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Dive into the research topics where Graziano Serrao is active.

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Featured researches published by Graziano Serrao.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2009

Toll-like Receptors 3, 4, and 7 Are Expressed in the Enteric Nervous System and Dorsal Root Ganglia

Isabella Barajon; Graziano Serrao; Francesca Arnaboldi; Emanuela Opizzi; Gerlomina Ripamonti; Andrea Balsari; Cristiano Rumio

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the expression of innate immunity receptors belonging to the Toll-like family in the neural plexuses of the different tracts of murine intestine, of the human ileum, and in lower dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) from where extrinsic afferents to these plexuses originate. Results obtained by immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence on paraffin-embedded tissue and whole-mount preparations show that Toll-like receptors (TLRs) −3 and −7, recognizing viral RNA, and TLR4, recognizing lipopolysaccharide (membrane component of Gram-negative bacteria), are expressed in the myenteric and submucous plexuses of murine intestine and human ileum, and in DRGs primary sensory neurons. They also show that TLR4 immunostaining is stronger in murine distal large bowel. In murine tissue, expression of TLRs was present in both neurons and glial cells. These observations indicate that the enteric neural network might be directly activated by bacterial and viral components and is therefore more in the forefront than previously envisaged in defense responses of the intestinal wall and in the cross-talk with intestinal microbiota. They also highlight the presence of a peripheral neural network that by way of hardwired neurotransmission could potentially convey to the central nervous system specific information on our microbial counterpart and invading or potentially invading pathogens.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2002

Active range of motion of the head and cervical spine: a three-dimensional investigation in healthy young adults.

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Graziano Serrao; Gianpiero Grassi; Erio Mossi

Purpose. To define reference values for head–cervical range of motion (ROM) in healthy young adults, to assess the effect of sex, and to quantify the separate contribution of other body districts.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Activation of Enteroendocrine Cells via TLRs Induces Hormone, Chemokine, and Defensin Secretion

Marco Palazzo; Andrea Balsari; Anna Rossini; Silvia Selleri; Claudia Calcaterra; Silvia Gariboldi; Laura Zanobbio; Francesca Arnaboldi; Yuri F. Shirai; Graziano Serrao; Cristiano Rumio

Enteroendocrine cells are known primarily for their production of hormones that affect digestion, but they might also be implicated in sensing and neutralizing or expelling pathogens. We evaluate the expression of TLRs and the response to specific agonists in terms of cytokines, defensins, and hormones in enteroendocrine cells. The mouse enteroendocrine cell line STC-1 and C57BL/6 mice are used for in vitro and in vivo studies, respectively. The presence of TLR4, 5, and 9 is investigated by RT-PCR, Western blot, and immunofluorescence analyses. Activation of these receptors is studied evaluating keratinocyte-derived chemokine, defensins, and cholecystokinin production in response to their specific agonists. In this study, we show that the intestinal enteroendocrine cell line STC-1 expresses TLR4, 5, and 9 and releases cholecystokinin upon stimulation with the respective receptor agonists LPS, flagellin, and CpG-containing oligodeoxynucleotides. Release of keratinocyte-derived chemokine and β-defensin 2 was also observed after stimulation of STC-1 cells with the three TLR agonists, but not with fatty acids. Consistent with these in vitro data, mice showed increased serum cholecystokinin levels after oral challenge with LPS, flagellin, or CpG oligodeoxynucleotides. In addition to their response to food stimuli, enteroendocrine cells sense the presence of bacterial Ags through TLRs and are involved in neutralizing intestinal bacteria by releasing chemokines and defensins, and maybe in removing them by releasing hormones such as cholecystokinin, which induces contraction of the muscular tunica, favoring the emptying of the distal small intestine.


Cranio-the Journal of Craniomandibular Practice | 2002

Relationship Between the Number of Occlusal Contacts and Masticatory Muscle Activity in Healthy Young Adults

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Graziano Serrao; Claudia Dellavia; Elisabetta Caruso; Chiarella Sforza

ABSTRACT The electromyographic (EMG) potentials of left and right masseter and temporalis anterior muscles were recorded in 23 healthy young adults during: 1. a 3-second maximum voluntary clench (MVC) on cotton rolls positioned on the posterior teeth (standardized recording); and 2. a 3-second MVC in intercuspal position. EMG potentials recorded in intercuspal position were standardized as a percentage of the mean potentials of the standardized recording, and the EMG muscle activity was calculated. The number of occlusal contacts in intercuspal position was assessed by using eight μm thick shim stocks. Two groups of subjects with either 1. Less than ten occlusal contacts (11 subjects with “few contacts”); or 2. At least ten occlusal contacts (12 subjects with “many contacts”) were selected. The MVC muscle activity in the “few contacts” group was significantly lower than that recorded in the “many contacts” group (p<0.005). In conclusion, the number of occlusal contacts and masticatory muscular function are significantly related, at least in young adults with a sound stomatognathic apparatus.


