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Dive into the research topics where Nadia Fucci is active.

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Featured researches published by Nadia Fucci.


Forensic Science International | 2003

Simultaneous detection of some drugs of abuse in saliva samples by SPME technique

Nadia Fucci; Nadia De Giovanni; Marcello Chiarotti

A simple method for the simultaneous determination of many drugs of abuse in saliva is referred [methadone, 2-ethyl-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolinium perchlorate (EDDP), cocaine, cocaethylene, amphetamine, methamphetamine, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), 3,4-methylenedioxyethyl amphetamine (MDEA), N-methyl-1-(3,4-methylenedioxyphenyl)-2-butanamine (MBDB), cannabidiol (CBD), Delta(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), cannabinol (CBN)]. Head space-solid phase microextraction (HS-SPME) and direct immersion-solid phase microextraction (DI-SPME) followed by gas chromatographic/mass spectrometric analyses (GC/MS) were employed, and results obtained with both techniques are discussed. The method was validated testing reproducibility, sensitivity, linearity.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

The current status of sweat testing for drugs of abuse: a review.

N. De Giovanni; Nadia Fucci

Sweat is an alternative biological matrix useful to detect drugs of abuse intake. It is produced by eccrine and apocrine glands originating in the skin dermis and terminating in secretory canals that flow into the skin surface and hair follicles. Since many years it has been demonstrated that endogenous and exogenous chemicals are secreted in this biological sample hence its collection and analysis could show the past intake of xenobiotics. From the seventies the excretion of drugs of abuse has been investigated in human skin excretion; later in nineties forensic scientists began to experiment some techniques to trap sweat for analyses. Even if the use of skin excretions for drug testing has been restricted mainly by difficulties in sample recovery, the marketing of systems for the sample collection has allowed successful sweat testing for several drugs of abuse. In the recent years sweat testing developed a noninvasive monitoring of drug exposure in various contexts as criminal justice, employment and outpatient clinical settings. This paper provides an overview of literature data about sweat drug testing procedures for various xenobiotics especially cocaine metabolites, opiates, cannabis and amphetamines. Issues related to collection, analysis and interpretation of skin excretions as well as its advantages and disadvantages are discussed. Moreover the chance to apply the technique to some particular situation such as workplace drug testing, drivers, doping or prenatal diagnosis, the comparison between sweat and other non conventional matrices are also reviewed. According to literature data the analysis of sweat may be usefully alternative for verifying drug history and for monitoring compliance.


Forensic Science International | 1991

Comparative analysis of illicit heroin samples

Marcello Chiarotti; Nadia Fucci; C. Furnari

The comparative analysis of street heroin samples is still an object of scientific discussion. A combination of a wide range of analytical techniques is necessary to obtain a valid amount of information about the sample composition, and it is impossible to define an unique analytical approach. We suggest a complete analytical sequence based on analysis of volatile compounds, opiates, diluents, adulterants and metals, by head space gas chromatography (HS/GC), gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC/MS), thin layer chromatography (TLC), high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and atomic absorption (AA) using a sample amount as low as 50-100 mg. The outlined procedure can be successfully applied to routine work, thus obtaining suitable information about a samples chemical composition. This helps to attribute or exclude common sources of separate specimens. Results obtained on 33 street heroin samples confiscated in the metropolitan area of Rome are listed.


Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 1999

Comparative analysis of heroin and cocaine seizures

Marcello Chiarotti; Nadia Fucci

In this brief review the analytical techniques mainly used for comparative analysis of both cocaine and heroin seizures are reported. The characterization of illicit samples is carried out by means of a variety of techniques including thin-layer chromatography, high-performance liquid chromatography, gas chromatography and capillary electrophoresis. By means of these technique it is possible to resolve some component in illicit drugs and their application for comparative analyses is described in this review. Owing to the complexity and the variability of the mixture related to the origin and manufacturing impurities a unique analytical approach based on the application of a single technique it is not sufficient to achieve the requested global characterization of the sample for comparative purposes. Generally a complete characterization is obtained focusing on the identification of minor and major components, origin and manufacturing impurities other than trace compounds such as solvent residues. Nevertheless the application of a single robust methods able to resolve any possible significant marker compounds, is still not described and there is a need for a standardized general procedure suitable for a complete cross-examination of analytical data related to comparative analyses that can be carried out at an international level.


