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Dive into the research topics where Anna Maria Stanzial is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Maria Stanzial.


Biological Trace Element Research | 1996

Selenium, zinc, and thyroid hormones in healthy subjects: low T3/T4 ratio in the elderly is related to impaired selenium status.

Domenico Girelli; Anna Maria Stanzial; Luigi Rossi; Antonella Bassi; Roberto Corrocher

Iodothyronine 5′ deiodinase, which is mainly responsible for peripheral T3 production, has recently been demonstrated to be a selenium (Se)-containing enzyme. The structure of nuclear thyroid hormone receptors contains Zinc (Zn) ions, crucial for the functional properties of the protein. In the elderly, reduced peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 with a lower T3/T4 ratio and overt hypothyroidism are frequently observed. We measured serum Se and RBC GSH-Px (as indices of Se status), circulating and RBC Zinc (as indices of Zn status), thyroid hormones and TSH in 109 healthy euthyroid subjects (52 women, 57 men), carefully selected to avoid abnormally low thyroid hormone levels induced by acute or chronic diseases or calorie restriction. The subjects were subdivided into three age groups. To avoid under- or malnutrition conditions, dietary records were obtained for a sample of 24 subjects, randomly selected and representative of the whole population for age and sex. Low T3/T4 ratios and reduced Se and RBC GSH-Px activity were observed only in the older group. A highly significant linear correlation between the T3/T4 ratio and indices of Se status was observed in the older group of subjects (r=0.54;p<0.002, for Se;r=0.50;p<0.002, for RBC GSH-Px). Indices of Zn status did not correlate with thyroid hormones, but RBC Zn was decreased in older as compared with younger subjects. We concluded that reduced peripheral T4 conversion is related to impaired Se status in the elderly.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1989

Effect of fish oil supplementation on erythrocyte lipid pattern, malondialdehyde production and glutathione-peroxidase activity in psoriasis

Roberto Corrocher; S. Ferrari; Marzia de Gironcoli; Antonella Bassi; Patrizia Guarini; Anna Maria Stanzial; Anna Lisa Barba; Luigi Gregolini

Erythrocytes from psoriatic patients have a significant increase in polyunsaturated fatty acids (p less than 0.001) especially in arachidonic acid (p less than 0.001). Glutathione peroxidase activity, in both erythrocytes and platelets, was stimulated when compared with normal cells (p less than 0.001, less than 0.02, respectively) and the production of malondialdehyde was also increased in psoriasis (p less than 0.01). The level of plasma selenium was significantly reduced (52.80 vs 72.49 ng/ml; p less than 0.001). alpha-Tocopherol and retinol were both normal in plasma of psoriatics. After two months of fish oil supplementation, the erythrocyte lipid pattern was changed, eicosapentaenoic and dochesaenoic acids substituting the arachidonate in the membrane. A reduction in malondialdehyde (p less than 0.01), a prolongation of bleeding time (p less than 0.05) and a further stimulation of glutathione-peroxidase (p less than 0.001) in both erythrocytes and platelets was also found.


Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation | 1988

Effects of dietary fish oil on malondialdehyde production and glutathione peroxidase activity in hyperlipidaemic patients

M. Negri; M. de Gironcoli; Antonella Bassi; Patrizia Guarini; Anna Maria Stanzial; L. Grigolini; S. Ferrari; Roberto Corrocher

In 20 adult patients suffering from hyperlipidaemia we measured the lipid composition of erythrocyte membrane, the glutathione peroxidase activity in both erythrocytes and platelets, the production of malondialdehyde by platelets stimulated with thrombin, as well as the level of plasma selenium, retinol and alpha-tocopherol, before and after 8 weeks of fish oil supplementation (20 ml daily). We noted a remarkable reduction in plasma triglycerides which was associated with a significant decrease in blood pressure; moreover, we noted a reduction in the amount of arachidonic acid compensated by an increment of omega-3-fatty acid (particularly eicosapentaenoic and docosahexaenoic acids). The dietary supplementation with fish oil was associated with a significant increase in glutathione peroxidase activity in both erythrocytes and platelets. On the contrary, the production of malondialdehyde, which was originally higher than normal in hyperlipidaemics, was inhibited significantly after fish oil (p less than 0.001). Whereas no changes were observed in the concentration of plasma selenium and alpha-tocopherol, an increment of plasma retinol occurred. These data indicate that in hyperlipidaemics there is a proaggregant status; this situation may be normalized by using a dietary supplementation of fish oil; the increase of polyunsaturated fatty acids on the cell membrane, with a possible increment of the formation of lipoperoxides, induced by fish oil, is compensated by an increased activity of the scavenger enzyme glutathione peroxidase.


International Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Research | 1994

Decreased activity of scavenger enzymes in human hepatocellular carcinoma, but not in liver metastases

Massimo Casaril; Flavia Corso; Antonella Bassi; Franco Capra; Giovanni Battista Gabrielli; Anna Maria Stanzial; Nicola Nicoli; Roberto Corrocher

SummaryTo investigate the role of oxygen free radicals in hepatocellular carcinoma we assayed tissue scavenger enzymes (superoxide dismutase and selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase) in liver homogenate, plasma concentrations of vitamins A and E and the serum selenium level from 19 control patients, 23 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma and 18 cases of metastases to liver from different carcinomas. In hepatocellular carcinoma tissue the enzyme activities were all significantly lower than in control liver and in metastases-bearing liver; the enzyme activities of the latter tissues were not different from control liver. In contrast, normal liver adjacent to the hepatocellular carcinoma had decreased activity of superoxide dismutase. Serum selenium concentrations were significantly decreased in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and those with liver metastases, while vitamin A was significantly decreased only in the former. These findings suggest that hepatocellular carcinoma develops in liver with severe impairment of cellular antioxidant systems, since, in patients with liver metastases from different cancers, despite low selenium concentrations, cellular scavenger enzymes have normal activities.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1998

Erythrocyte membrane lipids and serum selenium in post-viral and alcoholic cirrhosis

Patrizia Guarini; Anna Maria Stanzial; Massino Casaril; Simonetta Galvani; Maurizio Pantalena; Roberto Corrocher

Erythrocyte-membrane fatty acid composition and cholesterol content were evaluated along with serum selenium in 33 patients with liver cirrhosis and in 40 normal subjects. Thirteen patients were suffering from post-viral (group V) and 20 from alcoholic (group A) cirrhosis. The aim of the study was to elucidate whether membrane lipid abnormalities in cirrhosis were linked to the aetiology of the disease or whether they were the results of the cirrhotic process itself. The patients presented a significant increase in membrane cholesterol, palmitic acid (C16:0) and saturated fatty acids (SFA), and a decrease in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and polyunsaturated/saturated fatty acids ratio (P/S) compared with the control group. Serum selenium levels were significantly reduced. When patients were subdivided according to aetiology, the alcoholic patients showed greater lipid composition abnormalities than the viral cirrhotics (higher levels of SFA and lower PUFA and P/S), while pathologic palmitic acid, membrane cholesterol and serum selenium values were confirmed in both groups of patients. In conclusion, low serum selenium and a series of erythrocytes membrane lipid composition abnormalities would appear to be features peculiar to cirrhosis. Alcoholic cirrhotics, on the other hand, show a more deranged erythrocyte membrane lipid profile.


Journal of The American College of Nutrition | 2011

Folic acid effects on s-adenosylmethionine, s-adenosylhomocysteine, and DNA methylation in patients with intermediate hyperhomocysteinemia.

Francesca Pizzolo; Henk J. Blom; Sang W. Choi; Domenico Girelli; Patrizia Guarini; Nicola Martinelli; Anna Maria Stanzial; Roberto Corrocher; Simonetta Friso

Objective: Folic acid (FA) supplementation decreases homocysteine (tHcy) levels. However, little is known about the effects of FA treatment on DNA methylation or plasma S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) and S-adenosylhomocysteine (AdoHcy) concentrations. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of FA supplementation on AdoMet, AdoHcy, and genomic DNA methylation in hyperhomocysteinemic subjects without end-stage renal disease. Methods: To evaluate the effects of 5 mg FA/d for 8 weeks, we recruited 7 hyperhomocysteinemic MTHFR677TT patients (tHcy >30 μmol/L) with normal renal function. Results: FA supplementation induced a decrease in tHcy (from 51.1 ± 21 at baseline to 26.1 ± 27 μmol/L after folate supplementation; p < 0.01). A parallel increase was seen in plasma AdoMet concentrations and the AdoMet/AdoHcy ratio (p < 0.05). However, FA supplementation had no effect on global DNA methylation levels in the present study. Conclusions: Supraphysiologic FA supplementation can modulate biochemical markers in one-carbon metabolism such as tHcy, AdoMet, and the AdoMet/AdoHcy ratio in hyperhomocysteinemic subjects. However, the reduction in homocysteinemia and the increased availability of methyl compounds provided by vitamin supplementation may not be sufficient to affect genomic DNA methylation.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1994

