259 research outputs found
La vegetazione del Parco Regionale Marturanum (Lazio settentrionale, Italia entrale): lineamenti fitosociologici e genesi del paesaggio vegetale
The Marturanum Regional Park is
a small protected area (1,240 hectares),
however it is placed along the interface
between two of the main lithological
units of Lazio, hence featuring a high
diversity of flora, vegetation and landscape.
Further, it includes a small part
of theMonti dellaTolfa, a 30,000 hectares
hilly rangewhich features an exceptionally
low population density. The
Tolfa hills are a biodiversity hotspot of
C-Italy and show a very distinctive landscape
pattern. The present paper outlines
a phytosociological classification
and syntaxonomical discussion of the
numerous plant communities found in
theMarturanumPark.The presentwork
describes also the different role of the
natural constraints and of the historical
and cultural processes that have led to
the peculiar landscape patterns nowadays
found in the area, and in particular
to the differentiation between the two
landscape systems of the pyroclastic
flow and the Tolfa flysch.Parco regionale Marturanu
Pumps as turbines (PATs) in water distribution networks affected by intermittent service
A hydraulic model was developed in order to evaluate the potential energy recovery from the use of centrifugal pumps as turbines (PATs) in a water distribution network characterized by the presence of private tanks. The model integrates the Global Gradient Algorithm (GGA), with a pressure-driven model that permits a more realistic representation of the influence on the network behaviour of the private tanks filling and emptying. The model was applied to a real case study: a District Metered Area in Palermo (Italy). Three different scenarios were analysed and compared with a baseline scenario (Scenario 0 - no PAT installed) to identify the system configuration with added PATs that permits the maximal energy recovery without penalizing the hydraulic network performance. In scenarios involving PAT on service connections, the specification of PAT operational parameters was also evaluated by means of Monte Carlo Analysis. The centralized solution with a PAT installed downstream of the inlet node of the analysed district, combined with local PATs on the larger service connections, proves to be the most energy-efficient scenario
Identification of contracaecum rudolphii (Nematoda: Anisakidae) in great cormorants phalacrocorax carbo sinensis (Blumenbach, 1978) from Southern Italy
Simple Summary: Four dead Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis specimens from Southern Italy coasts were
examined for Contracaecum sp. detection. 181 Contracaecum sp. larvae and adults were found in
the viscera of all the P. carbo sinensis examined. The PCR-RFLP analysis showed the presence of
Contracaecum rudolphii A and B. A co-infestation of C. rudolphii A and B was found in P. carbo sinensis
from Leporano Bay. This study provides a first report of the presence of Contracaecum sp. in P. carbo
sinensis from Southern Italy.
Abstract: In this study, four dead great cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis (Blumenbach, 1978)
specimens, collected from the coasts and lakes of Southern Italy, were examined by necropsy for the
detection of Contraceacum sp. The adults and larvae found were subjected to morphological analysis
and molecular identification by PCR-RFLP. A total of 181 Contracaecum specimens were detected in
all of the four great cormorants examined (prevalence = 100%), showing an intensity of infestation
between nine and ninety-two. A co-infestation by adult and larval forms of Contracaecum rudolphii
was found only in one of the great cormorants examined. Following molecular investigations, 48
specimens of C. rudolphii A and 38 specimens of C. rudolphii B were detected, revealing co-infestation
solely for the great cormorant from Leporano Bay (Southern Italy). Our results showed an opposite
ratio between C. rudolphii A and C. rudolphii B in Pantelleria and in Salso Lake (Southern Italy)
compared to what was reported in the literature, probably due to migratory stopovers and the
ecology of the infested fish species, confirming the role of Contracaecum nematodes as ecological tags
of their hosts
Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Quinidine in Pediatric Patients with KCNT1 Genetic Variants