American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | 1998

A three-dimensional computerized mesh diagram analysis and its application in soft tissue facial morphometry

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Johannes H. Schmitz; Alessandro Miani; Graziano Serrao

A modified computerized mesh diagram analysis that allows rapid and independent quantifications of soft tissue facial size and shape in the three-dimensional space is presented. Normal references are provided, and the application of the method is also exemplified by the analysis of two maxillofacial surgical patients. The Three-Dimensional Facial Morphometry method has been used for the collection of the x, y, z coordinates of 22 soft tissue landmarks in 50 men and 50 women (all healthy young white adults). The method detects the three-dimensional coordinates of retroreflective, wireless markers positioned on selected facial landmarks with two charge-coupled device cameras, working in the infrared field. The midpoint between the right and left tragus landmarks served as the origin of the coordinate axes, and the landmark coordinates were rotated, setting the intercantheal line horizontal on both the frontal and the horizontal planes, and the Campers plane inclined at -7.5 degrees on the sagittal plane. A standardized mesh of equidistant horizontal (dimension: half the upper face width), vertical (half the vertical projection of upper face height), and anteroposterior (half the horizontal projection of upper face depth) lines was consequently constructed. The lattice was replicated on the entire face and comprised 84 parallelepipeds. Both male and female reference meshes had a harmonious and symmetric appearance, with gender differences in facial size but not in facial shape. The standard normal reference was superimposed on the patients tracing, and the global (size plus shape) difference was then evaluated by the calculation of the relevant displacement vectors for each soft tissue landmark. A global difference factor was calculated as the sum of the modules of all the displacement vectors. Consequently, a size normalization was performed, and the shape difference (size-standardized) was then evaluated by the calculation of new relevant displacement vectors for each landmark, as well as a shape--global difference vectors.


American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | 1999

Three-dimensional dental arch curvature in human adolescents and adults

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Carlo E. Poggio; Graziano Serrao; Anna Colombo

The three-dimensional arrangement of dental cusps and incisal edges in human dentitions has been reported to fit the surface of a sphere (the curve of Monson), with a radius of about 4 inches in adults. The objective of the current study was to compare the three-dimensional curvature of the mandibular dental arch in healthy permanent dentitions of young adults and adolescents. The mandibular casts of 50 adults (aged 19 to 22 years) and 20 adolescents (aged 12 to 14 years) with highly selected sound dentitions that were free from temporomandibular joint problems were obtained. The three coordinates of cusp tips excluding the third molars were digitized with a three-dimensional digitizer, and used to derive a spherical model of the curvature of the occlusal surfaces. From the best interpolating sphere, the radii of the left and right curves of Spee (quasi-sagittal plane) and of molar curve of Wilson (frontal plane) were computed. Mandibular arch size (interdental distances) was also calculated. The occlusal curvature of the mandibular arch was not significantly influenced by sex, although a significant effect of age was found (Student t, P <.005). The radii of the overall sphere, right and left curves of Spee, and curve of Wilson in the molar area were about 101 mm in adults, and about 80 mm in adolescents. Arch size was not influenced by either sex or age. The different curvatures of the occlusal plane in adolescents and adults may be explained by a progressive rotation of the major axis of the teeth moving the occlusal plane toward a more buccal position. These dental movements should be performed in a frontal plane on an anteroposterior axis located next to the dental crown.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2001

Morphometry of the orbital region: a soft-tissue study from adolescence to mid-adulthood.

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Anna Colombo; Johannes H. Schmitz; Graziano Serrao

The objective of this study was to gain information about normal sex‐related linear and angular dimensions of the orbital region; left‐right symmetry; and growth changes between adolescence and mid‐adulthood. The three‐dimensional coordinates of several soft‐tissue landmarks on the orbits and face were obtained by an electromagnetic digitizer in 40 male and 33 female adolescents aged 12 to 15 years, 73 female and 89 male young adults aged 19 to 30 years, and 41 male and 38 female adults aged 31 to 56 years. From the landmarks—binocular and intercanthal widths; paired height and inclination of the orbit relative to both the true horizontal (head in natural head position) and Frankfurt plane; length and inclination of the eye fissure; and the orbital height to eye fissure length ratio were calculated and averaged for age and sex. Comparisons were performed by factorial analysis of variance. Both the linear dimensions and the angular values were significantly larger in male subjects than in female subjects of corresponding age (p < 0.05). A significant effect of age was found (p < 0.05): while the linear distances and the orbital height‐to‐length ratio were greater in older people of the same sex, the inclination of the eye fissure decreased as a function of age. Both orbital inclinations were larger in the young adult group than in the adolescent and middle‐aged groups. On average, the paired measurements were symmetrical, with similar values within each sex and age group. Data collected in this investigation could serve as a database for the quantitative description of human orbital morphology during normal adolescent and adult growth. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 108: 285, 2001.)


