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Dive into the research topics where Paolo Valera is active.

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Featured researches published by Paolo Valera.


World Journal of Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Relationships of local lithium concentrations in drinking water to regional suicide rates in Italy

Maurizio Pompili; Monica Vichi; Enrico Dinelli; Roger Pycha; Paolo Valera; Stefano Albanese; Annamaria Lima; Benedetto De Vivo; Domenico Cicchella; Andrea Fiorillo; Mario Amore; Paolo Girardi; Ross J. Baldessarini

Objectives. Higher natural concentrations of lithium in drinking water may be associated with lower local rates of suicide. Methods. Lithium concentrations in drinking water were assayed by mass spectrometry at 145 sites in Italy, and compared with reported local suicide rates for men and women between 1980 and 2011. Results. Lithium concentrations in drinking water averaged 5.28 [CI: 4.08–6.48] μg/L (0.761 [0.588–0.934] μEq/L) and ranged from 0.110 to 60.8 μg/L (1.58 to 8.76 μEq/L). Lithium concentrations and local suicide rates were not significantly inversely related, except in 1980–1989, particularly among women. Conclusions. A proposed association between trace lithium concentrations in drinking water and risk of suicide was only partially supported, and mechanisms for potential clinical effects of trace levels of lithium are unknown.


Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2014

A correlation study between multiple sclerosis and type 1 diabetes incidences and geochemical data in Europe

Paolo Valera; Patrizia Zavattari; Stefano Albanese; Domenico Cicchella; Enrico Dinelli; Annamaria Lima; Benedetto De Vivo

Complex multifactorial disorders usually arise in individuals genetically at risk in the presence of permissive environmental factors. For many of these diseases, predisposing gene variants are partly known while the identification of the environmental component is much more difficult. This study aims to investigate whether there are correlations between the incidence of two complex traits, multiple sclerosis and type 1 diabetes, and some chemical elements and compounds present in soils and stream sediments in Europe. Data were obtained from the published literature and analyzed by calculating the mean values of each element and of disease incidence for each Country, respectively, 17 for multiple sclerosis and 21 for type 1 diabetes. Correlation matrices and regression analyses were used in order to compare incidence data and geochemical data. R correlation index and significance were evaluated. The analyses performed in this study have revealed significant positive correlations between barium and sodium oxide on one hand and multiple sclerosis and diabetes incidences on the other hand that may suggest interactions to be evaluated between silicon-rich lithologies and/or marine environments. The negative correlations shown by cobalt, chromium and nickel (typical of silicon-poor environment), which in this case can be interpreted as protective effects against the two diseases onset, make the split between favorable and protective environments even more obvious. In conclusion, if other studies will confirm the involvement of the above elements and compounds in the etiology of these pathologies, then it will be possible to plan strategies to reduce the spread of these serious pandemics.


Earth Science Informatics | 2009

GRIDA3—a shared resources manager for environmental data analysis and applications

Fabrizio Murgia; Riccardo Biddau; Alessandro Concas; Roberto Demontis; Luca Fanfani; Zeno Heilmann; Cristian Lai; Giuditta Lecca; Eva Lorrai; Marino Marrocu; Vittorio Alessandro Marrone; Laura Muscas; Elisaveta Peneva; Andrea Piras; Massimo Pisu; Gabriella Pusceddu; Guido Satta; Daniela Theis; Andrea Vacca; Paolo Valera; Ana Melina Vallenilla Ferrara; Ernesto Bonomi

GRIDA3 (Shared Resources Manager for Environmental Data Analysis and Applications) is a multidisciplinary project designed to deliver an integrated system to forge solutions to some environmental challenges such as the constant increase of polluted sites, the sustainability of natural resources usage and the forecast of extreme meteorological events. The GRIDA3 portal is mainly based on Web 2.0 technologies and EnginFrame framework. The portal, now at an advanced stage of development, provides end-users with intuitive Web-interfaces and tools that simplify job submission to the underneath computing resources. The framework manages the user authentication and authorization, then controls the action and job execution into the grid computing environment, collects the results and transforms them into an useful format on the client side. The GRIDA3 Portal framework will provide a problem-solving platform allowing, through appropriate access policies, the integration and the sharing of skills, resources and tools located at multiple sites across federated domains.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2017

Arsenic: Association of regional concentrations in drinking water with suicide and natural causes of death in Italy

Maurizio Pompili; Monica Vichi; Enrico Dinelli; Denise Erbuto; Roger Pycha; Gianluca Serafini; Gloria Giordano; Paolo Valera; Stefano Albanese; Annamaria Lima; Benedetto De Vivo; Domenico Cicchella; Zoltan Rihmer; Andrea Fiorillo; Mario Amore; Paolo Girardi; Ross J. Baldessarini

