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Dive into the research topics where Domenico Schiavino is active.

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Featured researches published by Domenico Schiavino.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1998

Beneficial Effects of Helicobacter pylori Eradication on Idiopathic Chronic Urticaria

Cristiana Di Campli; Antonio Gasbarrini; Eleonora Nucera; Francesco Franceschi; Veronica Ojetti; Elena Sanz Torre; Domenico Schiavino; Paolo Pola; Giampiero Patriarca; Giovanni Gasbarrini

Helicobacter pylori, the most important cause ofgastritis and peptic ulcer, recently has been associatedwith several extradigestive diseases. The aim of thisstudy was to assess the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection and the effects of bacteriumeradication in 42 consecutive patients affected byidiopathic chronic urticaria. Helicobacter pylori wasassessed by [13C]urea breath test.Amoxicillin, clarithromycin, and lansoprazole were given to infectedpatients for seven days. Urticaria and gastrointestinalsymptoms were assessed on enrollment and aftereradication. Fifty-five percent of patients proved to beinfected by Helicobacter pylori. Prevalence ofgastrointestinal symptoms did not differ betweeninfected and uninfected patients. Eighty-eight percentof infected patients in whom the bacterium waseradicated after therapy showed a total or partial remission ofurticaria symptoms. Conversely, symptoms remainedunchanged in all uninfected patients. In conclusion,Helicobacter pylori affects a high percentage ofpatients with idiopathic chronic urticaria; however,typical gastrointestinal symptoms do not identifyinfection status. Bacterium eradication is associatedwith a remission of urticaria symptoms, suggesting apossible role of Helicobacter pylori in the pathogenesisof this skin disorder.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2007

Oral Specific Desensitization in Food-Allergic Children

Giampiero Patriarca; Eleonora Nucera; Emanuela Pollastrini; Chiara Roncallo; Tiziana Maria De Pasquale; Carla Lombardo; Claudio Pedone; Giovanni Gasbarrini; Alessandro Buonomo; Domenico Schiavino

The possibility of obtaining oral desensitization in patients with food allergy is still a matter of debate. We decided to evaluate the safety and efficacy of standardized protocols for oral desensitization with the most common food allergens. Forty-two children (ages up to 16 years) diagnosed as affected by food allergy (on the basis of clinical history, skin prick tests, measurement of specific IgE, and double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge) underwent a sublingual-oral desensitizing treatment according to new standardized protocols. The control group consisted of 10 patients who followed an elimination diet. The treatment was successfully completed by 85.7% of the patients. Specific IgE showed a significant decrease, while specific IgG4 showed a significant increase, in all treated patients. The immunological modifications observed in our patients lead us to hypothesize that oral tolerance may be mediated by the same mechanisms as those involved in traditional desensitizing treatments for respiratory and insect sting allergy.


Pediatric Allergy and Immunology | 2007

Quantitative assessment of the compliance with once‐daily sublingual immunotherapy in children (EASY Project: Evaluation of A novel SLIT formulation during a Year)

Giovanni Passalacqua; A. Musarra; Silvia Pecora; Saverio Amoroso; Leonardo Antonicelli; G. Cadario; Mario Di Gioacchino; Carlo Lombardi; Erminia Ridolo; Guido Sacerdoti; Domenico Schiavino; Gianenrico Senna

Compliance is a major determinant for allergy treatment, especially in children. Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is self‐managed at home, and no quantitative data on pediatric adherence are available. We studied the compliance in a large real‐life setting. A simplified schedule of SLIT was used, consisting of a 10‐day updosing phase followed by maintenance treatment in monodose containers to be taken daily (SLITOne®). Italian specialists throughout Italy assessed the compliance in children who were newly prescribed SLIT according to guidelines. Parents were contacted with unscheduled telephone interviews at the third and sixth month of therapy and asked to count at that moment the remaining vials. Data from 71 children (38 boys, age range 2–13 yr) were enclosed in the database. Thirty had rhinoconjunctivitis, four asthma and 37 rhinoconjunctivitis + asthma. SLIT was prescribed for: mites in 57 (81%) subjects, grasses in 11 (15%) and 3 (4%) grass + olive mixture. Compliance data were available for all children at 3 months, and for 56 at 6 months. At 3 months, 85% of subjects had a compliance rate >75% (69% of them adhered >90%). At 6 months, 84% had a compliance rate >75% (66% of them adhered >90%). In four cases SLIT was discontinued for economical reasons, and in one case (1.4%) for side effects probably related to therapy. These data obtained in a quite large sample of children and in real‐life confirm that the compliance with SLITOne® is good, despite the therapy managed at home.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2006

