Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. Cristallini is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. Cristallini.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 1994

Osteopenia associated with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: what are the causes?

F. Gregorio; S. Cristallini; Fausto Santeusanio; Paolo Filipponi; Paolo Fumelli

This study investigated whether alterations in bone mineral content (BMC) and/or in the phosphate-calcium metabolism exist in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM); whether they are linked to glycaemic control and whether antidiabetic therapy--oral agents or insulin--influences BMC and mineral metabolism. A cross-section assessment compared BMC and mineral metabolism in 60 well-controlled and 50 poorly controlled diabetic patients under oral hypoglycaemic therapy with 50 healthy controls. A longitudinal assessment improved the high glucose levels of the poorly controlled diabetic group either by increasing oral treatment or by adding a bedtime NPH insulin. Glycaemic control, BMC and mineral metabolism were followed-up for 1 year. In NIDDM patients BMC is reduced. This reduction is more marked in poorly controlled diabetic patients. In well-controlled diabetes osteocalcin levels are low. In poorly controlled patients glycosuria, hypercalcuria and parathyroid hyperactivity are present. In both groups vitamins 25(OH)-D, 1,25(OH)2-D and calcitonin levels are normal. Improving metabolic control increased BMC, normalized urinary calcium excretion and parathyroid activity and reduced osteocalcin levels. The type of anti-diabetic therapy does not have any significant effect upon BMC or upon phosphate-calcium metabolism. In conclusion, in NIDDM a hard-to-define osteoblast deficit appears to exist. In poorly controlled diabetes the loss of BMC is aggravated by the negative calcium balance caused by the renal calcium leak. This is due to glucosuric-induced osmotic diuresis and is maintained by parathyroid activation.


Bone | 1996

Cyclical Intravenous Clodronate in Postmenopausal Osteoporosis: Results of a Long-Term Clinical Trial

Paolo Filipponi; S. Cristallini; E. Rizzello; G. Policani; L. Fedeli; F. Gregorio; S. Boldrini; S. Troiani; C. Massoni

We report the results of long-term cyclical clodronate therapy (200 mg IV infusion every 3 weeks) on 235 women with postmenopausal osteoporosis recruited over 6 years. A retrospective analysis of clinical and instrumental findings in 183 postmenopausal osteoporotic patients was used as control data. Clodronate was well-tolerated and compliance was good. Bone mineral density (BMD) increased significantly and the upward trend persisted for all 6 years of therapy (5.69 +/- 0.184%) vs. controls: -1.47% +/- 0.813%, p <0.0001). The increase in BMD was greater in the 145 patients without vertebral fractures before starting clodronate. From year 3 onward clodronate reduced the incidence of new vertebral fractures. In closed subsets of patients and controls monitored for 3 and 4 years, respectively, the number of patients developing new vertebral fractures fell significantly in the clodronate group (two-sided p value = 0.0671 and p <0.0026, respectively). This trend was more marked in patients who were fracture-free at the beginning of each year. Cyclical clodronate is a safe and effective therapy for established osteoporosis, but clinical trials are necessary to compare its efficacy versus continuous therapy and, as in the case of the other bisphosphonates, to investigate its mechanisms of action in depth.


Bone and Mineral | 1990

Partial gastrectomy and mineral metabolism: effects on gastrin-calcitonin release

Paolo Filipponi; F. Gregorio; S. Cristallini; Carla Mannarelli; Andrea Blass; Anna Maria Scarponi; Giacomo Vespasiani

Bone mineral metabolism was studied in 20 male patients, between 8 and 18 years, after surgical treatment for peptic ulcer (ten Billroth 1 and ten Billroth 2 gastrectomies) and in 16 sex- and aged-matched healthy controls. The bone mineral content was statistically reduced only in the Billroth 2 group. Serum 25(OH)D was lower in all patients, but fractional calcium absorption was similar to the control value. This may be due to increases in 1,25(OH)2D and parathyroid activity (particularly in Billroth 2). Serum osteocalcin levels and hydroxyproline excretion were higher than in the controls. A positive linear correlation emerged not only between serum 1,25(OH)2D and PTH levels but also between each of these and serum osteocalcin and urine hydroxyproline. Both PTH and calcitriol were inversely correlated with the bone mineral mass in Billroth 2, confirming a trend observed in Billroth 1. Although calcitonin values were normal, basal gastrin levels were severely impaired in all patients. In response to a mixed meal, increases in gastrin and calcitonin were significantly lower than in the controls. The calcitonin response to intravenous calcium and pentagastrin infusion was not significantly different to the controls. The percentage increase in gastrin and calcitonin responses to oral calcium correlated positively with the reduction in bone mineral content only in the Billroth 2 group, suggesting a reduction in calcitonin release may contribute to gastric surgery osteopenia in these patients.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 1992

