccola immortalità, Nando dalla Chiesa #36- L’anziano come risorsa sociale: il volontariato dopo la pensione, Fausto Melloni #44- Seconda Parte Aspetti sociali della condizione anziana #62- Psicogerontologia: attualità e nuove prospettive, Maria Antonietta Aveni Casucci #64- L’invecchiamento della popolazione italiana in un contesto internazionale, Antonio Golini e Agostino Lori #82- L’anziano e l’innovazione tecnologica, Francesco Jovane e Roberto Groppetti #114- La tutela giuridica dell’anziano, Luigi Mengoni #128- La salute dell’anziano: valutazione dei meccanismi di plasticità, Renzo Rozzini, Angelo Bianchetti e Marco Trabucchi #140- Lavoratori anziani: ambivalenza e interventi, Harris T. Schrank e Joan M. Waring #156- Il medico e l’anziano, Carlo Vergani #176- La normalità incerta, Virginio Oddone e Fabrizio Fabris #188- Il quadro organizzativo per una corretta assistenza socio-sanitaria alla popolazione anziana, Gaetano Maria Fara #200- Terza Parte Le tendenze della riflessione #216- La condizione degli anziani in Italia, Claudio Calvaruso #218- Anziani attivi: un possibile esempio di nuova centralità del sociale, Vincenzo Cesareo #228- Appendice Un contributo di ricerca #246- Figli adulti e genitori anziani: una nuova relazione tra le generazioni, Giovanna Rossi #24

    Early Cretaceous vegetation and climate change at high latitude: Palynological evidence from Isachsen Formation, Arctic Canada

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    Quantitative palynology of the marginal marine and deltaic-fluvial Isachsen Formation of the Sverdrup Basin, Canadian Arctic, provides insight into high latitude climate during much of the Early Cretaceous (Valanginian to early Aptian). Detrended Correspondence Analysis of main pollen and spore taxa is used to derive three ecological groupings influenced by moisture and disturbance based on the botanical affinities of palynomorphs: 1) a mixed coniferous assemblage containing both lowland and upland components; 2) a conifer-filicopsid community that likely grew in dynamic lowland habitats; and, 3) a mature dry lowland community composed of Cheirolepidiaceans. Stratigraphic changes in the relative abundance of pollen and spore taxa reflect climate variability in this polar region during the ~20 Mya history of the Isachsen Formation. The late Valanginian was relatively cool and moist and promoted lowland conifer-filicopsid communities. Warming in the Hauterivian resulted in the expansion coniferous communities in well-drained or arid hinterlands. A return to relatively cool and moist conditions in the Barremian resulted in the expansion of mixed lowland communities. This work demonstrates the utility of a multivariate statistical approach to palynology to provide insight into the composition and dynamics of ecosystems and climate of high latitude regions during the Early Cretaceous

    Bioenergetic status modulates motor neuron vulnerability and pathogenesis in a zebrafish model of spinal muscular atrophy

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    Degeneration and loss of lower motor neurons is the major pathological hallmark of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), resulting from low levels of ubiquitously-expressed survival motor neuron (SMN) protein. One remarkable, yet unresolved, feature of SMA is that not all motor neurons are equally affected, with some populations displaying a robust resistance to the disease. Here, we demonstrate that selective vulnerability of distinct motor neuron pools arises from fundamental modifications to their basal molecular profiles. Comparative gene expression profiling of motor neurons innervating the extensor digitorum longus (disease-resistant), gastrocnemius (intermediate vulnerability), and tibialis anterior (vulnerable) muscles in mice revealed that disease susceptibility correlates strongly with a modified bioenergetic profile. Targeting of identified bioenergetic pathways by enhancing mitochondrial biogenesis rescued motor axon defects in SMA zebrafish. Moreover, targeting of a single bioenergetic protein, phosphoglycerate kinase 1 (Pgk1), was found to modulate motor neuron vulnerability in vivo. Knockdown of pgk1 alone was sufficient to partially mimic the SMA phenotype in wild-type zebrafish. Conversely, Pgk1 overexpression, or treatment with terazosin (an FDA-approved small molecule that binds and activates Pgk1), rescued motor axon phenotypes in SMA zebrafish. We conclude that global bioenergetics pathways can be therapeutically manipulated to ameliorate SMA motor neuron phenotypes in vivo

    The disruption of proteostasis in neurodegenerative diseases

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    Cells count on surveillance systems to monitor and protect the cellular proteome which, besides being highly heterogeneous, is constantly being challenged by intrinsic and environmental factors. In this context, the proteostasis network (PN) is essential to achieve a stable and functional proteome. Disruption of the PN is associated with aging and can lead to and/or potentiate the occurrence of many neurodegenerative diseases (ND). This not only emphasizes the importance of the PN in health span and aging but also how its modulation can be a potential target for intervention and treatment of human diseases.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Late Cretaceous spore-pollen zonation of the Central African Rift System (CARS), Kaikang Trough, Muglad Basin, South Sudan: angiosperm spread and links to the Elaterates Province

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    This paper presents a first detailed study on and new zonation scheme for the Kaikang Trough, Muglad Basin of South Sudan. The Kaikang Trough lies within the central sediment locus of the Muglad Basin, a non-marine African cratonic basin within the Central African Rift System (CARS) Two wells, KW-1 and K-4, were examined leading to the recognition of five palynological assemblage zones: K-I (early–middle Cenomanian), K-II (late Cenomanian), K-III (Turonian?–Santonian), K-IV (Campanian–Maastrichtian) and K-V (Maastrichtian). The elaterate group are peculiarly absent in otherwise rich Cenomanian palynological assemblages of the Muglad Basin. Why this is so, and the implications for the global middle Cretaceous Elaterate Province, needs some explanation. The CARS provided a range of diverse freshwater alluvial and lake-shore substrates. Its cross-continent sweep may have played a role in the evolution and dispersal of floras including early angiosperms as the rift basin of the proto-South Atlantic became a permanently flooded fjord

    Complexity of rice-water stool from patients with Vibrio cholerae plays a role in the transmission of infectious diarrhea

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    At the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, one-half of the rice-water stool samples that were culture-positive for Vibrio cholerae did not contain motile V. cholerae by standard darkfield microscopy and were defined as darkfield-negative (DF−). We evaluated the host and microbial factors associated with DF status, as well as the impact of DF status on transmission. Viable counts of V. cholerae in DF− stools were three logs lower than in DF+ stools, although DF− and DF+ stools had similar direct counts of V. cholerae by microscopy. In DF− samples, non-V. cholerae bacteria outnumbered V. cholerae 10:1. Lytic V. cholerae bacteriophage were present in 90% of DF− samples compared with 35% of DF+ samples, suggesting that bacteriophage may limit culture-positive patients from producing DF+ stools. V. cholerae in DF− and DF+ samples were found both planktonically and in distinct nonplanktonic populations; the distribution of organisms between these compartments did not differ appreciably between DF− and DF+ stools. This biology may impact transmission because epidemiological data suggested that household contacts of a DF+ index case were at greater risk of infection with V. cholerae. We propose a model in which V. cholerae multiply in the small intestine to produce a fluid niche that is dominated by V. cholerae. If lytic phage are present, viable counts of V. cholerae drop, stools become DF−, other microorganisms bloom, and cholera transmission is reduced
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