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Dive into the research topics where Luigi Bergamaschini is active.

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Featured researches published by Luigi Bergamaschini.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Peripheral Treatment with Enoxaparin, a Low Molecular Weight Heparin, Reduces Plaques and β-Amyloid Accumulation in a Mouse Model of Alzheimer's Disease

Luigi Bergamaschini; Emanuela Rossi; Claudio Storini; Simone Pizzimenti; Maria Distaso; Carlo Perego; Ada De Luigi; Carlo Vergani; Maria Grazia De Simoni

We investigated the effect of long-term, peripheral treatment with enoxaparin, a low molecular weight heparin, in transgenic mice overexpressing human amyloid precursor protein751. Enoxaparin (6 IU per mouse intraperitoneally, three times a week for 6 months) significantly lowered the number and the area occupied by cortical β-amyloid deposits and the total β-amyloid (1-40) cortical concentration. Immunocytochemical analysis of glial fibrillary acid protein-positive cells showed that enoxaparin markedly reduced the number of activated astrocytes surrounding β-amyloid deposits. In vitro, the drug dose-dependently attenuated the toxic effect of β-amyloid on neuronal cells. Enoxaparin dose-dependently reduced the ability of β-amyloid to activate complement and contact systems, two powerful effectors of inflammatory response in AD brain. By reducing the β-amyloid load and cytotoxicity and proinflammatory activity, enoxaparin offers promise as a tool for slowing the progression of Alzheimers disease.


The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 1982

Hereditary Angioedema: An Appraisal of 104 Cases

Marco Cicardi; Luigi Bergamaschini; Bianca Marasini; Giorgio Boccassini; Antonietta Tucci; Angelo Agostoni

One hundred and four patients affected by hereditary angioedema belonging to 31 families have been studied. Twenty-two percent had the variant form related to the deficiency of the functional activity of serum C1 esterase inhibitor. The remaining 78% of patients had the predominant form, characterized by low antigenic levels and low functional activity of serum C1 esterase inhibitor. Attacks of swelling affected the subcutaneous tissue in 86% of patients; the upper airways in 76% of patients, and the bowel mucose in 75% of patients. Before treatment was available the mortality rate was 56%. One or more attacks a month were present in 46% of cases. The infusion of C1 inhibitor concentrate promptly reversed 14 severe attacks without any side effect. Twenty-nine patients were given long term prophylactic treatment with androgen derivatives with full success. Tranexamic acid reduced the frequency of swelling of 70% of the patients.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2006

Mild Cognitive Impairment Subtypes and Vascular Dementia in Community-Dwelling Elderly People: A 3-Year Follow-Up Study

Mariella Zanetti; Claudia Ballabio; Carlo Abbate; Chiara Cutaia; Carlo Vergani; Luigi Bergamaschini

OBJECTIVES: To investigate whether mild cognitive impairment (MCI) with multiple impaired cognitive domains (mcd‐MCI) is a prodromal manifestation of vascular dementia (VaD).


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2012

Selective DNA Methylation of BDNF Promoter in Bipolar Disorder: Differences Among Patients with BDI and BDII

Claudio D'Addario; Bernardo Dell'Osso; M.C. Palazzo; B. Benatti; Licia Lietti; Elisabetta Cattaneo; Daniela Galimberti; Chiara Fenoglio; Francesca Cortini; Elio Scarpini; Beatrice Arosio; Andrea Di Francesco; Manuela Di Benedetto; Patrizia Romualdi; Sanzio Candeletti; Daniela Mari; Luigi Bergamaschini; Nereo Bresolin; Mauro Maccarrone; A. Carlo Altamura

The etiology of bipolar disorder (BD) is still poorly understood, involving genetic and epigenetic mechanisms as well as environmental contributions. This study aimed to investigate the degree of DNA methylation at the promoter region of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) gene, as one of the candidate genes associated with major psychoses, in peripheral blood mononuclear cells isolated from 94 patients with BD (BD I=49, BD II=45) and 52 healthy controls. A significant BDNF gene expression downregulation was observed in BD II 0.53±0.11%; P<0.05), but not in BD I (1.13±0.19%) patients compared with controls (CONT: 1±0.2%). Consistently, an hypermethylation of the BDNF promoter region was specifically found in BD II patients (CONT: 24.0±2.1%; BDI: 20.4±1.7%; BDII: 33.3±3.5%, P<0.05). Of note, higher levels of DNA methylation were observed in BD subjects on pharmacological treatment with mood stabilizers plus antidepressants (34.6±4.2%, predominantly BD II) compared with those exclusively on mood-stabilizing agents (21.7±1.8%; P<0.01, predominantly BD I). Moreover, among the different pharmacological therapies, lithium (20.1±3.8%, P<0.05) and valproate (23.6±2.9%, P<0.05) were associated with a significant reduction of DNA methylation compared with other drugs (35.6±4.6%). Present findings suggest selective changes in DNA methylation of BDNF promoter in subjects with BD type II and highlight the importance of epigenetic factors in mediating the onset and/or susceptibility to BD, providing new insight into the mechanisms of gene expression. Moreover, they shed light on possible mechanisms of action of mood-stabilizing compounds vs antidepressants in the treatment of BD, pointing out that BDNF regulation might be a key target for their effects.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2003

Neuroprotection by complement (C1) inhibitor in mouse transient brain ischemia.

