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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Salvatoni is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Salvatoni.


Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2000

GH/IGF-I axis in Prader-Willi syndrome: Evaluation of IGF-I levels and of the somatotroph responsiveness to various provocative stimuli

Andrea Corrias; J. Bellone; Luciano Beccaria; L. Bosio; G. Trifirò; C. Livieri; L. Ragusa; Alessandro Salvatoni; M. Andreo; P. Ciampalini; G. Tonini; Antonino Crinò

Basal IGF-I levels and the GH response to at least two among provocative stimuli such as clonidine (CLO, Catapresan, 150 mcg/m2 po), GHRH (1 mcg/kg iv)+arginine (ARG, 0.5 g/kg iv infusion during 30 min) and GHRH+pyridostigmine (PD, Mestinon cpr 60 mg po) have been evaluated in 43 children with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS, 17 males and 26 females, age 3–22 yr, 7 normal weight and 36 obese PWS), in 25 normal short children (NC, 17 males and 8 females, 7.7–18.5 yr) and in 24 children with simple obesity (OB, 14 males, 10 females, 7.7–21.5 yr). Both normal weight and obese PWS had mean IGF-I levels lower than those recorded in NC (p<0.001) and OB (p<0.001). The GH responses to GHRH+ARG and GHRH+PD in NC were similar and higher than that to CLO (p<0.001). In PWS the GH response to GHRH+ARG was higher than that to GHRH+PD (p<0.001) which, in turn, was higher than that to CLO (p<0.001); these responses in PWS were lower than those in normal children (p<0.02) and similar to those in OB. In normal weight PWS the GH responses to GHRH+ARG and to GHRH+PD were similar and higher than to CLO (p<0.05); however, each provocative stimulus elicited a GH rise lower than that in NC (p<0.05). In obese PWS as well as in OB the GH response to GHRH+ARG was higher than that to GHRH+PD (p<0.02) which, in turn, was higher than that to CLO (p<0.001); all GH responses in obese PWS and OB were lower than those in NC (p<0.001) but similar to those in normal weight PWS. In conclusion, patients with PWS show clear reduction of IGF-I levels as well as of the somatotroph responsiveness to provocative stimuli independently of body weight excess. These results strengthen the hypothesis that PWS syndrome is frequently connoted by GH insufficiency.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2008

The Italian National Survey for Prader-Willi syndrome: an epidemiologic study.

Graziano Grugni; Antonino Crinò; L. Bosio; Andrea Corrias; Marina Cuttini; Teresa De Toni; Eliana Di Battista; Adriana Franzese; Luigi Gargantini; Nella Greggio; Lorenzo Iughetti; C. Livieri; Arturo Naselli; Claudio Pagano; G. B. Pozzan; Letizia Ragusa; Alessandro Salvatoni; G. Trifirò; Luciano Beccaria; Maria Bellizzi; J. Bellone; Amelia Brunani; Marco Cappa; Gabriella Caselli; Valeria Cerioni; Maurizio Delvecchio; Daniela Giardino; Francesco Iannì; Luigi Memo; Alba Pilotta

Twenty‐five medical centers and the Prader–Willi Syndrome (PWS) Association collaborated on a study which attempted to identify all people with genetically confirmed diagnosis of PWS living in Italy. Investigators of the participating centers contacted PWS subjects and/or their family, filled in a specially developed form with the required data and forwarded this information by email. The study identified 425 subjects (209 males and 216 females, between the ages of 0.4–46.7). Two hundred thirty‐eight patients had del15, 104 had UPD15, 4 demonstrated a translocation affecting chromosome 15 and 79 showed a positive methylation test. There were fewer subjects found over the age of 35, probably due to the low rate of identification of older PWS patients as well as the high mortality rate. There were a greater number of male children and adolescents with PWS whilst, amongst adults, there were more females. As expected, the majority of subjects with PWS were obese, especially in adult life. Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that 26% of patients aged between 6 and 17 were normal weight. A total of 212 subjects had received GH treatment, of which 141 were still receiving therapy, while the remaining 71 had stopped. In children and adolescents (233 cases), 89 subjects had never undergone GH therapy. Eighteen PWS patients had died in the past 20 years. Obesity‐related cardiovascular and respiratory diseases were the cause of death, both during childhood and after 18 years of age. Three children died suddenly whilst undergoing GH therapy. Respiratory infection and cardiac illness were the causes of death in two cases. There was no definitive cause of death found in the third case. Overall, there was no increase in number of deaths during GH treatment, suggesting that GH administration in patients with PWS, as a group, does not increase the risk of death.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2010

