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Featured researches published by Alessandra Coin.


Clinical Nutrition | 2008

Fat-free mass and fat mass reference values by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) in a 20–80 year-old Italian population

Alessandra Coin; Giuseppe Sergi; Nadia Minicuci; Sandro Giannini; Elisa Barbiero; Enzo Manzato; M. Pedrazzoni; Salvatore Minisola; Maurizio Rossini; Antonio Del Puente; Mauro Zamboni; Emine Meral Inelmen; Giuliano Enzi

BACKGROUND & AIMS To establish reference values for limb composition, fat-free mass (FFM) and fat mass (FM) in Italian adults for gender-specific age brackets 20-80 years old and to assess age-related regional changes in body composition. METHODS A multicenter, retrospective study was conducted on 1571 healthy subjects, 1240 women and 331 men. Regional FFM and FM were measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. FM was expressed as % of limb weight. RESULTS FFM in men diminished with age in both arms and legs, with reference ranges (25th -75th percentile) of 3.8-4.6 kg and 10.4-12.2 kg, respectively for 20-29 year-olds, and 3.1-3.9 kg and 8.2-10.4 kg for 70-79 year-olds. Womens arm FFM remained stable with aging (reference values 1.7-2.2 kg), decreasing in their legs (6.2-7.2 kg for 20-29 year-olds, 5.5-6.5 kg for 70-79 year-olds). Limb FM% increased with age in both genders: the reference values were 9-15% (arms) and 12-21% (legs) for 20-29 year-old men, and 19-26% and 19-29%, respectively, for 70-79 year-olds; for womens arms, they were 25-36% for 20-29 year-olds and 36-48% for 70-79 year-olds, while their leg FM remained the same with aging, i.e. 32-40%. CONCLUSIONS These data complete the published reference values for whole body composition, enabling physiological or pathological changes in limb composition to be identified in Caucasian populations living in the Mediterranean area.


Obesity Reviews | 2003

Can obesity be a risk factor in elderly people

Emine Meral Inelmen; G. Sergi; Alessandra Coin; Fabrizia Miotto; S. Peruzza; Giuliano Enzi

Obesity is increasing in middle‐aged adults and in elderly subjects (over 65 years), owing to the concurrence of different factors: inactivity, wrong nutritional habits, and basal metabolism and nutritional need reduction. This condition is becoming a serious problem because of the increasing numbers of the aged population all over the world. In the past, obesity was considered as a ‘secondary’ pathology of no medical importance in old age; but nowadays, obesity is increasingly being studied in Geriatrics too, because it causes disability and because of its quality‐of‐life impairment consequences. The Euronut‐Seneca study has confirmed the presence of obesity in both men and women in Europe. The definition of obesity, the reference values of body mass index and obesity as a mortality factor in elderly persons are still under discussion. Even when overweight does not represent a serious problem in old age, obese elderly people are certainly at risk of disability, morbidity and mortality. This review focuses on the potential risks of overweight and obesity in the aged population.


European Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2008

Predictors of low bone mineral density in the elderly: the role of dietary intake, nutritional status and sarcopenia

Alessandra Coin; Egle Perissinotto; Giuliano Enzi; Mauro Zamboni; Emine Meral Inelmen; Anna Chiara Frigo; Enzo Manzato; Luca Busetto; Alessandra Buja; Giuseppe Sergi

Objectives:The aims of this study were to investigate the relationship between sarcopenia, dietary intake, nutritional indices and hip bone mineral density (BMD) in the elderly, and to estimate the risk of low BMD due to specific independent predictor thresholds.Subjects and methods:Body mass index (BMI), serum albumin, energy and protein intake were studied in 352 elderly outpatients (216 women aged 73.5±5.3 years and 136 men aged 73.9±5.6 years). BMD at different hip sites and appendicular skeletal muscle mass (ASMM) were assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry.Results:The prevalence of osteoporosis was 13% in men and 45% in women, while the prevalence of sarcopenia (50%) and hypoalbuminemia (5%) were similar in both genders. BMI, albumin and ASMM were significantly associated with BMD in both genders: so was protein intake, but only in men. By multiple regression analysis, the variables that retained their independent explanatory role on total hip BMD, were BMI and protein intake in men, and BMI and albumin in women. By logistic regression analysis, men risked having a low BMD with a BMI <22 (OR=12) and a protein intake <65.7 g/day (OR=3.7). Women carried some risk already in the BMI 25–30 class (OR=5), and a much greater risk in the BMI <22 class (OR=26). Albumin <40 g/l also emerged as an independent risk factor (OR=2.6).Conclusions:BMI in both genders, albumin in women and protein intake in men have an independent effect on BMD. BMI values <22 are normal for younger adults but carry a higher risk of osteoporosis in the elderly, particularly in women. Age-related sarcopenia does not seem to be involved in bone mass loss.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Vitamin D and physical performance in elderly subjects: the Pro.V.A study.