M.G. De Simoni; Claudio Storini; M. Barba; L. Catapano; A.M Arabia; Emanuela Rossi; Luigi Bergamaschini

The authors investigated the effect of the C1 inhibitor (C1-INH), the only known inhibitor of complement C1, in a murine model of transient focal ischemia. Ischemia was induced by intraluminal occlusion of the middle cerebral artery. After 2 hours, reperfusion was produced by removing the nylon monofilament occluding the artery. The effect of 15 U C1-INH (intravenously) was evaluated in terms of general and focal neurologic deficits, ischemic volume, neutral red staining (to identify the brain areas subject to ischemic damage), and glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoreactivity (to show astrocytic response). Forty-eight hours after ischemia, C1-INH significantly improved general and focal deficits by 36% and 54%, respectively, and significantly reduced infarct volume (CI-INH, 6.69% ± 2.93%; saline, 24.24% ± 8.24%) of total brain. Neutral red staining further showed the strong protective effect of C1-INH in cortex, hippocampus, and striatum. Astrocyte activation induced by ischemia was not affected by C1-INH. These findings show that C1-INH displayed a potent neuroprotective action by effectively reducing ischemia—reperfusion injury.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 1991

Long-term treatment of hereditary angioedema with attenuated androgens: a survey of a 13-year experience.

Marco Cicardi; Luigi Bergamaschini; Massimo Cugno; Erik Hack; Giovanni Agostoni; Angelo Agostoni

Fifty-six patients affected with hereditary angioedema have been followed during long-term prophylaxis with attenuated androgens. The treatment was started in patients who had one or more severe attacks per month. In 24 patients, the therapy lasted for more than 5 years. The minimal effective dose usually did not exceed 2 mg/day of stanozolol or 200 mg/day of danazol. Only in two patients were these doses not sufficient to achieve the complete disappearance of symptoms. Irregular menstruation, but rarely amenorrhea, was the only significant side effect. One patient had to stop the therapy because of laboratory signs of hepatic cell necrosis. In one patient, danazol was administered during the last 8 weeks of pregnancy without side effects for the mother but with transient signs of virilization for the female baby. To find a biochemical marker for the minimal effective dose of androgen derivatives, we measured the plasma levels of C1 C1 INH complexes at different doses of stanozolol in four patients with hereditary angioedema. We found that these complexes, elevated before treatment, promptly reverted to normal values during androgen therapy and remained normal with any reduction of the dose of the drug as long as the patient remained symptom free. Therefore, the measurement of C1 C1 INH complexes appears to reflect the activity of the disease and not the amount of androgen that is administered.


American Journal of Pathology | 2004

The Powerful Neuroprotective Action of C1-Inhibitor on Brain Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury Does Not Require C1q

Maria Grazia De Simoni; Emanuela Rossi; Claudio Storini; Simone Pizzimenti; Cinara Echart; Luigi Bergamaschini

C1-inhibitor (C1-INH) is a major regulator of the complement classical pathway. Besides this action, it may also inhibit other related inflammatory systems. We have studied the effect of C1-INH in C57BL/6 mice with focal transient brain ischemia induced by 30 minutes of occlusion of the middle cerebral artery. C1-INH induced a dose-dependent reduction of ischemic volume that, with the dose of 15 U/mouse, reached 10.8% of the volume of saline-treated mice. Four days after ischemia the treated mice had significantly lower general and focal neurological deficit scores. Fluoro-Jade staining, a marker for neuronal degeneration, showed that C1-INH-treated mice had a lower number of degenerating cells. Leukocyte infiltration, as assessed by CD45 immunostaining, was also markedly decreased. We then investigated the response to ischemia in C1q(-/-) mice. There was a slight, nonsignificant decrease in infarct volume in C1q(-/-) mice (reduction to 72.3%) compared to wild types. Administration of C1-INH to these mice was still able to reduce the ischemic volume to 31.4%. The study shows that C1-INH has a strong neuroprotective effect on brain ischemia/reperfusion injury and that its action is independent from C1q-mediated activation of classical pathway.


