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Dive into the research topics where A. Fabbri is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Fabbri.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2005

Reversibility of GERD ultrastructural alterations and relief of symptoms after omeprazole treatment.

C. Calabrese; Mauro Bortolotti; A. Fabbri; Alessandra Areni; Giovanna Cenacchi; C. Scialpi; Mario Miglioli; Giulio Di Febo

BACKGROUND:Dilation of intercellular spaces (DIS) of human esophageal epithelium, evident at transmission electron microscopy (TEM), is an early marker of damage caused by gastroesophageal reflux, but its reversibility after therapy has not been investigated.AIM:To evaluate whether omeprazole can induce the healing of DIS.METHODS:Thirty-eight symptomatic patients, 22 with nonerosive reflux disease (NERD) and 16 with erosive esophagitis (EE), classified on the basis of 24-h pH monitoring, were enrolled. During upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, six biopsies from apparently normal mucosa were taken within the lower 5 cm of the esophagus for histological and TEM analysis. One hundred computer measurements were taken on TEM photomicrographs of the specimens in each patient. After 3 months of omeprazole 40 mg/die a further endoscopy with biopsies was performed. In patients with persistent heartburn and/or incomplete ultrastructural recovery of esophageal epithelium, a new endoscopy was performed after 3 more months of treatment.RESULTS:After 3 months of therapy, 35 patients (92.1%) showed a complete recovery of DIS and resolution of heartburn. Three patients required 3 more months of therapy because of an incomplete recovery of the epithelium correlated with sporadic heartburn. Healing of the mucosa was achieved in two patients, whereas one had an incomplete recovery of DIS with persistent heartburn.CONCLUSIONS:Three and six months of omeprazole therapy led to a complete recovery of DIS in 92.1% and 97.4% of cases, respectively. No significant differences of DIS between NERD and EE were noted. Complete recovery of DIS was accompanied by regression of heartburn in all cases.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2003

Dilated intercellular spaces as a marker of oesophageal damage: comparative results in gastro-oesophageal reflux disease with or without bile reflux.

C. Calabrese; A. Fabbri; Mauro Bortolotti; Giovanna Cenacchi; Alessandra Areni; C. Scialpi; M. Miglioli; G. Di Febo

Background : The dilation of oesophageal intercellular spaces, clearly apparent in transmission electron microscopy images, is a marker of cellular damage induced by acid.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 1993

Vegetable versus animal protein diet in cirrhotic patients with chronic encephalopathy. A randomized cross-over comparison

G. Bianchi; Giulio Marchesini; A. Fabbri; A. Rondelli; Elisabetta Bugianesi; Marco Zoli; Emilio Pisi

Abstract. In a randomized cross‐over comparison, the effects of a mainly vegetable protein diet were compared with an animal protein diet in eight patients with cirrhosis and chronic permanent encephalopathy, under optimum lactulose therapy. After a run‐in period, patients were fed two equi‐caloric, equi‐nitrogenous diets for 7 days (71 g total proteins), containing either 50 g protein of animal origin or 50 g vegetable proteins. In the last 3 days of each period, nitrogen balance was significantly better during the vegetable protein diet (+ 0.2 (SD 1.4) g vs. — 1.7 (2.4): P < 0.01), the difference being entirely due to a reduced urinary nitrogen excretion. Average daytime integrated blood glucose was slightly higher during vegetable proteins, whereas insulin, plasma amino acids and ammonia were lower. The clinical grading of encephalopathy improved slightly on vegetable proteins, and psychometric tests improved significantly, but remained grossly abnormal. Compliance to dietary manipulation was good. The data prove that a mainly vegetable protein diet is worthwhile in cirrhotic patients with chronic encephalopathy under optimum lactulose therapy. Improved nitrogen balance may be related to more effective nitrogen use for protein synthesis, probably due to blunted hormonal response, and largely outweighs the effects on encephalopathy.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2004

Prospective validation of a proposal for diagnosis and management of patients attending the emergency department for mild head injury

A. Fabbri; Franco Servadei; Giulio Marchesini; Antonio Maria Morselli-Labate; Massimo Dente; Tiziana Iervese; Marco Spada; Alberto Vandelli

