Publications by authors named "C Ongaro"

Article Synopsis
  • Transfusion medicine is having trouble due to new therapies like monoclonal antibodies that mess with blood tests, making it hard to match blood types for transfusions.
  • A chemical called dithiothreitol can help solve this problem but has downsides like losing some test accuracy and taking more time.
  • Researchers tested a new method that uses dithiothreitol but allows for easier tracking and reduces interference from the antibodies, showing promising results after 30 days.
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Introduction: The clinical learning environment is the context of overlap between the educational system and the working environment. Here students apply the knowledge learned during theoretical teachings, acquire practical, relational and caring skills. It is fundamental for nursing training and there are several rating scales aimed at evaluating it: the presence and quality of the studies that investigate their performances are heterogeneous, so it is difficult to identify the best tool.

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In the field of bone tissue engineering, particular interest is devoted to the development of 3D cultures to study bone cell proliferation under conditions similar to ones, e.g. by artificially producing mechanical stresses promoting a biological response (mechanotransduction).

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This study investigates the biological effects on a 3D scaffold based on hydroxyapatite cultured with MC3T3 osteoblasts in response to flow-induced shear stress (FSS). The scaffold adopted here (B-HA) derives from the biomorphic transformation of natural wood and its peculiar channel geometry mimics the porous structure of the bone. From the point of view of fluid dynamics, B-HA can be considered a network of micro-channels, intrinsically offering the advantages of a microfluidic system.

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Pyemotes ventricosus is a free-living mite feeding on larvae or nymphs of insects, including moths, beetles, wasps and bees, that are usually found in grain, straw and firewood. When present in great number or when its food is lacking, it could accidentally bite mammals, including humans, causing a highly pruritic self-limiting dermatitis, sometimes followed by a lymphangitis known as "comet sign".We present a singular case of mite lymphangitis that surrounds and delimitates breast prosthesis in a 30-year-old Caucasian woman.

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