226 research outputs found
Faust : Dramma Lirico In Cinque Atti ; Da Rappresentarsi Al Teatro Communale Di Trieste Stagione di Autunno 1864 / Dei Signori J. Barbier e M. Carré. Traduzione italiana del signor Achille de Lauzières. Musica Del Maestro C. Gounod
FAUST : DRAMMA LIRICO IN CINQUE ATTI ; DA RAPPRESENTARSI AL TEATRO COMMUNALE DI TRIESTE STAGIONE DI AUTUNNO 1864 / DEI SIGNORI J. BARBIER E M. CARRÉ. TRADUZIONE ITALIANA DEL SIGNOR ACHILLE DE LAUZIÈRES. MUSICA DEL MAESTRO C. GOUNOD
Faust : Dramma Lirico In Cinque Atti ; Da Rappresentarsi Al Teatro Communale Di Trieste Stagione di Autunno 1864 / Dei Signori J. Barbier e M. Carré. Traduzione italiana del signor Achille de Lauzières. Musica Del Maestro C. Gounod (1)
Cover (1)
Title page (3)
Titelseite (5)
Personaggi (7)
Atto Primo (9)
Atto Secondo (15)
Atto Terzo (24)
Atto Quarto (38)
Atto Quinto (49
Right-to-left shunt and obstructive sleep apnea in cluster headache
Introduction: Cluster headache (CH) is a trigeminal autonomic cephalalgia characterized by extremely painful, strictly unilateral, headache attacks accompanied by ipsilateral autonomic symptoms. Only few studies investigated a possible role of right-to-left shunt (R-to-LS) and sleep apnea (OSA) in cluster pathogenesis or expression and no prior studies were located that combined the two conditions in CH patients. Objective: To define the potential combined effect of right-to-left shunt and obstructive sleep apnea in patients with cluster headache and their possible influence on the frequency of attacks and on response to oxygen therapy of headache attacks. Methods: 33 patients with cluster headache were recruited and subsequently invited to undergo polysomnography and a transcranial doppler bubble study. Polysomnography is used for the diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea whereas transcranial doppler bubble study can help diagnose a cardiac right-to-left shunt. Results: Transcranial doppler results demonstrated that 10 out of 31 patients in our cohort had a right-to-left shunt (RLS). Polysomnography revealed that 10 out of 32 patients had obstructive sleep apnea (OSAS). Nineteen out of 33 subjects had one of the two conditions but only one of our 33 patients had both conditions simultaneously. In this sample patients with clear seasonality to their cluster attacks had a higher frequency of obstructive sleep apnea than patients without seasonality. Also a good response to oxygen treatment of the attacks was higher in OSAS patients. Conclusion: the presence of RLS or OSAS, by their possible influence on blood oxygenation, seems to be independently able to predispose to cluster headache or to make it clinically manifest, while the hypothesizable synergistic role between them in favoring cluster headache was not put in evidence. Additionally, our study suggested that the seasonality of cluster headache, may be influenced by the seasonal nature of obstructive sleep apnea. Finally, the presence of sleep breathing alterations seems to be also able to modulate the efficacy of oxygen inhalation on cluster headache attacks
Identification of the infant-type R631C mutation in patients with the benign muscular form of CPT2 deficiency.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2) deficiency is the most common defect of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation; three different clinical phenotypes have been described but the adult form, involving exclusively the skeletal muscle, is the most frequent. We describe herein 3 families where 4 individuals manifested with the adult form of CPT2 deficiency. CPT2 gene molecular analysis identified the homozygous R631C mutation, so far only reported in severe infantile cases. Our data evidenced that R631C mutation is not exclusively detected in the infantile form but it may be present in a wider spectrum of CPT2 phenotypes. These findings indirectly suggest that other modulators may influence clinical severity of CPT2 deficiency
Localising transnationalism. Researching political and cultural events in a context of migration
Salzbrunn M. Localising transnationalism. Researching political and cultural events in a context of migration. COMCAD Arbeitspapiere - working papers, 17. Bielefeld: COMCAD - Center on Migration, Citizenship and Development; 2007.Migration studies have extensively dealt with networks, transnational spaces and migration fields during the last 15 years. Recently, the focus has gone back to the very local rooting of these transnational spaces: Ludger Pries links geographic and sociological aspects by analysing the "spatial spanning of the social"; Nina Glick Schiller and Ayse çaðlar develop a "theory of locality in migration studies". In francophone social geography there is a similar research agenda influenced by Gildas Simon and in migration sociology there are growing interests in researching local-global embedding