Oral Rush Desensitization in Peanut Allergy: A Case Report

Giampiero Patriarca; Eleonora Nucera; Emanuela Pollastrini; Tiziana Maria De Pasquale; Carla Lombardo; Alessandro Buonomo; Chiara Roncallo; Valentina Pecora; Sonia Nunzialfina Musumeci; Giorgia Altomonte; Cristiana Alonzi; Domenico Schiavino; Giovanni Gasbarrini

Allergy to peanuts represents one of the most severe food allergies, rarely remitting compared with milk and egg allergy and frequently associated with life-threatening allergic reactions (1, 2). Its prevalence in the United States is 1.1% (3). Clinical manifestations range from vomiting, diarrhea, and local or generalized urticaria–angioedema to dyspnea, hypotension, collapse, and anaphylactic shock (4). Ara h1, Ara h2, and Ara h3 have been identified as the major peanut allergens (5). Currently prolonged strict avoidance represents the only effective means to prevent allergic symptoms, but this is hardly feasible. Peanut-allergic patients are particularly vulnerable to accidental exposure because small traces (doses as low as 100 μg of protein) may provoke severe symptoms (6, 7). Results of peanut allergen monitoring showed a remarkable quantity of products (such as snacks, cereal bars, and potato snacks) with hidden allergen (8). Another study has shown how simple tasks such as shopping and eating in restaurants can be extremely frightening, even perceived as life-threatening (9). We report the case of a woman with peanut allergy who successfully underwent specific rush desensitization by the oral route (10–14).


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2002

Sublingual desensitization: a new approach to latex allergy problem

Giampiero Patriarca; Eleonora Nucera; Emanuela Pollastrini; Chiara Roncallo; Alessandro Buonomo; Francesco Bartolozzi; Tiziana Maria De Pasquale; Giovanni Gasbarrini; Domenico Schiavino

The prevalence of latex allergy has rapidly increased. Clinical manifestations range from contact urticaria-angioedema and rhinoconjunctivitis to more severe bronchial asthma and anaphylactic shock. The only effective therapy is desensitization. We studied 24 patients allergic to latex: 12 of them underwent a rush (4-day) sublingual desensitization to latex, performed by putting increasing doses of latex extract under the patients’ tongues for 3 min every 20 min, followed by a maintenance therapy. The other 12 patients were considered controls. The sublingual rush desensitization protocol was successfully completed in all patients with no side effects. After 3 mo, all patients underwent an allergological evaluation, which showed a significant improvement of symptoms scores after challenges in the treated group as compared with the controls. All the desensitized patients can now wear latex gloves and undergo medical procedures without any symptoms.


Annals of Allergy Asthma & Immunology | 1999

Clinical usefulness of patch and challenge tests in the diagnosis of cell-mediated allergy to betalactams

Giampiero Patriarca; Claudio DAmbrosio; Domenico Schiavino; Luigi Maria Larocca; Eleonora Nucera; Alessandro Milani