Immunobiology | 1998

Pathogenetic and Clinical Aspects of C1 Inhibitor Deficiency

Marco Cicardi; Luigi Bergamaschini; Massimo Cugno; Andrea Beretta; Lorenza C. Zingale; Monica Colombo; Angelo Agostoni

People deficient in C1-INH present recurrent angioedema localized to subcutaneous or mucous tissues. The defect can be caused by impaired synthesis, due to a genetic defect (hereditary angioedema), or by increased catabolism (acquired angioedema). In our experience the majority of patients with acquired angioedema (16 of 18) have autoantibodies to C1-INH in their serum. These autoantibodies bind to C1-INH with different and generally low affinity. The vasopermeability mediator responsible for attacks is still undefined: bradykinin (derived from cleavage of high molecular weight kininogen) and a kinin-like peptide (derived from the second component of complement) still remain the two primary candidates. We examined the systems controlled by C1-INH (complement, contact system, fibrinolysis and coagulation) and found that all of them are activated during angioedema attacks. Activation of the coagulation leads to generation of thrombin whose vasoactive effect can thus influence edema formation. Treatment of severe angioedema attacks is satisfactorily performed with C1-INH plasma concentrate although patients with an acquired defect frequently need very high doses. Attenuated androgens effectively prevent attacks in hereditary angioedema, but their safety, on the very long-term, needs to be further assessed. Acquired angioedema generally fail to respond to these drugs, but can be treated prophylactically with antifibrinolytic agents.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2005

C1-inhibitor protects against brain ischemia-reperfusion injury via inhibition of cell recruitment and inflammation.

Claudio Storini; Emanuela Rossi; Veronica Marrella; Maria Distaso; Robert Veerhuis; Carlo Vergani; Luigi Bergamaschini; Maria Grazia De Simoni

Previous studies demonstrated that C1-inhibitor (C1-INH), a complement and contact-kinin systems inhibitor, is neuroprotective in cerebral ischemia. To investigate the mechanism of this action, we evaluated the expression of neurodegeneration and inflammation-related factors in mice subjected to 2-h ischemia and 2 or 46 h reperfusion. C1-INH significantly dampened the mRNA expression of the adhesion molecules P-selectin and ICAM-1 induced by the ischemic insult. It significantly decreased the pro-inflammatory cytokine (TNF alpha, IL-18) and increased the protective cytokine (IL-6, IL-10) gene expression. C1-INH treatment prevented the decrease of NFH gene, a marker of cellular integrity and counteracted the increase of pro-caspase 3, an apoptosis index. Furthermore, C1-INH markedly inhibited the activation and/or recruitment of microglia/macrophage, as shown by immunohistochemistry. In conclusion, C1-INH exerts an anti-inflammatory and anti-apoptotic action on ischemia-reperfusion injury. Our present and past data support a major effect of C1-INH on cell recruitment from the vasculature to the ischemic site.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1999

Idiopathic nonhistaminergic angioedema.

Marco Cicardi; Luigi Bergamaschini; Lorenza C. Zingale; Daniela Gioffré; Angelo Agostoni

PURPOSE We sought to describe the characteristics of a group of patients with idiopathic nonhistaminergic angioedema and their response to prophylactic treatment with tranexamic acid. METHODS We identified 25 patients (15 men and 10 women; age at diagnosis 16 to 77 years) who had idiopathic nonurticarial angioedema that was not prevented by histamine-1 (H1) blockers. Known causes of angioedema were excluded by clinical history, physical examination, and diagnostic tests. RESULTS The median age at the onset of symptoms was 35 years (range 8 to 66). The frequency of attacks was > 12 per year for 16 patients, six to 11 per year for 6 patients, and one to five per year for 3 patients. All patients had cutaneous attacks, 13 (52%) reported swellings of the pharynx or larynx, and 5 (20%) had symptoms consistent with bowel angioedema. Because of the similarities between these patients and patients who are deficient in C1 inhibitor, the 15 patients with severe and frequent attacks were started on prophylactic treatment with the antifibrinolytic agent tranexamic acid, 1 g three times a day orally for 3 months, tapered according to its effectiveness. The symptoms of 11 patients decreased to less than one attack per year, and the remaining 4 patients had partial remissions (less than 4 attacks per year). Fourteen patients are still being treated with tranexamic acid. CONCLUSION Patients with idiopathic nonhistaminergic angioedema appear to have similar clinical features and response to treatment with tranexamic acid as those who are deficient in C1 inhibitor. This suggests that those two forms of angioedema might have, at least in part, a similar pathogenesis.

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Carlo Vergani

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Emanuela Rossi

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Maria Grazia De Simoni

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Claudio Storini

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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