Valeria Patriarca
Istituto Superiore di Sanità
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Valeria Patriarca.
Journal of Hypertension | 1999
Menghetti E; Raffaele Virdis; Mirella Strambi; Valeria Patriarca; Maria Antonietta Riccioni; Emilio Fossali; Amedeo Spagnolo
OBJECTIVES To develop a national standard level of blood pressure (BP) for Italian children on the basis of a large sample of the population. DESIGN We analyzed data available from 21 Italian studies conducted according to the recommendations of the American Task Force between 1988 and 1994. Percentile curves of systolic and diastolic BP were constructed by fitting a third-order polynomial model of BP on age and height using multiple regression analysis. PARTICIPANTS BP was measured in 11 519 healthy individuals (6258 boys and 5261 girls) aged 5-17 years in various locations throughout Italy. All measurements were performed at school. RESULTS Percentile curves (5th, 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th and 95th) of systolic and diastolic BP are reported by age and by height for males and females. CONCLUSIONS With respect to the American standards, the levels in Italy for the 90th and 95th percentiles were 3-8 mmHg higher for systolic and diastolic BP in both sexes between 5 and 12 years of age, and 2-3 mmHg higher in older males. With respect to Northern Europe, in the lower ages, levels in Italy were quite similar, although slightly higher, whereas in late adolescence, the Northern European levels were much higher, especially in males, with differences of 4-5 mmHg for the mean values and 8-12 mmHg for the 95th percentile.
Twin Research and Human Genetics | 2008
Corrado Fagnani; Isabella Annesi-Maesano; Sonia Brescianini; Cristina D'Ippolito; Emanuela Medda; Lorenza Nisticò; Valeria Patriarca; Daniela Rotondi; Virgilia Toccaceli; Maria Antonietta Stazi
A number of studies have provided evidence of a significant familial aggregation for both asthma and hay fever, and have reported a substantial comorbidity between the two conditions. However, far fewer, especially in Italy, have aimed at clarifying the origins of such comorbidity. The main aims of the present study were (a) to estimate heritability of asthma and hay fever, (b) to measure the association between asthma and hay fever at the individual level, and (c) to assess the extent to which genetic and environmental factors, shared by the two conditions, mediate this association. The twin method was used. The study sample was derived from the Italian Twin Registry, and included 392 twin pairs aged 8 to 17 years. Data collection was performed through parent self-administered questionnaire. Bivariate structural equation twin modeling was applied to asthma and hay fever. Genetic factors accounted for 92% and 78% of the variance in liability to asthma and hay fever, respectively, with the remaining contributions due to unique environmental influences. The within-individual association between asthma and hay fever was substantial. The genetic correlation between the two conditions was .58, whereas no evidence of overlapping unique environmental effects was found. In conclusion, this study showed a high heritability of asthma and hay fever in the Italian child and adolescent population. It also indicated that asthma and hay fever share, to a large extent, a common genetic background, and environmental factors are not relevant to explain the comorbidity.
Pediatrics | 2011
Sonia Brescianini; Anna Volzone; Corrado Fagnani; Valeria Patriarca; Valentina Grimaldi; Roberta Lanni; Laura Serino; Pierpaolo Mastroiacovo; Maria Antonietta Stazi
OBJECTIVE: Between 25% and 30% of children and adolescents experience sleep disorders. These disorders are complex phenotypes that are regulated by many genes, the environment, and gene-environment interactions. The objective of this study was to evaluate the contribution of genetic and environmental factors to sleep behaviors in early childhood and to contribute to the knowledge on appropriate therapeutic approaches, using a twin design. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Data on sleeping behavior were collected from 314 18-month-old twin pairs (127 monozygotic and 187 dizygotic)using a parent-rated questionnaire. We used structural equation modeling to estimate genetic and environmental variance components for different sleep behaviors (cosleeping, sleep duration, and night awakenings). RESULTS: Shared environment explained almost all (98.3%) of the total variance in cosleeping. Sleep duration was substantially influenced by shared environmental factors (64.1% nocturnal sleep and 61.2% diurnal sleep), with a moderate contribution of additive genetic effects (30.8% and 36.3% for nocturnal and diurnal sleep, respectively). For nocturnal waking episodes, we found a shared environmental contribution of 63.2% and a heritability estimate of 35.3%. CONCLUSIONS: Most sleep disturbances during early childhood are explained by common shared environmental factors, and behavioral interventions adopted by parents and focused on modifying sleep behavior could contribute to solving sleep disturbances in this age group. However, the influence of genetic factors should not be underestimated, and research in this area could clarify the physiologic architecture of sleeping and contribute to selecting appropriate personalized therapeutic approaches.
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2008
Paola Pesenti-Gritti; Chiara A. M. Spatola; Corrado Fagnani; Anna Ogliari; Valeria Patriarca; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Marco Battaglia
Although Internalized and Externalized problem behaviors are described as separate phenomena at the psychometric and clinical levels, they frequently co-occur. Only few studies, however, have investigated the causes of such covariation. In a sample of 398 twin pairs aged 8–17 drawn from the general population-based Italian Twin Registry, we applied bivariate genetic analyses to parent-rated CBCL/6–18 Internalization and Externalization scores. Covariation of Internalizing and Externalizing problem behaviors was best explained by genetic and common environmental factors, while the influence of unique environmental factors upon covariance appeared negligible. Odds ratio values showed that a borderline/clinical level of Externalization is a robust predictor of co-existing Internalizing problems in the same child, or within a sibship. Our findings help to approximate individual risks (e.g., in clinical practice, predicting the presence of Internalization in an externalizing child, and vice-versa), and to recognize that several shared environmental and genetic factors can simultaneously affect a child’s proneness to suffer from both types of problem behaviors.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2011
Corrado Fagnani; Marcella Bellani; Michele Tansella; Matteo Balestrieri; Virgilia Toccaceli; Valeria Patriarca; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Paolo Brambilla
Genetic and environmental architecture of psychotic and obsessive symptoms are not completely elucidated. This study estimated for these symptoms (i) the genetic and environmental components, (ii) the within-individual association, and (iii) the extent to which this association originates from common genetic and environmental factors. Young adult twins (N=701) from the population-based Italian Twin Register were assessed for psychotic and obsessive-compulsive symptoms by using the Symptom Check List (SCL-90). Multivariate Cholesky models were fitted by the Mx statistical program. No previous study used this design to examine the same dimensions. The best-fitting model included additive genetic and nonshared environmental components, each accounting for about half of total variance in the symptoms. Genetic influences on the different symptoms overlapped considerably (r(g)=0.81 to 0.99). Phenotypic correlations of psychotic symptoms and of psychotic with obsessive symptoms were high (r=0.61 to 0.76), with 53% to 69% explained by shared genetic effects. This study shows substantial genetic influence on psychotic and obsessive symptoms, and indicates that their co-occurrence may be due to genetic factors to a greater extent than to environmental effects. These results encourage the search for genetic and environmental factors underlying the covariance between different psychotic traits as well as between psychotic and obsessive traits.
Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 2006
Anna Ogliari; Alessandra Citterio; Annalisa Zanoni; Corrado Fagnani; Valeria Patriarca; Rosalia Cirrincione; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Marco Battaglia
Twin Research | 2002
Maria Antonietta Stazi; Rodolfo Cotichini; Valeria Patriarca; Sonia Brescianini; Corrado Fagnani; Cristina D'Ippolito; Stefania Cannoni; Giovanni Ristori; Marco Salvetti
Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2001
Silvia Fargion; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Anna Ludovica Fracanzani; Michela Mattioli; Maurizio Sampietro; Dario Tavazzi; C. Bertelli; Valeria Patriarca; Chiara Mariani; Gemino Fiorelli
Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2005
Anna Ludovica Fracanzani; Silvia Fargion; Maria Antonietta Stazi; Luca Valenti; Pietro Amoroso; Elisabetta Cariani; A. Sangiovanni; Maurizio Tommasini; Angelo Rossini; C. Bertelli; E. Fatta; Valeria Patriarca; Sonia Brescianini; Tomaso Stroffolini
Twin Research and Human Genetics | 2006
Corrado Fagnani; Sonia Brescianini; Rodolfo Cotichini; C D'Ippolito; Tatjana Dukic; Lorenzo Giannantonio; Emanuela Medda; Lorenza Nisticò; Valeria Patriarca; Simonetta Pulciani; Daniela Rotondi; Virgilia Toccaceli; Maria Antonietta Stazi