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Dive into the research topics where Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion is active.

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Featured researches published by Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion.


British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2004

VEGF expression in the placenta from pregnancies complicated by hypertensive disorders

Eleonora Sgambati; Mirca Marini; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Elena Parretti; G. Mello; Claudio Orlando; Lisa Simi; Carmela Tricarico; Gheri G; E. Brizzi

Objective  To determine the expression of VEGF in the placental tissue from pregnancies complicated by hypertension disorders of different clinical severity.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2007

Distribution of the glycoconjugate oligosaccharides in the human placenta from pregnancies complicated by altered glycemia: lectin histochemistry

Eleonora Sgambati; Mirca Marini; Debora Vichi; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Elena Parretti; G. Mello; Gheri G

The aim of this study was to investigate the distribution of the oligosaccharides of the glycoconjugates in placentas from pregnancies complicated by different degree of altered glycaemia. Placentas from women with physiological pregnancies (group 1), with pregnancies complicated by minor degree of glucose intolerance (group 2) and with pregnancies complicated by gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) treated with insulin (group 3) were collected. Ten lectins were used (ConA, WGA, PNA, SBA, DBA, LTA, UEA I, GSL II, MAL II and SNA) in combination with chemical and enzymatic treatments. The data showed a decrease of sialic acid linked α(2–6) to galactose/N-acetyl-d-galactosamine and an increase of N-acetyl-d-glucosamine in the placentas of the pathological groups, in particular the group 3, comparing to the group 1. A decrease of l-fucose (LTA) and d-galactose-(β1–3)-N-acetyl-d-galactosamine, and an increase and/or appearance of l-fucose (UEA I) and N-acetyl-d-galactosamine were observed in both the pathological groups, particularly in the group 2, with respect to the group 1. In GDM, and even in pregnancies with a simple alteration of maternal glycaemia, the changes in the distribution of oligosaccharides could be related to alteration of the structure and functionality of the placenta.


Acta Histochemica | 2011

Distribution of sugar residues in human placentas from pregnancies complicated by hypertensive disorders.

Mirca Marini; Laura Bonaccini; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Debora Vichi; Elena Parretti; Eleonora Sgambati

The aim of the study was to investigate the content and distribution of sugar residues in placentas from pregnancies complicated by hypertensive disorders. Placentas from women with uncomplicated pregnancies (group 1), pregnancies complicated by gestational hypertension (group 2), pregnancies complicated by pre-eclampsia (group 3), pregnancies complicated by pre-eclampsia with HELLP syndrome (hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes and low platelets) (group 4) were collected. Lectins: ConA, WGA, PNA, SBA, DBA, UEA I, GNA, DSA, MAA, SNA, in combination with chemical and enzymatic treatments, were used. Data showed a decrease and/or lack of α-d-mannose, α-d-glucose and d-galactose-(β1-4)-N-acetyl-d-glucosamine in placentas from pre-eclampsia and pre-eclampsia with HELLP syndrome compared with control and hypertension cases. N-acetyl-d-galactosamine appeared and/or increased in placentas from hypertensive disorders. A different distribution of various types of sialic acid was observed in placentas from hypertensive disorders compared with the controls. In particular, placentas from pre-eclampsia, with and without HELLP syndrome, lacked the acetylated sialic acid side-chain. These findings demonstrate various alterations of the carbohydrate metabolism in the placentas from pregnancies complicated by different types of hypertensive disorders. This indicates correlation with the placental morpho-functional changes characteristic of these complications and with the degree of clinical severity.


Acta Histochemica | 2011

Lectin binding in normal, keratoconus and cross-linked human corneas.

