In a nuclear or radiological accident scenario, when potentially members of the public can undergo internal contamination by anthropogenic radionuclides released in the atmosphere, effective methods that can be used directly in the field to perform a fast scan for internal contamination on a large number of individuals can play a major role to undertake appropriate countermeasures. Specific attention should be paid to the individual monitoring of children since they constitute the sensitive population group with the highest risk of developing cancer. At the ENEA Casaccia Research Center in Rome (Italy), monitoring procedures based on a portable HPGe detector and ratemeters were tested in the field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Colorectal Dis
May 2023
Background: Videocapsule endoscopy (VCE) is considered the gold standard for overt and obscure gastrointestinal bleeding (OGIB), after negative upper and lower endoscopy. Nonetheless, VCE's diagnostic yield is suboptimal, and it represents a costly, time-consuming, and often not easily available technique. In order to evaluate bleeding risk in patients with atrial fibrillation, several scoring systems have been proposed, but their utilization outside the original clinical setting has rarely been explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCoronary artery atherosclerosis is a constantly evolving disease. Over the years, new drug therapies have been shown to reduce adverse cardiovascular events and improve the survival of patients with coronary artery disease. New intracoronary imaging modalities, including intravascular ultrasound, optical coherence tomography, and near-infrared spectroscopy, have been introduced to detect the anatomic changes which follow an effective lipid-lowering therapy in human coronary plaques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Heart J Suppl
November 2022
The current prognostic stratification of asymptomatic patients with Brugada syndrome is suboptimal. The so-called 'Brugada burden' concept is certainly emerging: the more extensive are the electrocardiographic alterations of the syndrome in space (peripheral as well as precordial derivations) and in time (persistence in the follow-up of electrocardiographic alterations), the greater the probability of arrhythmic events. Numerous clinical and electrocardiographic markers have been considered risk factors, but none of them alone is able to guide the choice of whether or not to implant a defibrillator, the only therapy so far proved effective in preventing SD (sudden death) in these patients.
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