Claudia Cevini
University of Pavia
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Maturitas | 1997
Arsenio Spinillo; Anna Maria Bernuzzi; Claudia Cevini; Roberto Gulminetti; Stefania Luzi; Antonella De Santolo
OBJECTIVE To estimate the prevalence of bacterial vaginosis, Candida albicans, and Trichomonas vaginalis infections in a population of postmenopausal women with symptoms of vaginitis seen at a vaginitis clinic either as self-referred or clinician referred patients. METHODS A cross-sectional study of 148 postmenopausal women (cases) and 1564 controls of reproductive age attending a vaginitis clinic. C. albicans and T. vaginalis infections were diagnosed by culture techniques. Bacterial vaginosis was diagnosed on the basis of clinical findings. RESULTS Fifty-six (37.8%) postmenopausal women and 834 (53.3%) controls were diagnosed with T. vaginalis or C. albicans infection, or bacterial vaginosis, or mixed infection (odds ratio (OR) 0.53, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.37-0.75). C. albicans and T. vaginalis infection were diagnosed in 34.1% (534/1564) and 1.92% (30/1564) of women of childbearing age and in 13.5% (20/148) and 10.8% of postmenopausal women, respectively. (P < 0.05 for both comparisons). The prevalence of bacterial vaginosis was similar between the two groups (14/148 in postmenopausal patients and 210/1564 in controls of reproductive age; P = 0.22). CONCLUSIONS Among postmenopausal women attending a vaginitis clinic, a defined diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis, C. albicans or T. vaginalis infection can be made in about one third of such patients. Concerning the two thirds of symptomatic women lacking such a microbiologic diagnosis, alternative causes (e.g., estrogen deficiency, nonanaerobic bacterial infections, local irritants or allergenes, and dermatologic conditions) need to be considered.
Parasitology Research | 1995
Simonetta Gatti; Claudia Cevini; L. Marchi; S. Novati; M. Scaglia
A total of 77 mentally retarde male inpatients residing in a psychiatric institution in northern Italy were screened for the presence of stool parasites,Entamoeba histolytica particularly. Parasitological stool examination showedEntamoeba spp. (E. histolytica and/orE. dispar) in 26 cases (33.7%). In vitro culture on Robinsons medium was positive in 16 cases (61.1%); in 11 cases we could stabilize and clone the isolates and proceed to electrophoretic assays. In all cases, patterns of pathogenic zymodemes were found (zymodeme II, 3 isolates; zymodeme XII, 4 isolates; zymodeme XIV, 4 isolates). All isolates were therefore identified asE. histolytica.
Zentralblatt Fur Bakteriologie-international Journal of Medical Microbiology Virology Parasitology and Infectious Diseases | 1992
Simonetta Gatti; Claudia Cevini; Chiara Atzori; Simona Muratori; Roberto Zerboni; Mario Cusini; M. Scaglia
A cohort of 51 homosexuals who were either HIV-positive or had AIDS was followed prospectively with parasitologic stool examination and in vitro culture in order to determine the incidence of E. histolytica infection. Amoebic isolates were further characterized by electrophoretic isoenzyme study. Five subjects (9.8%) were found to be infected with E. histolytica. None of the amoebic isolates were found to be pathogenic by isoenzyme analysis.
Parasitology Research | 1997
Simonetta Gatti; Claudia Cevini; A. Bruno; Mahdi Ramsan; Leonardo Marchi; M. Scaglia
Abstract Isoenzyme analysis by starch-gel electrophoresis has proved to be a useful method for the biochemical differentiation of pathogenic Entamoeba histolytica and non-pathogenic E. dispar isolates. Of the 24 known zymodemes, 3 are laboratory-made and have not previously been identified in humans. Parasitology screening was carried out in a psychiatric institution. Two amebic stocks were isolated and characterized that had never previously been found in humans and that have protein patterns identical to that of the laboratory-made zymodeme XX.
Experimental Parasitology | 1989
M. Scaglia; Simonetta Gatti; Claudia Cevini; Anna Maria Bernuzzi; Augusto Julio Martinez
A subspecies of Naegleria australiensis, N. australiensis italica, pathogenic for mice, was recently isolated and identified from an Italian thermal spa. We describe the histopathological changes of the central nervous system with experimental infection of albino mice. The histopathological patterns are intermediate to those seen with infection caused by N. fowleri and N. australiensis or Acanthamoeba spp. An acute inflammatory reaction was present within the choroid plexus, ependyma, midbrain, cerebellum, and basal ganglia. Occasional single amebic trophozoites were found within some microabscesses. Cysts were not identified. Involvement of the olfactory neuroepithelium and of the nasal mucosa was not detected.
QJM: An International Journal of Medicine | 1988
Robert M. Genta; Simona Gatti; Michael J. Linke; Claudia Cevini; Massimo Scaglia
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1998
Simonetta Gatti; Claudia Cevini; A. Bruno; Gabriella Penso; Paolo Rama; M. Scaglia
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1992
Guido Chichino; Anna Maria Bernuzzi; A. Bruno; Claudia Cevini; Chiara Atzori; Antonello Malfitano; M. Scaglia
Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1991
G. Chichino; Bruno A; Claudia Cevini; Atzori C; Simonetta Gatti; M. Scaglia
Bulletin De La Societe De Pathologie Exotique | 1989
M. Scaglia; Simonetta Gatti; Bruno A; Claudia Cevini; G. Chichino; Magnani B; Brustia R