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Dive into the research topics where Salvatore Li Volti is active.

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Featured researches published by Salvatore Li Volti.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2008

Treatment of Infantile Spasms with Sodium Dipropylacetic Acid

Lorenzo Pavone; Gemma Incorpora; Mario La Rosa; Salvatore Li Volti; Florindo Mollica

Eighteen infants with infantile spasms were given sodium dipropylacetate at a dosage of 20mg/kg/day. They were clinically examined before treatment, and again after one to three years of therapy. The short‐term clinical response was excellent in four patients, good in eight, poor in four and there was no change in two.


Vaccine | 1991

Immune response to simultaneous administration of a recombinant DNA hepatitis B vaccine and multiple compulsory vaccines in infancy.

Giuseppe Giammanco; Salvatore Li Volti; Mauro L; Giuseppe Giammanco Bilancia; Isabella Salemi; Patrizia Barone; Salvatore Musumeci

The reactogenicity and immunogenicity of simultaneous administration of recombinant DNA hepatitis B vaccine with diphtheria and tetanus toxoids (DT) and oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) in 111 infants were compared with those of DT and OPV alone in a control group of 21 infants. All subjects received three doses of the vaccine according to one of three different schedules of vaccination. Reactions following simultaneous administration of vaccines were all but absent, with mild pain reported for four out of 111 subjects, compared with one of 21 in the control group. Seroconversion rates of 98-100% and high anti-HBs geometric mean titres (GMTs) were observed in all study groups after three doses of hepatitis B vaccine. Significantly higher anti-HBs were seen in Group III, where six months is allowed between the second and the third hepatitis B vaccine doses, compared with Group I and II, where only 1-2 months separate the second and third doses. A fourth dose of vaccine was needed in both these groups to obtain anti-HBs levels as high as seen in Group III after three vaccine doses at 3, 4 and 10 months of age. The immune response to DT and OPV was similar in the study groups and the control group. It is concluded that a course of 10 micrograms doses of recombinant hepatitis B vaccine given simultaneously with DT and OPV elicits a strong anti-HBs response and does not interfere with the immune response to the other antigens.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2003

Risk factors for poor renal prognosis in children with hemolytic uremic syndrome

Alessandra Gianviti; A. E. Tozzi; Laura De Petris; Alfredo Caprioli; Lucilla Ravà; Alberto Edefonti; Gianluigi Ardissino; Giovanni Montini; Graziella Zacchello; Alfonso Ferretti; Carmine Pecoraro; Tommaso De Palo; Angela D. Caringella; Maurizio Gaido; Rosanna Coppo; Francesco Perfumo; Nunzia Miglietti; Ilse Ratsche; Rosa Penza; Giovambattista Capasso; Silvio Maringhini; Salvatore Li Volti; Carmen Setzu; Marco Pennesi; Alberto Bettinelli; Leopoldo Peratoner; Ivana Pela; Elio Salvaggio; Giuliana Lama; Salvatore Maffei

Many factors have been proposed as predictors of poor renal prognosis in children with hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), but their role is still controversial. Our aim was to detect the most reliable early predictors of poor renal prognosis to promptly identify children at major risk of bad outcome who could eventually benefit from early specific treatments, such as plasmapheresis. Prognostic factors identifiable at onset of HUS were evaluated by survival analysis and a proportional hazard model. These included age at onset, prodromal diarrhea (D), leukocyte count, central nervous system (CNS) involvement, and evidence of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) infection. Three hundred and eighty-seven HUS cases were reported; 276 were investigated for STEC infection and 189 (68%) proved positive. Age at onset, leukocyte count, and CNS involvement were not associated with the time to recovery. Absence of prodromal D and lack of evidence of STEC infection were independently associated with a poor renal prognosis; only 34% of patients D−STEC− recovered normal renal function compared with 65%–76% of D+STEC+, D+STEC− and D−STEC+ patients. In conclusion, absence of both D and evidence of STEC infection are needed to identify patients with HUS and worst prognosis, while D– but STEC+ patients have a significantly better prognosis.


