0000000000917972

AUTHOR

Fulvio Plescia

showing 113 related works from this author

Musculoskeletal disorders and incongruous postures in workers on ropes: A pilot study

2023

Background: Occupational hazards believed to cause musculoskeletal disorders in rope workers are traditionally associated with maintaining incongruous postures for prolonged periods of time. Design and methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted on 132 technical operators in the wind energy and acrobatic construction sectors, who work on ropes, analysing the ergonomic characteristics of the environments, the way in which tasks are carried out, the strain perceived by individual workers, and assessing the presence of any musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) by means of an objective examination focused on the anatomical districts that were the object of our study. Results: Analysis of the dat…

rope work work at height green wind turbines construction musculoskeletal disorders occupational medicine health surveillanceJournal of Public Health Research
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ChemInform Abstract: Synthesis of New 3-(3-Phenyl-isoxazol-5-yl) or 3-[(3-Phenyl-isoxazol-5-yl)amino] Substituted 4(3H)-Quinazolinone Derivatives wit…

2010

A novel series of 3-(3-phenyl-isoxazol-5-yl) or 3-[(3-phenyl-isoxazol-5-yl)amino] substituted 4(3H)-quinazolinone derivatives was synthesized. The compounds were tested for their antineoplastic activity in vitro against Raji (human Burkitt limphoma). K-562 (human chronic myelogeneous leukemia) and U937 (human histiocytic limphoma) cell lines. The most active quinazolinones showed IC50 values in the range 16-30 microM.

chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCell cultureStereochemistryIc50 valuesGeneral MedicineQuinazolinoneIn vitroChemInform
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Reversal of prenatal diazepam-induced deficit in a spatial-object learning task by brief, periodic maternal separation in adult rats.

2005

In the rat, prenatal exposure to diazepam (DZ) induces a permanent reduction in GABA/BZ receptor (R) function and behavioural abnormalities. Environmental modifications during early stages of life can influence brain development and induce neurobiological and behavioural changes throughout adulthood. Indeed, a subtle, periodic, postnatal manipulation increases GABA/BZ R activity and produces facilitatory effects on neuroendocrine and behavioural responses. We here investigated the impact of prenatal treatment with DZ on learning performance in adult 3- and 8-month-old male rats and the influence of a brief, periodic maternal separation on the effects exerted by prenatal DZ exposure. Learnin…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyReflex StartleSettore BIO/14 - FARMACOLOGIASpatial BehaviorMotor ActivityOpen fieldDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceEmotionalityPregnancyInternal medicineNeuroplasticitymedicinedeficit in learningAnimalsratlearning performanceprenatal diazepamRats WistarGABA ModulatorsMaze LearningemotionalityAnalysis of VarianceDiazepamBehavior AnimalLearning DisabilitiesMaternal DeprivationAge FactorsObject learningmaternal separationbehaviourRatsExploratory behaviourPrenatal treatmentEndocrinologyAcoustic StimulationAnimals NewbornAcoustic Startle ReflexPrenatal Exposure Delayed EffectsExploratory BehaviorLinear ModelsFemalePsychologyDiazepammedicine.drugBehavioural brain research
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Bioactive effects of citrus flavonoids and role in the prevention of atherosclerosis and cancer

2022

Citrus fruits are the main fruits of the Mediterranean diet and have been long recognized for their beneficial effects on human health. Observational studies have shown a significant association between dietary flavonoid intake and reduced risk of cardiovascular and malignant diseases. The beneficial effects of citrus fruits on human health appear to be due to their high content in vitamins, minerals and fibers. In particular, the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities have been indicated as some of the mechanisms through which citrus fruits may thwart the development of chronic degenerative diseases such as atherosclerosis and cancer. This review would critically examine the results …

antioxidantQH301-705.5Biochemistry (medical)food and beveragesPlant Sciencehuman healthantioxidant activitieGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologycardiovascular diseasesatherosclerosicardiovascular diseaseCitrus flavonoidsantiinflammatory activitiescanceratherosclerosisBiology (General)Citrus flavonoidSettore MED/49 - Scienze Tecniche Dietetiche Applicate
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Alcohol binge drinking in adolescence and psychological profile: Can the preclinical model crack the chicken-or-egg question?

