Institution
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
Education•Modena, Italy•
About: University of Modena and Reggio Emilia is a education organization based out in Modena, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 8179 authors who have published 22418 publications receiving 671337 citations. The organization is also known as: Università degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia & Universita degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia.
Topics: Population, Medicine, Cancer, Context (language use), Computer science
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection and acute respiratory failure, this study demonstrates that the utilisation of noninvasive respiratory support delivered outside the ICU was feasible and effective, but associated with a risk of staff contamination.
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: The severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus 2 outbreak spread rapidly in Italy and the lack of intensive care unit (ICU) beds soon became evident, forcing the application of noninvasive respiratory support (NRS) outside the ICU, raising concerns over staff contamination. We aimed to analyse the safety of the hospital staff and the feasibility and outcomes of NRS applied to patients outside the ICU. METHODS: In this observational study, data from 670 consecutive patients with confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 referred to pulmonology units in nine hospitals between March 1 and May 10, 2020 were analysed. Data collected included medication, mode and usage of NRS (i.e. high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC), continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), noninvasive ventilation (NIV)), length of stay in hospital, endotracheal intubation (ETI) and deaths. RESULTS: 42 (11.1%) healthcare workers tested positive for infection, but only three of them required hospitalisation. Data are reported for all patients (69.3% male), whose mean±sd age was 68±13â
years. The arterial oxygen tension/inspiratory oxygen fraction ratio at baseline was 152±79, and the majority (49.3%) of patients were treated with CPAP. The overall unadjusted 30-day mortality rate was 26.9%, with 16%, 30% and 30% for HFNC, CPAP and NIV, respectively, while the total ETI rate was 27%, with 29%, 25% and 28%, respectively; the relative probability of death was not related to the NRS used after adjustment for confounders. ETI and length of stay were not different among the groups. Mortality rate increased with age and comorbidity class progression. CONCLUSIONS: The application of NRS outside the ICU is feasible and associated with favourable outcomes. Nonetheless, it was associated with a risk of staff contamination.
200 citations
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01 Jul 2017TL;DR: A novel LSTM cell is proposed which can identify discontinuity points between frames or segments and modify the temporal connections of the encoding layer accordingly and can discover and leverage the hierarchical structure of the video.
Abstract: The use of Recurrent Neural Networks for video captioning has recently gained a lot of attention, since they can be used both to encode the input video and to generate the corresponding description. In this paper, we present a recurrent video encoding scheme which can discover and leverage the hierarchical structure of the video. Unlike the classical encoder-decoder approach, in which a video is encoded continuously by a recurrent layer, we propose a novel LSTM cell which can identify discontinuity points between frames or segments and modify the temporal connections of the encoding layer accordingly. We evaluate our approach on three large-scale datasets: the Montreal Video Annotation dataset, the MPII Movie Description dataset and the Microsoft Video Description Corpus. Experiments show that our approach can discover appropriate hierarchical representations of input videos and improve the state of the art results on movie description datasets.
200 citations
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TL;DR: A growing body of evidence shows that COX-2 also plays a physiological role in several body functions and that, conversely,COX-1 may also be induced at sites of inflammation, which explains the efforts to obtain drugs able to inhibit both 5-lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenases, the so-called dual acting anti-inflammatory drugs.
200 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify host factors, polymorphisms, and candidate genes associated with occupational asthma and use them to improve the understanding of the mechanisms involved in asthma in a relatively small proportion of exposed workers.
Abstract: Inhalation of agents in the workplace can induce asthma in a relatively small proportion of exposed workers. Like nonoccupational asthma, occupational asthma is probably the result of multiple genetic, environmental, and behavioral influences. It is important that occupational asthma be recognized clinically because it has serious medical and socioeconomic consequences. Environmental factors that can affect the initiation of occupational asthma include the intrinsic characteristics of causative agents as well as the influence of the level and route of exposure at the workplace. The identification of host factors, polymorphisms, and candidate genes associated with occupational asthma may improve our understanding of mechanisms involved in asthma. High-molecular-weight compounds from biological sources and low-molecular-weight chemicals cause occupational asthma after a latent period of exposure. Although the clinical, functional, and pathologic features of occupational asthma caused by low-molecular-weight agents resemble those of allergic asthma, the failure to detect specific IgE antibodies against most low-molecular-weight agents has resulted in a search for alternative or complementary physiopathologic mechanisms leading to airway sensitization. Recent advances have been made in the characterization of the immune response to low-molecular-weight agents. In contrast, the mechanism of the type of occupational asthma that occurs without latency after high-level exposure to irritants remains undetermined.
200 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest that IL-8 increases cell proliferation in NSCLC cell lines via transactivation of the EGFR and that this mechanism involves metalloproteinase activity.
200 citations
Authors
Showing all 8322 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Carlo M. Croce | 198 | 1135 | 189007 |
Gregory Y.H. Lip | 169 | 3159 | 171742 |
Geoffrey Burnstock | 141 | 1488 | 99525 |
Peter M. Rothwell | 134 | 779 | 67382 |
Claudio Franceschi | 120 | 856 | 59868 |
Lorenzo Galluzzi | 118 | 477 | 71436 |
Leonardo M. Fabbri | 109 | 566 | 60838 |
David N. Reinhoudt | 107 | 1082 | 48814 |
Stefano Pileri | 100 | 635 | 43369 |
Andrea Bizzeti | 99 | 1168 | 46880 |
Brian K. Shoichet | 98 | 281 | 40313 |
Dante Gatteschi | 97 | 727 | 48729 |
Roberta Sessoli | 95 | 424 | 41458 |
Thomas A. Buchholz | 93 | 494 | 33409 |
Pier Luigi Zinzani | 92 | 857 | 35476 |