Publications by authors named "Savorani G"

Background: Using the 'surprise' question 'Would you be surprised if this patient died in the next year?' may improve physicians' prognostic accuracy and identify people appropriate for palliative care.

Aim: Determine the prognostic accuracy of general practitioners asking the 'surprise' question about their patients with advanced (stage IV) cancer.

Design: Prospective cohort study.

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Background: A comprehensive lifestyle approach is suggested as first-line treatment for the individual features of the metabolic syndrome, but the results in community medicine are usually discouraging. No study has tested the feasibility of an integrated approach between general practitioners (GPs) and specialist centers.

Methods: We report the process analysis on baseline data of a randomized study based on the integration between GPs, selecting patients on the basis of a pre-defined grid and specific targets, and a specialist center, providing informative material and arranging courses of counseling and cognitive-behavioral therapy, using a shared database.

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Antipsychotic drugs are widely used in people with dementia to treat neuropsychiatic symptoms such as aggression, agitation and psychosis. Using antipsychotic agents in older patients is difficult, because it depends on co-morbid conditions, side effects, dosing strategies, duration of treatments and combinations of various medications. This paper discusses the use of atypical antipsychotics in a 1-year-observation on a group of patients followed by an expert dementia center.

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This study evaluated various outcomes of home care in a group of 121 chronically ill and frail elderly subjects followed for 24 months, starting from September 2001. The scheduled times of follow up were baseline, 6, 12, and 24 months. Subjects of both sexes were assigned to one of two groups.

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Techniques of reality orientation in dementia are widely used around the world and indifferent settings. Nevertheless, after the controversies for adverse effects and frustration,by the new millennium "a new era" is coming on where cognitive rehabilitation "has come of age" and a series of positive results appeared until the fulfillment in the global and person-centered approach. This renewed technique may no more be based only on cognitive psychology but it is necessary to apply a more complete psychosocial approach taking into account also emotional, behavioral and functional domains of the globally considered person.

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This controlled study evaluated various outcomes in a group of 127 chronically ill and frail elderly patients when discharged from a hospital ward, and cared at home, enrolled during 12 months starting from September 2001. The observation of patients is programmed to be of two years from enrollment, with a scheduled program of follow up at baseline,6, 12, and 24 months. Patients (of both sexes) were randomly assigned to one of two groups: (i) Control group (61 patients: mean age 85.

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Aims: Different criteria have been proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and by the Third Report of the National Cholesterol Education Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (ATPIII) for the diagnosis of the metabolic syndrome. Its identification is of particular importance for coronary risk assessment.

Methods: The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome was determined according to the two different proposals in 1569 consecutive subjects with Type 2 diabetes.

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To evaluate the stability and reproducibility of selected peripheral oxidative stress markers and their possible relation to cognitive performance, three different blood samples were taken at 7- to 10-day intervals from 11 patients with probable Alzheimer disease (AD) and 11 nondemented controls. Blood samples were also collected once from 6 patients with vascular dementia (VD). Alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (ACT), C-reactive protein (CRP), glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px), superoxide dismutase (SOD), lactoferrin (LTF), and total lipid peroxidation (LPO) were then measured.

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Despite the many instruments available for assessing elderly people, there is a need for additional methods to measure mental decline that would also be applicable in cross sectional and longitudinal studies. With this purpose in mind, our group developed and checked a new instrument, the Index of Mental Decline (IMD), which consists of five clusters of items intended for the assessment of cognition, personal interrelationships, affective disorders, apathy and somatic complaints. To improve its consistency, all clusters and items were evaluated individually, according to their clinical impact.

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The metabolic activity of circulating neutrophils from patients with senile dementia of the Alzheimer's type (SDAT) was investigated by a chemiluminescence assay and compared with that of old and young healthy controls. Neutrophils from demented patients showed a higher and faster chemiluminescence emission than those of controls when activated in vitro by autologous or heterologous sera. Granulocytes from patients with Parkinson's disease did not show an increased chemiluminescence activity.

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The inhibition of alpha-chymotrypsin induced by cerebrospinal fluid from patients with senile dementia of Alzheimer's type, vascular dementia, and nondemented controls was investigated. We optimized the sensitivity of the assay so that the inhibition of alpha-chymotrypsin could be measured in all samples. The competitive inhibition was proportional to the amount of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) added to the reaction mixture.

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Plasma zinc levels were measured in young controls, aged controls, patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type and patients with non-Alzheimer type dementia. Zinc levels decreased with age; however, no difference was found between patients with dementia and age-matched controls. Plasma levels of active or inactive thymulin, a nonapeptide produced and released by the thymus gland, were also determined in young controls, aged controls, patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type and patients with non-Alzheimer type dementia.

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The authors point out the importance of geriatric medicine in the hospital in its traditional goals and in some new proposals: geriatric case finding, general practitioner's education, teaching in nursing schools, family education, pre-retirement courses etc.

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The authors, after an evaluation of the historical course of the geriatrics in England and its contents, point out the importance of this specialty from a demografic, economical, social, epidemiological and cultural point of view.

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