Arsenic, as a toxin, may be associated with higher mortality rates, although its relationship to suicide is not clear. Given this uncertainty, we evaluated associations between local arsenic concentrations in tapwater and mortality in regions of Italy, to test the hypothesis that both natural-cause and suicide death rates would be higher with greater trace concentrations of arsenic. Arsenic concentrations in drinking-water samples from 145 sites were assayed by mass spectrometry, and correlated with local rates of mortality due to suicide and natural causes between 1980 and 2011, using weighted, least-squares univariate and multivariate regression modeling. Arsenic concentrations averaged 0.969 (CI: 0.543-1.396) µg/L, well below an accepted safe maximum of 10µg/L. Arsenic levels were negatively associated with corresponding suicide rates, consistently among both men and women in all three study-decades, whereas mortality from natural causes increased with arsenic levels. Contrary to an hypothesized greater risk of suicide with higher concentrations of arsenic, we found a negative association, suggesting a possible protective effect, whereas mortality from natural causes was increased, in accord with known toxic effects of arsenic. The unexpected inverse association between arsenic and suicide requires further study.


Nutrients | 2018

Zinc Status and Autoimmunity: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Alessandro Sanna; Davide Firinu; Patrizia Zavattari; Paolo Valera

Zinc is an essential trace element for living organisms and their biological processes. Zinc plays a key role in more than 300 enzymes and it is involved in cell communication, proliferation, differentiation and survival. Zinc plays also a role in regulating the immune system with implications in pathologies where zinc deficiency and inflammation are observed. In order to examine the experimental evidence reported in the literature regarding zinc levels in the body of patients with autoimmune disorders compared to control individuals, a systematic review and meta-analysis were performed. From 26,095 articles identified by literature search, only 179 of them were considered potentially relevant for our study and then examined. Of the 179 articles, only 62 satisfied the inclusion criteria. Particularly for Fixed Model, Zn concentration in both serum (mean effect = −1.19; confidence interval: −1.26 to −1.11) and plasma (mean effect = −3.97; confidence interval: −4.08 to −3.87) samples of autoimmune disease patients was significantly lower than in controls. The data presented in our work, although very heterogeneous in the manner of collecting and investigating samples, have proved to be extremely consistent in witnessing a deficiency of zinc in serum and plasma of patients compared to controls.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

U-Th signatures of agricultural soil at the European continental scale (GEMAS): Distribution, weathering patterns and processes controlling their concentrations

Philippe Négrel; Benedetto De Vivo; Clemens Reimann; Anna Ladenberger; Domenico Cicchella; Stefano Albanese; Manfred Birke; Walter De Vos; Enrico Dinelli; Annamaria Lima; P. O'Connor; Ignace Salpeteur; Timo Tarvainen; M. Andersson; R. Baritz; M.J. Batista; A. Bel-lan; Alecos Demetriades; M. Ďuriš; A. Dusza-Dobek; O.A. Eggen; M. Eklund; V. Ernstsen; Peter Filzmoser; D.M.A. Flight; Sean T. Forrester; M. Fuchs; U. Fügedi; A. Gilucis; Mateja Gosar

Agricultural soil (Ap-horizon, 0-20cm) samples were collected in Europe (33 countries, 5.6millionkm2) as part of the GEMAS (GEochemical Mapping of Agricultural and grazing land Soil) soil-mapping project. The GEMAS survey area includes diverse groups of soil parent materials with varying geological history, a wide range of climate zones, and landscapes. The soil data have been used to provide a general view of U and Th mobility at the continental scale, using aqua regia and MMI® extractions. The U-Th distribution pattern is closely related to the compositional variation of the geological bedrock on which the soil is developed and human impact on the environment has not concealed these genuine geochemical features. Results from both extraction methods (aqua regia and MMI®) used in this study support this general picture. Ternary plots of several soil parameters have been used to evaluate chemical weathering trends. In the aqua regia extraction, some relative Th enrichment-U loss is related to the influence of alkaline and schist bedrocks, due to weathering processes. Whereas U enrichment-Th loss characterizes soils developed on alkaline and mafic bedrock end-members on one hand and calcareous rock, with a concomitant Sc depletion (used as proxy for mafic lithologies), on the other hand. This reflects weathering processes sensu latu, and their role in U retention in related soils. Contrary to that, the large U enrichment relative to Th in the MMI® extraction and the absence of end-member parent material influence explaining the enrichment indicates that lithology is not the cause of such enrichment. Comparison of U and Th to the soil geological parent material evidenced i) higher capability of U to be weathered in soils and higher resistance of Th to weathering processes and its enrichment in soils; and, ii) the MMI® extraction results show a greater affinity of U than Th for the bearing phases like clays and organic matter. The comparison of geological units with U anomalies in agricultural soil at the country scale (France) enables better understanding of U sources in the surficial environment and can be a useful tool in risk assessments.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

