Publications by authors named "Capurso L"

Patients with IBD are at increased risk of developing Clostridium difficile (CD) infection and have worse outcomes, including higher rates of colectomy and death, and experience higher rates of recurrence. However, it is still not clear whether CD is a cause of IBD or a consequence of the inflammatory state and of intestinal dysbiosis. The association between IBD and CD may be due to different factors, such as drugs that are used for the treatment of IBD, including repeat courses of antibiotics, that might alter the intestinal flora and promote colonization, altered immune and nutritional status, frequent hospitalizations, and even genetic predisposition.

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The term probiotic refers to live microorganisms that survive passage through the gastrointestinal tract and have beneficial effects on the host. Many strains of probiotic microorganisms have been shown to inhibit growth and metabolic activity as well as the adhesion to intestinal cells of enteropathogenic bacteria, to modulate the gut microbiota and to have immunostimulatory or regulatory properties. The use of probiotic microorganisms for the prevention and the treatment of Antibiotic Associated Diarrhea is an obvious measure and perhaps the most usual application of probiotics.

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Antibiotics are some of the most frequently prescribed medications worldwide, but antibiotic therapy may disturb the colonization resistance of gut microbiota to pathogenic bacteria, resulting in a range of symptoms that include, most notably, diarrhea that occurs between 7% and 33% of adults and 66 and 80% in pediatric patients (median of 22%) who take antibiotics. The diverse class of antibiotics may damage the metabolic homeostasis and can alter the level of intestinal metabolites including amino acids, bile acids, glucose, short chain fatty acids through alteration in abundance of metabolically active bacteria. Clostridium difficile is the main cause of antibiotics associated diarrhea: 3rd generation Cephalosporin, Clyndamicin, 2nd and 4th generation Cephalosporines, Sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim, Quinolones, Penicillin combination show the strongest association with diarrhea.

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These are excellent times for probiotic medicine. We have discovered more than 150,000 genomes of the microbiome, which can be aggregated into 4,930 species. However, the dream of microbiome-based medicine requires a new approach - an ecological and evolutionary understanding of host-microbe interactions, rather than a qualitative analysis of species.

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Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) was the first strain belonging to the genus Lactobacillus to be patented in 1989 thanks to its ability to survive and to proliferate at gastric acid pH and in medium containing bile, and to adhere to enterocytes. Furthermore LGG is able to produces both a biofilm that can mechanically protect the mucosa, and different soluble factors beneficial to the gut by enhancing intestinal crypt survival, diminishing apoptosis of the intestinal epithelium, and preserving cytoskeletal integrity. Moreover LGG thanks to its lectin-like protein 1 and 2 inhibits some pathogens such as Salmonella species.

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The evidence-based medicine (EBM) in gastroenterology is born with the XIII International Congress of Gastroenterology, the world congress of Gastroenterology, held in Rome in 1988. A clinical epidemiology manual was placed in the congress bag for each participant. The book contained an approach to biostatistics, interpretation of epidemiological data, clinical trials, meta-analysis and decision analysis.

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Evidence-based medicine (EBM) and personalized medicine (PM) are driven by two diverse modes of reasoning about «evidence making». EBM has been criticized since his quality mark has been misappropriated by vested interests, the benefits statistically significant may be marginal in clinical practice, rigid rules and technology may produce care that is management driven rather than patient centered. On the contrary PM (or "precision medicine") refers to the tailoring of medical treatment to the specific characteristics of each patient involving the ability to classify individuals into subpopulations that are uniquely susceptible to a specific treatment, sparing expense and side effects and is derived from doubts on the results of subgroup analyses and on non responders in clinical trials typical of EBM.

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[Probiotics].

Recenti Prog Med

June 2016

On the basis of the currently available literature, which includes well-designed clinical trials, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, certain effects can be ascribed to probiotics as a general class. It is accepted that sufficient evidence has accumulated to support the concept of benefits of certain probiotics; it is reasonable to expect that evidence gained from a defined class of live microbes might be appropriate for certain, but not all, health outcomes. Moreover there is a need for clear communication to consumers and health-care providers of the activity of differentiate probiotic products.

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The human gastrointestinal tract contains a large number of commensal (non pathogenic) and pathogenic microbial species that have co-evolved with the human genome and differ in composition and function based on their location, as well as age, sex, race/ethnicity, and diet of their host and we can in fact consider the human body as a mix of human and bacterial cells. It is now evident that the large intestine is much more than an organ for waste material and absorption of water, salts and drugs, and indeed has a very important impact on human health, for a major part related to the specific composition of the complex microbial community in the colon. In man, the large gut receives material from the ileum which has already been digested and the contents are then mixed and retained for 6-12 hours in the caecum and right colon.

