Publications by authors named "Scarciolla O"

We describe a patient with fever, pancytopenia, and hepato-splenomegaly associated with the finding of neoplastic lymphoid cells and histiocytes with hemophagocytosis in the peripheral smear; the diagnostic features were suggestive for a biological overlap between a large B-cell lymphoma with intravascular involvement and the Asian variant of intravascular B-cell lymphoma.

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Background: Measurement of serum cobalamin (Cbl) levels is the standard investigation for assessing vitamin B12 deficiency. Falsely increased values of Cbl can be caused by alcoholic liver disease. Measurement of total vitamin B12 serum levels might be misleading in alcoholics, because a tissue metabolic deficiency is possible even with normal serum Cbl levels.

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The term "phacomatosis" refers to a growing number of sporadic genetic skin disorders characterized by the combination of two or more different nevi and possibly resulting from non-allelic twin spotting. While phacomatosis pigmentovascularis (PPV) and pigmentokeratotica represent the most common patterns, some patients do not fit with either condition and are temporarily classified as unique phenotypes. We report on an 8-year-old boy with striking right hemihypoplasia, resulting in limb asymmetry and fixed dislocation of right hip.

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Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a clinically heterogeneous disease characterized by recurrent chromosomal aberrations of prognostic significance. We aimed to evaluate the potential of the multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) assay to detect genomic alterations in CLL. Highly purified (>90%) peripheral mononuclear CD19+ cell populations from 100 untreated CLL patients (pts) in early stage disease (Binet stage A) were included in this study.

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Background: Cardiac complications secondary to iron overload remain a significant matter in patients with transfusion dependent anemias.

Patients And Methods: To evaluate cardiac siderosis, Magnetic resonance imaging T2* (MRI T2*) was performed in 3 cohorts of transfusion dependent patients: 99 with thalassemia major (TM), 20 with thalassemia intermedia (TI), and 10 with acquired anemias (AA). Serum ferritin was measured and all patients underwent echocardiographic evaluation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Parkinson's disease is when certain brain cells start to break down, and it can be caused by changes in specific genes.
  • A new test called PD-MLPA can find these gene changes better than older methods.
  • In tests, PD-MLPA successfully spotted known mutations and even found new ones in patients with early-onset Parkinsonism.
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Autosomal recessive parkinsonism is a genetic condition closely resembling Parkinson disease, the only distinguishing features being an earlier age at onset and a slower disease progression. Three causative genes have been identified so far. While exon rearrangements are frequently encountered in the Parkin gene, most PINK1 mutations are represented by single nucleotide changes.

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  • Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a disease that causes muscle weakness and affects how people move, and it comes in three types based on how bad it is and when it starts.
  • Most cases (about 95%) happen because of a missing gene called SMN1, which is important for muscle health.
  • A new testing method called MLPA can find out if someone has this missing gene and even identify healthy people who carry the gene but don't show symptoms, making it a better way to diagnose SMA.
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Background: The SRY gene encodes for a testis-specific transcription factor (TDF, testis determining factor) that plays a key role in sexual differentiation and development in males. Several SRY mutations have been described in patients with gonadal dysgenesis, accounting for 10-15% of the sex reversal cases. The reported mutations are both point mutations and deletions, mostly involving the high mobility group (HMG) box domain of SRY, which is a conserved region through the evolution, suggesting that SRY function strictly depends on the HMG box.

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Persistent elevation of serum creatine kinase (CK) in individuals with normal neurological and laboratory examinations has been called idiopathic hyperCKemia (IH). IH has been reported in rare families and was recently ascribed to caveolin-3 gene mutations. We retrospectively found that IH was familial in 13 of 28 subjects in whom serum CK was measured in relatives.

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Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) are caused in the majority of cases by deletions of the DMD gene and are readily detectable in affected males by multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR). However, different approaches must be used for the identification of female carriers, in which deletions are not detectable by PCR, because of the presence of a normal X chromosome. In this study, we used the multiple ligation probe amplification (MLPA) tool for the identification of female carriers of DMD deletions or duplications in 12 families with a single affected male, 10 of which were previously diagnosed as carriers of a DMD rearrangement, and the remaining two as having an unknown disease-causing mutation.

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Article Synopsis
  • The male-specific region (MSY) of the Y chromosome is crucial for male sex determination and sperm production, housing many fertility-related genes in ampliconic regions.
  • Genetic evolution suggests that some of these Y chromosome genes originated from X-linked or autosomal ancestors, which may enhance male fertility; however, this has only been confirmed for genes DAZ and CDY.
  • The study identifies a homologous region on chromosome 8q11.2 that includes multiple genes linked to fertility and highlights a newly discovered gene, BEYLA, along with its genomic structure and expression patterns.
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Van der Woude syndrome (VWS) is the most common type of syndromic orofacial cleft, being characterised by variable association of lower lip pits, cleft lip and cleft palate. VWS is transmitted in an autosomal dominant manner, with high penetrance and variable expressivity, and a gene for this disease has been mapped in 1q32-q41. Very recently, mutations of the interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) gene have been found in VWS patients, suggesting that this gene plays an important role in the orofacial development.

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The 677T allele of the MTHFR gene has been suggested to represent a factor of risk for male infertility. In order to confirm this association, we investigated the presence of the 677T allele in 93 Italian infertile patients, selected after the exclusion of other possible genetic causes of infertility, and in 105 Italian fertile controls. The homozygous 677TT genotype was present in 20.

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