Publications by authors named "Rocchiccioli F"

General anesthesia is frequently associated to transient hypoxemia and lung atelectasis. Although volatile anesthetics are safe and widely used, their potential role on anesthesia-induced pulmonary impairment has not been fully explored. In this study, we investigated the effect of volatile anesthetic sevoflurane on pulmonary surfactant composition and structure that could contribute to atelectasis.

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Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is released by alveolar epithelial cells during ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) and regulates fluid transport across epithelia. High CO(2) levels are observed in patients with "permissive hypercapnia," which inhibits alveolar fluid reabsorption (AFR) in alveolar epithelial cells. The authors set out to determine whether VILI affects AFR and whether the purinergic pathway is modulated in cells exposed to hypercapnia.

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The apoptotic effector Bid regulates cell death at the level of mitochondria. Under its native state, Bid is a soluble cytosolic protein that undergoes proteolysis and yields a 15 kDa-activated form tBid (truncated Bid). tBid translocates to mitochondria and participates in cytochrome c efflux by a still unclear mechanism, some of them at least mediated by Bax.

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X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), an inherited demyelinating disorder of the central nervous system, can be corrected by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, likely due to the turnover of brain macrophages that are bone marrow derived. ALD is characterized by an accumulation of very long chain fatty acids (VLCFA) due to the deficiency of an ATP binding cassette transporter that imports these fatty acids in peroxisomes. Murine retroviral transduction results in metabolic correction of ALD CD34(+) cells in vitro but reinfusion of these cells into ALD patients would not provide clinical benefit owing to the absence of selective advantage conferred by transgene expression.

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Objective: To analyse to what extent age may alter intestinal permeability (IP) in children and to assess its reliability according to clinical manifestations in cow's milk allergy (CMA).

Design: A routine prospective study was performed in 200 children (12.5+/-23 mo, 0.

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X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) is a genetic demyelinating disorder characterized by accumulation of very long chain fatty acid (VLCFA) in tissues. Lovastatin, an inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase, normalizes VLCFA in fibroblasts and plasma from ALD patients. We dietary treated ALD mice with simvastatin, an analog of lovastatin with similar pharmacokinetics and effects on plasma VLCFA in ALD patients at 20 or 60 mg/kg/day for 6-12 weeks.

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Approximately 70-80% of cases of primary adrenal insufficiency are classified as idiopathic. An effective protocol for the etiological diagnosis of primary adrenal insufficiency is needed to ensure correct patient management. With the aim of developing an algorithm for the etiological diagnosis of primary adrenal insufficiency, we studied 56 Italian patients with nonsurgical primary adrenal insufficiency and 24 French patients with X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) for serum levels of adrenal cortex, steroid-21-hydroxylase (21OHAb), islet cell (ICA), glutamate decarboxylase (GAD65Ab), IA2/ICA512 (ICA512Ab), thyroid peroxidase (TPOAb) autoantibodies, and plasmatic concentrations of very long chain fatty acids (VLCFA).

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We have measured the bile acids in human serum as methyl ester-trimethylsilyl ethers by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) using an electron ionization procedure. The overall method was validated and the detection limit (0.4 mumol/l), linearity (2-30 mumol/l), intra-day and inter-day precision, accuracy and recovery (96.

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Six infants suspected of food allergy during breastfeeding were evaluated using prick tests, total IgE, RASTs and intestinal permeability measurements during fast and provocation with mother's milk. An elimination diet was undertaken in mothers, removing first cow's milk protein (CMP), then, when inefficient, all foods suspected on the clinical history or a positive prick test in the child, followed by oral challenges in mother's diet with the corresponding food. The sole CMP-free diet in mothers always proved insufficient.

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A new thermophilic, xylanolytic, strictly anaerobic, rod-shaped bacterium, strain SEBR 7054T, was isolated from an African oil-producing well. Based on the presence of an outer sheath (toga) and 16S rRNA sequence analysis data, this organism was identified as a member of the genus Thermotoga. Strain SEBR 7054T possessed lateral flagella, had a G + C content of 50 mol%, produced traces of ethanol from glucose but no lactate, and grew optimally in the presence of 0 to 0.

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A 33 year old man has been presenting since childhood an exertional muscle pain syndrome without myoglobinuria. Muscle biopsy revealed a vacuolar myopathy with glycogen excess in subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar spaces which was confirmed by electron microscopy. Plasma production of ammonia was abnormally high during exercise on a bicycle ergometer while the raise of lactate was normal.