BACKGROUND Literature reports dealing with cell-mediated allergy to betalactams have appeared with increasing frequency in the last years. OBJECTIVE To evaluate patients with such reactions and to identify cross-reactivities among betalactams in order to provide safe guidelines for their further clinical management. METHODS Thirty consecutive subjects with cell-mediated allergy to betalactams (history of adverse reactions to these antibiotics; serum total IgE within the normal range; absence of serum specific IgE antibodies to penicillin G and V, amoxicillin, and ampicillin; negative skin tests with a wide pattern of betalactam preparations; and positive patch-test to at least one betalactam antigenic determinant) were investigated. The subjects admitted to the study were patch tested with a wide variety of betalactam preparations in order to identify alternative molecules tolerated by the patient. To better evaluate the cross-reactivity pattern, tolerance challenges with patch-negative betalactams were also performed in each subject. RESULTS Both specific IgE and skin tests were negative in all patients. The skin biopsies performed on the positive patch-tested area in four patients showed a clear T-lymphocyte, CD4+-type infiltrate, thus definitely proving the occurrence of a cell-mediated response. A total of 44 adverse reactions (mean: 1.47 episodes for each patient) were reported in history, with a mean interval of 15 hours after betalactam administration. The reported symptoms were mainly cutaneous (maculo-papular rash and urticaria) and the responsible drugs were chiefly aminopenicillins (86.4% of cases) and penicillin G (9.1%). We were able to identify three separate groups of patients on the basis of clinical history, patch-test, and tolerance challenge pattern: allergy to the side chain of aminopenicillins in 16 patients (53.3%); allergy to the thiazolidine ring in 3 patients (10.0%); undetermined specificity in the remainder 11 patients (36.7%). Cross-reactivity among different betalactam molecules (revealed by positive tolerance tests performed with patch-negative betalactams) was found in 4.8% of cases only (23.3% of all investigated patients). This fact demonstrates a very high (95.2%) predictive value of a negative patch-test in excluding the occurrence of a cross-reactivity. The mis-match between patch and tolerance tests was observed in 3 out of 178 cases only (1.7% of cases, 10.5% of patients) in groups A and B, and in as much as 12.2% of cases (45.5% of subjects) in group C (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS Delayed allergy to betalactams (mainly to aminopenicillins) may be exerted by a cell-mediated response. Patch tests and tolerance challenges are extremely useful and safe for diagnosis and further clinical treatment of these patients, helping to identify safe alternative betalactam molecules that could be successfully tolerated by the allergic subjects.


Thorax | 2000

Effects of lysine-acetylsalicylate (LAS) treatment in nasal polyposis: two controlled long term prospective follow up studies

Eleonora Nucera; Domenico Schiavino; Alessandro Milani; M Del Ninno; C Misuraca; Alessandro Buonomo; Cristiana D'Ambrosio; Gaetano Paludetti; Giampiero Patriarca

Nasal polyposis is a multifactorial disease with a complex and still not completely understood pathogenesis. In more than one third of cases it is associated with intolerance to acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin, ASA) or to other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).1 In as many as 20% of cases nasal polyposis is also associated with the presence of bronchial asthma and/or rhinitis, configuring the so-called ASA triad or aspirin disease.2 Nasal polyps may benefit from medical treatment (corticosteroids) and surgery,3 but they frequently relapse soon after surgery4-9 with significant morbidity and high social and medical costs. Unfortunately, the effect of treatment with steroids is also often temporary.3 10-16 In the last two decades it has been observed that, in aspirin sensitive patients, oral aspirin desensitisation (followed by long term aspirin treatment) often results in an improvement in the clinical course of nasal polyposis.17-21 We have shown that aspirin sensitive patients with nasal polyposis have a higher rate of positive nasal provocation tests (rhinomanometric measure of nasal airflow reduction after exposure to the drug) with lysine-acetylsalicylate (LAS) than aspirin sensitive patients without nasal polyps.22-24 Moreover, LAS has been found to have an in vitro non-specific antiproliferative, dose dependent effect on the growth of fibroblasts of both nasal polyps and normal skin.23 We have shown that long term topical (endonasal) treatment with LAS prevents the recurrence of nasal polyps after polypectomy with satisfactory results.24 In this paper we present and discuss the definitive results obtained in two controlled long term prospective follow up studies dealing with the evaluation of relapse rates in nasal polyposis. The first is a six year follow up study of patients with nasal polyps who underwent long term intranasal LAS treatment after surgical polypectomy in comparison with matched controls (patients who underwent …


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 1995

Oral Hyposensitization to Nickel Allergy: Preliminary Clinical Results

Rc Panzani; Domenico Schiavino; Eleonora Nucera; Stefano Pellegrino; G Fais; G Schinco; Giampiero Patriarca

Fifty-one patients presenting a dermatological allergy (erythema, urticaria, angioedema, contact dermatitis) to nickel were treated over 3 years with oral doses of 0.1 ng nickel sulfate per day, following a low-nickel diet. Diagnostic tests comprised patch and oral provocation tests. In 7 cases, the treatment was interrupted because of symptom reactivation, and in 14 cases for other reasons. Among the 30 cases who went through the whole follow-up, symptomatology totally disappeared in 29 cases, and a partial alleviation was achieved in 1 case after 1 year of treatment. Oral provocation tests with these 30 patients showed an overall increase of tolerance. Patch tests showed no variation in 20 cases, a diminution in 5, and were negative in 5. Although the study was not conducted double blind, the results of this attempt to cure nickel allergy are statistically significant.


