17 research outputs found

    Risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection, hospitalization, and death for COVID-19 in people with Parkinson disease or parkinsonism over a 15-month period: A cohort study

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    Background and purpose: The patterns of long-term risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection, hospitalization for COVID-19, and related death are uncertain in people with Parkinson disease (PD) or parkinsonism (PS). The aim of the study was to quantify these risks compared to a control population cohort, during the period March 2020–May 2021, in Bologna, Northern Italy. Methods: ParkLink Bologna cohort (759 PD, 192 PS) and controls (9226) anonymously matched (ratio = 1:10) for sex, age, district, and comorbidity were included. Data were analysed in the whole period and in the two different pandemic waves (March–May 2020 and October 2020–May 2021). Results: Adjusted hazard ratio of SARS-CoV-2 infection was 1.3 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.04–1.7) in PD and 1.9 (95% CI = 1.3–2.8) in PS compared to the controls. The trend was detected in both the pandemic waves. Adjusted hazard ratio of hospitalization for COVID-19 was 1.1 (95% CI = 0.8–1.7) in PD and 1.8 (95% CI = 0.97–3.1) in PS. A higher risk of hospital admission was detected in PS only in the first wave. The 30-day mortality risk after hospitalization was higher (p = 0.048) in PS (58%) than in PD (19%) and controls (26%). Conclusions: Compared with controls, after adjustment for key covariates, people with PD and PS showed a higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection throughout the first 15 months of the pandemic. COVID-19 hospitalization risk was increased only in people with PS and only during the first wave. This group of patients was burdened by a very high risk of death after infection and hospitalization

    Bread baking monitoring by smart sensory system: A feasibility study

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    The concepts of process optimization and product innovation are revolutionizing consumers' needs both at home and on an industrial level, pushing the scientific research to the development of smart products. In this context, this paper describes the realization and the preliminary testing of an E-Nose prototype for bread baking monitoring. More in detail, it explored its potentialities in the discrimination of different bread cooking status aimed at the development of an E-Nose module to be implemented in smart home appliances for the on-line monitoring of baking progress. The feasibility study proved, with accuracies close or above 95%, that the E-Nose prototype can monitor odour alterations occurring during baking and identify the achievement of bread optimal cooking

    La survivina come marker di cellule staminali follicolari: espressione immunoistochimica nel follicolo pilifero e nei tumori follicolari del cane.

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    Canine hair follicle stem cells have been identified in a specialized area of the outer root sheath. The increasing interest in the characterization of these cells is also related to the key role they may play in the onset of tumours. Survivin has yet been identified as hematopoietic, mesenchymal, intestinal and interfollicular epidermis stem cells marker. Its overexpression has been found in several human and canine cutaneous tumors, suggesting a possible involvement of the molecule in tumour initiation and cancer stem cell maintenance. The immunohistochemical expression of survivin was evaluated in 4 normal skin samples and 30 hair follicle tumours of dog, with a comparison with the expression of known stem cell markers, in order to establish its possible role as a marker of follicular and cancer stem cells. Positive nuclei were observed in scattered cells of the basal cell layer of normal epidermis and among basal cells of the outer root sheath and matrical cells of the hair follicle bulb. The highest number of positive cells were present in trichoblastomas and among cells with matrical differentiation of pilomatricomas and trichoepitheliomas. The present results would suggest survivin as a follicular stem cell marker, considering the presence of positive cells in the outer root sheath and its overexpression in tumours deriving from these cells: trichoepitheliomas and trichoblastomas. However, further studies are needed to better define the role of survivin as follicular stem cell marker.[...