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The present paper summarizes the consensus views of a group of 9 European clinicians and scientists on the current state of scientific knowledge on probiotics, covering those areas where there is substantial evidence for beneficial effects and those where the evidence base is poor or inconsistent. There was general agreement that probiotic effects were species and often strain specific. The experts agreed that some probiotics were effective in reducing the incidence and duration of rotavirus diarrhoea in infants, antibiotic-associated diarrhoea in adults and, for certain probiotics, Clostridium difficile infections.

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In a recent publication we assessed the kinetics of intestinal colonization by microencapsulated probiotic bacteria in comparison with the same strains given in an uncoated form. It's well known, in fact, that microencapsulation of probiotics with specific materials is able to confer a significant resistance to gastric juice, thus protecting the cells during the gastric and duodenal transit and enhancing the probiotic efficacy of any supplementation. In any case, this was the first study reporting the fecal amounts of probiotics administered in a coated, protected form compared with traditional, uncoated ones.

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The intestinal microbiota is an ecosystem formed by a variety of ecological niches, made of several bacterial species and a very large amount of strains. The microbiota is in close contact with the intestinal mucosa or epithelial interface which is, after the respiratory area, the largest surface of the body, occupying approximately 250-400 m(2). The physiological activities of the microbiota are manifold and are just being unraveled.

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This study reports a case of Ménétrier's disease (MD) in an adult who presented with epigastric pain and peripheric edema. We focused in particular on the imaging and diagnostic aspects of the presenting case as well as clinical, histologic, and therapeutic aspects. Computed tomography (CT) enteroclysis is a new imaging technique which combines enteroclysis and spiral multislice CT.

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Background: Evacuation disorders and hard stools are common in industrialized countries, affecting on average 12% to 17% of the adult healthy population at any age. Dietary supplementation with probiotic microorganisms may be useful in reducing the disorder.

Methods: We performed a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study to evaluate the effectiveness of 2 different probiotic blends, either mixed Lactobacillus plantarum LP01 (LMG P-21021) and Bifidobacterium breve BR03 (DSM 16604) or Bifidobacterium animalis subspecies lactis BS01 (LMG P-21384), in the management of evacuation disorders and intestinal discomfort.

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Background: Beneficial findings concerning probiotics are increasing day by day. However, one of the most important parameter which affects the probiotic activity of a microorganism is its survival during the gastroduodenal transit. Some microencapsulation techniques could be applied to bacterial cells to improve this parameter.

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Objectives: We sought (i) to validate a new prediction rule of mortality (Progetto Nazionale Emorragia Digestiva (PNED) score) on an independent population with non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) and (ii) to compare the accuracy of the Italian PNED score vs. the Rockall score in predicting the risk of death.

Methods: We conducted prospective validation of analysis of consecutive patients with UGIB at 21 hospitals from 2007 to 2008.

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Background: Aminosalicylates (5-ASA) are first-line treatment for mild-moderate ulcerative colitis (UC). Systemic corticosteroids (CS) are considered for patients in whom 5-ASA has been unsuccessful, but their use is limited by adverse effects. Beclomethasone dipropionate (BDP), a topically acting steroid with low systemic bioavailability, has a more favorable safety profile, but its role in clinical practice is not yet well established.

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Background: Prevention of post-operative recurrence has a central role in the management of Crohn's Disease (CD). Many drugs have been evaluated in prospective randomised controlled trials (RCTs) but the results are disappointing. Mesalazine, the drug more extensively investigated, has been shown to be effective for preventing recurrence in the short-term; however, the overall benefit is small and no data are available on the long-term effectiveness.

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Despite the general progress of the last two decades in oncogenesis mechanism comprehension, in screening and surveillance programs, in technological support to diagnosis and in treatment protocols, the long-term survival of gastrointestinal (GI) cancer patients is not substantially changed. Therefore chemoprevention strategies still appear as a possible alternative to screening and surveillance programs in reducing the incidence and the mortality for GI cancer, at an acceptable cost/effectiveness ratio. The present review is focused on three GI cancers: esophageal adenocarcinoma, gastric cancer and colorectal cancer and their respective precarcinogenic lesions.

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