Elena Debora Toffanello; Egle Perissinotto; Giuseppe Sergi; Sabina Zambon; Estella Musacchio; Stefania Maggi; Alessandra Coin; Leonardo Sartori; Maria Chiara Corti; Giovannella Baggio; Gaetano Crepaldi; Enzo Manzato

Background The role of Vitamin D in musculoskeletal functionality among elderly people is still controversial. We investigated the association between serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) levels and physical performance in older adults. Methods 2694 community-dwelling elderly women and men from the Progetto Veneto Anziani (Pro.V.A.) were included. Physical performances were assessed by: tandem test, 5 timed chair stands (TCS), gait speed, 6-minute walking (6 mW) distance, handgrip strength, and quadriceps strength. For each test, separate general linear models and loess plots were obtained in both genders, in relation to serum 25OHD concentrations, controlling for several potential confounders. Results Linear associations with 25OHD levels were observed for TCS, gait speed, 6 mW test and handgrip strength, but not for tandem test and quadriceps strength. After adjusting for potential confounders, linear associations with 25OHD levels were still evident for the 6 mW distance in both genders (p = .0002 in women; <.0001 in men), for TCS in women (p = .004) and for gait speed (p = .0006) and handgrip strength (p = .03) in men. In loess analyses, performance in TCS in women, in gait speed and handgrip strength in men and in 6 mW in both genders, improved with increasing levels of 25OHD, with most of the improvements occurring for 25OHD levels from 20 to 100 nmol/L. Conclusion lower 25OHD levels are associated with a worse coordination and weaker strength (TCS) in women, a slower walking time and a lower upper limb strength in men, and a weaker aerobic capacity (6 mW) in both genders. For optimal physical performances, 25OHD concentrations of 100 nmol/L appear to be more advantageous in elderly men and women, and Vitamin D supplementation should be encouraged to maintain their 25OHD levels as high as this threshold.


The Journal of Pathology | 2002

Multiple symmetric lipomatosis may be the consequence of defective noradrenergic modulation of proliferation and differentiation of brown fat cells

Enzo Nisoli; Laura Regianini; Luca Briscini; Alessandra Bulbarelli; Luca Busetto; Alessandra Coin; Giuliano Enzi; Michele O. Carruba

Multiple symmetric lipomatosis (MSL) is an inherited disorder in which enlarging and unencapsulated lipomas symmetrically develop in the subcutaneous tissue of the neck, shoulders, mammary, and truncal regions. In some cases, it is associated with mitochondrial DNA abnormalities. The pathogenesis of MSL is completely unknown, although the fat deposits may be due to a neoplastic‐like proliferation of functionally defective brown adipocytes. It has recently been demonstrated that the β3‐adrenergic receptor is the functionally relevant adrenergic receptor subtype in brown adipocytes and that its stimulation by noradrenaline (NA) modulates the expression of genes, such as uncoupling protein (UCP)‐1 and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), involved in fat cell proliferation and differentiation. Furthermore, Trp64Arg mutation of the β3‐adrenoceptor has been implicated in lower NA activity in adipose tissues. The aim of this study was to investigate the molecular and functional characteristics of MSL adipocytes and to analyse the effects of nitric oxide (NO) on the proliferation/differentiation of MSL adipocytes in culture, and the relevance of putative noradrenergic deficit in the development of lipomas in MSL patients. Cultured MSL adipocytes were able to synthesize UCP‐1 (the selective marker of brown adipocytes), but unlike that of normally functioning brown fat cells, the expression of the UCP‐1 gene was not significantly induced by NA. NA is also defective in inducing iNOS gene expression, thus leading to reduced NO production and a consequent reduction in the anti‐proliferative, adipogenic (mitochondrial biogenesis) effects of NA on MSL cells. Furthermore, the transcriptional peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor γ co‐activator‐1 (PGC‐1), which plays a key role in the sympathetic‐stimulated mitochondrial biogenesis of brown adipocytes, is expressed but not induced by NA in MSL cells, as it is in brown adipocytes. The study did not find any association between β3‐adrenoceptor gene polymorphism and noradrenergic signalling defects in MSL subjects with or without mitochondrial DNA mutations. Copyright


European Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2006

Role of visceral proteins in detecting malnutrition in the elderly.

