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Dive into the research topics where Giovanni Zuliani is active.

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Featured researches published by Giovanni Zuliani.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2005

Executive Function Correlates with Walking Speed in Older Persons: The InCHIANTI Study

Alesandro Ble; Stefano Volpato; Giovanni Zuliani; Jack M. Guralnik; Stefania Bandinelli; Fulvio Lauretani; Benedetta Bartali; Cinzia Maraldi; Renato Fellin; Luigi Ferrucci

Objectives: To study the association between performance on psychological tests of executive function and performance on lower extremity tasks with different attentional demands in a large sample of nondemented, older adults.


Circulation | 2000

Effect of Native and Oxidized Low-Density Lipoprotein on Endothelial Nitric Oxide and Superoxide Production Key Role of l-Arginine Availability

Luciana Vergnani; Stefan Hatrik; Franco Ricci; Angelina Passaro; Nadia Manzoli; Giovanni Zuliani; Viktor Brovkovych; Renato Fellin; Tadeusz Malinski

BACKGROUND Native and oxidized LDLs (n-LDL and ox-LDL) are involved in the atherogenic process and affect endothelium-dependent vascular tone through their interaction with nitric oxide (NO). METHODS AND RESULTS In this study we evaluated directly, by using a porphyrinic microsensor, the effect of increasing lipoprotein concentrations on endothelial NO and superoxide (O(2)(-)) production. We investigated where lipoproteins may affect the L-arginine-NO pathway by pretreating cells with L-arginine, L-N-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), and superoxide dismutase. Bovine aortic endothelial cells were exposed for 1 hour to increasing concentrations of n-LDL (from 0 to 240 mg cholesterol/dL) and ox-LDL (from 0 to 140 mg cholesterol/dL). A stimulated (calcium ionophore) NO concentration decreased to 29% of the control at n-LDL concentration of 80 mg cholesterol/dL and to 15% of the control at 20 mg cholesterol/dL of ox-LDL. L-Arginine partially neutralized the inhibitory effect of n-LDL and ox-LDL on the NO generation. Superoxide dismutase pretreatment did not modify NO production, whereas L-NAME blunted NO generation at all LDL concentrations. O(2)(-) production was increased at low n-LDL and very low ox-LDL concentrations; this was reversed by L-arginine. CONCLUSIONS These findings confirm the inhibitory role of n-LDL and ox-LDL on NO generation and suggest that lipoproteins may induce a decreased uptake of L-arginine. The local depletion of the L-arginine substrate may derange the NO synthase, leading to overproduction of O(2)(-) from oxygen, the other substrate of NO synthase.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2011

Predictive Value of the Short Physical Performance Battery Following Hospitalization in Older Patients

Stefano Volpato; Margherita Cavalieri; Fotini Sioulis; Gianluca Guerra; Cinzia Maraldi; Giovanni Zuliani; Renato Fellin; Jack M. Guralnik

BACKGROUND Hospitalization represents a stressful and potentially hazardous event for older persons. We evaluated the value of the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) in predicting rates of functional decline, rehospitalization, and death in older acutely ill patients in the year after discharge from the hospital. METHODS Prospective cohort study of 87 patients aged 65 years and older who were able to walk and with a Mini-Mental State Examination score ≥ 18 and admitted to the hospital with a clinical diagnosis of congestive heart failure, pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or minor stroke. Patients were evaluated with the SPPB at hospital admission, were reevaluated the day of hospital discharge, and 1 month later. Subsequently, they were followed every 3 months by telephone interviews to ascertain functional decline, new hospitalizations, and vital status. RESULTS After adjustment for potential confounders, including self-report activity of daily living and comorbidity, the SPPB score at discharge was inversely correlated with the rate of decline in activity of daily living performance over the follow-up (p < .05). In a multivariable discrete-time survival analysis, patients with poor SPPB scores at hospital discharge (0-4) had a greater risk of rehospitalization or death (odds ratio: 5.38, 95% confidence interval: 1.82-15.9) compared with those with better SPPB scores (8-12). Patients with early decline in SPPB score after discharge also had steeper increase in activity of daily living difficulty and higher risk of rehospitalization or death over the next year. CONCLUSIONS In older acutely ill patients who have been hospitalized, the SPPB provides important prognostic information. Lower extremity performance-based functional assessment might identify older patients at high risk of poor outcomes after hospital discharge.