Therapeutical concentrations of tolbutamide, glibenclamide, gliclazide and gliquidone at different glucose levels: in vitro effects on pancreatic A- and B-cell function

F. Gregorio; Franca Ambrosi; S. Cristallini; M. Pedetti; Paolo Filipponi; Fausto Santeusanio

In the classical model of isolated perfused rat pancreas four commonly used sulfonylureas--tolbutamide, glibenclamide, gliquidone and gliclazide--were investigated at therapeutical concentrations at three different glucose levels (with 0, 2.22 and 5 mmol/l glucose surrounding) and in the presence of a metabolic stimulus with glucose at 8.33 mmol/l. All the sulfonylureas stimulated the B-cell function. Tolbutamide, gliquidone and gliclazide produced a prompt biphasic hormone release while glibenclamide induced a delayed monophasic insulin secretion. In all cases the amount of insulin released depended on the metabolic condition. As the environmental glucose levels fell, the sulfonylureas stimulatory effect on the B-cell function decreased. At the therapeutical concentrations we tested, no sulfonylurea influenced A-cell activity whether directly or indirectly via an insulin-mediated paracrine inhibition of glucagon release.


Bone | 1994

Effects of two different bisphosphonates on Paget's disease of bone: ICTP assessed

Paolo Filipponi; M. Pedetti; F. Beghe; B. Giovagnini; M. Miam; S. Cristallini

Clodronate and alendronate were compared in 27 patients with active Pagets bone disease. Carboxyterminal crosslinked telopeptide of type I collagen (ICTP) was evaluated as a marker of bone turnover in Pagets bone disease. Group 1. Nineteen patients received clodronate infusions (300 mg/daily) on 5 consecutive days. After 1 year, 12 patients (63%) were still in remission; urinary hydroxyproline (64.8%) and serum alkaline phosphatase (59.4%) were significantly reduced and had returned to normal in 30%. Patients in remission had significantly higher basal values of urinary hydroxyproline. No adverse side effects were observed. Group 2. One year after clodronate, seven relapsing patients retrospectively underwent five consecutive infusions of alendronate (5 mg/daily). Within 12 months, urinary hydroxyproline fell by 74.7%, alkaline phosphatase dropped by 75.2%, osteocalcin by 47.3%, and ICTP by 56.4%. In all patients, urinary hydroxyproline and alkaline phosphatase returned to normal within 3 months and remained within the normal range during the 12-month follow-up. Most patients had mild, short course fever and arthromyalgia. Group 3. Eight newly diagnosed pagetics, received alendronate alone (5 mg/daily for 5 days). All patients responded well to alendronate within the first month. None suffered a relapse during the follow-up. At month 12, urinary hydroxyproline was down by 71.4%, alkaline phosphatase by 75.3%, osteocalcin by 58.1%, and ICTP by 67.4%. In all patients, markers of bone remodeling were in the normal range at the end of the follow-up. Moderate, transitory arthromyalgia, and fever (high and lasting for 7 days in only one case) were observed in half of the patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Bone | 2000

Intermittent versus continuous clodronate administration in postmenopausal women with low bone mass

Paolo Filipponi; S. Cristallini; G. Policani; M.F Schifini; C Casciari; P Garinei