GEMAS: CNS concentrations and C/N ratios in European agricultural soil

Jörg Matschullat; Clemens Reimann; Manfred Birke; Debora dos Santos Carvalho; Stefano Albanese; Mark W. Anderson; R. Baritz; M.J. Batista; A. Bel-Ian; Domenico Cicchella; Alecos Demetriades; B. De Vivo; W. De Vos; Enrico Dinelli; M. Ďuriš; A. Dusza-Dobek; O.A. Eggen; M. Eklund; V. Ernsten; Karl Fabian; Peter Filzmoser; D.M.A. Flight; Sean T. Forrester; U. Fügedi; A. Gilucis; Mateja Gosar; V. Gregorauskiene; W. De Groot; A. Gulan; Josip Halamić

A reliable overview of measured concentrations of TC, TN and TS, TOC/TN ratios, and their regional distribution patterns in agricultural soil at the continental scale and based on measured data has been missing - despite much previous work on local and the European scales. Detection and mapping of natural (ambient) background element concentrations and variability in Europe was the focus of this work. While total C and S data had been presented in the GEMAS atlas already, this work delivers more precise (lower limit of determination) and fully quantitative data, and for the first time high-quality TN data. Samples were collected from the uppermost 20cm of ploughed soil (Ap horizon) at 2108 sites with an even sampling density of one site per 2500km2 for one individual land-use class (agricultural) across Europe (33 countries). Laboratory-independent quality control from sampling to analysis guaranteed very good data reliability and accuracy. Total carbon concentrations ranged from 0.37 to 46.3wt% (median: 2.20wt%) and TOC from 0.40 to 46.0wt% (median: 1.80wt%). Total nitrogen ranged from 0.018 to 2.64wt% (median: 0.169wt%) and TS from 0.008 to 9.74wt% (median: 0.034wt%), all with large variations in most countries. The TOC/TN ratios ranged from 1.8 to 252 (median: 10.1), with the largest variation in Spain and the smallest in some eastern European countries. Distinct and repetitive patterns emerge at the European scale, reflecting mostly geogenic and longer-term climatic influence responsible for the spatial distribution of TC, TN and TS. Different processes become visible at the continental scale when examining TC, TN and TS concentrations in agricultural soil Europe-wide. This facilitates large-scale land-use management and allows specific areas (subregional to local) to be identified that may require more detailed research.


Geochemistry-exploration Environment Analysis | 2018

Gold in Stream Sediments from the Sardinia Crystalline Basement (Italy)

Paolo Valera; Alessandro Sanna; A. Marcello; Salvatore Pretti

From the first half of the 1970s to the early 2000s, more than 33 000 samples of stream sediments have been collected in Sardinia over the course of several mineral prospecting campaigns. The sets of elements determined in each campaign varied, although analyses for most of the ore-related metals were normally performed. On this basis, the distribution of gold was studied because, in the set of metals known in the metallogeny of Sardinia, this metal was the last to prove economically recoverable. For this study, the territory of the whole island was subdivided into 110 districts and 26 sectors. This subdivision takes into account both the overall geological–lithological characteristics of each district and the total number of samples collected inside its limits. The results show that the metamorphic-dominated areas display a number of samples containing more than 20 ppb Au. This number is much higher than that observed in the granitic areas, not only as an absolute value, but also in relative frequency, which is more than twice that in the granitic areas. These high Au values are clearly clustered and related to ore-bearing structures.


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2010

Trace elements and ions in Italian bottled mineral waters: Identification of anomalous values and human health related effects

Domenico Cicchella; Stefano Albanese; B. De Vivo; Enrico Dinelli; Lucia Giaccio; Annamaria Lima; Paolo Valera


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2012

Major and trace elements in tap water from Italy

Enrico Dinelli; Annamaria Lima; Stefano Albanese; Manfred Birke; Domenico Cicchella; Lucia Giaccio; Paolo Valera; Benedetto De Vivo

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Stefano Albanese

University of Naples Federico II

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Annamaria Lima

University of Naples Federico II

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Benedetto De Vivo

University of Naples Federico II

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D.M.A. Flight

British Geological Survey

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B. De Vivo

University of Naples Federico II

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Peter Filzmoser

Vienna University of Technology

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Sean T. Forrester

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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