Publications by authors named "Picciotto G"

Childhood experiences, both positive and negative, play a crucial role in shaping individual development. Extensive research has demonstrated that adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have long-lasting negative effects on physical, mental, and social health. Over the last two decades, many studies have found a strong link between ACEs and poor health outcomes in adults.

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This study examines whether adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) predict long-term health issues and how ACEs, alongside stress, impact well-being and cognitive abilities in older adults. 279 adults were categorized into three age groups (30-46, 47-60, and 61-80). Participants completed an online survey assessing health problems, stress, resilience, and ACEs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most prevalent type of localization-related epilepsy, linked to cognitive decline that affects memory and attention.
  • This study compared TLE patients with healthy individuals using cognitive tests (MoCA and MMSE) and neurophysiological measures (ERPs, especially P300).
  • Results showed TLE patients scored lower in cognitive functions and had abnormalities in ERPs, suggesting significant cognitive deficits and the need for early intervention in TLE to manage these impairments.
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Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common neuropsychiatric disorder among school-age children, characterized by persistent behavioral patterns of inattention and/or hyperactivity/impulsivity. These behaviors can create stress for teachers and negatively affect teacher-student interactions. This study hypothesized that a high frequency of ADHD students in the classroom can increase internal and external entropy, ultimately resulting in a negative stress impact on teachers.

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Previous research has shown that acute psychosocial stress impairs cognitive abilities, but recent studies suggest that this may be due to a decrease in willingness to engage in cognitive effort rather than a direct effect on performance. The aim of the present study was to replicate this last research and verify the influence of acute stress on avoidance of cognitive effort and cognitive performance. Fifty young, healthy individuals (26 females, 24 males) aged between 18 and 40 years were randomly assigned to two groups: a stress condition and a control condition.

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Often micronutrient deficiencies cannot be detected when patient is already following a long-term gluten-free diet with good compliance (LTGFDWGC). The aim of this narrative review is to evaluate the most recent literature that considers blood micronutrient deficiencies in LTGFDWGC subjects, in order to prepare dietary supplementation advice (DSA). A research strategy was planned on PubMed by defining the following keywords: celiac disease, vitamin B12, iron, folic acid, and vitamin D.

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Cardiac screening is recommended to prevent cardiovascular death after renal transplantation. This retrospective observational study illustrates the results of application of a cardiac assessment algorithm in a series of 558 renal transplant candidates at a single center in Turin, Italy. A dipyridamole-stress sestamibi myocardial scintiscan (DMS) performed in 302/558 (54.

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Background: Cholesterol crystal emboli syndrome (CCE) is an emerging disease, whose progression reflects the currently observed increase in cardiovascular diseases. Diagnostic criteria shifted from pathological to clinical criteria: creatinine increase, skin lesions, recent endovascular interventions and severe vasculopathy). Diabetes, hypertension and diffuse vascular disease are inter-linked, major risk factors.

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Purpose: To evaluate the sensitivity, specificity, and usefulness of dual-phase 99mTc-Sestamibi scintigraphy (SS) and sonography (US) of the neck, alone and in combination, as noninvasive adenoma localizing procedures in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism prior to parathyroidectomy.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the charts of 79 patients with parathyroid (PT) adenomas and confirmed diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism who were evaluated with SS and US prior to successful parathyroidectomy.

Results: Ninety-three adenomas were removed during bilateral neck exploration.

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Acute pyelonephritis is a common complication of kidney transplantation, occurring in up to 1% of grafts. Diagnosis is mainly clinical and atypical presentations have seldom been reported. The diagnostic role of imaging techniques has not been defined.

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Background: Acute pyelonephritis is a potential cause of kidney scars.

Aim: To evaluate the relationship between clinical, laboratory and imaging data and the development of kidney scars in acute pyelonephritis.

Methods: All consecutive patients hospitalized for acute uncomplicated pyelonephritis in our nephrology unit from June 1996 to June 2004 were considered: 58 females, median age 25.

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This report describes the rapid and complete reversal of proteinuria after preemptive transplantation in diabetic nephropathy. Case 1 was a 42-year-old woman with type 1 diabetes (before pancreas-kidney graft: serum creatinine 1.6 mg/dL and proteinuria 9.

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Background: Nephrotic syndrome due to diabetic nephropathy is presently considered an indication for pancreas-kidney transplantation even in the absence of severe renal failure. Reversal of the nephrotic syndrome has been reported, but the mechanisms of this effect are unclear.

Aim: To describe the renal morphofunctional pattern and the pattern of proteinuria before and after preemptive pancreas-kidney transplantation.

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Unlabelled: Captopril renography is a reliable, widely used test for the functional diagnosis of renovascular hypertension. Well-recognized drawbacks of the procedure include reduced accuracy in patients with bilateral disease or renal impairment as well as the possible interference from concurrent antihypertensive medication (diuretics, beta-blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, calcium channel blockers). Currently, no data exist regarding the reliability of captopril renography in patients with renovascular hypertension evaluated while they are under chronic treatment with angiotensin II (AT1) receptor antagonists (Sartans).

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Background: The effects of renin-angiotensin system blockade on nitric oxide (NO), especially in pathological conditions, are far from being established. The influence of kinins and angiotensin type 2 receptor are largely speculative and based mainly on animal studies. This study was aimed to address these aspects in humans.

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The pathogenic mechanisms that lead to renal deposition of the cryoprecipitable IgM rheumatoid factor-IgG complexes in essential mixed cryoglobulinaemia (EMC) are unknown. Defective removal of cryoprecipitable complexes from the circulation has been postulated in EMC-associated nephritis. To test this hypothesis, the kinetics and fate of a trace dose of 123I-radiolabelled autologous cryoglobulins were analysed in 13 patients with EMC grouped according to renal involvement.

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Unlabelled: PURPOSE AND DESIGN OF STUDY: Asymmetric-induced changes of the renogram under angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition (ACE-i), i.e. lateralization, is probably the most distinctive finding for the detection of haemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis (RAS) in compensated kidney, since bilateral and symmetric patterns are non-specific.

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Heavy alcohol intake and/or lipotrope-deficient diet induced hepatocellular injury and mesangial deposition of IgA and often IgG in Lewis rats. The experimental animals showing more severe urinary abnormalities and histologic damage in the glomeruli had increased levels of IgA antibodies to dietary antigens and altered intestinal permeability. Based on human studies, the prolonged circulation of IgA-containing complexes associated with the liver disease could be envisaged as important for the development of mesangial IgA deposits.

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The renal damage consequent to cyclosporine A (CsA) administration ranges from hemodynamic alterations to irreversible chronic lesions. The initial vasoconstriction depends upon the imbalance between the various modulators of the renal vascular tone, among which the most powerful are endothelins and nitric oxide (NO). CsA could play a crucial role by inhibiting the Ca++/calmodulin-mediated activation of the constitutive NO synthase (NOS) isoform, which converts L-arginine (L-Arg) into NO and citrulline, with a 1:1 stoichiometry.

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