L
Luca Ronfani
Researcher at University of Trieste
Publications - 248
Citations - 118143
Luca Ronfani is an academic researcher from University of Trieste. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mortality rate. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 221 publications receiving 83759 citations. Previous affiliations of Luca Ronfani include IRCCS Materno Infantile Burlo Garofolo & James Cook University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Respiratory training with a specific device in cystic fibrosis: A prospective study
R. Sartori,Egidio Barbi,F. Poli,Luca Ronfani,Federico Marchetti,Alessandro Amaddeo,Alessandro Ventura +6 more
TL;DR: This study shows an association between training through a specific device and improved lung function, and further trials are needed to confirm this report.
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Coeliac disease in the ERA of the new ESPGHAN and BSPGHAN guidelines: a prospective cohort study
Elisa Benelli,Valentina Carrato,Stefano Martelossi,Luca Ronfani,Tarcisio Not,Alessandro Ventura +5 more
TL;DR: Diagnosis of coeliac disease can be reliably performed without a duodenal biopsy in approximately 11% of cases and this approach has no negative consequences relating to clinical remission, adherence to diet, and quality of life of children with CD.
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Prognostic impact of atypical presentation in pediatric systemic lupus erythematosus: results from a multicenter study.
Andrea Taddio,Elena Rossetto,Carlos D. Rose,Anne Marie C. Brescia,Claudia Bracaglia,Elisabetta Cortis,Donato Rigante,Achille Stabile,Marcella Montico,Luca Ronfani,Alessandro Ventura,Loredana Lepore +11 more
TL;DR: In this article, the rate of atypical manifestations at onset in pediatric systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and their effect on disease outcome was evaluated.
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Management of cryptorchidism: a survey of clinical practice in Italy
TL;DR: In line with the Consensus guidelines, surgery was carried out by a paediatric surgeon in the majority of cases, with a high success rate, and an important delay in orchidopexy was showed.
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Analysis of motivations that lead women to participate (or not) in a newborn cohort study
Liza Vecchi Brumatti,Marcella Montico,Stefano Russian,Veronica Tognin,Maura Bin,Fabio Barbone,Patrizia Volpi,Luca Ronfani +7 more
TL;DR: The altruistic reason appears to be the main reported by women to decide to participate in a newborn cohort study, and the fact that the study was too demanding and the need to collect biological samples are important reasons that lead women to refuse participation or to withdraw from the study.