Publications by authors named "Claudio Avanzini"

Article Synopsis
  • - The clinical manifestation of diseases often shows significant sex and gender differences, which are overlooked despite their importance, highlighted during the COVID-19 pandemic where men experienced more severe symptoms due to biological differences.
  • - Women generally have a more robust immune response, practice better social distancing, and tend to smoke less, factors that contribute to differing outcomes in COVID-19 infections compared to men.
  • - A comprehensive analysis of 2020 COVID-19 testing data from Amedeo di Savoia Hospital revealed many records lacked proper information; nonetheless, the processed data showed a clear need for a sex and gender-based approach to healthcare for better patient outcomes and efficient health system management.
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Legionella quantification in environmental samples is overestimated by qPCR. Combination with a viable dye, such as Propidium monoazide (PMA), could make qPCR (named then vPCR) very reliable. In this multicentre study 717 artificial water samples, spiked with fixed concentrations of Legionella and interfering bacterial flora, were analysed by qPCR, vPCR and culture and data were compared by statistical analysis.

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Strains of the marine ciliate protist Euplotes crassus produce exclusive terpenoids called euplotins that play an ecological role. Among these derivatives, euplotin C is the main of four secondary metabolites isolated from cultures of this protozoon and represents the sesquiterpene taxonomic marker from E. crassus.

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The microbicidal effect of a monoclonal antiidiotypic antibody, mimicking the activity of a yeast killer toxin, characterized by a wide antimicrobial spectrum, has been evaluated in vitro against two relevant species of protozoan parasites, Leishmania major and Leishmania infantum. The antiidiotypic antibody exerted a significant and dose-dependent antileishmanial activity against parasite promastigotes in comparison to an irrelevant isotype-matched monoclonal antibody. This is the first demonstration that an antibody, which had been already shown to be fungicidal and bactericidal, may also exert a direct microbicidal activity against protozoa.

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