Rita Mencucci; Mirca Marini; Gheri G; Debora Vichi; Erica Sarchielli; Laura Bonaccini; Stefano Ambrosini; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Iacopo Paladini; Gabriella Barbara Vannelli; Eleonora Sgambati

In this study the characterization of various types of sugar residues in normal, keratoconus and cross-linked human corneas was performed using immunohistochemical localization with lectins. Corneal samples were collected and divided into three groups: (1) normal corneas from cadavers; (2) keratoconic corneal buttons; (3) keratoconic corneal buttons treated with cross-linking. A series of lectins including: DBA, SBA, PNA, ConA, WGA, UEA I, GNA, DSA, MAA, SNA, were used in combination with chemical and enzymatic treatments. Compared with the normal corneas, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine increased in the keratoconus corneas. L-fucose increased and/or appeared in the keratoconus and the cross-linked corneas. N-acetyl-D-galactosamine was more abundant in the epithelium of keratoconus corneas, but was lacking in the keratoconus and cross-linked endothelium. D-galactose-(β1-4)-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine was absent in the whole stroma of the keratoconus corneas and in the deep layers of the cross-linked ones. Sialic acids increased in the keratoconus corneas and decreased in the cross-linked ones. These results showed altered glycosylation in the keratoconic corneas and partially similar glycosylation in the cross-linked corneas, compared to the normal ones. This suggests a role played by sugar residues in maintaining the corneal structure. The changes could be related to structural alterations in keratoconus. The present findings contribute to our understanding of the effect of cross-linking treatment of keratoconic corneas in therapeutic attempts to re-establish the normal corneal structure.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2000

The effects on auditory neurocognitive evoked responses and contingent negative variation activity of frontal cortex lesions or ablations in man: three new case studies

R. Zappoli; A. Versari; F. Zappoli; Roberta Chiaramonti; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Maria Grazia Arneodo; Vanni Zerauschek

Our previous research in patients with extensive surgical ablations of the prefrontal cortex contradict the hypothesis of some authors that the generators of several auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) (N100; P200; N200; P300; SW), recordable in humans with depth/scalp electrodes and MEG over the prefrontal dorsolateral cortical areas, are essentially located in medial prefrontal and anterior cingulate-limbic cortices. Using a standard CNV paradigm, 21 EEG electrodes and topographic mapping analysis, the post-warning (S1) auditory N100a b c, P200, P300 (binaural clicks) and CNV activity were recorded in three additional patients after extensive dorsolateral and/or medial prefrontal cortex ablations, verified through CT/MRI examinations. No true post-S1/CNV components were recordable over the ablated frontal areas, only sporadic volume-conducted ERPs probably generated in the temporo-parietal lobes or posterior cingulate gyrus. For one of these patients, after excision of a vast right frontal epileptogenic cortical region (including extensive dorsolateral areas, but sparing the fronto-medial cortex and anterior/middle cingulate gyrus), no post-S1/CNV components were recordable over the ablated regions. These latest observations again indicate that independent neuronal generators of several post-S1 auditory and CNV components are located in the dorsolateral supramodal premotor/prefrontal cortical areas which are directly, ipsilaterally connected to the uni/multimodal temporo-parieto-occipital sensory and associative regions through the long, two-way, fairly superficial, superior arcuate-longitudinal and deeper superior and inferior occipito-frontal bundles. Clear and almost constant differences in the latency of some post-S1 N100 subcomponents (especially the time-lapses between onset and the highest amplitude of the N100 a and c) over various posterior, central and anterior cortical areas sequentially involved, roughly measured in 10 normal subjects along the scalp and with MRI cerebral imaging, may probably be accounted for by the transcortical homohemispheric conduction time, which varies in our scalp recordings from 1 cm/0.74-1.28 ms, mean approximately 1 cm/1.02 ms ( approximately 9.8 ms).


Acta Histochemica | 2014

Expression of sialic acids in human adult skeletal muscle tissue

Mirca Marini; Stefano Ambrosini; Erica Sarchielli; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Laura Bonaccini; Gabriella Barbara Vannelli; Eleonora Sgambati

Investigations mostly in animal models have shown a role of sialic acid in the morphology and functionality of skeletal muscle during development and adult life. Several studies in humans have been performed regarding changes in sialic acid expression in a particular pathology, hereditary inclusion body myopathy, leading to muscular weakness and atrophy, with a similar phenomenon appearing also in sarcopenia of aging. In this study the expression of monomeric and polymeric sialic acids was evaluated in human skeletal muscle during adult life. Surgical biopsies of the Quadriceps femoris muscle from men aged 18-25 years (young group; n=8) and men aged 72-78 (elderly group; n=10) were collected for analysis. Expression of sialic acids was evaluated using lectin histochemistry, associated with enzymatic and chemical treatments to characterize monomeric and polymeric sialic acids. The polysialic acid expression was also evaluated by immunohistochemistry. Various types of sialic acid in the muscle tissue, in different amounts in the study groups, were detected. Monomeric sialic acids decreased in the elderly group compared with the young group, whereas polysialic acid increased. Sialic acid acetylation was present only in the young group. These findings demonstrated that changes in the expression of sialic acids in skeletal muscle tissue may be related to morphofunctional modifications occurring during aging.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2002

Frontal and parieto-temporal cortical ablations and diaschisis-like effects on auditory neurocognitive potentials evocable from apparently intact ipsilateral association areas in humans: Five case reports

R. Zappoli; F. Zappoli; Anna Picchiecchio; Roberta Chiaramonti; Maria Grazia Arneodo; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Vanni Zerauschek

The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of disruption on the warning auditory S1-elicited ERP and CNV complexes recordable on the site and on remote ipsilateral apparently normal anatomo-functionally interconnected brain regions. These effects in some cases showed aspects of a probable diaschisis-like phenomenon, due to resections of extensive frontal association cortex or of primary and secondary sensory parieto-temporal areas damaged by differing pathological processes. Using a standard CNV paradigm, 21/19 EEG electrodes connected with three different references, and scalp-topographic bidimensional mapping analysis, the S1 auditory binaural/monaural clicks N1a,b,c, P2, N2, P3 and CNV waves were recorded in 10 normal subjects and 11 patients. Nine of the latter had been submitted to unilateral frontal dorsolateral cortex ablation, one to bihemispheric dorsomedial cortex ablation, and one to unilateral ablation of sensory parieto-temporal cortex and underlying white matter, verified through CT/MRI examinations. No true S1ERP/CNV components were recordable over the ablated cortical areas, whereas normal ERP/CNV complexes were observable on the intact hemispheres. In five patients, four of whom with frontocortical ablations, the S1 ERP/CNV complexes appeared severely diminished or disrupted, in two cases in a slow, partially-reversible manner, also in the neuroradiologically normal ipsilateral functionally-connected post-rolandic sensory and association areas. Similar deactivation of some ERP components was observed in reverse on the unilateral dorsolateral frontocortical region in the fifth patient with parieto-temporal cortex ablation. Even when they are partially reversible, these ipsilateral remote ERP changes in apparently intact brain regions, due to ablations of functionally-interconnected cortical formations, probably reflect cortical deactivation or simply dysfacilitation deriving from functional unilateral diaschisis. If these changes are instead irreversible they may probably be interpreted as transneuronal degeneration phenomena, though they are not at present easy to document either neuroradiologically or electroclinically.


BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2016

Hypersensitivity reactions to metal implants: laboratory options

Anna Maria Carossino; Christian Carulli; Simone Ciuffi; Roberto Carossino; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Roberto Zonefrati; Massimo Innocenti; Maria Luisa Brandi

BackgroundAll implant compounds undergo an electrochemical process when in contact with biological fluids, as well as mechanical corrosion due to abrasive wear, with production of metal debris that may inhibit repair processes. None of the commonly-used methods can diagnose implant allergies when used singly, therefore a panel of tests should be performed on allergic patients as pre-operative screening, or when a postoperative metal sensitisation is suspected.MethodsWe analysed patients with painful prostheses and subjects prone to allergies using the Patch Test in comparison with the Lymphocyte Transformation Test. Cytokine production was evaluated to identify prognostic markers for early diagnosis of aseptic loosening. Metal debris endocytosis and cytoskeletal rearrangement was visualised by confocal microscopy.ResultsOur results demonstrate that the Lymphocyte Transformation Test can identify patients who have a predisposition to develop allergic reactions and can confirm the diagnosis of hypersensitivity in patients with painful prostheses.The prevalence of a Th2-cytokine pattern may be used to identify predisposition to the development of allergic diseases, while the selective presence of osteoclastogenic cytokines may be used as predictor of a negative outcome in patients with painful prosthesis.The hypothesis of the prognostic value of these cytokines as early markers of aseptic loosening is attractive, but its confirmation would require extensive testing.ConclusionsThe Lymphocyte Transformation Test is the most suitable method for testing systemic allergies. We suggest that the combined use of the Patch Test and the Lymphocyte Transformation Test, associated with cytokine detection in selected patients, could provide a useful tool for preventive evaluation of immune reactivity in patients undergoing primary joint replacement surgery, and for clinical monitoring of the possible onset of a metal sensitization in patients with implanted devices.


Acta Oncologica | 1998

Colonic Cell Proliferation in Normal Mucosa of Patients with Colon Cancer

A. Becciolini; M. Balzi; Paola Faraoni; E. Tisti; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Valentino Giachè; Luca Bandettini; Christopher S. Potten

Cell kinetics parameters have been analysed in colonic mucosa at different distances from a tumour in patients with colon carcinoma. Total cell number (TCN), 3H thymidine labelling index (TLI), mitotic index (MI), Goblet cell index (GCI) and the distribution of labelled cells along the crypt column (cell position frequency plot) were determined in well-aligned crypts. Total cell number, GCI and the labelled cell position frequency plots were similar in different samples from the same individual. A negative linear correlation between TCN and TLI was observed. The analysis of the cell position plots showed two patterns 1) with a high concentration in the bottom fifth of the crypt and 2) with frequent labelled cells at high positions. Whereas a negative correlation between overall TLI and the percent contribution to the TLI of the lowermost fifth was seen, the correlation was positive for the next 3 fifths and labelling was absent in the last part of the crypt.


Histology and Histopathology | 2017

Sialic acid expression in human fetal skeletal muscle during limb early myogenesis.

Mirca Marini; Erica Sarchielli; Giorgia Donata Zappoli Thyrion; Stefano Ambrosini; Eleonora Sgambati

Investigations on animal models demonstrated that changes of sialic acid (SA) expression, particularly the polymeric form, in the skeletal muscle during embryonic and post-natal development seem to be related to muscle differentiation and functionality onset. The aim of this study was to evaluate the monomeric and polymeric SA expression in human skeletal muscle during early stages of fetal development, when important morphofunctional events occur. Specimens of fetal skeletal muscle from limb, between 9 and 12 weeks of gestation (wg), were obtained from 19 pregnant women. To investigate some morphofunctional features occurring during this development period, haematoxylin-eosin staining, tunel assay and immunohistochemistry for connexin-43 (Cx43) and parvalbumin were performed. SA expression and characterization was evaluated using lectin histochemistry (MAA, SNA, PNA, SBA, DBA), associated with enzymatic and chemical treatments. Polysialic acid (PSA) expression was also evaluated using immunohistochemistry. The results showed apoptotic myotubes between 9 and 10.5 wg, disappearing from 11 wg; Cx43 was more abundant in myotubes/myoblasts between 9 and 9.5 wg, decreasing and/or disappearing from 10 wg and parvalbumin was present in myotubes between 10 and 10.5 wg. PSA was revealed in myotubes/myoblasts from 9 to 10.5 wg; from 11 wg it was reduced or disappeared. Monomeric SA appeared in myotubes/myoblasts from 10 wg, increasing successively; acetylated SA was present from 11 wg. These findings demonstrated that changes in expression of various types of SA, occurring in human fetal skeletal muscle during early development, seem to be related to some morphofunctional aspects distinctive of this organogenesis crucial period.

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Gheri G

University of Florence

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M. Balzi

University of Florence

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