American Journal of Nephrology | 1999

Evidence for Genetic Heterogeneity in Benign Familial Hematuria

Monica Piccini; Giorgio Casari; Janhua Zhou; Mirella Bruttini; Salvatore Li Volti; Andrea Ballabio; Alessandra Renieri

Benign familial hematuria (BFH: MIM141200) is an autosomal-dominant disease accounting for one-fifth of all hematuria of unknown cause in children. Previous observations suggest that BFH may be allelic to recessive Alport syndrome (AS: MIM 203780) with a mutation in the COL4A3/COL4A4 locus. However, it is not clear whether all cases of BFH are due to heterozygous mutation of COL4A3/COL4A4 genes. We report here the exclusion of linkage between BFH and COL4A3/COL4A4 loci at 2q35-37 in a restricted population from Sicily (Italy). Total lod score is –9.6 at theta 0. Furthermore, in some cases exclusion of linkage is evident even considering single families. We conclude that BFH is genetically heterogeneous.


Reproductive Toxicology | 2003

Elevated incidence of hypospadias in two sicilian towns where exposure to industrial and agricultural pollutants is high

Sebastiano Bianca; Giovanni Li Volti; Manuela Caruso-Nicoletti; Giuseppe Ettore; Patrizia Barone; Lorenzo Lupo; Salvatore Li Volti

We found significant elevated incidence of hypospadias in two towns in Southeastern Sicily selected on the basis of the presence of intense industrial (Augusta) and agricultural (Vittoria) activities. Cases and controls were chosen in records collected from a surveillance system on abnormal live births in the same area and in a large city (Catania) located in an area at low risk of exposure to environmental pollutants. From 1991 to 1998, 16 cases of isolated hypospadias were recorded among male live births in Augusta (12.1 per 1000 male live births) and 24 cases in Vittoria (7.4 per 1000 male live births) with an incidence significantly higher than that expected (3.2 per 1000 in Southeastern Sicily). Relative risks in Augusta and Vittoria were 3.8 (95% confidence interval: 2.16-6.14) and 2.3 (95% confidence interval: 1.48-3.43; P=0.00003 and 0.04, respectively). In Augusta, the incidence of hypospadias was higher than in Vittoria. Significant log odds ratios were found for occupational exposure in fathers both in Augusta and Vittoria (P=0.0478 and 0.026, respectively). However, daily contact with pollutants in Augusta may not be sufficient by itself to determine hypospadias and other factors might be involved. Similar factors may act also in Vittoria. Thus, contact with large amounts of pesticides is, by itself, a risk factor for hypospadias, though genetic and other environmental factors might be involved.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2012

Puberty is associated with increased deterioration of renal function in patients with CKD: data from the ItalKid Project

Gianluigi Ardissino; Sara Testa; Valeria Daccò; Fabio Paglialonga; Sara Viganò; Cristina Felice-Civitillo; Francesco Battaglino; Alberto Bettinelli; Andrea Bordugo; Valeria Cecchetti; Salvatore De Pascale; Angela La Manna; Salvatore Li Volti; Silvio Maringhini; Giovanni Montini; Marco Pennesi; Leopoldo Peratoner

Objective To analyse the timing of end stage renal disease in children with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Design A population-based cohort study. Setting A nationwide registry (ItalKid Project) collecting information on all patients with CKD aged <20 years. Patients 935 children with CKD secondary to renal hypodysplasia with or without urologic malformation. In a subgroup of patients (n=40) detailed pubertal staging was analysed in relation to CKD progression. Main outcome measures Kidney survival (KS) was estimated using renal replacement therapy (RRT) as the end-point. Puberty was staged by identifying the pubertal growth spurt. Results A non-linear decline in the probability of KS was observed, with a steep decrease during puberty: the probability of RRT was estimated to be 9.4% and 51.8% during the first and second decades of life, respectively. A break-point in the KS curve was identified at 11.6 and 10.9 years of age in male and female patients, respectively. Conclusions The present analysis suggests that puberty is associated with increased deterioration of renal function in CKD. The mechanism(s) underlying this unique and specific (to children) pattern of progression have not yet been identified, but it may be that sex hormones play a role in this puberty-related progression of CKD.


