0000000000342275

AUTHOR

Marco Zaffanello

0000-0002-8659-5505

showing 5 related works from this author

Monitoring neonatal fungal infection with metabolomics

2014

Abstract The objective of our study was to evaluate the capability of the metabolomics approach to identify the variations of urine metabolites over time related to the neonatal fungal septic condition. The study population included a clinical case of a preterm neonate with invasive fungal infection and 13 healthy preterm controls. This study showed a unique urine metabolic profile of the patient affected by fungal sepsis compared to urine of controls and it was also possible to evaluate the efficacy of therapy in improving patient health.

Fungal infectionmedicine.medical_specialtyUrineInfant Newborn DiseasessepsisSepsisSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaMetabolomicsIntensive Care Units NeonatalmedicineHumansMetabolomicsIntensive care medicinePrincipal Component AnalysisPatient affectedbusiness.industryInfant NewbornObstetrics and Gynecologymedicine.diseaseItalyMycosesfungal infectionsPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthMetabolomePopulation studyMetabolomic; fungal infections; PrematurityFungal sepsisClinical caseneonatePrematuritybusinessBiomarkersMetabolic profilemetabolomicThe Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
researchProduct

Personal and Environmental Risk Factors at Birth and Hospital Admission: Direct and Vitamin D-Mediated Effects on Bronchiolitis Hospitalization

2021

Abstract: Seasonal variations in UV-B radiation may influence vitamin D status, and this, in turn, may influence the risk of bronchiolitis hospitalization. The aim of this study was using a causal inference approach to investigate, simultaneously, the interrelationships between personal and environmental risk factors at birth/hospital admission (RFBH), serum vitamin D levels and bronchiolitis hospitalization. A total of 63 children (<2 years old) hospitalized for bronchiolitis (34 RSV-positive) and 63 controls were consecutively enrolled (2014-2016). Vitamin D levels and some RFBH (birth season, birth weight, gestational age, gender, age, weight, hospitalization season) were recorded. The d…

seasonality: bronchiolitis hospitalizationvitamin Dgestational agemediation analysis
researchProduct

Personal and Environmental Risk Factors at Birth and Hospital Admission: Direct and Vitamin D-Mediated Effects on Bronchiolitis Hospitalization in It…

2021

Seasonal variations in UV-B radiation may influence vitamin D status, and this, in turn, may influence the risk of bronchiolitis hospitalization. The aim of this study was using a causal inference approach to investigate, simultaneously, the interrelationships between personal and environmental risk factors at birth/hospital admission (RFBH), serum vitamin D levels and bronchiolitis hospitalization. A total of 63 children (&lt

MalePediatricsHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesislcsh:Medicinevitamin Dchemistry.chemical_compoundSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E Specialistica0302 clinical medicinePregnancyRisk Factors030212 general & internal medicineChildseasonalityGestational ageVitaminsHospitalsHospitalizationItalyChild PreschoolHospital admissionBronchiolitisPremature BirthFemaleSeasonsVitaminmedicine.medical_specialtyUltraviolet RaysBirth weightGestational AgeEnvironmentLower riskArticle03 medical and health sciencesEnvironmental risk030225 pediatricsmedicineVitamin D and neurologyHumansmediation analysisbusiness.industrylcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthInfant NewbornInfantmediation analysimedicine.diseasebronchiolitis hospitalizationchemistryBronchiolitisbusinessInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
researchProduct

Twenty-year follow-up of children with obstructive sleep apnea.

2022

STUDY OBJECTIVES: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in children is associated with acute metabolic, cardiovascular, and neurocognitive abnormalities. The long-term outcomes of childhood OSA into adulthood have not been established. We performed a 20-year follow-up of patients with polysomnography-documented OSA in childhood compared to a healthy control group to evaluate the long-term anthropometric, sleep, cognitive, and cardiovascular outcomes. METHODS: Children diagnosed with severe OSA between ages 1 and 17 years (mean, 4.87 ± 2.77) were prospectively contacted by telephone as young adults after approximately 20 years. Data collected included reported anthropometric information, educational…

Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineCOVID-19 children obstructive sleep apnea sleep-disordered breathingAdultSleep Apnea ObstructiveAdolescentPolysomnographysleep-disordered breathingSnoringCOVID-19InfantScientific Investigationsnervous system diseasesrespiratory tract diseasesNeurologychildrenChild PreschoolHumansNeurology (clinical)Childobstructive sleep apneaFollow-Up StudiesJournal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine
researchProduct

Cluster Analysis of Home Polygraphic Recordings in Symptomatic Habitually-Snoring Children: A Precision Medicine Perspective

2022

(1) Background: Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is a frequent problem in children. Cluster analyses offer the possibility of identifying homogeneous groups within a large clinical database. The application of cluster analysis to anthropometric and polysomnographic measures in snoring children would enable the detection of distinctive clinically-relevant phenotypes; (2) Methods: We retrospectively collected the results of nocturnal home-based cardiorespiratory polygraphic recordings and anthropometric measurements in 326 habitually-snoring otherwise healthy children. K-medoids clustering was applied to standardized respiratory and anthropometric measures, followed by Silhouette-based statis…

children; cluster analysis; obstructive sleep apnea; polygraphy; sleep apnea; sleep-disordered breathing; snoringpolygraphychildrensleep-disordered breathingGeneral Medicinesleep apneaobstructive sleep apneasnoringcluster analysisJournal of Clinical Medicine
researchProduct