Angle Orthodontist | 2001

Three-Dimensional Inclination of the Dental Axes in Healthy Permanent Dentitions—A Cross-Sectional Study in a Normal Population

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Anna Colombo; Veronica Ciusa; Graziano Serrao

The 3-dimensional (3-D) inclination of the facial axis of the clinical crown (FACC) and the size of the clinical crowns were measured in 100 white northern Italians. The subjects consisted of 22 girls and 21 boys, ages 13-15 years (adolescents), and 31 women and 26 men, ages 16-26 years (adults), all with a complete permanent dentition and Class I dental relationships. The 3-D coordinates of dental landmarks were obtained with a computerized electromagnetic digitizer. Clinical crowns heights and FACC inclinations in the anatomical frontal and sagittal planes relative to 2 reference planes, maxillary and mandibular (between the incisive papilla and the intersection of the palatal/lingual sulci of the first permanent molars with the gingival margin), were calculated. Ages and sexes were compared by ANOVA. On average, the frontal plane FACCs of most teeth converged toward the midline plane of symmetry. In contrast, the incisors diverged from the midline plane or were nearly vertical. Within each quadrant, the inclinations of the postincisor teeth progressively increased. In the sagittal plane, most teeth had a nearly vertical FACC. FACC inclinations showed sex- and age-related differences (P < .05). In the frontal plane, the canines, premolars, and molars were more inclined in adolescents than in adults. In the sagittal plane, a large within-group variability was observed. Clinical crown height was significantly larger in males than in females in all maxillary and mandibular canines, premolars, second molars, maxillary central incisors, and first molars. With age, some degree of dental eruption was found in maxillary and mandibular canines, maxillary second premolars, and molars. The age-related decrease in FACC inclination may be the effect of a progressive buccal and mesial drift.


Cranio-the Journal of Craniomandibular Practice | 1999

The Effects of a Single Intercuspal Interference on Electromyographic Characteristics of Human Masticatory Muscles During Maximal Voluntary Teeth Clenching

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Graziano Serrao; Anna Colombo; Johannes H. Schmitz

In 13 healthy subjects (eight men and five women, mean age, 22 years), an aluminum intercuspal interference (height, 0.25 mm) was placed on the maxillary right first premolar to study its effect on the contractile symmetry of the right and left masseter and anterior temporalis muscles when measured through a Percentage Overlapping Coefficient (POC), derived from surface electromyographic recordings of maximum voluntary teeth clenching. Additionally, and to estimate the potential of the experimental intercuspal interference to induce lateral displacement of the mandible, a Torque Coefficient (TC) was derived from surface electromyographic recordings. The conclusion was that the experimental occlusal interference gave rise to asymmetric contractile activity in the studied mandibular elevator muscles as well as a potential to displace the mandible in a lateral direction.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 1995

A computerized non-invasive method for the assessment of human facial volume

Virgilio F. Ferrario; Chiarella Sforza; Graziano Serrao; Alessandro Miani

The three-dimensional coordinates of 22 standardized soft-tissue facial landmarks were used in the definition of a three-dimensional model of the adult human face. The model allows the estimation of the volume of the face in toto and of its parts (upper, middle and lower thirds, nose). Landmark coordinates were collected in 80 healthy young adults (40 men and 40 women selected according to criteria of dentofacial normality) by infrared photogrammetry by an automated instrument, and facial volumes calculated. Sample variability was larger in women than in men; the nose and the upper third of face had the largest variability regardless of gender. On average, all volumes computed in men were significantly larger than the corresponding values computed in women. Also the lower-to-middle third face ratio was significantly higher in men than in women. The sexual dimorphism in human facial volume did not involve the different parts of the face to the same extent: a large part of male facial volume preponderance was explained by the lower third of face. The proposed facial model could adequately represent the human face in all those research and clinical fields where noninvasive surface measurements could be employed alone or in support of conventional radiographic data.

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