7 results match your criteria: "Mazzini Institute[Affiliation]"

Objectives: In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of malaria on the lives of Roman pontiffs.

Materials And Methods: The histories of all 264 popes from Saint Peter to John Paul II were extensively studied.

Results: Malaria affected the lives of Roman pontiffs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The purpose of this study is to explore the historical background of edema as a prognostic sign in popes, a special category of medical subjects whose health status was closely monitored and chronicled because of their unique important status in the events of their times. Nine out of 51 popes, who reigned in the years 1555-1978, died edematous at a mean age of 75.5 years of age.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pius X (1835-1914): the last gouty pope.

G Ital Nefrol

February 2022

Division of Heart Surgery, Department of translational Medical Sciences, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Naples, Italy.

Gout is a common, complex, systemic and well-studied form of chronic inflammatory arthritis in adults. It is due to the deposition of sodium monourate crystals in peripheral joints and periarticular tissues driven by hyperuricemia. Gout is the oldest recorded inflammatory arthritis to affect humankind, with roots stretching back to 2460 BC.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Refeeding syndrome as described in 1507 by Antonio Benivieni in Florence.

Nephrol Dial Transplant

July 2022

Associate Professor Division of Heart Surgery, Department of Translational Medical Sciences, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Naples, Italy.

In 1981, Weinsier and Krumdieck described death resulting from overzealous total parenteral nutrition in two chronically malnourished, but stable, patients given aggressive total parenteral nutrition. This was the birth of what is now called the refeeding syndrome, a nutrition-related disorder associated with severe electrolyte disturbances. The purpose of this work is to demonstrate that refeeding syndrome was first described medically in Florence by Antonio Benivieni in 1507 in his book On Some Hidden and Remarkable Causes of Diseases and Cures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF