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Dive into the research topics where Giovanni A. Fontana is active.

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Featured researches published by Giovanni A. Fontana.


European Respiratory Journal | 2007

ERS guidelines on the assessment of cough

Alyn H. Morice; Giovanni A. Fontana; Maria G. Belvisi; Surinder S. Birring; Kian Fan Chung; Peter V. Dicpinigaitis; J.A. Kastelik; Lorcan McGarvey; Jaclyn A. Smith; M. Tatar; John Widdicombe

### Cough 1) All basic scientific articles should refer to cough as a three-phase motor act. For the purposes of acoustic recordings in clinical studies, however, cough should be described as a forced expulsive manoeuvre or manoeuvres against a closed glottis that are associated with a characteristic sound or sounds. 2) All scientific articles should include a clear definition of what the authors have used as their definition of cough. ### Capsaicin and citric acid inhalation cough challenge 1) The methodology for the performance of inhalation cough challenge should be standardised so as to facilitate universal interpretation and comparison of data generated by different laboratories. 2) Comprehensive normal ranges need to be developed using the standardised methodology advocated in the present document. 3) The single-breath concentration–response method using a flow-limited dosimeter is recommended for most experimental protocols. 4) Both C2 and C5 should be recorded. 5) Since there is wide inter-individual variation, cough challenge data have no intrinsic significance, but may usefully be used to follow change in cough reflex sensitivity in an individual. ### Cough induced by inhalation of aqueous solutions 1) Aerosolised aqueous solutions represent a useful experimental tool in cough research. 2) The cough challenge with ultrasonic distilled water (fog) is difficult to standardise since it is highly dependent upon nebuliser output. 3) Consideration should be given to potential adverse events, such as bronchoconstriction and cross-infection. ### Cough monitors 1) No cough monitor is currently the gold standard. 2) Monitors should be developed that are ambulatory, are capable of being digitally processed and permit prolonged (24-h) recording. 3) There is little to commend any particular method of quantifying cough over any other. ### Assessment of quality of life of patients with chronic cough 1) Cough can have profound effects on health status, which can be assessed by cough-specific health status questionnaires. 2) Cough visual analogue scale (VAS, 0–100 mm) should be used to assess cough severity in patients with chronic cough. 3) Patients with chronic cough should be assessed with cough-specific quality-of-life questionnaires in clinical studies. ### Animal models of cough 1) The most useful animal model of cough is …


The Lancet | 2014

The first tissue-engineered airway transplantation: 5-year follow-up results

Alessandro Gonfiotti; Massimo Osvaldo Jaus; Daniel Barale; Silvia Baiguera; Camilla E. Comin; Federico Lavorini; Giovanni A. Fontana; Oriol Sibila; Giovanni Rombolà; Philipp Jungebluth; Paolo Macchiarini

BACKGROUND In 2008, the first transplantation of a tissue-engineered trachea in a human being was done to replace an end-staged left main bronchus with malacia in a 30-year-old woman. We report 5 year follow-up results. METHODS The patient was followed up approximately every 3 months with multidetector CT scan and bronchoscopic assessment. We obtained mucosal biopsy samples every 6 months for histological, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopy assessment. We also assessed quality of life, respiratory function, cough reflex test, and production and specificity of recipient antibodies against donor human leucocyte antigen. FINDINGS By 12 months after transplantation, a progressive cicatricial stenosis had developed in the native trachea close to the tissue-engineered trachea anastomosis, which needed repeated endoluminal stenting. However, the tissue-engineered trachea itself remained open over its entire length, well vascularised, completely re-cellularised with respiratory epithelium, and had normal ciliary function and mucus clearance. Lung function and cough reflex were normal. No stem-cell-related teratoma formed and no anti-donor antibodies developed. Aside from intermittent bronchoscopic interventions, the patient had a normal social and working life. INTERPRETATION These clinical results provide evidence that a tissue-engineering strategy including decellularisation of a human trachea, autologous epithelial and stem-cell culture and differentiation, and cell-scaffold seeding with a bioreactor is safe and promising. FUNDING European Commission, Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, Swedish Research Council, ALF Medicine.


Thorax | 2004

Antitussive activity of iodo-resiniferatoxin in guinea pigs

Marcello Trevisani; A Milan; Raffaele Gatti; Alessandro Zanasi; Selena Harrison; Giovanni A. Fontana; Alyn H. Morice; Pierangelo Geppetti

Background: Iodo-resiniferatoxin (I-RTX) has recently been described as an ultra potent antagonist of the transient receptor potential vanilloid-1 (TRPV1). Methods: The ability of I-RTX to inhibit cough induced by inhalation of two putative TRPV1 stimulants (capsaicin and citric acid) was tested in non-anaesthetised guinea pigs. Results: Pretreatment with I-RTX either intraperitoneally (0.03–0.3 µmol/kg) or by aerosol (0.1–3 µM) reduced the number of coughs produced by inhalation of citric acid (0.25 M) and capsaicin (30 µM) in a dose dependent manner. Capsazepine (CPZ) also reduced citric acid and capsaicin induced cough, but the activity of I-RTX was 10–100 times more potent than CPZ in all the experimental conditions tested. Conclusions: I-RTX is a novel and potent antitussive drug which inhibits cough mediated by agents possibly acting via TRPV1 activation.