The Lancet | 2002

Autosomal recessive hypercholesterolaemia in Sardinia, Italy, and mutations in ARH: A clinical and molecular genetic analysis

Marcello Arca; Giovanni Zuliani; Kenneth R. Wilund; Filomena Campagna; Renato Fellin; Stefano Bertolini; Sebastiano Calandra; Giorgio Ricci; Nicola Glorioso; Mario Maioli; Paolo Pintus; Ciriaco Carru; Fausto Cossu; Jonathan C. Cohen; Helen H. Hobbs

BACKGROUND Autosomal recessive hypercholesterolaemia (ARH) is caused by mutations in a putative adaptor protein called ARH. This recessive disorder, characterised by severe hypercholesterolaemia, xanthomatosis, and premature coronary artery disease, is rare except on the island of Sardinia, Italy. Our aim was to ascertain why ARH is more common on Sardinia than elsewhere. METHODS We obtained detailed medical histories, did physical examinations, measured concentrations of lipoproteins, and harvested genomic DNA from 28 Sardinians with ARH from 17 unrelated families. We sequenced the coding regions and consensus splice sites of ARH in probands from these families, and from 40 individuals of non-Sardinian origin who had an autosomal recessive form of hypercholesterolaemia of unknown cause. FINDINGS Two ARH mutations, a frameshift mutation (c432insA) in exon 4 (ARH1) and a nonsense mutation (c65G-->A) in exon 1 (ARH2), were present in all of the 17 unrelated families with ARH. Three of the ARH alleles contained both mutations, as a result of an ancient recombination between ARH1 and ARH2. No regional clustering of the three mutant alleles within Sardinia was apparent. Furthermore, four Italians from the mainland with autosomal recessive hypercholesterolaemia were homozygous for ARH1. INTERPRETATION The small number, high frequency, and dispersed distribution of ARH mutations on Sardinia are consistent with these mutations being ancient and maintained in the Sardinian population because of geographic isolation.


Diabetes Care | 2012

Role of Muscle Mass and Muscle Quality in the Association Between Diabetes and Gait Speed

Stefano Volpato; Lara Bianchi; Fulvio Lauretani; F. Lauretani; Stefania Bandinelli; Jack M. Guralnik; Giovanni Zuliani; Luigi Ferrucci

OBJECTIVE Older people with type 2 diabetes are at high risk of mobility disability. We investigated the association of diabetes with lower-limb muscle mass and muscle quality to verify whether diabetes-related muscle impairments mediate the association between diabetes and low walking speed. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We performed a cross-sectional analysis of 835 participants (65 years old and older) enrolled in the InCHIANTI (Invecchiare in Chianti, aging in the Chianti area) population-based study. Total, muscular, and fat cross-sectional areas of the calf and relative muscle density were measured using peripheral quantitative computerized tomography. Indicators of muscle performance included knee-extension torque, ankle plantar flexion and dorsiflexion strength, lower-extremity muscle power, and ankle muscle quality (ratio of ankle strength to the muscle area [kilograms per centimeters squared]). Gait performance was assessed by 4- and 400-m walking speed. Diabetes was ascertained by standard American Diabetes Association criteria. RESULTS Prevalence of diabetes was 11.4%. After adjustment for age and sex, participants with diabetes had lower muscle density, knee and ankle strength, and muscle power and worse muscle quality (all P < 0.05). Diabetic participants were also slower on both 4-m (β: −0.115 ± 0.024 m/s, P < 0.001) and 400-m (β:−0.053 ± 0.023 m/s, P < 0.05) walking tests. In multivariable linear regression models, lower-limb muscle characteristics accounted for 24.3 and 15.1% of walking speed difference comparing diabetic and nondiabetic subjects in the 4- and 400-m walks, respectively. CONCLUSIONS In older persons, diabetes is associated with reduced muscle strength and worse muscle quality. These impairments are important contributors of walking limitations related to diabetes.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2014

Prevalence and Clinical Correlates of Sarcopenia in Community-Dwelling Older People: Application of the EWGSOP Definition and Diagnostic Algorithm

