117,658 research outputs found

    Journal of Alzheimer's Disease

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    The Journal of Alzheimer's Disease (JAD) is an international multidisciplinary journal to facilitate progress in understanding the etiology, pathogenesis, epidemiology, genetics, behavior, treatment and psychology of Alzheimer's disease. The journal publishes research reports, reviews, short communications, hypotheses, ethics reviews, book reviews, and letters-to-the-editor. The journal is dedicated to providing an open forum for original research that will expedite our fundamental understanding of Alzheimer's disease

    Palaeontographica. Il Disegno e L‟Immaginario della Vita Antica

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    recensione al volume di Emanuele Garbin: "Palaeontographica. Il Disegno E L‟Immaginario Della Vita Antica

    Cerebral hemodynamics and cognitive performances in bilateral asymptomatic carotid stenosis.

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    Cerebral hemodynamics and cognitive performance in bilateral asymptomatic carotid stenosis. Balucani C, Viticchi G, Falsetti L, Silvestrini M. From the Department of Neurology (C.B.), University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy; Department of Neurology and Stroke Center (C.B.), SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY; Neurological Clinic (G.V., M.S.), Marche Polytechnic University, Ancona; and Internal and Subintensive Medicine (L.F.), Ospedali Riuniti, Ancona, Italy. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate cognitive performance in subjects with bilateral asymptomatic carotid stenosis (B-ACS) compared to subjects with unilateral ACS and to subjects with no carotid stenosis (CS) and to explore the relationship between cognitive performance and cerebral hemodynamics status in B-ACS. METHODS: The neuropsychological investigation included phonemic (ph) and categorical (ca) Verbal Fluency (VF) tests for exploring the left brain functions and Colored Progressive Matrices (CPM) and Complex Figure Copy Test (CFCT) for the right brain. Cerebral hemodynamics status was assessed using the transcranial Doppler-based breath-holding index test. RESULTS: A total of 333 subjects were included: 127 B-ACS, 73/77 left/right unilateral ACS, 56 no CS, mean age 70 ± 3.78 years, 65% male. Subjects with B-ACS and subjects with unilateral ACS showed significantly lower scores in all cognitive tests compared to subjects with no CS (p < 0.05). Subjects with B-ACS with left impaired hemodynamics status showed a significantly reduced ph-VF score, from 13.4 (95% confidence interval [CI] 11.2-15.8) to 7.5 (95% CI 5.4-9.7), and a reduced ca-VF score, from 19.7 (95% CI 18.1-24.1) to 10.8 (95% CI 9.5-15.1), compared to subjects with no CS. Similarly, impaired cerebral hemodynamics in the right side was associated with a significantly reduced CPM score, from an estimated mean of 34.2 (95% CI 29.8-35.4) to 24.6 (95% CI 20.2-25.8), and CFCT score from 37.0 (95% CI 32.0-37.4) to 27.1 (95% CI 23.3-28.7). All comparisons were p < 0.05. CONCLUSION: Subjects with B-ACS and subjects with unilateral ACS are more likely to have cognitive dysfunction compared to subjects with no CS. There appears to be a link between cognitive dysfunction and hemodynamics impairment due to carotid stenosis

    AFICILL Database

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    Dataset for the AFICILL Stud

    Metafisica popolare: il quartiere Don Bosco e la periferia meridionale romana tra paesaggio e artificio

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    Il quartiere Don Bosco, nella periferia meridionale di Roma, rappresenta uno tra gli esempi più emblematici del dopoguerra romano, anche in ragione del suo travagliato sviluppo urbano. Elaborato a partire dal piano regolatore del 1931 e completato a metà degli anni ’50, in piena epoca di speculazione edilizia, il Don Bosco si caratterizza per l’ impianto organico fortemente gerarchizzato, che lo differenzia da altre esperienze coeve, contrapponendolo ai vicini “tre tuscolani” di Muratori, Libera e De Renzi, latori di una scrittura urbana per parti. I monumentali intensivi di Gaetano Rapisardi che, unitamente alla basilica di San Giovanni Bosco, definiscono la piazza, uno spazio senza precedenti tra i quartieri di edilizia pubblica in Italia, ma anche gli interessanti progetti minori che costellano il quartiere, così come la cornice scenica del grande asse viario -aperto e chiuso dai due fondali tematici- costituiscono l’immagine peculiare di questo frammento poco indagato della periferia di Roma, a metà tra la visione piacentiniana e le scenografie di Cinecittà.Popular Metaphysics: the Don Bosco district and the southern Roman suburbs between landscape and artifice Marked by majestic perspectives, visually related to other Roman avenues, and semantically connected to the Mausoleum of Alexander Severus, the Don Bosco quarter, in Rome, features the lithic nature of a wing and the obsessive repetition of its housing blocks. It was mainly designed by Gaetano Rapisardi in the early Fifties, by further developing the 1931 Plan of Rome, and can be considered as the only discontinuity in the national panorama of low-cost housing quarters, more related to foreign contexts than other Italian coeval experiences. Although almost completely neglected by the Italian architectural debate, the Don Bosco quarter portrays a sophisticated spatial organism, due to the monumental dimension of its blocks and the perspectival majesty of Viale San Giovanni Bosco, one of the biggest urban axis in Italy. All those elements tipify a unique morphological area, enclosed by a couple of poles: the Mausoleum and Cinecittà