European Respiratory Journal | 2006

Cough: what's in a name?

John Widdicombe; Giovanni A. Fontana

The cough reflex (CR) and the expiration reflex (ER) are two defensive reflexes from the respiratory tract, the latter mainly from the larynx. Both are elicited by mechanical and chemical irritation of the airway mucosa, and are a characteristic of airway diseases, but they have different functions. The CR first draws air into the lungs, to accentuate the subsequent expulsive phase; the ER consists of a strong expiration, to prevent aspiration of material into the lungs. They have different sensory pathways, central nervous circuits, and physiological and pharmacological modulations. In practice, coughing often consists of a combination of the two reflexes, a cough bout, epoch or attack. Articles on cough usually do not distinguish between the two reflexes, or whether the coughs are single events or epochs; they usually only measure frequency of expiratory efforts, and neglect other aspects. Current methods for measuring and assessing cough are described, with indications of when the use of these methods may be important.


Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery | 2009

Targeting drugs to the airways: the role of spacer devices

Federico Lavorini; Giovanni A. Fontana

Aim: Spacer devices are inhalation aids of varying dimension and complexity, specifically designed to overcome problems with the use of pressurised metered dose inhalers (pMDIs). The aim of this review is to examine the current understanding about these inhalation devices and discuss their advantages and disadvantages. Methods: The pertinent literature concerning the characteristics and effects of spacers on delivery and lung deposition of inhaled medications, as well as their clinical efficacy in patients with reversible airway obstruction, is examined. Results: Spacers minimise problems of poor inhalation technique with pMDI, reduce oropharyngeal deposition and increase lung deposition. Spacers improve the clinical effect of inhaled medications, especially in patients unable to use a pMDI properly. Compared to both pMDIs and dry-powder inhalers, spacers may increase the response to β-adrenergic bronchodilators, even in patients with correct inhalation technique. A pMDI plus spacer has proven to be viable lower cost alternative to the use of a nebuliser for delivering large bronchodilator doses in patients with severe acute asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The use of large-volume spacers is recommended for delivering high doses of inhaled corticosteroids, and may permit a lower maintenance dose to be used. Conclusion: pMDIs may be routinely fitted with a spacer, especially in situations where correct pMDI use is unlikely.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

Modulation of the cough reflex by antitussive agents within the caudal aspect of the nucleus tractus solitarii in the rabbit

Donatella Mutolo; Fulvia Bongianni; Elenia Cinelli; Giovanni A. Fontana; Tito Pantaleo

We have previously shown that ionotropic glutamate receptors in the caudal portion of the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS), especially in the commissural NTS, play a prominent role in the mediation of tracheobronchial cough and that substance P potentiates this reflex. This NTS region could be a site of action of some centrally acting antitussive agents and a component of a drug-sensitive gating mechanism of cough. To address these issues, we investigated changes in baseline respiratory activity and cough responses to tracheobronchial mechanical stimulation following microinjections (30-50 nl) of centrally acting antitussive drugs into the caudal NTS of pentobarbitone-anesthetized, spontaneously breathing rabbits. [D-Ala2,N-Me-Phe4,Gly5-ol]-enkephalin (DAMGO) and baclofen decreased baseline respiratory frequency because of increases in the inspiratory time only at the higher concentration employed (5 mM and 1 mM, respectively). DAMGO (0.5 mM) and baclofen (0.1 mM) significantly decreased cough number, peak abdominal activity, peak tracheal pressure, and increased cough-related total cycle duration. At the higher concentrations, these agents suppressed the cough reflex. The effects of these two drugs were counteracted by specific antagonists (10 mM naloxone and 25 mM CGP-35348, respectively). The neurokinin-1 (NK1) receptor antagonist CP-99,994 (10 mM) abolished cough responses, whereas the NK2 receptor antagonist MEN 10376 (5 mM) had no effect. The results indicate that the caudal NTS is a site of action of some centrally acting drugs and a likely component of a neural system involved in cough regulation. A crucial role of substance P release in the mediation of reflex cough is also suggested.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2007

The role of excitatory amino acids and substance p in the mediation of the cough reflex within the nucleus tractus solitarii of the rabbit