Children with Prader-Willi syndrome exhibit more evident meal-induced responses in plasma ghrelin and peptide YY levels than obese and lean children

Carla Bizzarri; Antonello E. Rigamonti; Antonella Luce; Marco Cappa; Silvano G. Cella; Jenny Berini; Alessandro Sartorio; Eugenio E. Müller; Alessandro Salvatoni

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Ghrelin is an orexigenic 28-amino acid peptide produced by the stomach. Circulating ghrelin levels rise shortly before and fall shortly after every meal. Peptide YY (PYY), an anorexigenic 36-amino acid peptide, is secreted primarily from the intestinal mucosa of the ileum and large intestine. Plasma PYY levels begin to rise within 15 min after starting to eat and plateau within approximately 90 min, remaining elevated for up to 6 h. Recently, some studies have tried to evaluate the potential role of ghrelin and PYY in the hyperphagia of patients with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS). While hyperghrelinemia is well characterized in PWS, conflicting results have been reported for PYY. The aim of the study was to investigate ghrelin and PYY responses to a standard liquid high-fat meal in children with PWS. PATIENTS AND METHODS Circulating levels of total ghrelin and PYY levels were assayed by RIA after overnight fasting and 45, 60, 90, and 180 min following a standard meal (Ensure 6 ml/kg) in 16 patients with PWS (11 boys and five girls, aged 4.6-10.7 years, including ten receiving 0.02 mg/kg per day rhGH for 2-18 months; body mass index (BMI) z-score: 0.6+/-0.2 and 1.6+/-0.5 for children treated or not treated with rhGH respectively), ten obese (eight boys and two girls, aged 9.2-15.6 years; BMI z-score: 2.4+/-0.2, i.e. BMI >97th centile for chronological age and sex) subjects, and 16 normal-weight controls (five boys and 11 girls, aged 5.8-17.3 years; BMI z-score: 0.6+/-0.2). RESULTS PWS children showed higher fasting levels of ghrelin than obese and lean controls. Postprandial ghrelin drop was more pronounced in PWS than in the other study groups. No significant difference on fasting levels of PYY was found among groups. PWS showed a higher postprandial PYY rise than obese and lean controls. PWS patients treated and not treated with GH showed similar fasting and postprandial levels of ghrelin and PYY. Fasting PYY levels correlated negatively (P<0.05; r=-0.68) with those of ghrelin only in PWS. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study confirm fasting hyperghrelinemia in PWS. Since in PWS adults an impaired postprandial suppression of plasma ghrelin was previously reported to be associated with a blunted postprandial PYY response, the finding of a meal-induced decrease and increase in ghrelin and PYY levels respectively in PWS children would imply that the regulation of appetite/satiety of these peptides is operative during childhood, and it progressively deteriorates and vanishes in adulthood when hyperphagia and obesity worsen.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Whole Genome SNP Genotyping and Exome Sequencing Reveal Novel Genetic Variants and Putative Causative Genes in Congenital Hyperinsulinism

Maria Carla Proverbio; Eleonora Mangano; Alessandra Gessi; Roberta Bordoni; Roberta Spinelli; Rosanna Asselta; Paola Sogno Valin; Stefania Di Candia; Cecilia Diceglie; Stefano Mora; Manuela Caruso-Nicoletti; Alessandro Salvatoni; Gianluca De Bellis; Cristina Battaglia