Factors affecting the thiobarbituric acid test as index of red blood cell susceptibility to lipid peroxidation: a multivariate analysis

Domenico Girelli; Anna Maria Stanzial; Patrizia Guarini; Maria Teresa Trevisan; Antonella Bassi; Roberto Corrocher

The relationship between formation of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) in red blood cells (RBC) after exposure to H2O2 and factors potentially able to modulate it was investigated by a multivariate analysis in 92 healthy volunteers. The independent covariates considered were: RBC membrane fatty acids and cholesterol, RBC antioxidant enzymes and zinc, plasma vitamins A and E and serum selenium, zinc and copper. The stepwise multiple-linear-regression analysis revealed RBC membrane fatty acids and cholesterol as predictors of a consistent proportion of the RBC-TBARS variability whereas none of the antioxidants entered the equation. The unsaturation index was the most important individual predictor; RBC-TBARS increased with increasing concentrations of total omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, C 20:5 omega-3 and cholesterol, whereas they decreased with increasing concentrations of total monounsaturated fatty acids, saturated fatty acids, C 16:0 and C 18:0. It is suggested that formation of TBARS, at least in currently used conditions, reflects mainly the lipid composition of the tissue under investigation, without giving sufficient information about the status of the antioxidant defences.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1989

Serum selenium in liver cirrhosis: Correlation with markers of fibrosis

Massimo Casaril; Anna Maria Stanzial; Giovanni Battista Gabrielli; Franco Capra; Luciano Zenari; S. Galassini; G. Moschini; Niang Qin Liu; Roberto Corrocher

In 55 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis and in 47 healthy individuals we assayed the concentration of selenium in serum (S-Se) by proton induced X-ray emission, the aminoterminal peptide of type III procollagen (NPIIIP) by RIA and the plasma fibronectin (FN) by immuno-nephelometry, together with routine biochemical tests. S-Se was lower in cirrhosis than in controls (0.57, SD 0.20 vs 0.92, SD 0.16 mumol/l; p less than 0.001) and was more reduced in ascitic than in compensated patients (0.50, SD 0.19 vs 0.66, SD 0.17 mumol/l; p less than 0.001). Regression analysis showed a positive correlation of S-Se with serum albumin and FN, whereas necrotic or inflammatory activity seems unrelated to S-Se; a negative correlation was found between S-Se and NPIIIP, suggesting a protective role of selenium against fibrosis.


Journal of Chemotherapy | 2003

Urinary nitrite/nitrate concentrations and total antioxidant capacity in patients with chronic hepatitis C in therapy with interferon and ribavirin.

Anna Maria Stanzial; G. Benoni; L. Cuzzolin; Giovanni Battista Gabrielli; M. Pasino; P. Perfetti; R. Corrocher

Abstract In this study we tried to elucidate the role of nitric oxide (NO) in chronic hepatitis C in relation to antioxidant status, since the mechanisms by which hepatitis C virus (HCV) causes cell damage and the factors underlying its resistance to therapy are not well understood. Before and after one and six months of therapy with α-interferon and ribavirin, we measured nitrite/nitrate urinary levels, total antioxidant capacity and selenium serum concentrations in 14 patients with chronic hepatitis C and in 9 healthy subjects. Before therapy, mean urinary nitrite/nitrate levels of patients were not different from those of healthy subjects, but after a 6-month treatment with α-interferon and ribavirin, these NO metabolites were higher in virologically negative patients (responders). Moreover, while no changes in selenium were observed in all patients, total antioxidant capacity was significantly higher in non-responders and well correlated with hyperuricemia (due to cell damage) observed in these subjects. Instead, uric acid decreased as free molecule in serum in responders, while we found the excretion of high NO levels as nitrite/nitrate. Our data allow us to hypothesize a role for NO as predictive of the success of therapy, since nitrite/nitrate increase in the urine of some patients precedes disappearance of the virus observed at the end of therapy.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1994

Selenium status, fatty acids, vitamins A and E, and aging: the Nove Study.

Anna Maria Stanzial; Domenico Girelli; Maria Teresa Trevisan; Patrizia Guarini; Marta Terzi; Sandro Caffi; Fabrizio Fontana; Massimo Casaril; S. Ferrari

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