Publications by authors named "Rossini K"

Article Synopsis
  • Lifelong exercise helps older people keep their muscles strong and healthy by improving how their muscle fibers connect and grow.
  • In older athletes, muscles showed more slow-type fibers, which are important for endurance activities, compared to those who didn't exercise much.
  • Studies since 2013 have confirmed that staying active can prevent muscle loss and keep older adults independent for longer.
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Lymphedema is a challenging condition that occurs as a complication to many life-limiting medical conditions. It has a number of associated symptoms including pain, functional impairments, and emotional distress. Majority of treatment interventions have been studied and applied outside of the palliative care context.

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Background: The dietary limitation during pregnancy influences the growth and development of the fetus and offspring and their health into adult life. The mechanisms underlying the adverse effects of gestational protein restriction (GPR) in the development of the offspring hearts are not well understood.

Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of GPR on cardiac structure in male rat offspring at day 60 after birth (d60).

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Despite the ravages of long term denervation there is structural and ultrastructural evidence for survival of muscle fibers in mammals, with some fibers surviving at least ten months in rodents and 3-6 years in humans. Further, in rodents there is evidence that muscle fibers may regenerate even after repeated damage in the absence of the nerve, and that this potential is maintained for several months after denervation. While in animal models permanently denervated muscle sooner or later loses the ability to contract, the muscles may maintain their size and ability to function if electrically stimulated soon after denervation.

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Objective: To assess involuntary admitted patients' experience and understanding of their hearing with the judge ruling on civil detention cases according to the Act of July 5th 2011.

Methods: The evaluation was conducted through face-to-face interviews, from a semi-structured questionnaire, with 48 involuntary admitted patients under psychiatric care admission on a third party request (ASPDT) or on state representative decision (ASPDRE) (participation rate=96%).

Results: Few participants knew the name of the hearing place (13%) and the judge's exact title (21%).

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Aging is usually accompanied by a significant reduction in muscle mass and force. To determine the relative contribution of inactivity and aging per se to this decay, we compared muscle function and structure in (a) male participants belonging to a group of well-trained seniors (average of 70 years) who exercised regularly in their previous 30 years and (b) age-matched healthy sedentary seniors with (c) active young men (average of 27 years). The results collected show that relative to their sedentary cohorts, muscle from senior sportsmen have: (a) greater maximal isometric force and function, (b) better preserved fiber morphology and ultrastructure of intracellular organelles involved in Ca(2+) handling and ATP production, (c) preserved muscle fibers size resulting from fiber rescue by reinnervation, and (d) lowered expression of genes related to autophagy and reactive oxygen species detoxification.

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Three different samples of white chocolate were prepared: a sample with a synthetic antioxidant, another with casein peptides as natural antioxidant, and a third sample without any kind of antioxidant. Parameters associated with lipid oxidation and non-enzymatic browning were evaluated in the different samples of white chocolate during 10 months storage at 20 and 28°C. Acidity, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances and peroxide values increased with the incubation time.

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Introduction And Objectives: Evidence showed that physical forces, as passive stretching or active contraction, may counteract various kinds of skeletal muscle atrophy due, for instance, to muscle immobilization, pathophysiology or denervation. Accordingly, active muscle contraction induced by functional electric stimulation is helpful to reduce the muscle atrophic state in denervated man. Moreover, there is evidence that also passive mechanical stimulation of the sarcolemnic membrane may reduce the atrophic muscle state.

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The relative importance of muscle activity versus neurotrophic factors in the maintenance of muscle differentiation has been greatly debated. Muscle biopsies from spinal cord injury patients, who were trained with an innovative protocol of functional electrical stimulation (FES) for prolonged periods (2.4-9.

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Systemic autoimmune diseases are characterized by the presence in patient sera of high titers of autoantibodies directed against self-antigens. The characterization of specific autoantigen-autoantibody system is very important for research as well as for diagnostic tools and several techniques can be employed in such immunological studies. In this review an overview of the different biochemical methods of antigen preparation and the specific methodological applications is given, also describing potential critical aspects and benefits of the different protocols.

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Regular exercise is known to improve physiological and functional capacity of many organs due to adaptive processes. We have previously shown that acute exercise in untrained rats results in apoptosis of renal tubular cells and that the apoptotic process seems to be associated with stimulation of angiotensin II, AT1 and AT2 receptors. In this study, we examined the influence of regular training on apoptosis and the role of angiotensin II receptors and antioxidant enzymes in mediating the adaptive response in renal tubular cells.

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The induction of exercise-induced apoptosis in not actively involved in exercise organs, such as kidney could be a result of oxidative stress. Metallothionein (MT) exerts a protective effect in the cell against oxidative stress and apoptosis. We have previously demonstrated an increased incidence of apoptosis in distal tubular cells and collecting ducts in rat kidney after acute exercise.