Background: In mild head injury, predictors to select patients for computed tomography (CT) and/or to plan proper management are needed. The strength of evidence of published recommendations is insufficient for current use. We assessed the diagnostic accuracy and the clinical validity of the proposal of the Neurotraumatology Committee of the World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies on mild head injury from an emergency department perspective. Methods: In a three year period, 5578 adolescent and adult subjects were prospectively recruited and managed according to the proposed protocol. Outcome measures were: (a) any post-traumatic lesion; (b) need for neurosurgical intervention; (c) unfavourable outcome (death, permanent vegetative state or severe disability) after six months. The predictive value of a model based on five variables (Glasgow coma score, clinical findings, risk factors, neurological deficits, and skull fracture) was tested by logistic regression analysis. Findings: At first CT evaluation 327 patients (5.9%) had intracranial post-traumatic lesions. In 16 cases (0.3%) previously undiagnosed lesions were detected after re-evaluation within seven days. Neurosurgical intervention was needed in 71 patients (1.3%) and an unfavourable outcome occurred in 39 cases (0.7%). The area under the ROC curve of the variables in predicting post-traumatic lesions was 0.906 (0.009) (sensitivity 70.0%, specificity 94.1% at best cut off), neurosurgical intervention was 0.926 (0.016) (sensitivity 81.7%, specificity 94.1%), and unfavourable outcome was 0.953 (0.014) (sensitivity 88.1%, specificity 95.1%). Interpretation: The variables prove highly accurate in the prediction of clinically meaningful outcomes, when applied to a consecutive set of patients with mild head injury in the clinical setting of a 1st level emergency department.


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2007

Mesalazine with or without cholestyramine in the treatment of microscopic colitis: Randomized controlled trial

C. Calabrese; A. Fabbri; Alessandra Areni; D. Zahlane; C. Scialpi; Giulio Di Febo

Background:  Collagenous colitis (CC) and lymphocytic colitis (LC) are chronic inflammatory diseases of the colon with a benign and sometimes relapsing course. Frequency among patients with chronic diarrhea and normal looking colonoscopy is around 10–15%. To date, treatment of CC and LC is not well defined. Data about these conditions are mostly derived from retrospective studies. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the response to treatment and the clinical course of CC and LC in a large group of patients prospectively diagnosed.


Emergency Medicine Journal | 2002

Positive blood alcohol concentration and road accidents. A prospective study in an Italian emergency department

A. Fabbri; Giulio Marchesini; Antonio Maria Morselli-Labate; F Rossi; A Cicognani; Massimo Dente; Tiziana Iervese; S Ruggeri; U Mengozzi; Alberto Vandelli

Study objective: To examine if a positive blood alcohol concentration (BAC) at the time of crash (≥0.50 g/l), independently of any clinical evidence and laboratory results indicating acute alcohol intoxication, is associated with specific features of patients involved, specific types of injury, and characteristics of the accident. Methods: In this prospective cohort study, the BAC was measured in adult patients who had been injured and who were admitted to an Italian emergency department within four hours after a road accident. Altogether 2354 trauma patients were included between January to December 1998 out of 2856 eligible subjects. Results: BAC exceeded 0.50 g/l in 425 subjects (18.1%), but was in a toxic range (>1.00 g/l) in only 179 subjects (7.6%). BAC positivity was significantly more common in men, in young subjects, in subjects driving cars or trucks, and in persons involved in a crash during night time and at weekends. It was associated with higher trauma severity, but no differences were found in injury body distribution according to vehicle type. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, the risk of a positive BAC in injured patients at the time of crash was independently associated with night time (odds ratio: 3.48; 95% confidence intervals: 2.46 to 4.91), male sex (3.08 (2.36 to 4.01)), weekend nights (1.21 (1.05 to 1.41)), and age (0.92 (0.86 to 0.99) per decades). Conclusion: In injured patients after a road accident, a BAC at the time of crash in a non-toxic range (≥0.50 g/l) is associated with specific characteristics of crash, as well as increased risk of higher trauma severity. More careful monitoring is needed in young men during weekend nights for highest risk of BAC positivity after a road accident.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007

Controlled study using wireless capsule endoscopy for the evaluation of the small intestine in chronic refractory pouchitis.

C. Calabrese; A. Fabbri; Paolo Gionchetti; Fernando Rizzello; Claudia Morselli; Giuseppina Liguori; G. Poggioli; Massimo Campieri; G. Di Febo

Pouchitis is a common long‐term complication after ileal pouch anal anastomosis for ulcerative colitis. Chronic refractory pouchitis is a treatment‐resistant condition that affects 5–15% of patients.


Biomarkers | 2006

Superoxide dismutase in gastric adenocarcinoma: is it a clinical biomarker in the development of cancer?

