The global increase in autoimmunity, together with the emerging autoimmune-related side effects of cancer immunotherapy, have furthered a need for understanding of immune tolerance and activation. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the archetypical autoimmune disease, affecting multiple organs, and tissues. Studying SLE creates knowledge relevant not just for autoimmunity, but the immune system in general.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Forensic Leg Med
February 2019
Background: Maturation is the irreversible biological process leading to adult form or function. The degree of maturation can be derived from the examination of maturity indicators, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlucocorticoids (GCs) are excellent anti-inflammatory drugs but are dose-limited by on-target toxicity. We sought to solve this problem by delivering GCs to immune cells with antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) using antibodies containing site-specific incorporation of a non-natural amino acid, novel linker chemistry for in vitro and in vivo stability, and existing and novel glucocorticoid receptor (GR) agonists as payloads. We directed fluticasone propionate to human antigen-presenting immune cells to afford GR activation that was dependent on the targeted antigen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTLRs facilitate the recognition of pathogens by immune cells and the initiation of the immune response, leading to the production of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Production of proinflammatory mediators by innate immune cells, such as macrophages, is tightly regulated to facilitate pathogen clearance while limiting an adverse impact on host tissue. Exposure of innate immune cells to TLR ligands induces a state of temporary refractoriness to a subsequent exposure of a TLR ligand, a phenomenon referred to as "tolerance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The aim of this study is to estimate the annual incidence and prevalence rate of the GH treatment exposure in patients under the age of 18 treated for hypopituitarism or isolated GH deficiency (GHD) in Piedmont, during the period January 1, 2002 to December 31, 2004.
Methods: The selection criteria for recombinant human GH (rhGH) treatment in childhood were approved by the Ministry of Health in Italy in the yr 1998. The present analysis is based on data from the Registry of subjects receiving GH therapy (GH Registry) made up of the 918 pediatric patients (age <18 yr) with a diagnosis of GHD (excluding Prader-Willi and Turner syndromes and other conditions), diagnosed in the period January 1, 2002 - December 31, 2004.
Physiologic interindividual differences in neonatal size are traditionally thought of as determined by differences in fetal growth occurring only in the second half of pregnancy. Whether possible differences in early intrauterine growth velocity are the effect of random growth fluctuations or may affect size at birth is still debated. This article aims at evaluating to what extent differences in neonatal size are accounted for by differences in fetal growth velocity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is well known that the biologic variability in fetal size increases as pregnancy advances, although the embryonal and early fetal growth patterns as well as how early and how much the genetic, hormonal and environmental variables play a role in its modulation are still debated. It is accepted that growth in the first trimester of pregnancy is relatively uniform, with a minimal biologic variability; this variability may be underestimated, because the transversal studies do not permit the identification of the growth pattern. The aim of this work is to evaluate, by means of a longitudinal study, the time of embryo-fetal growth differentiation related at neonatal anthropometric measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWithin an appropriate clinical context, severe GH deficiency (GHD) in adults has to be defined biochemically by provocative testing of GH secretion. Patients with childhood-onset GHD need retesting in late adolescence or young adulthood to verify whether they have to continue recombinant human GH treatment. GHRH + arginine (GHRH+ARG) is the most reliable alternative to the insulin-induced hypoglycemia test (ITT) as a provocative test for the diagnosis of GHD in adulthood, provided that appropriate cut-off limits are assumed (normal limits, 16.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChromosomal aberrations (CAs), sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) and high frequency cells (HFCs) have been assessed in peripheral blood lymphocytes of 10 neurofibromatosis (NF1) patients and 10 healthy controls. In both groups, the spontaneous rates and the induced (bleomycin for CA and MMC for SCE) frequencies were analyzed. No differences between cells from NF1 patients and controls were observed with respect to spontaneous or bleomycin induced CA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Endocrinol Metab
July 2000
A boy is described with early puberty and Chiari 1 malformation. It is not known whether there was an etiological relationship between these two conditions, or whether they were coincidental. This report emphasizes the utility of MRI when early puberty is diagnosed, particularly in males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Obstet Gynecol Scand
March 2000
Background: Most ultrasonographic fetal growth norms are derived from cross-sectional data or from longitudinal data treated as coming from cross-sectional studies, although only longitudinal models may detect particular aspects of fetal growth shape, such as peak of growth velocity.
Materials And Methods: The sample included 238 singleton normal pregnancies. All the fetal traits under study (biparietal diameter, occipito-frontal diameter, head circumference, femur diaphysis length and abdomen circumference) were measured according to the classical ultrasound techniques by highly trained operators.
