Publications by authors named "Frugoni C"

Introduction: Long-COVID is a condition characterized by the permanence of symptoms beyond 4 weeks after an initial infection. It affects 1 out of 5 people and is loosely related to the severity of acute infection and pathological mechanisms, which are yet to be understood.

Areas Covered: This article looks at currently available and under-studied therapies for long-COVID syndrome.

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Background: Accurate estimation of haematopoietic stem cell (HSC) counts by flow cytometry may be difficult in laboratories in which sophisticated equipment and staff with specific expertise are not available. Affordable flow cytometers that can perform basic functions may help to overcome these difficulties. In this study we compared HSC and leucocyte counts determined by volumetric and bead-based protocols performed with the small, low-cost Accuri(®) C6, with those obtained with two gold-standard instruments, the four-colour FACSCalibur(®) and the eight-colour FACSCantoII(®), our reference flow cytometers.

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Objective: Increased body iron stores and hepcidin have been hypothesized to promote atherosclerosis by inducing macrophage iron accumulation and release of cytokines, but direct demonstration in human cells is lacking. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of iron on cytokine release in monocytes ex vivo and the correlation with vascular damage and to evaluate the relationship among serum levels of hepcidin, cytokines, and vascular damage in patients with metabolic syndrome alterations.

Methods And Results: Manipulation of iron status with ferric ammonium citrate and hepcidin-25 induced monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1 and interleukin-6 in human differentiating monocytes of patients with hyperferritinemia associated with the metabolic syndrome (n=11), but not in subjects with hemochromatosis or HFE mutations impairing iron accumulation (n=15), and the degree of induction correlated with the presence of carotid plaques, detected by echocolor-Doppler.

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Hyperthyroid Graves' disease (GD) is a B-cell-mediated disease caused by antibodies stimulating the thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) receptor (TRAb). A proportion of patients (40-60%) present with an associated ophthalmopathy (TAO), a progressive inflammatory autoimmune disease of the retroorbital tissue. We thought that the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab (RTX), by inducing transient B-cell depletion, may potentially modify the active inflammatory phase of TAO.

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In vitro models of human erythropoiesis are useful in studying the mechanisms of erythroid differentiation from BFU-E to mature erythrocytes both in normal and pathological conditions. Most of the available in vitro liquid cultures are from cell lines or are limited by the production of few erythroid cells mixed with myeloid cells. Here we describe an erythroid liquid culture system starting from CD34(+)-enriched cells obtained from peripheral blood.

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Studies of T-cell subsets (CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD8+ CD57+ cells), lymphocyte response to concanavalin A (Con A), phytohaemoagglutinin (PHA) and the alterations of white cell membranes shown by scanning electronic microscope (SEM) in 51 patients who underwent cardiac operation were performed. Out of these 51 unselected patients, for 16, duration of CPB was < or = 110 min (group A), while for the other 35 (group B) it was prolonged (> 110 minutes). Although variations of the lymphocyte subset observed between groups A and B were slightly significant (p < 0.

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From January 1968 to July 1983, 38 patients with an intracardiac myxoma underwent surgical excision of the tumor at our Institution. There were 15 males and 23 females, ranging in age from 17 to 68 years (mean 47.7).

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Five patients, who developed sternal wound infection following open heart surgery and in whom the standard methods of management of this complication had been unsuccessful, were treated with an autogenous vaccine. Complete healing of the sternal wound was obtained in 4 of them, while in one, who had an associated mediastinitis, a slow recovery with persistence of a sternal fistula occurred. The results of this preliminary experience indicate that the use of an autogenous vaccine might be regarded as an alternative method of treatment of sternal infections in selected patients.

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The present report reviews our experience with 12 cases of delayed cardiac tamponade following open heart surgery, which occurred at various times after the seventh postoperative day (average 19 days). In each case the diagnosis was made on clinical grounds, supported by the radiographic findings in all, and confirmed by echocardiography in 4. Pericardial effusion was serous in 5 patients, sero-sanguineous in 3, sanguineous in 3, and purulent in one; it was most frequently caused by a postpericardiotomy syndrome (7 cases).

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Over a 2-year period, 19 patients whose autologous saphenous veins were either unsuitable or unavailable underwent myocardial revascularization with saphenous vein allografts (SVAs) at our institution. All SVAs had been preserved in 98% glycerol at room temperature for at least 3 weeks (average, 7 weeks); before use, they were rinsed with saline and antibiotic solution. One operative death (5.

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A case of staphylococcus epidermidis endocarditis associated with a right atrial thrombosis around a pacemaker electrode is presented. Stuce the antibiotic therapy had proved uneffective, the electrode had to be removed with cardiopulmonary bypass; the infection was subsequently eliminated. When a foreign body cannot be removed by closed techniques, open heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass may be necessary.

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