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Dive into the research topics where Eugenia Tognotti is active.

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Featured researches published by Eugenia Tognotti.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2013

Lessons from the History of Quarantine, from Plague to Influenza A

Eugenia Tognotti

The complex and controversial history of this centuries-old public health strategy offers guidance for its future use.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Program to Eradicate Malaria in Sardinia, 1946–1950

Eugenia Tognotti

Malaria, considered almost eradicated in the mid-1940s, is still a worldwide public health problem.


The Journal of Medical Humanities | 2009

The Rise and Fall of Syphilis in Renaissance Europe

Eugenia Tognotti

The rapid changes that syphilis underwent after the first major outbreak that occurred in Naples in the mid-1490s are believed to constitute the first well-documented example of a human disease. The new plague was of exceptional virulence, highly contagious and causing severe ulceration at the site of infection. According to medical and other historical sources, the ‘genius epidemics’ changed some years after this onset, and a slower-progressing form of syphilis seems to have replaced the initial severe form, as do many virulent epidemic infectious diseases that appear in devastating forms in a previously uninfected population. But what exactly were the features of the disease at the moment of its appearance in Europe at the end of the fifteenth century? How many years did it take for the early, virulent form to be replaced and become endemic? What was the pace of these changes through the decades following the onset of the epidemic? In this essay, I review these issues through an analysis of a large number of chronologically-ordered primary historical sources.


Journal of Ancient Diseases & Preventive Remedies | 2014

Prevention Strategies and Changes in Sexual Mores in Response to the Outbreak of Syphilis in Europe in the Early Modern Age

Eugenia Tognotti

In the same way as AIDS in the 20th century, syphilis was the sexual scourge of the 16th century. Both of these sexually transmitted diseases, AIDS and syphilis, placed women at the risk of becoming infected through sexual intercourse within marriage. Nothing is known about the individual strategies of women during the first European syphilis epidemic. On the basis of primary sources (in the form of archival material and personal letters), and of literary sources, this article tries to shed light on the preventive measures and behavioural choices adopted in Renaissance Italy. We take in account, in particular, the social and institutional context in which two structural factors were acting: the large-scale war involving long separation of spouses, and the diffusion of prostitution which offered more opportunities for mens extramarital sexuality.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2018

Metals in bones of the middle-aged inhabitants of Sardinia island (Italy) to assess nutrition and environmental exposure

Beatrice Bocca; Giovanni Forte; Valentina Giuffra; Rita Maria Serra; Yolande Asara; Cristiano Farace; M Milanese; Eugenia Tognotti; Andrea Montella; Pasquale Bandiera; Roberto Madeddu

Metals in bones of 72 subjects lived between the twelfth and eighteenth century AC and collected in four Sardinian (Italian insular region) burial sites (Alghero, Bisarcio, Geridu, and Sassari) were determined and used as biomarkers to evaluate diet and potential social-environmental differences. Concentrations of Ba, Ca, Cd, Cu, Hg, Pb, Sr, and Zn were quantified in different types of compact bone (femur, fibula, humerus, radius, tibia, ulna) by sector field inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry previous acidic digestion and differences among the various burial sites, centuries, types of bone, gender, and age were explored by univariate and multivariate analyses. Results indicated differences between sites in terms of diet: Bisarcio (inland village) had increased ratios of Ba/Ca and Zn/Ca due to higher incidence of vegetables, cereals, and animal foods in the diet; Geridu (coastal village) showed increased Sr/Ca ratio indicating foods of plant and marine origin that were predominant; Alghero (coastal site) and Sassari (inland site) displayed prevalently a mixed diet reflecting a higher economy and food imports. In addition, these latter sites showed increased levels of Hg/Ca (fish, drugs, cosmetics) and Pb/Ca (coins, utensils, pipeline for water). In conclusion, the elemental Ba/Ca, Sr/Ca, and Zn/Ca ratios were indicative of provenance and diet, while Hg/Ca and Pb/Ca ratios were associated to various forms of environmental exposure.


Folia Morphologica | 2017

Atlas occipitalization associated with other anomalies in a 16th century skeleton from Sardinia (Italy).

V. Giuffra; Andrea Montella; M Milanese; Eugenia Tognotti; Davide Caramella; Pasquale Bandiera

Archaeological excavations carried out in the plague cemetery of 16th century Alghero (Sardinia) brought to light the skeleton of a male aged 35-45 years, showing anomalies of the atlas. A macroscopic and radiological study has been carried out. The first cervical vertebra is fused with the skull base, resulting in an occipitalisation of the atlas. Absence of the costal element of the left foramen transversarium, resulting in an open anterior foramen transversarium, and posterior arch defect are also observed. The atlanto-occipital junction is a complex structure, susceptible to develop different patterns of congenital defects. These anatomical variations of atlas should be considered in modern clinical practice in order to formulate a correct diagnosis and to conceive an appropriate treatment. Osteoarchaeological cases are important as, beside to ascertain the presence of congenital defects in past populations, allow an in-depth study in dry bones, which can help modern medicine in interpreting anatomical variations. We present an association of congenital anomalies of the atlanto-occipital junction, a condition rarely documented in ancient and modern human skeletal remains.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2017

Why were Sardinians the shortest Europeans? A journey through genes, infections, nutrition, and sex

Giovanni Mario Pes; Eugenia Tognotti; Michel Poulain; Dany Chambre; Maria Pina Dore