The aim of the study was to compare the effects on bone mass and turnover of continuous vs. intermittent clodronate administration on 120 postmenopausal women (average age 61 years) with low bone mass (femoral neck bone mineral density [BMD] of at least -1 SD or more, T-score), with another 30 women as a control group. Participants were given 1800 mg of clodronate every 6 months over 2 years using different treatment patterns: a) two continuous regimens, consisting of a daily oral dose of 400 mg or 100 mg every 10 days by intramuscular injection, the latter being considered continuous because the interval between injections is shorter than the time employed by each bone remodelling unit to complete the resorption phase of a remodelling cycle; and b) two intermittent regimens, consisting of 1800 mg every 6 months administered either as a single 18-h intravenous infusion or by separate infusions of 300 mg over 6 consecutive days. All women, including those in the control group, received calcium and vitamin D supplementation. After 2 years, continuous clodronate regimens caused an increase in BMD both at lumbar spine and proximal femur (L(1-4) BMD = 3.07% and 2.69%; femoral neck = 2.12% and 2.09%, respectively, with intramuscular and oral regimens). Intermittent clodronate administration was associated with a small increase or a stabilization in bone mass (L(1-4) BMD = 0.53% and 1.22%; femoral neck = 0.30% and 0.77%, respectively, with 1- and 6-day intravenous infusion regimens). From the 12th month, changes in spine and femoral neck BMD after continuous regimens were statistically different compared with that obtained with intermittent ones. Twenty-five of the 150 women (16.7%) discontinued the study before the end of the 2-year follow-up, but of these, only 7 dropped out because of adverse events related to the treatment itself. To summarize, intermittent clodronate administration could be a suitable option for the prevention of osteoporosis.


Acta Diabetologica | 1990

Low dose metformin in the treatment of type II non-insulin-dependent diabetes: Clinical and metabolic evaluations

F. Gregorio; Franca Ambrosi; Piero Marchetti; S. Cristallini; R. Navalesi; P. Brunetti; Paolo Filipponi

SummaryLow doses of metformin (500 mg twice daily) were administered to 20 diabetic patients, combined with the original sulfonylurea treatment which had become ineffective even at full dosage. After 1 and 5 weeks, the effects of the drug on glycemic control, blood intermediate metabolites and monocyte insulin receptors were monitored. Metformin clearly improved glycemic control by reducing both fasting blood glucose from 189.88±21.11 mg/dl to 131.12±16.02 mg/dl after 1 week and to 130.11±13.29 mg/dl after 5 weeks (p<0.025 both after 1 and 5 weeks); the diurnal blood glucose average fell from 235.33±24.11 mg/dl to 174.66±23.45 mg/dl (p<0.0025) after 1 week and to 177.65±21.71 mg/dl (p<0.0005) after 5 weeks. Consequently both blood glycosylated hemoglobin (p=n.s. after 1 week, p<0.025 after 5 weeks) and serum fructosamine (p<0.0025 after both 1 and 5 weeks) also decreased after metformin treatment. No change in plasma insulin and C-peptide levels was reported and no modification in diurnal rhythms of blood lactate, pyruvate, alanine glycerol and β-OH-butyrate was detected at any time during metformin treatment. All the changes documented in the binding values were already complete at the end of the first week: insulin binding to monocytes increased slightly but significantly (p<0.05) and the number of receptors per cell rose (p<0.05) but could not be correlated to any index of glycemic control. These data suggest that the antidiabetic action of metformin is neither related to its lactate-increasing activity nor does it depend upon its inducing an increase in insulin binding values. This metformin-related hypoglycemic effect might be the result, at least in part, of a reduced oxidative phosphorylation without inhibition of hepatic guconeogenesis and/or of decreased hepatic glucose output. Moreover, our data are also consistent with the hypothesis that metformin might affect insulin action at a post-receptor level.


Bone | 1998

Paget's Disease of Bone: Benefits of Neridronate as a First Treatment and in Cases of Relapse After Clodronate

