20 research outputs found

    TIME OF VICTIM’S DNA PERMANENCE IN JAWS OF ATTACKER DOGS.

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    Dogs attacks against humans represent a serious social, healthy and legal issue. During the last ten years more than ten lethal attacks occurred in Italy [1-3]. In order to fight this serious phenomenon, we need to use severe civil and criminal punishments towards anyone may omit, because of fraud or negligence, any measure to prevent or avoid aggressiveness events. Often these events remain unpunished as consequence of the impossibility to identify the animal makers of the tragedy and, consequently, the legal entities who are responsible of the management of the same. In the event of a legal dispute, presence of the victim’s DNA, in the jaw of the dog attacker, may represent an indisputable date in order to give the relevant responsibilities. The objective of this work is to confirm the possibility of revealing the presence of the DNA of a hypothetical victim in the jaws of an aggressor dog and quantify the time in order to be able to give a precise indication on the useful technical time to prove the participation of one or more animals to an attack on people. Ten dogs were given the opportunity to belabor a simulacrum of a victim consists of a piece of beef. Subsequently they were performed on these dogs of the dento-gingival swabs at established times. Swabs was performed is the DNA extraction with subsequent search of STRs cattle. Our analysis shows that the bovine DNA traces persist in the dogs mouth up to an hour and a half after the attack simulation. Therefore, the method of investigation we propose to prove the dog or the dogs responsible of the attack was revealed efficient, provided that the swabs are made promptly

    Respiratory failure and bioelectrical phase angle are independent predictors for long-term survival in acute heart failure

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    Background. The assessment of long-term mortality in acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) is challenging. Respiratory failure and congestion play a fundamental role in risk stratification of ADHF patients. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of arterial blood gases (ABG) and congestion on long-term mortality in patients with ADHF. Methods and results. We enrolled 252 patients with ADHF. Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), blood urea nitrogen (BUN), phase angle as assessed by means of bioimpedance vector analysis, and ABG analysis were collected at admission. The endpoint was all-cause mortality. At a median follow-up of 447 d (interquartile range [IQR]: 248–667), 72 patients died 1–840 d (median 106, IQR: 29–233) after discharge. Respiratory failure types I and II were observed in 78 (19%) and 53 (20%) patients, respectively. The ROC analyses revealed that the cut-off points for predicting death were: BNP > 441 pg/mL, BUN > 1.67 mmol/L, partial pressure in oxygen (PaO2) ≤69.7 mmHg, and phase angle ≤4.9°. Taken together, these four variables proved to be good predictors for long-term mortality in ADHF (area under the curve [AUC] 0.78, 95% CI 0.72–0.78), thus explaining 60% of all deaths. A multiparametric score based on these variables was determined: each single-unit increase promoted a 2.2-fold augmentation of the risk for death (hazard ratio [HR] 2.2, 95% CI 1.8–2.8, p< .0001). Conclusions. A multiparametric approach based on measurements of BNP, BUN, PaO2, and phase angle is a reliable approach for long-term prediction of mortality risk in patients with ADHF

    Intracoronary Gene Delivery of the Cytoprotective Factor Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-B167 in Canine Patients with Dilated Cardiomyopathy: A Short-Term Feasibility Study

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    Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a myocardial disease of dogs and humans characterized by progressive ventricular dilation and depressed contractility and it is a frequent cause of heart failure. Conventional pharmacological therapy cannot reverse the progression of the disease and, in humans, cardiac transplantation remains the only option during the final stages of heart failure. Cytoprotective gene therapy with vascular endothelial growth factor-B167 (VEGF-B167) has proved an effective alternative therapy, halting the progression of the disease in experimental studies on dogs. The aim of this work was to test the tolerability and feasibility of intracoronary administration, under fluoroscopic guidance, of VEGF-B167 carried by adeno-associated viral vectors in canine DCM patients. Ten patients underwent the gene delivery procedure. The intraoperative phase was well tolerated by all dogs. Clinical and echocardiographic assessments at 7- and 30-days post-procedure showed stable conditions compared to the pre-procedure phase. The results of this work indicate that intracoronary VEGF-B167 gene delivery is feasible and tolerated in dogs with DCM. Further monitoring/investigations are ongoing to evaluate the effects of this therapy on disease progression
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