Vaccine | 1998

Safety and immunogenicity of a combined diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis-hepatitis B vaccine administered according to two different primary vaccination schedules

Giuseppe Giammanco; Angela Moiraghi; Carla Maria Zotti; Sarina Pignato; Salvatore Li Volti; Anna Giammanco; Renato Soncini

The reactogenicity and immunogenicity of a tetravalent diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis-hepatitis B (DTPa-HB) vaccine (SmithKline Beecham) were studied in 565 infants immunized according to one of two different schedules, at 2, 4 and 6 months of age (group A n = 208) or at 3, 5 and 11 months of age (group B n = 357). The incidences of local and general reactions within the first 8 days after vaccination were similar in the two groups of infants, the vast majority being mild in intensity and occurring within 2-3 days of vaccine administration. Severe local symptoms were rare: pain after 0.6% of all doses, redness after 0.5% and 1.3%, and swelling after 0.3% and 1.5%, in group A and B, respectively. Only one infant in group A and one in group B had a temperature > 39.0 degrees C. Both schedules proved satisfactory in obtaining high levels of antibodies against all antigens. The rates of serologic response against the different antigens reached 100% in both groups. Antibody titres against all vaccine components were elevated following both schedules, but after the third dose of vaccine geometric mean antibody titres (GMTs) against D toxoid, filamentous haemagglutinin (FHA), pertactin (PRN) and hepatitis B (HB) were significantly higher in the 3, 5, 11 group than after the 2, 4, 6 schedule. Antibody titres measured at 7 months of age in the group immunized at 2, 4 and 6 months were higher than those reached at 6 months of age in infants immunized at 3, 5 and 11 months, but FHA and PRN were within the range of DTPa vaccine with proven efficacy. We conclude that DTPa-HB vaccine was safe, well tolerated and highly immunogenic. Both vaccination schedules (2, 4, 6 and 3, 5, 11) can be considered suitable for mass immunization programmes.


Clinical Genetics | 2008

Ocular manifestations in a family with probably X-linked cataracts

Lorenzo Pavone; Mario La Rosa; Giovanni Sorge; Santi Scaletta; Salvatore Li Volti; Florindo Mollica

A family with probably X‐linked congenital cataracts is reported: three males were affected, while two heterozygous females showed Y‐sutural opacities, and a third one was blind as a result of juvenile bilateral cataracts.


Pediatric Research | 2004

Soluble Adhesion Molecules and Cytokines in Children Affected by Recurrent Infections of the Upper Respiratory Tract

Grazia Malaponte; Valentina Bevelacqua; Giovanni Li Volti; Marcello Petrina; Giusy Nicotra; Valentina Sapuppo; Salvatore Li Volti; Salvatore Travali; Maria Clorinda Mazzarino

The objective of this study was to compare plasma levels of soluble adhesion molecules and Th1-Th2 type cytokines in 44 children with frequently recurrent respiratory infections (FRRI) of upper airways, defined as having nine or more episodes per year, and in 34 children without recurrence; all subjects were followed-up for 12 mo. The viral etiology was determined by cultures from nasal, pharyngeal, and ear secretions, using PCR and immunofluorescence. Plasma levels of five soluble adhesion molecules (E-selectin, P-selectin, L-selectin, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1) and interferon (IFN)-γ, IL-12, IL-4, and IL-10 were measured in patients and in 15 healthy controls using sandwich ELISA. During acute phase, all patients showed significant increase in plasma levels of soluble adhesion molecules; during the follow-up, the levels were greater in children with FRRI. A difference of cytokine profile was demonstrated between the patients with and without FRRI: an increased IL-4 and IL-10 release with decreased levels of IFN-γ and IL-12 suggested a skewing into Th2-type response, in patients with FRRI. This pattern persisted during the follow-up. In patients without recurrence, an increased IFN-γ and IL-12 release, together with decreased levels of IL-4 and IL-10, showed a skewing into Th1-type responses; in the follow-up these cytokines reached normal values. In conclusion, the abnormal levels of all examined parameters in children with FRRI may reflect the persistence of an inflammatory microenvironment in the airways and an activation of the immune system that may contribute to the frequently recurrence of the respiratory disease.


Ophthalmologica | 1986

Familial optic atrophy with sex-influenced severity. A new variety of autosomal-dominant optic atrophy?

Giovanni Gorgone; Salvatore Li Volti; Nicola Cavallaro; Letizia Conti; Gaetano Maria Profeta; Florindo Mollica

A family is described with 20 members in three successive generations affected by optic atrophy without other ocular or extraocular manifestations. The anomaly was transmitted as an autosomal-dominant character. There was a clearly bimodal distribution of severity: 4 male patients complained of severe impairment of vision since childhood while 16 other subjects (7 males and 9 females) were completely asymptomatic. This family could be an example of a new variety of autosomal dominant optic atrophy characterized by sex-influenced severity.

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Gianluigi Ardissino

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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