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Previous studies have shown that glucose increases the glucose transporter (GLUT2) mRNA expression in the liver in vivo and in vitro. Here we report an analysis of the effects of glucose metabolism on GLUT2 gene expression. GLUT2 mRNA accumulation by glucose was not due to stabilization of its transcript but rather was a direct effect on gene transcription.

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To quantify lactate gluconeogenesis, we developed a gas chromatography-mass spectrometry method based on the infusion of [6,6-2H2]glucose and [3-13C]lactate tracers to 12 infants aged 1-25 mo fasting for 11.5 +/- 1.5 h.

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Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), a lethal demyelinating disease of the brain, is caused by mutations of a gene encoding an ATP-binding transporter, called ALDP, localized in the peroxisomal membrane. It is associated with a defective oxidation of very-long-chain fatty acids, leading to their accumulation in many tissues. This study reports that the retroviral-mediated transfer of the ALD cDNA restored very-long-chain fatty acid oxidation in ALD fibroblasts in vitro following abundant expression and appropriate targeting of the vector-encoded ALDP in peroxisomes.

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Using the infusion of D-(-)-3-hydroxy-[1,2,3,4,-13C4]butyrate at tracer doses, we measured total ketone body turnover in 13 premature and 10 at term infants in the first 2 weeks after birth. The premature infants received parenteral and/or oral feeding. The normal newborns were either recently fed or briefly fasting.

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To determine 13C enrichment at specific positions of glucose, plasma samples (50-100 microliters) were deproteinized using ethyl alcohol, centrifuged, and evaporated to dryness, and the residues were derivatized with acetone/H2SO4 (100/1, v/v). After acetylation, the 1,2:5,6-diisopropylidene-3-O-acetyl-alpha-furanosyl derivative was analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The method was tested using mixtures of natural and 13C-labeled glucose molecules.

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Background: Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency is the most frequent cause of defective congenital fatty acid oxidation. Its molecular characterization is now possible. Case n.

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Phytanic acid (PA) accumulates in patients with adult Refsum disease (ARD) and with peroxisomal disorders. In three related patients with ARD, PA levels were moderately increased in plasma, whereas phytanic oxidation was severely deficient in the fibroblasts. Two of these patients had a significant increase of pipecolic acid in plasma, a finding not reported in ARD, and a fourth related patient, a brother, died at age 17 from a progressive neurologic disorder with unusual clinical and neuropathologic (a spongy degeneration of the white matter) abnormalities for ARD.

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Background: Adrenomyeloneuropathy is an X-linked recessive disorder characterized by myelopathy, peripheral neuropathy, and cerebral demyelination, which develop in association with the accumulation of very-long-chain fatty acids. The administration of oleic and erucic acids inhibits the synthesis of very-long-chain fatty acids. Recently such dietary treatment has been widely publicized as a possible cure for this disease.

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Zellweger syndrome, neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy, and infantile Refsum's disease are genetic disorders characterized by the virtual absence of catalase-positive peroxisomes and a general impairment of peroxisomal functions. Recent studies in these three disorders have provided morphologic evidence of peroxisomal "ghosts" of density 1.10 g/cm3 that contain membrane proteins but lack a majority of the matrix enzyme activities.

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A new sensitive and precise method for the determination of lactic acid in plasmatic microsamples (50 microL) has been developed. Lactic acid was directly extracted from plasma by ethyl acetate in acidic conditions, and analysed as its di-t-butyldimethylsilyl derivative by capillary gas chromatography/electron-impact mass spectrometry (GC/MS). The internal standard was a previously synthesized deuterated compound, 3-[2H]-(2R)-lactic acid.

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Beta-mannosidosis is a recently described inherited disorder with predominantly neurological signs and symptoms as the major manifestations of the disorder. The heterogeneous manifestations of the disease have been presented in seven previous patients. We describe a further case of European descent with an infantile onset of the disease, with the features of speech impairment as the first symptom.

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The relative effect of glucose and lipids on whole-body protein-metabolism kinetics was assessed in seven infants undergoing parenteral feeding. Protein intake was kept constant and nonprotein energy was either provided as glucose alone or as an isoenergetic glucose-lipid mixture according to a randomized crossover trial. Protein metabolism and energy-substrate utilization were assessed by a primed, constant L-[13C]leucine infusion, combined with indirect calorimetry.

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