J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab
January 1998
The aim of the present study was to verify the GH-releasing effect of Hexarelin, a synthetic hexapeptide, in newborns who are known to have GH hypersecretion likely due to hyperactivity of GHRH-secreting neurons while somatostatinergic activity seems not fully operative. We studied in 6 newborns (NB, 2.5 +/- 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone age assessments were related to auxological variables in 407 Italian boys, between 7 and 12 years of age, in order to elucidate the factors that affect the rate of skeletal maturation and to examine the possibility of using measures of skeletal maturation of evaluate individual patients. Using the radius-ulna-short bones (RUS) method of assessment, bone age velocity was greater in the Italian boys than for the UK reference standards, although there was considerable interindividual dispersion around the mean. Bone age velocity and height velocity were poorly correlated, and there was little correlation between skeletal and pubertal maturation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to verify the persistence in adulthood of GH deficiency diagnosed in childhood and treated with hGH in childhood and to study whether anatomical hypothalamic-pituitary alterations evaluated by magnetic resonance (MR) imaging could predict it. To this goal, in six GHD adults (3 males and 3 females aged 17.2-24.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn scientific papers, skeletal maturation-expressed as bone maturity scores or bone age-is often used as a quantifiable variable similar to height or weight. This paper discusses whether this approach is appropriate. The questions addressed are whether skeletal maturation can be measured on a quantitative scale, whether its use is appropriate in computing, and what the 'numbers' used represent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Endocrinol Metab
April 1995
The objective of this study was to verify the GH-releasing activity of a synthetic hexapeptide, hexarelin (HEX), before and during puberty. Ninety-six children (54 boys and 42 girls, aged 4.1-17.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSince intensive chelating therapy for thalassaemic children was introduced, growth rates appear to have diminished. To investigate what factors were responsible we compared velocities of growth in length over a period of 1 year between groups distinguished by different strategies of treatment. Forty-two thalassaemic patients, 30 males aged 4-12 years, and 12 females, 4-10 years old, were assigned from their current treatment into subgroups based upon blood ferritin levels, daily dose of desferrioxamine and urinary zinc levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough growth hormone (GH) deficiency is a very common cause of short stature, many cases are still diagnosed as idiopathic. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), more clearly than CT, reveals the anatomy of the hypothalamic-hypophyseal region and of the possible alterations (pituitary hypoplasia, interruption of the stalk) causing hormonal deficit. Twenty-nine patients with short stature underwent MRI examinations of the hypothalamic-pituitary region to assess the significance of the correlation between hormonal test and MR patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1990, the Italian Study Group for Turner's Syndrome (ISGTS) undertook a nationwide survey, involving the retrospective collection of cross-sectional data and longitudinal growth profiles of 772 girls with Turner's syndrome born between 1950 and 1990. The study was carried out in 29 pediatric endocrinological centers. In this first report, the familial characteristics and neonatal data of Turner girls are described, compared to those of the general population, and related to postnatal somatic development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-two girls affected by sexual precocity with impaired final height prognosis were followed until they achieved final height. Twelve of them were treated with an intranasal (D-Ser6)-gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogue (buserelin) administered at a mean dose of 25 micrograms/kg/day (range 20-32) for a mean period of 14 months (range 8-18). Ten girls refused treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeflazacort (DFZ), a new glucocorticoid which has recently become available, is expected to have less negative effects on growth and skeletal maturation than conventional steroids, in children treated long term. To verify this hypothesis, a multicentre trial was organized to evaluate the effects of DFZ vs prednisone (PDN) on statural growth and skeletal maturation in a group of prepubertal children requiring glucocorticoid therapy for at least 6 months/year. The results of an analysis of 55 children (aged 3-12 years, 24 with connective tissue disease and 31 with kidney glomerular disorders) treated randomly with either DFZ (31 patients) or PDN (24 patients) and followed for a mean period of about 22 months (16 months under steroid therapy) are presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagnetic resonance imaging was performed in 23 patients with short stature (7 had multiple pituitary hormone defect, 11 had isolated growth hormone deficiency and 5 had normal variant short stature) to investigate if there is a relation between magnetic resonance findings and results of endocrine tests. Magnetic resonance imaging of patients with multiple pituitary hormone deficiency or with serious isolated growth hormone deficiency (growth hormone < 3 micrograms/l) revealed an interrupted pituitary stalk and ectopic neurohypophysis or a mass. In patients with less serious isolated growth hormone deficiency (growth hormone > 3 micrograms/l) or with normal variant short stature, the technique revealed a normal or hypoplastic hypophysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Authors describe the growth of a 2 year old child affected by Dubowitz syndrome. The child came to their observation because of short stature and microcephaly.
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