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Vittorio Gatto

Researcher at Sapienza University of Rome

Publications -  11
Citations -  270

Vittorio Gatto is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Patient safety. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 11 publications receiving 166 citations.

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Diffuse Axonal Injury and Oxidative Stress: A Comprehensive Review.

TL;DR: Following TBI, axonal degeneration has been identified as a progressive process that starts with disrupted axonal transport causing axonal swelling, followed by secondary axonal disconnection and Wallerian degeneration, and studies support the role of an altered axonal calcium homeostasis as a mechanism in the secondary damage of axon, and suggest that calcium channel blocker can alleviate the secondaryDamage.
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Oral treatment with the melatonin agonist agomelatine lowers the intraocular pressure of glaucoma patients.

TL;DR: This pilot study addresses for the first time agomelatine effects on the IOP of patients affected by POAG.
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Personalized Medicine and Adverse Drug Reactions: The Experience of An Italian Teaching Hospital.

TL;DR: This study highlights the great potential of pharmacogenomics in reducing adverse reactions and suggests the need for further pharmacogenomic clinical trials to better personalize drug treatment and to refine the current pharmacovigilance strategies.
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Clinical-pathological study on β-APP, IL-1β, GFAP, NFL, Spectrin II, 8OHdG, TUNEL, miR-21, miR-16, miR-92 expressions to verify DAI-diagnosis, grade and prognosis

TL;DR: Results indicated thatmiR-21, miR-92 and miR -16 have a high predictive power in discriminating trauma brain cases from controls and could represent promising biomarkers as strong predictor of survival, and for the diagnosis of postmortem traumatic brain injury.
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Postmortem computed tomography angiography (PMCTA) and traditional autopsy in cases of sudden cardiac death due to coronary artery disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: PMCTA demonstrated a high accuracy in the diagnosis of parietal and luminal coronary changes but was less effective in detecting myocardial ischemia and necrosis, suggesting that PMCTA can improve the performance of the autopsy.