Congenital hyperinsulinism of infancy (CHI) is a rare disorder characterized by severe hypoglycemia due to inappropriate insulin secretion. The genetic causes of CHI have been found in genes regulating insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells; recessive inactivating mutations in the ABCC8 and KCNJ11 genes represent the most common events. Despite the advances in understanding the molecular pathogenesis of CHI, specific genetic determinants in about 50 % of the CHI patients remain unknown, suggesting additional locus heterogeneity. In order to search for novel loci contributing to the pathogenesis of CHI, we combined a family-based association study, using the transmission disequilibrium test on 17 CHI patients lacking mutations in ABCC8/KCNJ11, with a whole-exome sequencing analysis performed on 10 probands. This strategy allowed the identification of the potential causative mutations in genes implicated in the regulation of insulin secretion such as transmembrane proteins (CACNA1A, KCNH6, KCNJ10, NOTCH2, RYR3, SCN8A, TRPV3, TRPC5), cytosolic (ACACB, CAMK2D, CDKAL1, GNAS, NOS2, PDE4C, PIK3R3) and mitochondrial enzymes (PC, SLC24A6), and in four genes (CSMD1, SLC37A3, SULF1, TLL1) suggested by TDT family-based association study. Moreover, the exome-sequencing approach resulted to be an efficient diagnostic tool for CHI, allowing the identification of mutations in three causative CHI genes (ABCC8, GLUD1, and HNF1A) in four out of 10 patients. Overall, the present study should be considered as a starting point to design further investigations: our results might indeed contribute to meta-analysis studies, aimed at the identification/confirmation of novel causative or modifier genes.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2012

Assessment of central adrenal insufficiency in children and adolescents with Prader-Willi syndrome.

Andrea Corrias; Graziano Grugni; Antonino Crinò; Stefania Di Candia; Patrizia Chiabotto; Anna Cogliardi; Giuseppe Chiumello; Clotilde De Medici; S. Spera; Luigi Gargantini; Lorenzo Iughetti; Antonella Luce; Benedetta Mariani; Letizia Ragusa; Alessandro Salvatoni; Simeone Andrulli; Alessandro Mussa; Luciano Beccaria

Objective  A recent study evidenced by metyrapone test a central adrenal insufficiency (CAI) in 60% of Prader–Willi syndrome (PWS) children. These results were not confirmed in investigations with low [Low‐Dose Tetracosactrin Stimulation Test (LDTST), 1 μg] or standard‐dose tetracosactrin stimulation tests. We extended the research by LDTST in paediatric patients with PWS.


Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases | 2010

Metabolic syndrome in children with Prader–Willi syndrome: The effect of obesity

Paolo Brambilla; Antonino Crinò; Giorgio Bedogni; L. Bosio; Marco Cappa; Andrea Corrias; Maurizio Delvecchio; S. Di Candia; Luigi Gargantini; E. Grechi; Lorenzo Iughetti; Alessandro Mussa; Letizia Ragusa; Michele Sacco; Alessandro Salvatoni; Giuseppe Chiumello; Graziano Grugni