Quinidine (QND) is an old antimalarial drug that was used in the early 20th century as an antiarrhythmic agent. Currently, QND is receiving attention for its use in epilepsy of infancy with migrating focal seizures (EIMFS) due to potassium sodium-activated channel subfamily T member 1 (KCNT1) genetic variants. Here, we report the application of Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) in pediatric patients carrying KCNT1 genetic variants and orally treated with QND for developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEE). We measured plasma levels of QND and its metabolite hydroquinidine (H-QND) by using a validated method based on liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Three pediatric patients (median age 4.125 years, IQR 2.375-4.125) received increasing doses of QND. Cardiac toxicity was monitored at every dose change. Reduction in seizure frequency ranged from 50 to 90%. Our results show that QND is a promising drug for pediatric patients with DEE due to KCNT1 genetic variants. Although QND blood levels were significantly lower than the therapeutic range as an anti-arrhythmic drug, patients showed a significant improvement in seizure burden. These data underlie the utility of TDM for QND not only to monitor its toxic effects but also to evaluate possible drug-drug interactions
Lung magnetic resonance imaging with diffusion weighted imaging provides regional structural as well as functional information without radiation exposure in primary antibody deficiencies
PURPOSE:
Primary antibody deficiency patients suffer from infectious and non-infectious pulmonary complications leading over time to chronic lung disease. The complexity of this pulmonary involvement poses significant challenge in differential diagnosis in patients with long life disease and increased radio sensitivity. We planned to verify the utility of chest Magnetic Resolution Imaging with Diffusion-Weighted Imaging as a radiation free technique.
METHODS:
Prospective evaluation of 18 patients with Common Variable Immunodeficiency and X-linked Agammaglobulinemia. On the same day, patients underwent Magnetic Resonance Imaging with Diffusion Weighted Imaging sequences, High Resolution Computerized Tomography and Pulmonary Function Tests, including diffusing capacity factor for carbon monoxide. Images were scored using a modified version of the Bhalla scoring system.
RESULTS:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging was non-inferior to High Resolution Computerized Tomography in the capacity to identify bronchial and parenchymal abnormalities. HRCT had a higher capacity to identify peripheral airways abnormalities, defined as an involvement of bronchial generation up to the fifth and distal (scores 2-3). Bronchial scores negatively related to pulmonary function tests. One third of consolidations and nodules had Diffusion Weighted Imaging restrictions associated with systemic granulomatous disease and systemic lymphadenopathy. Lung Magnetic Resolution Imaging detected an improvement of bronchial and parenchymal abnormalities, in recently diagnosed patients soon after starting Ig replacement.
CONCLUSIONS:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging with Diffusion Weighted Imaging was a reliable technique to detect lung alterations in patients with Primary Antibody Deficiencies
A MALDI-TOF MS approach for mammalian, human, and formula milks’ profiling
Human milk composition is dynamic, and substitute formulae are intended to mimic its protein content. The purpose of this study was to investigate the potentiality of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS), followed by multivariate data analyses as a tool to analyze the peptide profiles of mammalian, human, and formula milks. Breast milk samples from women at different lactation stages (2 (n = 5), 30 (n = 6), 60 (n = 5), and 90 (n = 4) days postpartum), and milk from donkeys (n = 4), cows (n = 4), buffaloes (n = 7), goats (n = 4), ewes (n = 5), and camels (n = 2) were collected. Different brands (n = 4) of infant formulae were also analyzed. Protein content (<30 kDa) was analyzed by MS, and data were exported for statistical elaborations. The mass spectra for each milk closely clustered together, whereas different milk samples resulted in well-separated mass spectra. Human samples formed a cluster in which colostrum constituted a well-defined subcluster. None of the milk formulae correlated with animal or human milk, although they were specifically characterized and correlated well with each other. These findings propose MALDI-TOF MS milk profiling as an analytical tool to discriminate, in a blinded way, different milk types. As each formula has a distinct specificity, shifting a baby from one to another formula implies a specific proteomic exposure. These profiles may assist in milk proteomics for easiness of use and minimization of costs, suggesting that the MALDI-TOF MS pipelines may be useful for not only milk adulteration assessments but also for the characterization of banked milk specimens in pediatric clinical settings
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