Marta Monari; Andrea Trinchero; C. Calabrese; O. Cattani; Gian Paolo Serrazanetti; Jurgen Foschi; A. Fabbri; D. Zahlane; G. Di Febo; Valeria Tonini; Maurizio Cervellera; M. R. Tosi; Vitaliano Tugnoli

Abstract Gastric cancer is the second most common cancer worldwide. The involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the pathogenesis of gastric malignancies is well known. Many human tumours have shown significant changes in the activity and expression of superoxide dismutase (SOD), which might be correlated with clinical–pathological parameters for the prognosis of human carcinoma. The aim of this study is the detection of MnSOD and CuZnSOD activity and their expression in gastric adenocarcinoma and healthy tissues. Gastric samples (adenocarcinoma and healthy tissues) harvested during endoscopy or resected during surgery were used to determine MnSOD and CuZnSOD activity and expression by spectrophotometric and Western blotting assays. The total SOD activity was significantly higher (p<0.05) in healthy mucosa with respect to gastric adenocarcinomas. No differences were found in MnSOD activity and, on the contrary, CuZnSOD activity was significantly lower (p<0.001) in cancer samples with respect to normal mucosa. The rate of MnSOD/CuZnSOD activity in adenocarcinoma was over ninefold higher than that registered in healthy tissues (p<0.05). Moreover, in adenocarcinoma MnSOD activity represented the 83% of total SOD with respect to healthy tissues where the ratio was 52% (p<0.001). On the contrary, in cancer tissues, CuZnSOD activity accounted for only 17% of the total SOD (p<0.001 if compared with the values recorded in normal mucosa). After immunoblotting, MnSOD was more expressed in adenocarcinoma with respect to normal mucosa (p<0.001), while CuZnSOD was similarly expressed in adenocarcinoma and healthy tissues. The SOD activity assay might provide a specific and sensitive method of analysis that allows the differentiation of healthy tissue from tumour tissue. The MnSOD to CuZnSOD activity ratio, and the ratio between these two isoforms and total SOD, presented in this preliminary study might be considered in the identification of cancerous from healthy control tissue.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2004

Coagulopathy and NICE recommendations for patients with mild head injury

A. Fabbri; Alberto Vandelli; Franco Servadei; Giulio Marchesini

Management of patients with mild head injury (MHI) is open to debate.1 In the last few years, there has been a trend towards earlier diagnosis, implying an extensive use of computed tomography (CT), rather than admission and observation. The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) has recently proposed new evidence based recommendations on all steps of the management of patients with MHI.2 In the diagnostic algorithm, coagulopathy (history of bleeding, clotting disorder, or current treatment with warfarin) is not considered a predictor variable necessitating early CT in subjects without loss of consciousness (LOC) or amnesia since injury. This statement conflicts with previous guidelines, where history of coagulopathy, independently of symptoms, indicated CT.3 Since 1999, all cases with MHI attending the Emergency Department of our district hospital have been treated and registered in a comprehensive database according to predefined procedures.3 Our criteria for CT and/or hospital admission are wider than the NICE criteria; in particular, there is routine detailing of NICE variables, but in addition, all subjects with coagulopathy have an early CT, independently of symptoms and signs after injury. This provides the opportunity to determine the risk related to coagulopathy and the accuracy of the NICE recommendations. We analysed the data of 7955 consecutive …


Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases | 2016

Costs associated with emergency care and hospitalization for severe hypoglycemia

Giacomo Veronese; Giulio Marchesini; G. Forlani; Stefania Saragoni; L. Degli Esposti; Elena Centis; A. Fabbri

BACKGROUND AND AIMS We aimed to determine the direct economic cost of the management of severe hypoglycemia among people with diabetes in Italy. METHODS AND RESULTS Data of cases with an acceptance diagnosis of hypoglycemia between January 2011 and June 2012 were collected in 46 Emergency Departments (EDs). Emergency care costs were computed by estimating the average cost per ambulance service, ED visit and short-term (<24 h) observation period. Hospitalization expenditure was estimated using the average cost reimbursed by the Italian healthcare system for hospital admission per patient with diabetes in a specific hospital ward. We retrieved 3516 hypoglycemic episodes occurring in subjects with diabetes. Half the cases (51.8%) required referral to EDs by means of the emergency ambulance services. A total of 1751 cases (49.8%) received an ED visit followed by discharge; 604 cases (17.2%) received a short-term observation period; 1161 (33.1%) were hospitalized. Unit costs for emergency care management were estimated at €205 for an ambulance call, €23 for an ED visit, and €220 for a short-term observation. The mean hospitalization cost was estimated at €5317; the average cost per each severe hypoglycemic event totaled €1911. From a base case assumption, the total direct cost of severe hypoglycemia in patients with diabetes in Italy was estimated to be approximately €23 million per year. CONCLUSION Severe hypoglycemia in patients with diabetes constitutes a remarkable economic burden for national healthcare systems. Measures for preventing hypoglycemia are mandatory in diabetes management programs considering the impact on patients and on health spending.

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