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This paper presents biopsy analyses in support of the clinical evidence of muscle recovery induced by a new system of life-long functional-electrical-stimulation (FES) training in permanent spinal-motoneuron-denervated human muscle. Not earlier than 1 year after subjects experienced complete conus cauda lesion, their thigh muscles were electrically stimulated at home for several years with large skin surface electrodes and an expressly designed stimulator that delivered much longer impulses than those presently available for clinical use. The poor excitability of long-term denervated muscles was first improved by several months of twitch-contraction training.

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Morphologic characteristics of the long-term denervated muscle in animals suggest that some original fibers are lost and some of those seen are the result of repeated cycles of fiber regeneration. Muscle biopsies from lower motoneuron denervated patients enrolled in the EU Project RISE show the characteristics of long-term denervation. They present a few atrophic or severely atrophic myofibers dispersed among adipocytes and connective tissue (denervated degenerated muscle, DDM).

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Skeletal muscle regeneration is a powerful, naturally occurring process of tissue reconstruction that follows myofiber damage secondary to myotoxic injury that does not normally affect the tissue circulation and scaffold. The ablated tissue, in traumatology and free muscle grafts, is frequently replaced by scars. The final outcome is poor even after in situ myoblast seeding of the harvested muscle.

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Autologous skeletal myoblast transplantation may be used to ameliorate the healing process following myocardium infarct and, hopefully, cardiomyopathies. Despite successful animal experimentation, several issues need to be addressed in clinical settings, i.e.

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Over the last 30 years there has been considerable interest in the use of functional electrical stimulation (FES) to restore movement to the limbs of paralyzed patients. Spinal cord injury causes a rapid loss in both muscle mass and contractile force. The atrophy is especially severe when the injury involves lower motoneurons because many months after spinal cord injury, atrophy is complicated by fibrosis and fat substitution.

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We investigated the restorative potential of intensive electrical stimulation in a patient with long-standing quadriceps denervation. Stimulation started 18 months after injury. After 26 months, the thighs were visibly less wasted.

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The postmitotic nature and longevity of skeletal muscle fibers permit stable expression of any transfected gene. Direct in vivo injection of plasmid DNA, in both adult and regenerating muscles, is a safe, inexpensive, and easy approach. Here we present an optimized electroporation protocol based on the use of spatula electrodes to transfer cDNA in vivo into the adult myofibers of an anatomically defined muscle, which could be functionally characterized.

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Purpose: The value of dynamic cardiomyoplasty has been brought into question by the disappointing results produced by slow contraction-relaxation cycle and possibly degeneration of the latissimus dorsi muscle (LD) secondary to temporary tenotomy and chronic daily electrical stimulation. Objective of our study is to determine whether daily periods of rest introduced by demand stimulation in the continuous contraction protocol produce systolic assistance and improve clinical results.

Methods: Twelve dynamic cardiomyoplasty patients (mean age 58.

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Due to its high sensitivity, silver staining is a widely popular method for the revelation of biopolymers separated by both native and denaturing electrophoresis. A step-by-step method for the destaining and restaining of overdeveloped/overloaded silver-stained bands is described that is applicable to both proteins and nucleic acids. The procedure significantly improves densitometric analysis of gels that have been silver stained with either commercial kits or solutions made in-house.

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Background: In congestive heart failure (CHF), skeletal muscle shows increased expression of fast myosin heavy chains (MHC) and fibers, muscle atrophy, increased fatigability, and decreased endurance. Atrophy is secondary to myocyte apoptosis, which is probably triggered by tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha). Angiotensin II receptors are thought to play a role in controlling apoptosis.

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Macrophage-muscle cell interactions are complex, and the majority is unknown. The persistence of inflammatory cells in skeletal muscle could be critical for myofiber viability. In the present paper, we show that FasL plays a role in the resolution of muscle inflammation.

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Apoptosis was detected in different muscular diseases, including severe dystrophin deficiency, but apoptotic mechanisms are not completely described in adult skeletal muscle. Studying patients affected by Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and by facio-scapulo-humeral dystrophy (FSHD) we showed an increase of apoptotic myonuclei, bax, and bcl-2-positive myofibers. Positive correlation was detected between apoptotic nuclei and bax expression (p < 0.

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Bupivacaine-induced regeneration was studied in rat soleus muscle under several conditions, with the focus on type 2A and type 1 myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform expression. In denervated muscles, type 1 was absent, whereas type 2A was widely expressed, a pattern of regeneration which appeared to be independent of fibrillation activity of the muscle. Both type 1 and type 2A isoforms were absent in muscles regenerated during tetrodotoxin (TTX) block of impulse conduction in the sciatic nerve, but type 2A was still present when the TTX block was associated with the vinblastine block of axoplasmic flow; vinblastine block alone caused the coexpression of type 1 and type 2A isoforms in the majority of fibers.

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