    La diagnosi elettrocardiografica di infarto miocardico acuto nell'era dell'angioplastica primaria e delle reti hub and spoke

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    A più di 100 anni dalla sua invenzione, l’ECG standard sta vivendo un vero e proprio “rinascimento”. Per quanto riguarda la cardiopatia ischemica acuta, il fenomeno è dovuto, soprattutto, alla disponibilità di grandi database in cui le caratteristiche elettrocardiografiche di migliaia di pazienti sono raccolte in maniera ordinata e predefinita e sono affiancate, e quindi correlabili, alle caratteristiche cliniche e coronarografiche e ai dati di outcome. La presente rassegna analizza criticamente il ruolo diagnostico dell’ECG standard nelle sindromi coronariche acute con (STEMI) e senza (NSTEMI) sopraslivellamento del tratto ST, con particolare attenzione ai possibili trabocchetti interpretativi e a quelle caratteristiche del tracciato in grado di contribuire a orientare le decisioni terapeutiche. Di fronte al paziente con presentazione clinica suggestiva per infarto miocardico acuto, l’ECG può aiutare a dare una risposta a molte domande. In caso di sospetto STEMI: siamo sicuri di poter escludere che sia in atto un infarto? (il problema dei falsi negativi); siamo sicuri che sia un vero infarto e non un falso positivo? Qual è la coronaria ostruita e a quale livello? Si è verificata riperfusione miocardica? In caso di sospetto NSTEMI: siamo sicuri che sia un vero infarto miocardico acuto (piuttosto che un’embolia polmonare o una dissezione aortica)? Siamo sicuri che sia in atto un NSTEMI piuttosto che uno STEMI dorsale “mascherato”? Quale substrato coronarico e quale grado di estensione dell’ischemia sono ipotizzabili in questo paziente? In particolare è presente un substrato a rischio molto alto, tale da suggerire un approccio invasivo in emergenza

    Survivin expression in canine hair follicle tumours

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    Introduction. Despite the vast body of knowledge on survivin expression in skin tumours, no data are available concerning survivin expression in hair follicle neoplasms. The aims of this study was to evaluate survivin expression pattern in canine hair follicle tumours. Materials and Methods: Survivin expression was investigated by immunohistochemistry in 4 normal canine skin samples, 30 hair follicle tumours (6 pilomatricomas, 8 infundibular keratinizing acanthomas-IKA, 6 trichoepiteliomas, 10 trichoblastomas) and 2 basal cell carcinomas (BCC). A semi-quantitative method was used to analyse results. Mitotic index was morphologically evaluated. Results: Nuclear immunolabelling with positive mitosis have been observed among basal cells of normal epidermis, outer root sheath, hyperplastic epidermis overlying the tumours and neoplastic cords of IKA cases. Scattered positive matrical cells were present in the bulb of normal hair follicles. The highest number of positive cells (>50%) were present in pilomatricomas and trichoepitheliomas, among cells with matrical differentiation, and in some cases of trichoblastoma. Few or absent positive cells were observed in BCCs. Conclusion: In accordance with previous study on human hair follicle, our results suggested that survivin could represent a key molecule in the maintenance of cellular subpopulations of canine hair follicle, as well as of tumours deriving from these cells: trichoepithelioma, trichoblastoma and pilomatrixoma. [...

    Frequency, determinants, and clinical relevance of acute coronary syndrome-like electrocardiographic findings in patients with acute aortic syndrome

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    We investigated frequency/characteristics of acute coronary syndrome-like (ACS-like) electrocardiographic (ECG) profiles among patients with a final diagnosis of acute aortic syndrome (AAS), and explored pathophysiologic determinants and prognostic relevance within each Stanford subtype. We blindly reviewed presentation electrocardiograms of 233 consecutive patients with final diagnosis of AAS (164 Stanford type A) at a regional treatment center. Prevalence of ACS-like ECG findings was 27% (type A, 26%, type B, 29%); most were non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction-like. Patients with ACS-like ECG findings more often had coronary ostia involvement (p = 0.002), pleural effusion (p = 0.02), significant aortic regurgitation (p = 0.01), and troponin positivity (p = 0.001). ACS-like ECG profile in type A disease was independently associated with coronary ostia involvement (odds ratio [OR] 5.27, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.75 to 15.88). ACS-like ECG profile predicted in-hospital mortality (OR 2.90, 95% CI 1.24 to 6.12), as did age (each incremental 10-year: OR 1.59, 95% CI 1.14 to 2.22), and syncope at presentation (OR 2.90, 95% CI 1.16 to 7.24). In conclusion, about 25% of our AAS patients (in either Stanford subtype) presented ACS-like ECG patterns-often with non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction characteristics-which could cause misdiagnosis. ACS-like ECG profile was associated with more complicated disease, and in type A disease was a strong independent predictor of in-hospital mortality
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