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University of Turin

EducationTurin, Piemonte, Italy
About: University of Turin is a education organization based out in Turin, Piemonte, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 29607 authors who have published 77952 publications receiving 2480900 citations. The organization is also known as: Universita degli Studi di Torino & Università degli Studi di Torino.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Marco Tavani1, Guido Barbiellini2, A. Argan1, F. Boffelli, Andrea Bulgarelli1, P. A. Caraveo1, P. W. Cattaneo, A. W. Chen1, V. Cocco, Enrico Costa1, Filippo D'Ammando1, E. Del Monte1, G. De Paris1, G. Di Cocco1, G. Di Persio1, I. Donnarumma1, Y. Evangelista1, Marco Feroci1, Arnaud Ferrari3, M. Fiorini1, F. Fornari1, F. Fuschino1, T. Froysland, Massimo Frutti1, M. Galli4, Fulvio Gianotti1, A. Giuliani1, Claudio Labanti1, I. Lapshov1, Francesco Lazzarotto1, F. Liello, Paolo Lipari5, Francesco Longo2, E. Mattaini1, Martino Marisaldi1, M. Mastropietro, A. Mauri1, F. Mauri, Sandro Mereghetti1, Ennio Morelli1, A. Morselli, Luigi Pacciani1, A. Pellizzoni1, F. Perotti1, G. Piano1, P. Picozza, C. Pontoni, Geiland Porrovecchio1, M. Prest, G. Pucella1, Massimo Rapisarda4, A. Rappoldi, E. Rossi1, Alda Rubini1, Paolo Soffitta1, Alessandro Traci1, M. Trifoglio1, Alessio Trois1, E. Vallazza, S. Vercellone1, V. Vittorini1, A. Zambra1, D. Zanello5, C. Pittori, B. Preger, P. Santolamazza, F. Verrecchia, P. Giommi, S. Colafrancesco, Angelo Antonelli, S. Cutini, Dario Gasparrini, S. Stellato, G. Fanari, R. Primavera, F. Tamburelli, F. Viola6, G. Guarrera6, L. Salotti6, F. D'Amico6, E. Marchetti6, M. Crisconio6, Paolo Sabatini, G. Annoni, S. Alia, Antonio Francesco Longoni, R. Sanquerin, M. Battilana, P. Concari, E. Dessimone, R. Grossi, A. Parise, F. Monzani7, E. Artina7, R. Pavesi7, G. Marseguerra7, L. Nicolini7, L. Scandelli7, L. Soli7, V. Vettorello7, E. Zardetto7, A. Bonati7, L. Maltecca7, E. D'Alba7, M. Patané7, G. Babini, F. Onorati, L. Acquaroli, M. Angelucci, B. Morelli, C. Agostara, M. Cerone8, A. Michetti8, P. Tempesta8, S. D'Eramo8, F. Rocca8, Franco Giannini8, G. Borghi, B. Garavelli, M. Conte7, M. Balasini7, Ivan Ferrario, M. Vanotti, E. Collavo, M. Giacomazzo 
TL;DR: AGILE as mentioned in this paper is an Italian Space Agency mission dedicated to observing the gamma-ray universe, which was successfully launched on 2007 April 23 from the Indian base of Sriharikota and was inserted in an equatorial orbit with very low particle background.
Abstract: Context. AGILE is an Italian Space Agency mission dedicated to observing the gamma-ray Universe. The AGILE’s very innovative instrumentation for the first time combines a gamma-ray imager (sensitive in the energy range 30 MeV–50 GeV), a hard X-ray imager (sensitive in the range 18–60 keV), a calorimeter (sensitive in the range 350 keV–100 MeV), and an anticoincidence system. AGILE was successfully launched on 2007 April 23 from the Indian base of Sriharikota and was inserted in an equatorial orbit with very low particle background. Aims. AGILE provides crucial data for the study of active galactic nuclei, gamma-ray bursts, pulsars, unidentified gamma-ray sources, galactic compact objects, supernova remnants, TeV sources, and fundamental physics by microsecond timing. Methods. An optimal sky angular positioning (reaching 0.1 degrees in gamma-rays and 1–2 arcmin in hard X-rays) and very large fields of view (2.5 sr and 1 sr, respectively) are obtained by the use of Silicon detectors integrated in a very compact instrument. Results. AGILE surveyed the gamma-ray sky and detected many Galactic and extragalactic sources during the first months of observations. Particular emphasis is given to multifrequency observation programs of extragalactic and galactic objects. Conclusions. AGILE is a successful high-energy gamma-ray mission that reached its nominal scientific performance. The AGILE Cycle-1 pointing program started on 2007 December 1, and is open to the international community through a Guest Observer Program.

379 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Striking evidences implicating LPO in foetal vascular dysfunction occurring in pre-eclampsia, in renal and liver diseases, as well as their role as cause and consequence to cancer development are addressed.
Abstract: Lipid peroxidation (LPO) product accumulation in human tissues is a major cause of tissular and cellular dysfunction that plays a major role in ageing and most age-related and oxidative stress-related diseases. The current evidence for the implication of LPO in pathological processes is discussed in this review. New data and literature review are provided evaluating the role of LPO in the pathophysiology of ageing and classically oxidative stress-linked diseases, such as neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes and atherosclerosis (the main cause of cardiovascular complications). Striking evidences implicating LPO in foetal vascular dysfunction occurring in pre-eclampsia, in renal and liver diseases, as well as their role as cause and consequence to cancer development are addressed.