G. Sergi; Alessandra Coin; Giuliano Enzi; S Volpato; Emine Meral Inelmen; M Buttarello; M Peloso; S Mulone; S Marin; P Bonometto

Objective:In the clinical practice, visceral proteins are used as indirect markers of protein energy malnutrition (PEM), but their reliability could be reduced with advancing age. The aim of this work is to investigate the reliability of albumin, prealbumin, retinol-binding protein (RBP) and transferrin in evaluating nutritional status in old patients and their relationship with fat-free mass (FFM).Design:Cross-sectional study.Setting:Padua, Italy.Subjects:In 44 underweight (body mass index<20 kg/m2) (66–97 years) and 69 normal weight or overweight elderly subjects (62–98 years), albumin, prealbumin, transferrin and RBP were determined in the plasma. Body composition and particularly FFM was obtained by dual X-ray absorptiometry. FFM was also expressed as FFM index (FFMI) calculated as FFM divided by height squared. Subjects affected by acute illnesses and inflammatory states were excluded.Results:Albumin, prealbumin and RBP mean values were significantly lower in underweight subjects. No differences between two groups were found for transferrin. Albumin prealbumin and RBP resulted under the normal range in 55, 25 and 54% of underweight subjects, respectively. Transferrins values were low in about 40% of underweight and normal weight subjects, respectively. In all subjects, FFMI shows a significant correlation with albumin (r: 0.52), prealbumin (r: 0.64) and RBP (r: 0.57). No correlation between FFMI and transferrin was found.Conclusions:Visceral proteins, except for transferrin, seem to be useful indexes in detecting malnutrition in the elderly; low values still in the normal range should also be carefully evaluated because they could suggest a poor nutritional status.


International Journal of Obesity | 2003

Historical perspective: visceral obesity and related comorbidity in Joannes Baptista Morgagni's ‘De Sedibus et Causis Morborum per Anatomen Indagata’

Giuliano Enzi; Luca Busetto; Emine Meral Inelmen; Alessandra Coin; G. Sergi

In recent years, advances in epidemiological approaches and laboratory technology, along with the availability of sophisticated imaging methods to evaluate body fat distribution, made it possible to define the close correlation between visceral fat accumulation and the occurrence of metabolic abnormalities, cardiovascular diseases and respiratory disturbances in obese patients. Some 250 y ago, JB Morgagni with the help of only a knife for anatomical dissection, an acute mind, and an observational skillfulness was able to identify the intra-abdominal and mediastinal fat accumulation in android obesity. He clearly described the association between visceral obesity, hypertension, hyperuricemia, atherosclerosis and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, long before the modern recognition of this syndrome.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2014

Effect of oral magnesium supplementation on physical performance in healthy elderly women involved in a weekly exercise program: a randomized controlled trial

Nicola Veronese; Linda Berton; Sara Carraro; Francesco Bolzetta; Marina De Rui; Egle Perissinotto; Elena Debora Toffanello; Giulia Bano; S. Pizzato; Fabrizia Miotto; Alessandra Coin; Enzo Manzato; Giuseppe Sergi

BACKGROUND Magnesium deficiency is associated with poor physical performance, but no trials are available on how magnesium supplementation affects elderly peoples physical performance. OBJECTIVE The aim of our study was to investigate whether 12 wk of oral magnesium supplementation can improve physical performance in healthy elderly women. DESIGN In a parallel-group, randomized controlled trial, 139 healthy women (mean ± SD age: 71.5 ± 5.2 y) attending a mild fitness program were randomly allocated to a treatment group (300 mg Mg/d; n = 62) or a control group (no placebo or intervention; n = 77) by using a computer-generated randomization sequence, and researchers were blinded to their grouping. After assessment at baseline and again after 12 wk, the primary outcome was a change in the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB); secondary outcomes were changes in peak torque isometric and isokinetic strength of the lower limbs and handgrip strength. RESULTS A total of 124 participants allocated to the treatment (n = 53) or control (n = 71) group were considered in the final analysis. At baseline, the SPPB scores did not differ between the 2 groups. After 12 wk, the treated group had a significantly better total SPPB score (Δ = 0.41 ± 0.24 points; P = 0.03), chair stand times (Δ = -1.31 ± 0.33 s; P < 0.0001), and 4-m walking speeds (Δ = 0.14 ± 0.03 m/s; P = 0.006) than did the control group. These findings were more evident in participants with a magnesium dietary intake lower than the Recommended Dietary Allowance. No significant differences emerged for the secondary outcomes investigated, and no serious adverse effects were reported. CONCLUSIONS Daily magnesium oxide supplementation for 12 wk seems to improve physical performance in healthy elderly women. These findings suggest a role for magnesium supplementation in preventing or delaying the age-related decline in physical performance.


Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism | 2003

Changes in Fluid Compartments and Body Composition in Obese Women after Weight Loss Induced by Gastric Banding

Giuseppe Sergi; Lucia Lupoli; Luca Busetto; Stefania Volpato; Alessandra Coin; Roberta Bertani; Irene Calliari; Adriano Berton; Giuliano Enzi

Background/Aims: Surgical gastric banding procedures induce considerable and rapid weight losses in obese subjects. Nevertheless changes in lean mass and body fluids following these surgical treatments are not well known. Methods: We studied 6 obese women aged 38–42 years, before, and 8 and 24 weeks after laparoscopic adjustable silicone gastric banding (LAP-BANDTM). Fat-free mass (FFM) and fat mass (FM) were investigated using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA), while total body water (TBW) and extracellular water (ECW) were assessed by dilution methods. Results: The subjects showed a total weight loss of 16% of initial weight; the weight reduction was greater during the first 8 weeks. FFM decrease after 24 weeks was very limited and represented only 14% of the weight loss. The mean FFM changes per week were similar in the two periods of observation (0–8 and 8–24 weeks after LAP-BAND). TBW showed a global reduction of 2.2 ± 1.8 litres mainly due to a decline in intracellular water (ICW), while ECW remained constant during weight loss. As a consequence, the ECW/ICW ratio increased after LAP-BAND. Conclusion: LAP-BAND seems to achieve satisfactory weight losses while sparing FFM and causing only mild body fluid alterations.


Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | 2013

Prevalence of Sarcopenia Based on Different Diagnostic Criteria Using DEXA and Appendicular Skeletal Muscle Mass Reference Values in an Italian Population Aged 20 to 80

Alessandra Coin; Silvia Sarti; Elena Ruggiero; Sandro Giannini; M. Pedrazzoni; Salvatore Minisola; Maurizio Rossini; Antonio Del Puente; Emine Meral Inelmen; Enzo Manzato; Giuseppe Sergi

OBJECTIVE To identify the mean values and percentiles for ASMM (appendicular skeletal muscle mass) and the prevalence of sarcopenia, in terms of muscle mass reduction, using different cutoffs in a European population. DESIGN A retrospective analysis on the dataset from a multicenter study on apparently healthy Italian adults conducted between 1999 and 2002. A significant muscle mass loss, necessary to diagnose sarcopenia, was defined in 3 different ways: (1) by subtracting 2 SDs from the mean ASMM index (ASMMI) of a young adult population (20-39 year-olds), as in the Rosetta study and the NHANES survey; (2) by calculating the 15th percentile of the distribution of our young population, corresponding to about 1 SD below the mean ASMMI; (3) by calculating the 20th percentile of the distribution of the ASMMI (as in the Health ABC study) of an elderly population. SETTING Five centers for the diagnosis and treatment of osteoporosis in various parts of the country (Padova, Verona, Parma, Roma, Napoli). PARTICIPANTS Participants were 1535 volunteers (1208 women and 327 men) aged 20 to 80 years, drawn from among staff members, university students, lay people contacted by word of mouth, and patients presenting spontaneously for osteoporosis screening. MEASUREMENTS Body weight and height were measured for all participants. Body composition was assessed by DEXA, and the ASMMI was calculated as the ASMM divided by body height in meters squared. RESULTS Both mens and womens lean mass in the arms and ASMM were highest in the young group and became lower in older age. In men, the ASMMI dropped gradually from age 20 to 29 to age 60 to 69, then remained stable in the oldest group. In women, the ASMMI gradually increased from age 20 to 29 to age 60 to 69, then dropped among the 70- to 80-year-olds. Based on the 15th percentile of the ASMMI for our young adult reference population, the cutoffs for sarcopenia were 7.59 kg/m(2) in men and 5.47 kg/m(2) in women; if the 20th percentile of the ASMMI in our elderly subjects (>65 years) was considered, the cutoffs were 7.64 kg/m(2) in men and 5.78 kg/m(2) in women. Applying the different diagnostic criteria to the those older than 65, the prevalence of sarcopenia ranged from 0% to about 20% in both genders. CONCLUSION The 15th percentile (or 1 SD below the mean) of the ASMMI of our young adults, and the 20th percentile of this index for an elderly reference population proved more effective in identifying cases of sarcopenia than subtracting 2 SD from the mean ASMMI of a young adult population.

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Nicola Veronese

National Research Council

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