European Heart Journal | 2009

Pre-intervention eosinophil cationic protein serum levels predict clinical outcomes following implantation of drug-eluting stents

Giampaolo Niccoli; Domenico Schiavino; Flavia Belloni; Giuseppe Ferrante; Giuseppe La Torre; Micaela Conte; Nicola Cosentino; Rocco A. Montone; Vito Sabato; Francesco Burzotta; Carlo Trani; Antonio Maria Leone; Italo Porto; Maurizio Pieroni; Giampiero Patriarca; Filippo Crea

AIMS Eosinophils have been identified in post-mortem studies as important players of both restenosis and thrombosis after drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation. We aimed at assessing the association between baseline levels of eosinophil cationic protein (ECP), a marker of eosinophil activation, and recurrence of clinical events in a consecutive series of patients who underwent DES implantation. METHODS AND RESULTS Two hundred patients (age 63 +/- 10.4, males 75%) undergoing implantation of first-generation DES (Taxus or Cypher stents) were enrolled. We measured serum levels of ECP and total IgE by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and of C-reactive protein by high-sensitivity nephelometry prior to percutaneous coronary intervention. A clinical follow-up was planned 18 months after discharge. Major adverse cardiac events (MACEs), such as cardiac death, recurrent myocardial infarction, or clinically driven target lesion revascularization, were the endpoint of the study. Twenty-two patients (11%) had MACEs and showed higher serum levels of ECP compared with those without MACEs [30.5 (14.4-50) vs. 12.2 (4.4-31) microg/L, P = 0.004]. At simple Cox regression analysis, serum levels of ECP were a significant predictor of MACEs (hazard ratio 1.016, 95% confidence interval 1.003-1.03, P = 0.018). CONCLUSION This study shows for the first time an association between baseline ECP levels and the occurrence of MACEs in patients undergoing implantation of DES. Further studies are warranted to establish whether in this setting ECP is a risk marker or plays a contributory pathogenetic role.


International Journal of Immunopathology and Pharmacology | 2002

Oral desensitisation in cow milk allergy: immunological findings.

Giampiero Patriarca; Alessandro Buonomo; Chiara Roncallo; M Del Ninno; Emanuela Pollastrini; Alessandro Milani; Tiziana Maria De Pasquale; Giovanni Gasbarrini; Domenico Schiavino; Eleonora Nucera

In the literature there are several reports dealing with the possibility of a desensitising treatment in food allergy, but there are very few studies concerning the immunological mechanisms of or al desensitisation. We studied the immunological modifications in four children who underwent oral desensitisation with cow milk. Four children with cow milk allergy underwent oral desensitisation according to a standardized protocol. Total IgE, eosinophilic cationic protein in serum, and specific IgE and IgG4 to α-lactalbumin, to β-lactoglobulin and to casein were determined at the beginning of the treatment and after 6, 12 and 18 months in the 4 children treated. All the 4 treated patients successfully completed the treatment. Specific IgE to casein showed a significant reduction (p<0.01), while specific IgG4 to α-lactalbumin (p<0.02), to β-lactoglobulin (p<0.01) and to casein (p<0.01) showed a significant increase. Total IgE, eosinophilic cationic protein, and specific IgE to a-lactalbumin and to β-Iactoglobulin did not show any significant modification. Control patients did not show any immunological modification and still had a positive double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge. These results make us think that oral desensitisation in food allergy occurs with the same mechanisms of traditional desensitising treatments for respiratory and insect sting allergies.

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Eleonora Nucera

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Giampiero Patriarca

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Alessandro Buonomo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Emanuela Pollastrini

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Arianna Aruanno

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Carla Lombardo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Chiara Roncallo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Tiziana Maria De Pasquale

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Angela Rizzi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Valentina Pecora

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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