379 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In conclusion, rates of survival and complication‐free survival continue to improve, due to better treatment strategies, and new complications are appearing in long‐term survivors.
Abstract: The life expectancy of patients with thalassemia major has significantly increased in recent years, as reported by several groups in different countries. However, complications are still frequent and affect the patients' quality of life. In a recent study from the United Kingdom, it was found that 50% of the patients had died before age 35. At that age, 65% of the patients from an Italian long-term study were still alive. Heart disease is responsible for more than half of the deaths. The prevalence of complications in Italian patients born after 1970 includes heart failure in 7%, hypogonadism in 55%, hypothyroidism in 11%, and diabetes in 6%. Similar data were reported in patients from the United States. In the Italian study, lower ferritin levels were associated with a lower probability of experiencing heart failure and with prolonged survival. Osteoporosis and osteopenia are common and affect virtually all patients. Hepatitis C virus antibodies are present in 85% of multitransfused Italian patients, 23% of patients in the United Kingdom, 35% in the United States, 34% in France, and 21% in India. Hepatocellular carcinoma can complicate the course of hepatitis. A survey of Italian centers has identified 23 such cases in patients with a thalassemia syndrome. In conclusion, rates of survival and complication-free survival continue to improve, due to better treatment strategies. New complications are appearing in long-term survivors. Iron overload of the heart remains the main cause of morbidity and mortality.

379 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 2006-Cancer
TL;DR: In patients with cancer, one of the main mechanism of resistance to antimetabolite drugs is related to higher levels of thymidylate synthase (TS) activity.
Abstract: BACKGROUND. In patients with cancer, one of the main mechanism of resistance to antimetabolite drugs is related to higher levels of thymidylate synthase (TS) activity. METHODS. To investigate the association between TS expression and histopathologic data, 56 resection specimens from patients with nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) were collected consecutively. TS messenger RNA (mRNA) was evaluated in tumor specimens by using real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis; protein expression was evaluated by using immunohistochemistry (IHC) in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) specimens; and the analysis of TS transcriptional regulation activity was performed by using real-time PCR analysis in snap-frozen normal and tumor specimens. RESULTS. The amplification of the TS gene from FFPE tissues was obtained from all samples, with a median level (unit-less ratio) of 1.45 (range, 0.34–5.24); whereas positive TS status at IHC (>10% positive cells) was detected in 56% of samples. It is noteworthy that TS expression was significantly higher in squamous cell carcinoma compared with adenocarcinoma when both mRNA levels (2.17 vs. 1.16; P < .0001) and protein levels (P = .0269) were considered in FFPE specimens, and a strong association was observed between mRNA and protein expression (P = .00017). Moreover, higher TS levels were observed in high-grade tumors (P = .0389 and P = .0068 for mRNA and protein quantification, respectively). The analysis in snap-frozen samples revealed that the TS gene was up-regulated strongly in tumors (P = 3.8 × 10−12), and an 8-fold increase (as a cut-off value) in the TS mRNA ratio between tumor and corresponding normal tissue was detected in 32 of 56 patients (57%) bearing preferentially squamous cell tumors (P = .0022) and high-grade tumors (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS. Data from the current study consistently indicated higher TS expression levels in squamous cell and in high-grade carcinomas. This information may be useful in selecting which patients with NSCLC should receive treatment with TS-inhibiting agents. Cancer 2006. © 2006 American Cancer Society.

379 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Assessment of the scientific evidence related to the efficacy of clear aligner treatment (CAT) in controlling orthodontic tooth movement found that it is effective in controlling anterior intrusion but not anterior extrusion; it iseffective in controlling posterior buccolingual inclination butNot anterior buccoledual inclination; and it is not effective in controls rotation of rounded teeth in particular.
Abstract: Objective: To assess the scientific evidence related to the efficacy of clear aligner treatment (CAT) in controlling orthodontic tooth movement. Materials and Methods: PubMed, PMC, NLM, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Clinical Trials, Web of Knowledge, Scopus, Google Scholar, and LILACs were searched from January 2000 to June 2014 to identify all peer-reviewed articles potentially relevant to the review. Methodological shortcomings were highlighted and the quality of the studies was ranked using the Cochrane Tool for Risk of Bias Assessment. Results: Eleven relevant articles were selected (two Randomized Clinical Trials (RCT), five prospective non-randomized, four retrospective non-randomized), and the risk of bias was moderate for six studies and unclear for the others. The amount of mean intrusion reported was 0.72 mm. Extrusion was the most difficult movement to control (30% of accuracy), followed by rotation. Upper molar distalization revealed the highest predictability (88...

379 citations


Authors

Showing all 30045 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Michael Grätzel2481423303599
Lewis C. Cantley196748169037
Kenneth C. Anderson1781138126072
Elio Riboli1581136110499
Giacomo Bruno1581687124368
Silvia Franceschi1551340112504
Thomas E. Starzl150162591704
Paolo Boffetta148145593876
Marco Costa1461458105096
Pier Paolo Pandolfi14652988334
Andrew Ivanov142181297390
Chiara Mariotti141142698157
Tomas Ganz14148073316
Jean-Pierre Changeux13867276462
Dong-Chul Son138137098686
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023202
2022623
20215,733
20205,428
20194,544
20184,233