Publications by authors named "Donatella Angelone"

Article Synopsis
  • Recent increases in migration have led to more unaccompanied foreign minors (UFMs) entering Italy, prompting the need for accurate age assessments by pediatricians, guided by updated 2020 protocols that prioritize minors' well-being.
  • A survey of 344 Italian pediatricians revealed that only 38.9% have conducted age assessments, with only 14.2% fully knowledgeable about the procedures, while many others had limited or no knowledge.
  • There is a noted gap in awareness and resources regarding a multidisciplinary approach to age estimation, indicating a need for better education and resource allocation to assist UFMs and enhance healthcare practices.
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Article Synopsis
  • Primary lymphedema occurs due to defects in the lymphatic system, leading to fluid accumulation and edema, with only about 30% of cases linked to known genes.
  • A study on 543 individuals identified a whole-gene deletion and four mutations affecting the ANGPT2 protein, which plays a vital role in lymphatic vessel formation and signaling.
  • Functional tests showed that certain mutations decreased ANGPT2 secretion and altered its signaling, providing new insights into how these genetic changes contribute to primary lymphedema and the mechanisms involved in lymphatic vessel regulation.
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We describe two previously healthy children who were hospitalized in the same period in different departments of our University with clinical signs of Kawasaki syndrome, which were treated with intravenous immunoglobulins and acetylsalicylic acid: in both cases, Coxsackie virus infection was concurrently demonstrated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and complement fixation test identified antibodies to serotype B3. In the acute phase, both patients presented hyperechogenic coronary arteries, but no cardiologic sequels in the mid term. The etiological relationship between Kawasaki syndrome and Coxsackie viruses is only hypothetical; however, the eventual identification of ad hoc environmental triggers is advisable in front of children with Kawasaki syndrome, with the aim of optimizing epidemiological surveillance and understanding the intimate biological events of this condition.

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Clues to predict the response to intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIG) and the development of coronary artery abnormalities (CAA) in children with Kawasaki syndrome (KS) are still undefined. We examined retrospectively the medical charts of children hospitalized between February 1990 and April 2009 with diagnosis of KS. A total of 32 Italian patients with a mean age of 23.

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A 3-month-old child was first treated for incomplete Kawasaki syndrome with three cycles of intravenous immunoglobulins and aspirin, then with methylprednisolone which led to fever remission. The same child was re-hospitalized after a 10-month-period of well-being for the suspicion of a new episode of Kawasaki syndrome, which appeared to be immunoglobulin-resistant: extensive testing failed to provide an alternative diagnosis of any infectious or infiltrative disease. Diagnosis of systemic onset-juvenile idiopathic arthritis was postulated upon the long persistence of fever and inflammatory signs, which subsided only after starting corticosteroid treatment.

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Human newborns are susceptible to microbial infection related to incompletely defined aspects of the neonatal immune system. To characterize neonatal innate immunity, we studied production of two early response cytokines in response to Toll-like receptor (TLR)-activating microbial stimuli in vitro: the pro-inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and IL-6, a multifunctional cytokine with antiinflammatory and Th2-polarizing properties. Neonatal cord blood responses to multiple TLR agonists, including poly dI:dC (TLR3), lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (TLR4), flagellin (TLR5), and CpG DNA (TLR9), are characterized by a higher IL-6/TNF-alpha ratio than in adult peripheral blood.

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