Forensic Science International | 1998

Adulterants encountered in the illicit cocaine market

Nadia Fucci; Nadia De Giovanni

Illicit cocaine samples (156), seized on Romes illegal market between January 1996 and June 1997, were examined. Both the purity of the cocaine and the presence of substances employed for dilution were determined for each sample. Adulterants were found in many of the street samples analysed. Lidocaine (average 14.7%) followed by caffeine (average 9%) proved to be the adulterants most frequently encountered in the cocaine samples.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2002

Cozart Rapiscan System: our experience with saliva tests

Nadia De Giovanni; Nadia Fucci; Marcello Chiarotti; Salvatore Scarlata

International literature has devoted many contributions to the evaluation of alternative biological matrices (such as saliva) as diagnostic tools in drug testing. The immunoassay Cozart Rapiscan saliva drug system, has been studied in recent years. In the present paper we report our experience with saliva collection and the quali-quantitative determination of drugs of abuse. Fifty-nine saliva samples were collected by the Cozart Rapiscan pad. Qualitative analyses were carried out by Cozart Rapiscan System and the results were confirmed by a solid-phase microextraction-GC-MS technique. Quantitative determinations were performed for methadone and its metabolite by GC-MS technique. The Cozart System provides collection and transfer procedures more easily than other systems, requiring minimal operator intervention.


Forensic Science International | 2009

Identification of GHB and morphine in hair in a case of drug-facilitated sexual assault

Riccardo Rossi; Massimo Lancia; Cristiana Gambelunghe; Antonio Oliva; Nadia Fucci

The authors present the case of a 24-year-old girl who was sexually assaulted after administration of gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) and morphine. She had been living in an international college for foreign students for about 1 year and often complained of a general unhealthy feeling in the morning. At the end of the college period she returned to Italy and received at home some video clips shot by a mobile phone camera. In these videos she was having sex with a boy she met when she was studying abroad. Toxicological analysis of her hair was done: the hair was 20-cm long. A 2/3-cm segmentation of all the length of the hair was performed. Morphine and GHB were detected in hair segments related to the period of time she was abroad. The analyses of hair segments were performed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) and the concentration of morphine and GHB were calculated. A higher value of GHB was found in the period associated with the possible criminal activity and was also associated with the presence of morphine in the same period.


European Journal of Dermatology | 2012

Lichenoid red tattoo reaction: histological and immunological perspectives

Simone Garcovich; Teresa Carbone; Simona Avitabile; Francesca Nasorri; Nadia Fucci; Andrea Cavani

As tattooing practices increase, delayed-type inflammatory reactions represent an uncommon adverse event to tattoo pigments. Different reaction patterns, such as eczematous, lichenoid, granulomatous and pseudolymphomatous reactions, have been previously reported, especially in association with metals contained in red tattoo pigments. We report a lichenoid papular reaction to an organic red tattoo ink, characterized by an intense mononuclear infiltrate dominated by CD8(+) T cells and CD56(+) lymphocytes and distributed in the superficial dermis around the red pigment and in the epidermis. Cytofluorimetric analysis of the lesional skin infiltrate confirmed the high frequency of cytotoxic CD8(+ )T cells and CD56(+)CD16(-) lymphocytes, most of which release type 1 cytokines. Chemical analysis of the red tattoo pigment confirmed its organic nature and the presence of intermediate reactive compounds. The lichenoid tissue reaction to red organic tattoo pigment showed the prototypical features of a cytotoxic inflammatory response to foreign substances (xenobiotics). The chemically unstable and reactive nature of modern tattoo pigments has to be taken into account by the clinician as well by the tattoo recipients.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2007

Methadone in hair and sweat from patients in long-term maintenance therapy.

Nadia Fucci; Nadia De Giovanni

The authors refer to their experience with alternative matrices to supervise the methadone therapy of heroin abusers. For this purpose, hair, sweat, and urine samples were collected from 10 heroin addicts and from a control group and were submitted to gas chromatographic/mass spectroscopic analysis for methadone and its main metabolite, 2-ethylidene-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolidine (EDDP), determination. The advantages of alternative matrices to urine samples in the supervision of methadone maintenance therapy are discussed. In particular, the detection of methadone in sweat could be a preferable option to the urine matrix as a result of the feasibility of sampling that allows noninvasive collection, which is not susceptible to adulteration. The ratio between EDDP and methadone in sweat and hair was also calculated to provide information about program agreement.


Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science | 2014

Sweat Testing to Monitor Drug Exposure

Cristiana Gambelunghe; Riccardo Rossi; Kyriaki Aroni; Mauro Bacci; Andrea Lazzarini; Nadia De Giovanni; Paola Carletti; Nadia Fucci

Recently, there has been an enormous increase in the number of people seeking treatment for cocaine addiction. Fifteen male cocaine users aged 20–30 years who requested hair analysis from our forensic toxicology laboratory (Perugia, Italy) from March to June 2012, reported using scopolamine without medical supervision to reduce the anxiety associated with cocaine withdrawal. Self-reports were verified with the results obtained from the hair analysis. We discuss whether the use of scopolamine in cocaine abusers could be supported by a neurobiological and pharmacological point of view.

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Nadia De Giovanni

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Vincenzo Lorenzo Pascali

The Catholic University of America

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Marcello Chiarotti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Riccardo Rossi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Fabio De Giorgio

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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N. De Giovanni

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Antonio Oliva

The Catholic University of America

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