Stefano Volpato; Lara Bianchi; Antonio Cherubini; Francesco Landi; Marcello Maggio; Elisabetta Savino; Stefania Bandinelli; Gian Paolo Ceda; Jack M. Guralnik; Giovanni Zuliani; Luigi Ferrucci

BACKGROUND Muscle impairment is a common condition in older people and a powerful risk factor for disability and mortality. The aim of this study was to apply the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People criteria to estimate the prevalence and investigate the clinical correlates of sarcopenia, in a sample of Italian community-dwelling older people. METHODS Cross-sectional analysis of 730 participants (74% aged 65 years and older) enrolled in the InCHIANTI study. Sarcopenia was defined according to the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People criteria using bioimpedance analysis for muscle mass assessment. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify the factors independently associated with sarcopenia. RESULTS Sarcopenia defined by the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People criteria increased steeply with age (p < .001), with 31.6% of women and 17.4% of men aged 80 years or older being affected by this condition. Higher education (odds ratio: 0.85; 95% CI: 0.74-0.98), lower insulin-like growth factor I (lowest vs highest tertile, odds ratio: 3.89; 95% CI: 1.03-14.1), and low bioavailable testosterone (odds ratio: 2.67; 95% CI: 1.31-5.44) were independently associated with the likelihood of being sarcopenic. Nutritional intake, physical activity, and level of comorbidity were not associated with sarcopenia. CONCLUSIONS Sarcopenia identified by the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People criteria is a relatively common condition in Italian octogenarians, and its prevalence increases with aging. Correlates of sarcopenia identified in this study might suggest new approaches for prevention and treatment of sarcopenia.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2005

Role of Anti-Oxidants in Atherosclerosis: Epidemiological and Clinical Update

Antonio Cherubini; Giovanni Battista Vigna; Giovanni Zuliani; Carmelinda Ruggiero; Umberto Senin; Renato Fellin

Low density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidative modification in the vascular wall seems to be a key factor in atherosclerosis development. Oxidised LDLs might recruit monocytes and favour their transformation into foam cells through a receptor-mediated intake (scavenger pathway). Moreover oxidised LDLs show cytotoxic potential which is probably responsible for endothelial cell damage and macrophage degeneration in the atherosclerotic human plaque. Following the oxidation hypothesis of atherosclerosis the role of natural antioxidants, i.e. Vitamin C, Vitamin E and carotenoids, has been investigated in a large number of epidemiological, clinical and experimental studies. Animal studies indicate that dietary antioxidants may reduce atherosclerosis progression, and observational data in humans suggest that antioxidant vitamin ingestion is associated with reduced cardiovascular disease, but the results of randomised controlled trials are mainly disappointing. It has been suggested that natural antioxidants may be effective only in selected subgroups of patients with high levels of oxidative stress or depletion of natural antioxidant defence systems. The favourable effects shown by some studies relating antioxidant dietary intake and cardiovascular disease, may have been exerted by other chemicals present in foods. Flavonoids are the ideal candidates, since they are plentiful in foods containing antioxidant vitamins (i.e. fruits and vegetables) and are potent antioxidants. Tea and wine, rich in flavonoids, seem to have beneficial effects on multiple mechanisms involved in atherosclerosis. Future studies should probably select patients in a context of high-oxidative stress / low-antioxidant defence, to verify if antioxidants may really prove useful as therapeutic anti-atherosclerotic agents.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1998

Copper/zinc ratio and systemic oxidant load: effect of aging and aging-related degenerative diseases

Andrea Mezzetti; Sante D. Pierdomenico; Fabrizio Costantini; Ferdinando Romano; Domenico De Cesare; Franco Cuccurullo; T. Imbastaro; Giuseppe Riario-Sforza; Franco Di Giacomo; Giovanni Zuliani; Renato Fellin