Donatella Mutolo; Fulvia Bongianni; Giovanni A. Fontana; Tito Pantaleo

We hypothesized that cough evoked by mechanical stimulation of the tracheobronchial tree in the rabbit is primarily mediated by glutamatergic neurotransmission at the level of the caudal portions of the medial subnucleus of the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) and the lateral commissural NTS where cough-related afferents terminate, and that this reflex is potentiated by local release of substance P. To test our hypothesis, we performed bilateral microinjections (30-50 nl) of ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonists or substance P into these locations in pentobarbitone anaesthetized, spontaneously breathing rabbits. Blockade of NMDA and non-NMDA receptors by 50mM kynurenic acid abolished the cough reflex without affecting the Breuer-Hering inflation reflex or the pulmonary chemoreflex. Blockade of non-NMDA receptors using 10mM CNQX or 5mM NBQX caused identical effects. Blockade of NMDA receptors by 10mM D-AP5 strongly reduced, but did not abolish cough responses. Microinjections of 1mM substance P increased peak and rate of rise of abdominal muscle activity as well as cough number. These results are the first to provide evidence that ionotropic glutamate receptors, especially non-NMDA receptors, located within specific regions of NTS are primarily involved in the mediation of cough evoked by mechanical stimulation of the tracheobronchial tree in the rabbit. Present findings on substance P cough-enhancing effects extend previous observations and are relevant to the tachykinin-mediated central sensitization of the cough reflex. They also may provide hints for further studies on centrally acting antitussive drugs.


Respiration | 2014

New Inhaler Devices - The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Federico Lavorini; Giovanni A. Fontana; Omar S. Usmani

Drug delivery to the lungs is an effective way of targeting inhaled therapeutic aerosols and treating obstructive airway diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). In the past 10 years, several new drugs for the management of asthma and COPD have been marketed and more are under development. These new therapeutic respiratory drugs have been furthered by innovations in all categories of pulmonary drug delivery systems to ensure optimal aerosolisation performance, consistency in efficacy and satisfactory patient adherence. In this review, we discuss the technological advances and innovations in recent inhaler devices and the evolving roles of pressurised metered-dose inhalers, dry powder inhalers and nebulisers, as well as their impact on patient adherence to treatment.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 1998

Discharge patterns of Bötzinger complex neurons during cough in the cat

Fulvia Bongianni; Donatella Mutolo; Giovanni A. Fontana; Tito Pantaleo

This study was carried out on pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized, spontaneously breathing cats to address the hypothesis that Bötzinger complex (BötC) neurons are involved in the production of the cough motor pattern induced by mechanical stimulation of the tracheobronchial tree. Phrenic nerve and abdominal muscle activities as well as intratracheal pressure were monitored; single-unit extracellular recordings from BötC neurons ( n = 87) were performed. The majority of augmenting expiratory (E-Aug) neurons encountered ( n = 47) displayed excitatory responses during the expulsive phases of coughing in parallel with the main components of the abdominal bursts and the corresponding increases in tracheal pressure. We also encountered E-Aug neurons markedly depressed up to complete inhibition during coughing ( n = 14) as well as E-Aug neurons assuming a decremental pattern without any increase or even with some reduction in their peak activity ( n = 15). During the expiratory thrusts, most decrementing expiratory neurons ( n = 7) presented excitatory responses, whereas others were depressed ( n = 3) or completely inhibited ( n = 1). The results are consistent with the view that these neurons are involved in the generation of the cough motor pattern and, in particular, that some BötC E-Aug neurons convey excitatory drive to caudal expiratory neurons and, hence, to expiratory motoneurons.


European Respiratory Journal | 1997

A noninvasive electromyographic study on threshold and intensity of cough in humans

Giovanni A. Fontana; Tito Pantaleo; Federico Lavorini; Vieri Boddi; P. Panuccio

The assessment of cough threshold and intensity is important in respiratory medicine. We have developed a method for objectively and noninvasively assessing cough threshold and intensity of expiratory muscle efforts in response to inhalation of ultrasonically nebulized distilled water (UNDW). Thirty (83%) out of 36 volunteers studied coughed in response to UNDW inhalation. Cough threshold was taken as the lowest nebulizer output (mL x min(-1)) that induced cough in two challenges performed at a 30 min interval. At threshold level, repeatability of peak and slope of the integrated electromyographic (IEMG) activity of abdominal muscles was evaluated. Short- and long-term repeatability of cough threshold were evaluated in 15 subjects following a 3 h and a 6-9 month interval, respectively. Dose-response relationships between nebulizer outputs and IEMG-related variables were also investigated, as were the correlations between the latter and expiratory flow during voluntary coughing. The median (1st and 3rd quartile) cough threshold value was 0.89 (0.40 and 1.54) mL x min(-1). At threshold level, peak and slope of IEMG activity were highly reproducible. Cough threshold displayed a high degree of short- and long-term repeatability. Peak and slope of IEMG activity displayed a clear trend to increase (p<0.01) following inhalation of progressively higher UNDW outputs. Maximum flow during voluntary coughs of varying intensity correlated with the peak (p<0.05) and, more closely, with the slope (p<0.01) of abdominal IEMG activity. The assessment of cough threshold as well as the evaluation of the intensity of cough efforts by abdominal integrated electromyographic recordings may represent useful and reliable tools for cough research in humans.

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Omar S. Usmani

National Institutes of Health

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