    The role of Framingham risk score in the progression from mild cognitive impairment to dementia

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    Background: Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) often represents the clinical manifestation of cognitive deterioration preceding Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Currently, there are no reliable approaches for an objective evaluation of the risk of developing AD in patients affected by amnestic MCI (aMCI). Objective: The aim of this study was to verify whether the Framingham cardiovascular risk profile (FCRP) could be useful to identify patients at the highest risk of conversion from MCI to AD. Methods: Patients with aMCI were carefully investigated to assess their vascular risk profile. They were also submitted to a comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation. FCRP was calculated for each patient and apolipoprotein E (ApoE) genotype was determined from peripheral blood cells. The main outcome was defined as a conversion to AD within 24 months after inclusion. Results: 385 consecutive aMCI subjects were included. Age, FCRP, and vascular age showed a fairly predictive value on conversion to AD. Selecting the subpopulation of ApoE ε4 carriers, we observed that FCRP had an increased performance in predicting the conversion. The rate of conversion increased from 12.5% in the FCRP low-risk group to 43.2% in the high-risk group (p < 0.0001). ApoE ε4 carriers had a 3.7-times increased probability of conversion with respect to the other subjects (p < 0.0001). Conclusions: FCRP assessment could be considered a reliable approach to predict conversion to AD in aMCI subjects. The presence of ApoE ε4 increases significantly the risk of conversion. These data confirm the narrow relationship between genetic and vascular risk factors in influencing the evolution of cognitive impairment

    A data-driven clinical prediction rule for pulmonary embolism

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    Purpose: Pulmonary embolism (PE), a life-threatening emergency is underdiagnosed because of a non-specific presentation.First-level exams (clinical exhamination, electrocardiography, blood gas analysis and laboratory tests)have low sensitivity and specificity.Clinical prediction rulers (CPRs)such as Wells and Geneva Revised, have been derived from different combinations of these exams. Our aim was to perform a comparison between the two score systems in our population and to derive a new CPR using an Artificial Neural Network (ANN). Methods: We enrolled 755 consecutive outpatients with suspect of PE (351 males, mean age 71±14years) and analyzed 24 clinical,instrumental and laboratoristic variables and Wells and Geneva scores.Logistic regression with ROC curves was used to evaluate the the diagnostic reliability of the scores. To derive the new classifier,the dataset was first split (in supervised classification step)into a train and a test subset containing 2/3 ad 1/3 of the patients' dataset,respectively.To find the optimal configuration of the new classifier we tested two different ANNs:a non-linear feed-forward ANN with back-propagation and a Levenberg-Marquardt network.For both we fixed the topological configurations of the network (one hidden layer,one output neuron)and stressed the system to find the optimal number of neurons in the hidden layer for the best configuration among highest AUC with the highest number of hit in the validation process and the minimum epochs.We repeated this study changing the dimension of the input dataset in two ways:excluding interactively some features or performing the reduction of the dimensionality of the feature space with principal component analysis. The application of the trained ANN to a "map set" gave,for each patient,the probability of belonging to the "pathological" or "healthy" class, obtaining the new CPR.Automatic classifications were compared with the manual ones, calculating the Jaccard coefficient, giving a measure of the quality. The system was implemented in Matlab using Neural Network toolboxes and PRTools. Results: In our population,Wells performed better than Revised Geneva (AUC 0.75%,0.63%,respectively),while our CPR (feed-forward ANN with back-propagation) obtained an average AUC of 0.86% from the train set and Jaccard coefficient 0.86 from the map set.The optimal ANN configuration was with 3 neurons in the hidden layer.The difference among the three ROC curves resulted statistically significant. Conclusions: An ANN-based CPR performs better in the clinical prediction of PE than classical rulers without increasing the number of items required for the analysis

    Scaling-up of wastewater bioremediation by Tetradesmus obliquus, sequential bio-treatments of nutrients and metals

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    Microalgae may be exploited in water or wastewater treatment facilities to reduce excess concentrations of nutrients and metals to comply with regulatory limits. In this study, we characterized the growth and phosphorus (P) removal capacity of an isolated strain of Tetradesmus obliquus VRUC280. Investigations were carried out from laboratory scale (50 mL) up to a 100 L outdoor photobioreactor (PBR). After 10 days, batch cultures removed up to 74% of the media P, while in the PBR, 95% removal was achieved within five days. The harvested biomass was then inactivated (freeze-dried) and used for metal adsorption tests, employing solutions containing 6.0 mg Cu L −1 or 4.8 mg Ni L −1 . Metal removal rates were evaluated after 15, 30, 60 and 120 min by the analysis of liquid and biomass metal contents. For the latter, a specific biomass digestion method was developed. Cu removal ranged between 50% and 65%, while for Ni, removal varied between 30% and 50%. 300–400 mg Cu Kg DW −1 and 130–250 mg Ni Kg DW −1 were rapidly adsorbed on the cell surface of T. obliquus (ca. 15–30 min incubations). This study demonstrates the potential of microalgae, in this case T. obliquus, to remove sequentially P and metals from aqueous media
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