Since ancient times the Mediterranean island of Sardinia has been known for harboring a population with an average body height shorter than almost every other ethnic group in Europe. After over a century of investigations, the cause(s) at the origin of this uniqueness are not yet clear. The shorter stature of Sardinians appears to have been documented since prehistoric times, as revealed by the analysis of skeletal remains discovered in archaeological sites on the island. Recently, a number of genetic, hormonal, environmental, infective and nutritional factors have been put forward to explain this unique anthropometric feature, which persisted for a long time, even when environmental and living conditions improved around 1960. Although some of the putative factors are supported by sound empirical evidence, weaker support is available for others. The recent advent of whole genome analysis techniques shed new light on specific variants at the origin of this short stature. However, the marked geographical variability of stature across time and space within the island, and the well-known presence of pockets of short height in the population of the southern districts, are still puzzling findings that have attracted the interest of anthropologists and geneticists. The purpose of this review is to focus on the state-of-the-art research on stature, as well as the factors that made Sardinians the shortest among Europeans.


Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2014

A Case of brachymetatarsia from Medieval Sardinia (Italy)

Valentina Giuffra; Raffaella Bianucci; M Milanese; Eugenia Tognotti; Andrea Montella; Davide Caramella; Gino Fornaciari; Pasquale Bandiera

Archaeological excavations carried out in the Medieval village of Geridu (Sardinia) uncovered several burials dating to the late 13th or the first half of 14th century. Among these individuals, the skeleton of an adult female showing a bilateral abnormal shortness of the fourth metatarsal bone was identified. Bilaterality and absence of other skeletal anomalies allow to rule out an acquired aetiology of the disease and to support a diagnosis of congenital brachymetatarsia. Such a rare deformity has a clinical incidence of 0.02% to 0.05%, with strong predominance of the female gender. To our knowledge, no other cases of brachymetatarsia have been reported in paleopathology so far. Anat Rec, 297:650–652, 2014.


PLOS ONE | 2018

The association of adult height with the risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer in the population of Sardinia

Giovanni Mario Pes; Antonello Ganau; Eugenia Tognotti; Alessandra Errigo; Chiara Rocchi; Maria Pina Dore

The relationship between body height and the risk of non‒communicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease and cancer has been the subject of much debate in the epidemiological literature. Concerns have recently arisen over spurious associations due to confounding factors like birth cohort, especially in the context of epidemiological transition. The population of Sardinia represents an interesting case study, as the average physical stature of inhabitants was the lowest recorded in Europe until a few decades ago. In this population we tested whether height is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease and cancer. We analysed the stature of 10,427 patients undergoing endoscopy for any reason, for whom a detailed clinical history of cardiovascular disease and/or malignancies had been documented. Poisson regression modelling was used to test the association between stature and disease risk. When patients were subdivided according to sex and height tertiles, the risk of cardiovascular disease proved significantly greater for subjects in the lowest tertile irrespective of sex (men: 1.87; 95%CI 1.41‒2.47; women: 1.23; 95%CI 0.92‒1.66) and smaller for those in the highest tertile (men: 0.51; 95%CI 0.35‒0.75; women: 0.41; 95%CI 0.27‒0.61). However, after adjusting the risk for birth cohort and established risk factors, it mostly resulted in non-significant values, although the overall trend persisted. Similar results were obtained for all-cancer risk (relative risk for men and women in the lowest tertile: 1.44; 95%CI 1.09–1.90 and 1.17; 95%CI 0.93–1.48, in the highest tertile: 0.51; 95%CI 0.36–0.72 and 0.62; 95%CI 0.47–0.81, respectively) as well as for some of the most common types of cancer. We concluded that the risk of developing cardiovascular disease and malignancies does not vary significantly with stature in the Sardinian population, after adjusting for birth cohort and more obvious risk factors.


Italian journal of anatomy and embryology | 2017

Osteological Markers of Malaria

Rita Maria Serra; Valeria Pomponi; Giuseppe Manzoni; Eugenia Tognotti; Maria Alessandra Sotgiu; Andrea Montella; Pasquale Bandiera

Malaria is an acute and chronic disease caused by a parasitic protozoan, the Plasmodium. Five species infect humans and one of them, the Plasmodium falciparum, is the most attested in the past by biomolecular research (1). Recently the connection between malaria and various skeletal and dental lesions like Cribra Orbitalia (2, 3), Cribra Femuri and Hypoplasia (4) was supposed, already related with nutritional deficiency during development. The aim of this study is to verify this connection comparing osteological and biomolecular data. Samples from Nord-West of Sardinia were examined: four necropolis ranging from the Prenuragic period (3000 BC) to Middle Age (1400 AD). The necropolis underwent analysis using standard anthropological methods. To verify the presence of Plasmodium, samples from each necropolis were analyzed using an immune-chromatographic approach; only the fragment from Nuragic period showed a positive signal to Plasmodium falciparum. Cribra were evaluated according to a scale present in literature for Orbitalia (5) and Femuri (6); to better evaluate them, each pathological sample underwent radiographic and TC analysis. Crossing malaria and osteological data we can see that hypoplasia seems not to be related to malaria because it is absent when there is the Plasmodium falciparum; on the contrary, Cribra seems to be related to Plasmodium falciparum, especially Cribra Orbitalia were the most severe and the most common. Thanks to our data, we can say that osteological diseases like Cribra can be used to diagnose ancient cases of malaria.

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