Publications by authors named "G Scaravaggi"

Article Synopsis
  • Lacosamide, a third-generation antiepileptic drug used for partial seizures, has had limited documentation of overdose cases since its approval in 2008, prompting a study to assess the clinical effects of acute poisoning.
  • This retrospective study at the Pavia Poison Control Centre analyzed 31 cases between 2012 and 2021, noting that the median ingested dose was 1500 mg and that 64.5% of individuals had taken other substances like benzodiazepines.
  • The findings indicated that 87% of patients experienced symptoms, with the most common being vomiting and seizures, and those who entered a coma had significantly higher doses; however, all patients eventually fully recovered
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Article Synopsis
  • Hydrogen cyanamide, a plant growth regulator introduced in Italy, was recalled in 2008 and is currently unauthorized in Europe due to its potential for causing serious health issues, including irritation, organ damage, and dangerous reactions with alcohol.
  • A study covering exposures from 2007 to 2021 found that most cases (79%) occurred after the product's market withdrawal, primarily in Sicily, with all instances being unintentional and work-related; a significant portion (41%) involved alcohol co-ingestion.
  • Common symptoms included flushing, dyspnoea, and burns, but all patients treated symptomatically fully recovered; the findings highlight ongoing illegal usage and the need for heightened awareness of the risks
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Introduction: Until now very few cases of an adverse cardiovascular event have been described following European viper envenomation (Aravanis et al., 1982) (Aravanis et al., 1982) (Aravanis et al.

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At the end of the 90s in Europe, the new psychoactive substances (NPS) phenomenon was limited to a small number of molecules created to mimic the actions and psychoactive effects of licensed medicines and existing drugs that are controlled by the United Nations drug conventions and therefore traded as their "legal" replacements. NPS were mostly circulating in rave parties and electronic music festivals. The globalization, the evolution of e-commerce and the growing popularity of NPS, facilitated the development of a wide illegal market in constant expansion.

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Considering the consequences on human health, in general population and workplace, associated with the use of new psychoactive substances and their continuous placing on the market, novel in vitro models for neurotoxicology research, applying human-derived CNS cells, may provide a means to understand the mechanistic basis of molecular and cellular alterations in brain. Cytotoxic effects of MAM-2201, a potent-naphthoyl indole derivative-synthetic cannabinoid, have been evaluated applying a panel of human cell-based models of neurons and astrocytes, testing different concentrations (1-30 µM) and exposure times (3-24-48 h). MAM-2201 induced toxicity in primary neuron-like cells (hNLCs), obtained from transdifferentiation of mesenchymal stem cells derived from human umbilical cord.

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