Paolo Filipponi; S. Cristallini; G. Policani; C Casciari; F. Gregorio

This study assessed the efficacy of 200 mg of aminohexane bisphosphonate (neridronate) administered by intravenous infusion in a single dose or in two separate doses on consecutive days in 32 patients (16 males and 16 females, average age 66 years) affected by active Pagets disease of bone. Fifteen patients had never been treated with any antiresorptive agent and 17 had had unsatisfactory results from a prior clodronate treatment. All of the latter patients had failed to enter a remission stage (i.e., normalization of bone turnover was not reported at any time during treatment) and had had a full relapse within 6 months after clodronate infusion. In the present study bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (bAp), deoxypyridinoline (dPyr), and N- and C-terminal polypeptide of collagen type 1 (Ntx, Ctx) were determined before neridronate administration and at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months thereafter. Basal values of bAp were 51.7 +/- 2.3 microg/L, range 31.7-92.5 (normal range 6.2-23.6). No statistical differences in markers of bone turnover were evident in the basal state between new pagetic patients (bAp = 55.1 +/- 4.1) and those suffering a relapse after clodronate (bAp = 48.8 +/- 2.6). Neridronate induced an average percent change from baseline in excess bAp of 68.0 +/- 4.3 and in excess dPyr, Ntx, and Ctx of 68.1 +/- 11, 60.6 +/- 8.5, and 86.7 +/- 7.8, respectively. Markers of bone resorption declined more slowly in patients treated previously with clodronate, although the average change in percent decrement from baseline in excess bAp as well as in excess of bone resorption markers was not different from that registered in untreated pagetic patients. Response to treatment, defined as a percent decrement from baseline in excess bAp of 50% or more at any time during the 12-month follow-up, was observed in 27 patients (84.4%). Remission (a drop in bAp to within normal range) was achieved in 21 patients (65.6%) and was maintained in 12 at 12-month follow-up, with no significant differences between either 1- or 2-day infusions, or between new pagetic patients and those relapsing after clodronate. In 15 of 21 patients requiring analgesics to alleviate bone pain, pain was reduced or completely alleviated in 8. A slight, short-lived acute phase reaction (fever and/or arthromyalgia) occurred in 6 patients. To summarize, 200 mg of intravenous neridronate, in one or two doses, significantly reduced the biochemical indices of disease activity in the majority of patients, showing a normalization of bAp in more than 60%. We conclude that neridronate can be used safely in the treatment of patients with Pagets disease of bone either as a first bisphosphonate treatment or as retreatment for patients relapsing after clodronate.


Acta Diabetologica | 1996

Effects of glimepiride on insulin and glucagon release from isolated rat pancreas at different glucose concentrations

F. Gregorio; Franca Ambrosi; S. Cristallini; Paolo Filipponi; Fausto Santeusanio

The effects of glimepiride, the newest sulphonylureic compound, on pancreatic insulin and glucagon secretion were studied using the classical, isolated, perfused rat pancreas model. The influence of four different environmental glucose conditions (during a glycaemic stimulus with glucose increasing from 5 to 8.33 mM and at stable 0, 5 and 2.22 mM glucose levels) on the effects of glimepiride was also assessed. At a pharmacological concentration glimepiride strongly stimulated beta-cell activity, producing a characteristic biphasic insulin release with a sharp first-phase secretory peak, followed by a prolonged and sustained second phase. Environmental glucose concentrations markedly influenced the extent, but not the pattern of glimepiride-induced insulin secretion, as hormone release dropped significantly when the glucose level was reduced. Glimepiride failed to influence alpha-cell activity at any of the environmental glycaemic levels.


Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications | 1994

Glucose Modulates the Amount, but not the Kinetics, of Insulin Released by Sulfonylureas

F. Gregorio; Franca Ambrosi; Paolo Filipponi; S. Cristallini; Fausto Santeusanio

This study compares the insulin-secretory profiles induced by therapeutical concentrations of four different sulfonylureas--tolbutamide, gliquidone, gliclazide, and glibenclamide--and the amount of hormone released by each under different ambient glucose concentrations, using the isolated perfused rat pancreas model. All four sulfonylureas stimulated B-cell function, but the kinetics varied. Tolbutamide, gliquidone, and gliclazide produced a quick, biphasic release, whereas glibenclamide stimulated a delayed monophasic insulin secretion. Dramatic falls in insulin release were observed when ambient glucose concentrations were lowered. Glucagon release was not influenced by any of the sulfonylureas whatever the metabolic condition, neither directly nor indirectly, via an insulin-mediated paracrine inhibition of A-cell activity.

Collaboration


Dive into the S. Cristallini's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge