F
F.R. Patacchioli
Researcher at Sapienza University of Rome
Publications - 26
Citations - 917
F.R. Patacchioli is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corticosterone & Glucocorticoid receptor. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 26 publications receiving 885 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Maternal corticosterone during lactation permanently affects brain corticosteroid receptors, stress response and behaviour in rat progeny.
Assia Catalani,Paola Casolini,Sergio Scaccianoce,F.R. Patacchioli,P Spinozzi,Luciano Angelucci +5 more
TL;DR: The present study demonstrates that, when the increase of corticosterone in infancy is moderate, the adult rats show reduced anxiety, improved learning and a better coping strategy to deal with stressful situations.
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Evaluation of apoptosis and the glucocorticoid receptor in the cartilage growth plate and metaphyseal bone cells of rats after high-dose treatment with corticosterone
G. Silvestrini,Paola Ballanti,F.R. Patacchioli,P. Mocetti,R. Di Grezia,B Martin Wedard,Luciano Angelucci,Ermanno Bonucci +7 more
TL;DR: Pharmacological doses of CORT reduce bone formation by increasing osteoblast apoptosis; they reduce growth cartilage width, probably by inhibiting chondrocyte proliferation and increasing the apoptosis of terminal hypertrophic chonrocytes, and they reduce osteocyte GR.
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Effects of prolonged autovehicle driving on male reproductive function: A study among taxi drivers
Irene Figà-Talamanca,C Cini,G C Varricchio,Franco Dondero,Loredana Gandini,Andrea Lenzi,Francesco Lombardo,Luciano Angelucci,R. Di Grezia,F.R. Patacchioli +9 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that prolonged urban automobile driving might be a risk factors for sperm quality, and particularly for sperm morphology, but the finding needs further confirmation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Altered circadian cortisol secretion in Alzheimer's disease: clinical and neuroradiological aspects.
Franco Giubilei,F.R. Patacchioli,Giovanni Antonini,M Sepe Monti,Paolo Tisei,Stefano Bastianello,P. Monnazzi,Luciano Angelucci +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that, in AD patients, hypercortisolemia is correlated with severity of the disease.
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Actual stress, psychopathology and salivary cortisol levels in the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
TL;DR: Findings suggest a dysregulation of the adrenal activity in IBS patients, which may be relevant considering that changes in cortisol levels have been shown to be sensitive indicators of psychosocial stress and coping patterns in both laboratory and life situations.