The human milk fat globule membrane protein composition is still largely unknown, although it counts for 2-4% of the total milk protein content and contains several important biologically active components. The aim of this work was to create a two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) map of the human milk fat globule membrane proteins, both integral and membrane-associated, and to identify and characterize as many protein components as possible. A new protocol for the solubilization and extraction of the human milk fat globule membrane proteins with a double extraction procedure is presented, and the results compared with the extraction methods reported in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Limb vascular thrombosis is a severe, rare entity, often needing invasive surgery and sometimes leading to loss of function. An infant with in utero arteiro-venous thrombosis is reported.
Case Report: The baby, a female infant, was born at 34 weeks from a mother affected by gestational diabetes.
Acta Biomed Ateneo Parmense
October 2001
Aim of this study is to compare traditional post-partum hospital stay to hospitalization associated with early protected discharge: a case-control study has been performed to evaluate outcome as mother's appreciation of the experience as well as breastfeeding. The study included 50 healthy-term newborns and their mothers, discharged within 24 and 48 hours of life, and 44 controls, who had traditional "rooming-in" stay, delivered at the Department of Neonatology--University of Turin. The protocol included a midwife daily home visits and a neonatologist and nurse visit within 4th to 5th day of life, to evaluate mother's and baby's health status and to perform metabolic screenings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Biomed Ateneo Parmense
October 2001
Chronic anemia is very frequent in very low birth weight (VLBW) infants. Lowered red cells life span, hemolysis, low production of erythropoietin, phlebotomies, excessive body growth are its most important causes. A reduction of the number of transfusions to babies with chronic anemia was obtained through r-HuEpo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is no "ideal" method of infection diseases control, but there are some different methods according to the risk degree of patient, the problems, the information accuracy and also the available resources. Some important points need to be stressed about infectious diseases control in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit:--continuous microbiological surveillance in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit is necessary, because newborns admitted are at very high risk of infection disease;--continuous microbiological data review is needed: therefore criticism and integration with other clinical and laboratory data are necessary to exclude simple colonisation;--critical analysis of data allows more rational use of antimicrobical agents to avoid the selection of multiresistant bacteric streams;--a rational analysis of laboratory data needs necessarily a strict collaboration among neonatologists, microbiologists and the Committee for infectious diseases control;--in epidemics, techniques of bacterial streams typization are needed, and methods of molecular biology (DNA and proteins analysis) are better;--this implies a collection of microbiological data, by database integrating microbiological, clinical and anamnestic data and allowing retrospective studies too.
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 PDFThe presence of foreign proteins in human milk after the ingestion of bovine dairy products is thought to be one of the possible causes of allergic sensitization in exclusively breast-fed predisposed infants. The immunologic determination of bovine beta-lactoglobulin (LG) concentration in human milk has been reported by several researchers, but the results are conflicting. Moreover, a strong cross-reactivity between antibodies to bovine beta-LG and human milk proteins and peptides was reported, throwing doubt on the reliability of radioimmunoassay and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay detection and quantification assays for bovine beta-LG in human milk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHereditary hemochromatosis (HH) is a disorder of iron metabolism that leads to iron overload in middle age and can be caused by homozygosity for the C282Y mutation in the HFE gene. Preliminary studies have estimated the frequency of this mutation at 0.5-1% in Italy, but this has not been verified on a large sample.
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.
The aim of this work was to check and quantify any cross-reactivities among the main bovine whey proteins, utilizing purified polyclonal antibodies against bovine beta-lactoglobulin, alpha-lactalbumin and serum albumin, and to identify possible common epitope(s). Purified polyclonal anti-bovine beta-lactoglobulin antibodies show 10% cross-reactivity with bovine alpha-lactalbumin, both in its native and its denatured form. A continuous stretch of four amino acids common to alpha-lactalbumin and beta-lactoglobulin that might be responsible for this cross-reactivity has been identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpecific IgE (sIgE) for cow's milk proteins (CMP) have been reported to be present in blood sera of exclusively breast-fed infants. The aim of this study was to find whether the presence of sIgE to human milk proteins in the sera of exclusively breast-fed infants could explain the apparent detection of sIgE to CMP in infants that were never previously in contact with cow's milk. sIgE for human milk whey proteins were found in the blood sera of atopic infants, and these sIgE strongly cross-reacted with the corresponding CMP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Biomed Ateneo Parmense
March 1999
Objectives: To analyze the presence of bovine beta-LG in breast milk.
Methods: Human milk samples from 14 healthy non-atopic women on diets with different cow's milk contents were examined. The total concentration of beta-LG immuno-like proteins (beta-LGIP) was determined by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).
Aim of the work was to measure the cortisol level in human tissues at different stages of life, by means of radioimmunoassay and by chromatography. Viable samples of 13 different tissues were obtained during surgical intervention from 30 to 70 years old patients of either sex. Mean tissue cortisol concentration was 78 +/- 35 ng/g, ranging from 20 +/- 10 ng/g in the thyroid to 124 +/- 76 ng/g in the kidney.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is widely believed that cow's milk proteins ingested by the mother, in particular beta-lactoglobulin (beta-LG), can pass into breast milk and thus sensitize predisposed infants. However, studies to evaluate bovine beta-LG in human milk have given conflicting results. The aim of this study was to analyse the correlation between the amount of cow's milk in the mother's diet and the presence of bovine beta-LG in breast milk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Endocrinol Invest
February 1996
The exact period when glucocorticoid receptors (GR) appear in human embryos is unknown, however their presence is acknowledged in target tissues before the fetal adrenal cortex secretes cortisol. Determining when GR develop could serve as an index of the importance of glucocorticoids in the morphological and functional development of tissues. The aim of this study was to determine time of onset of GR in human tissues using an immunohistochemical method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed
January 1996
With the aim of determining fetal growth kinetics, prenatal data were analysed which had been longitudinally collected in the framework of a perinatal growth survey. The sample comprised 238 singleton normal pregnancies, selected in Genoa and Turin (between 1987 and 1990), and repeatedly assessed by ultrasound scans (five to nine per pregnancy). Five morphometric traits were considered: BPD (biparietal diameter), OFD (occipitofrontal diameter), HC (head circumference), FDL (femur diaphysis length) and AC (abdomen circumference).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Endocrinol Invest
September 1993
GH immunolike reactivity was measured by RIA and IRMA tests in the extracts of tissues from human fetuses (8-32 weeks) and adults. For some fetal tissues a comparison was made with the T4 values obtained in a previous study. Both hormones were already measurable in peripheral tissues at 8 weeks of gestation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe examined birthweight distribution in relation to gestational age from 25 to 42 weeks in a series of 3.526 single newborns and in whom reliability of gestational age was rigorously controlled. To verify the distribution normality the Shapiro-Wilk and the Kolmogorov tests have been applied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA "bolus dose" of aztreonam was used to treat a sample group of 46 neonates suffering from urinary tract infections caused by bacteria thought to be sensitive to aztreonam. This treatment proved efficacious in approximately 80% of cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe human whey components cross-reacting with antibodies raised against bovine and/or equine beta-lactoglobulin were screened systematically. The milk of six women on a normal diet was collected within 72 h of confinement and whey components were fractionated by high-speed size exclusion chromatography and reversed-phase techniques. The fractions which were immunoreactive in double diffusion experiments with antisera anti-bovine and/or equine beta-lactoglobulin were subsequently purified by native PAGE and then electroblotted on Pro-blott membrane (Western blotting).
View Article and Find Full Text PDF