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS), the most frequent syndromic obesity, is associated with elevated morbidity and mortality in pediatric and adult ages. In PWS, the presence of metabolic syndrome (MS) has not yet been established. The aim of the study was to estimate the frequency of MS and its components in pediatric subjects according to obesity status. METHODS AND RESULTS A cross-sectional study was performed in 109 PWS children aged 2-18 years (50 obese and 59 non-obese) and in 96 simple obese controls matched for age, gender, and also for BMI with obese PWS. Obesity was defined when SDS-BMI was >2. Non-obese PWS showed significantly lower frequency of hypertension (12%) than obese PWS (32%) and obese controls (35%)(p=0.003). The same was observed for low HDL-cholesterol (3% vs 18% and 24%, p=0.001) and high triglycerides (7% vs 23% and 16%, p=0.026). Frequency of altered glucose metabolism was not different among groups (2% vs 10% and 5%), but type 2 diabetes (four cases) was present only in obese PWS. Non-obese PWS showed lower insulin and HOMA-index respect to obese PWS and obese controls (p ≤ 0.017). Overall MS frequency in PWS was 7.3%. None of the non-obese PWS showed MS compared with 16% of obese PWS and controls (p<0.001). When obesity was excluded from the analysis, a significantly lower frequency for clustering of ≥ 2 factors was still found in non-obese PWS (p=0.035). CONCLUSION Non-obese PWS showed low frequency of MS and its components, while that observed in obese PWS was very close to those of obese controls, suggesting the crucial role of obesity status. Prevention of obesity onset remains the most important goal of PWS treatment. Early identification of MS could be helpful to improve morbidity and mortality in such patients.


Pediatric Diabetes | 2013

Intrafamilial spread of enterovirus infections at the clinical onset of type 1 diabetes.

Alessandro Salvatoni; Andreina Baj; Giuliana Bianchi; Giovanni Federico; Martina Colombo; Antonio Toniolo

At the clinical onset of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D), enterovirus (EV) infections are suspected to play a role. EVs in blood are seen as a possible biomarker of T1D. EV infections may occur in temporal and geographic clusters and may spread within families.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2006

Variability of the 13C‐octanoic acid breath test for gastric emptying of solids in healthy children

Bruno Hauser; J. De Schepper; V. Caveliers; S. Salvatore; Alessandro Salvatoni; Yvan Vandenplas

To assess the intra‐individual variability of the 13C‐octanoic acid breath test using non‐dispersive infrared spectrometry for gastric emptying of solids in healthy children.


Pediatric Drugs | 2003

Inhaled corticosteroids in childhood asthma: long-term effects on growth and adrenocortical function.

Alessandro Salvatoni; Elena Piantanida; Luana Nosetti; Luigi Nespoli

Inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) are the most potent of all the available inhaled treatments, and are effective medications for long-term control of asthma. However, their use in children is limited by the risk of systemic adverse effects. Although results reported in the literature on the adverse effects of ICS are conflicting and often restricted to a small number of cases with a limited follow-up, most of them show an early decrease in growth velocity without significant influence on final adult height. Partial adrenal suppression has also been demonstrated in children treated with ICS for more than 2 months.Only children with mild persistent, moderate, or severe asthma not controlled by non-corticosteroid drugs should be treated with ICS for long periods. The dose of ICS must be individually adjusted to minimize the possible adverse effects on growth, and all children with asthma receiving long-term treatment with ICS must be regularly evaluated for growth impairment, which may necessitate dose reduction or drug replacement.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006

Lean Mass of Children in Various Nutritional States: Comparison between Dual‐Energy X‐Ray Absorptiometry and Anthropometry

Paolo Brambilla; Marie-Françoise Roland-Cachera; Corrado Testolin; André Briend; Alessandro Salvatoni; Giulio Testolin; Giuseppe Chiumello

PAOLO BRAMBILLA,a,b MARIE-FRANÇOISE ROLLAND-CACHERA,c CORRADO TESTOLIN,a ANDRÉ BRIEND,c ALESSANDRO SALVATONI,d GIULIO TESTOLIN,e AND GIUSEPPE CHIUMELLOa aPediatric Department, Scientific Institute, San Raffaele Hospital, Milan, Italy cISTNA CNAM, Paris, France dPediatric Department, University of Insubria, Varese, Italy eInternational Centre of the Assessment of Nutritional Status (ICANS), University of Milan, Italy

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Giuseppe Chiumello

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Lorenzo Iughetti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Antonino Crinò

Boston Children's Hospital

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S. Di Candia

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Yvan Vandenplas

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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