There is evidence that copper and zinc have pro-oxidant and antioxidant properties, respectively, so that their imbalance may be expected to condition oxidative stress status. Oxidative stress is relevant in aging and in age-related degenerative diseases. In this study, blood content of copper, zinc, and ceruloplasmin as well as of lipid peroxides were investigated in 81 healthy and 62 disabled octo-nonagenarians affected by chronic degenerative diseases, and in 81 healthy adults. Serum copper/zinc ratio and ceruloplasmin were significantly higher in the elderly than in the healthy adults. Moreover, all these parameters were significantly higher in the disabled than in the healthy elderly. Notably, the increased copper/zinc ratio found in healthy elderly was due to high copper values, whereas in the disabled, both high copper and low serum zinc concentrations were present. The copper/zinc ratio was significantly and positively related to systemic oxidative stress status in all groups. The higher the serum copper/zinc ratio the higher the lipid peroxides plasma content. We conclude that there is a strict relationship between copper/zinc ratio and systemic oxidant burden. Moreover, advanced age and, particularly, advanced age-related chronic degenerative diseases are associated with a significant increase in the copper/zinc ratio and systemic oxidative stress.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1999

Characterization of a New Form of Inherited Hypercholesterolemia Familial Recessive Hypercholesterolemia

Giovanni Zuliani; Marcello Arca; Alberto Signore; Giovanni Bader; Sergio Fazio; Marco Chianelli; Stefano Bellosta; Filomena Campagna; Anna Montali; Mario Maioli; Adolfo Pacifico; Giorgio Ricci; Renato Fellin

We previously described a Sardinian family in which the probands had a severe form of hypercholesterolemia, suggestive of familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). However, low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor activity in fibroblasts from these subjects and LDL binding ability were normal. The characteristics of the pedigree were consistent with an autosomal recessive trait. Sitosterolemia and pseudohomozygous hyperlipidemia were ruled out. A second Sardinian kindred with similar characteristics was identified. Probands showed severe hypercholesterolemia, whereas their parents and grandparents were normolipidemic. FH, familial defective apoprotein (apo) B, sitosterolemia, and cholesteryl ester storage disease were excluded by in vitro studies. We addressed the metabolic basis of this inherited disorder by studying the in vivo metabolism of LDL in 3 probands from these 2 families. 125I-LDL turnover studies disclosed a marked reduction in the fractional catabolic rate (0.19+/-0.01 versus 0.36+/-0.03 pools per day, respectively; P<0.001) and a significant increase in the production rate [20.7+/-4.4 versus 14. 0+/-2.4 mg. kg-1. d-1, respectively; P<0.01] of LDL apoB in the probands compared with normolipidemic controls. We then studied the in vivo biodistribution and tissue uptake of 99mtechnetium-labeled LDL in the probands and compared them with those in normal controls and 1 FH homozygote. The probands showed a significant reduction in hepatic LDL uptake, similar to that observed in the FH homozygote. A reduced uptake of LDL by the kidney and spleen was also observed in all patients. Our findings suggest that this recessive form of hypercholesterolemia is due to a marked reduction of in vivo LDL catabolism. This appears to be caused by a selective reduction in hepatic LDL uptake. We propose that in this new lipid disorder, a recessive defect causes a selective impairment of LDL receptor function in the liver.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2006

Anaemia increases the risk of dementia in cognitively intact elderly.

Anna Rita Atti; Katie Palmer; Stefano Volpato; Giovanni Zuliani; Bengt Winblad; Laura Fratiglioni

Although cross-sectional studies found an association between anaemia and dementia, longitudinal studies provided contradictory results. We hypothesize that anaemia might increase the risk of developing dementia because of chronic brain hypo-oxygenation. Using baseline data from a community-based longitudinal study, the Kungsholmen Project, Stockholm, Sweden, we clinically followed 1435 non demented subjects aged 75-95 years for 3 years to detect incident dementia cases (DSM-III-R criteria). Subjects that fulfilled WHO criteria for anaemia, baseline haemoglobin concentration; 130 g/L (men) and 120 g/L (women), had a higher hazard ratios (HR) of developing dementia 3 years later (HR 1.6, 95% CI: 1.1-2.4). In persons with good baseline cognition (MMSE>or=26, n=1139), the association was stronger and still significant after adjustments for conditions potentially related to anaemia and dementia, such as chronic diseases, inflammatory markers, and indicators of nutritional status. The HR was increased even when different haemoglobin cut offs for anaemia definition were used. Thus, anaemia is suggested to be a new potential modifiable risk factor for dementia.

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Luigi Ferrucci

National Institutes of Health

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