processes, such as Alain Tarrius’ "La mondialisation par le bas" (globalization from below). Inspired by these approaches, I give two empirical examples for localising transnationalism: By researching political and cultural events in a context of migration, I will show how the understanding of a specific event within an urban context can help us to recognize the rooting of transnational networks. Therefore, my epistemological focus considers festive events as platforms for the negotiation of inclusion/ exclusion and transformation processes within migration. Minorities and majorities are therefore seen as historically-evolved dynamic categories. This choice avoids taking an a priori-defined ethnic, religious or sociocultural category as a key issue in the processes of communitarization. The link of theoretical debates on rituals and events, on translocal social spaces and on globalization leads to innovative methodological instruments in action theory. These allow us to research festive events and their integrative impact in a migratory context. The 1st example will be the Murid parade in New York, where followers of a Sufi group get successfully integrated in the social and urban space in the United States. The 2nd example shows how origin works temporarily as a resource within festive events in Paris, which finally leads to the emergence of a we-group based on a common belonging to an urban territory
De Chirico, l’altro versante della storia
De Chirico e il museo, a cura di M. Ursino, Roma, Galleria nazionale d’arte moderna, autunno 200
Le Stagioni: rivista trimestrale di varietà economica, A. 10 (1971), n. 4 (autunno)
- Sommario #8- Detti memorabili, Giovanni Sartori #9- Lettere dell’autunno. La pizzeria batte la latteria, Mario Longo #11- Lettere dell’autunno. La concorrenza, A. Z. #14- Lettere dell’autunno. Economia dei segnali, M. M. #19- Lettere dell’autunno. Ritorno ai geroglifici, Marco Martinez #22- Lettere dell’autunno. Una riforma da riformare?, Pippo Giani #25- Diario di un contribuente. L’illusione finanziaria, Il Contribuente #31- Note sull’iconografia borghese. Le «scene di conversazione» #35- Note sull’iconografia borghese. I borghesi dal fotografo, Giulio Rizona #36- Epigrammi professionali #42- Scala 1:43, Antonio Caron #47- Guida per la formazione di una cineteca, Giovanni Zanetti #55- Le città. Venezia, Angelo Marin #62- Tutto è geometria #69- Conferito al San Paolo il premio «Torino 1970» #83- Il servizio «American Express Cards» #85- Autunno, Loris Bononi #8
La tutela amministrativa e penale del lavoro tra punizione e riparazione
In the first part, the essay deals with the reasons of the doctrinal’s
disregard for remedies under public law in the field of labour law, pointing
out that the main reasons for disinterest are related to the inefficiency
of sanctions and the impossibility of safeguarding, through such
sanctions, the individual rights of worker in the employment relationship.
In the second part the author focuses on two specific legal institution:
the mandatory warning and the inspector’s provision
Chronic migraine in the first COVID-19 lockdown. the impact of sleep, remote working, and other life/psychological changes
Aims: The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of the first Italian COVID-19 lockdown on patients with chronic migraine (CM). Material and methods: The study was based on an e-mail survey addressed to CM patients of our headache center. The survey evaluated demographic, life style, sleep, psychological, and migraine features during the COVID-19 lockdown period and the month before. The outcomes were migraine impact on daily life and variation in attack frequency, attack duration, migraine pain intensity, migraine symptomatic drugs use per week, and efficacy. Results: Ninety-two patients completed the survey. During the lockdown period, attack frequency was stable in 40,2%, increased in 33,7%, and reduced in 26,1% of patients; attack duration was stable in 55,4%, increased in 23,9%, and reduced in 20,7%. Migraine pain was stable or reduced in 65,2% and increased in 34,8%; number of symptomatic drugs per week was stable in 50%, reduced in 29,3%, and increased in 20,7%; migraine drug efficacy was stable in 73,9%, reduced in 17,4%, and increased in 8,7%. Patients had a HIT-6 score of 64,63 ± 8,81. Significant associations were found with remote working, smoke, education, discontinuation of the therapy performed within headache center, migraine familiarity, sleep, anxiety, perceived stress, concern about future, and COVID-19. Conclusion: During the lockdown, approximately half of the patients had a clinical stability, a quarter an improvement, and another quarter a worsening. We identified different migraine-influencing elements; in particular, the remote working could represent an easy way to ameliorate migraineurs’ life
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