2022

During adolescence, internal and external factors contribute to engaging with alcohol binge drinking (ABD), putting at risk the neurodevelopment of brain regions crucial for emotional control and stress coping. This research assessed the prevalence of ABD in late adolescent students of Southern Italy and characterized their psychological profile and drinking motives. Translational effects of alcohol binge drinking in the animal model were also studied. Seven hundred and fifty-nine high school students of both sexes (aged 18–20) were recruited. Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C), Drinking Motives Questionnaire-Revised Short Form, Millon Clinical Multiaxial Invento…

Psychiatry and Mental healthpsychopathologyself-esteem.resiliencedrinking motivealcohol binge drinkinglate adolescence
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Targeting the Stress System During Gestation: Is Early Handling a Protective Strategy for the Offspring?

2020

The perinatal window is a critical developmental time when abnormal gestational stimuli may alter the development of the stress system that, in turn, influences behavioral and physiological responses in the newborns. Individual differences in stress reactivity are also determined by variations in maternal care, resulting from environmental manipulations. Despite glucocorticoids are the primary programming factor for the offspring's stress response, therapeutic corticosteroids are commonly used during late gestation to prevent preterm negative outcomes, exposing the offspring to potentially aberrant stress reactivity later in life. Thus, in this study, we investigated the consequences of one…

OffspringCognitive NeurosciencePhysiologyprenatal exposurestress reactivitylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineNeurochemicalEmotionalityCorticosteronemedicineWeaninglcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Research030304 developmental biologyemotionality0303 health sciencesPregnancyprenatal exposure glucocorticoid early handling stress reactivity depressive-like behavior emotionalitybusiness.industrymedicine.diseasedepressive-like behaviorNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologychemistrySettore BIO/14 - Farmacologiaearly handlingGestationglucocorticoidbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGlucocorticoidmedicine.drugFrontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
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Perinatal exposure to 5-methoxytryptamine, behavioural-stress reactivity and functional response of 5-HT1A receptors in the adolescent rat.

2008

Abstract Serotonin is involved in a wide range of physiological and patho-physiological mechanisms. In particular, 5-HT1A receptors are proposed to mediate stress-adaptation. The aim of this research was to investigate in adolescent rats: first, the consequences of perinatal exposure to 5-metoxytryptamine (5MT), a 5-HT1/5-HT2 serotonergic agonist, on behavioural-stress reactivity in elevated plus maze, open field and forced swim tests; secondly, whether the behavioural effects induced by perinatal exposure to 5MT on open field and forced swim tests were affected by the selective 5-HT1A receptor agonist LY 228729, a compound able to elicit a characteristic set of motor behaviours on these ex…

AgonistMalemedicine.medical_specialtyElevated plus mazePerinatal 5MTOffspringmedicine.drug_classPyridinesPresynaptic TerminalsAnxietyMotor ActivitySerotonergicOpen fieldPiperazinesStatistics Nonparametric5-MethoxytryptamineBehavioral NeuroscienceSerotonin AgentsSex FactorsPregnancyBehavioural-stress reactivityInternal medicinemedicineAdolescent ratAnimals5-HT1A receptorErgolinesRats WistarAnalysis of VariancePerinatal 5MT; 5-HT1A receptors; Acute LY 228729 and WAY 100635; Behavioural-stress reactivity; Adolescent ratPerinatal ExposureBrainDrug SynergismRatsEndocrinologyAnimals NewbornPrenatal Exposure Delayed EffectsReceptor Serotonin 5-HT1ASynapsesSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaExploratory BehaviorAcute LY 228729 and WAY 100635FemaleSerotoninPsychologyStress PsychologicalBehavioural despair testBehavioural brain research
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Exposure to ototoxic agents and hearing loss: A review of current knowledge

2014

Several experimental and clinical studies have shown that a variety of ototoxic agents (such as drugs, industrial chemicals and noise) can cause sensorineural hearing loss. The most common ototoxic drugs used in clinical practice include: aminoglycoside and macrolide antibiotics, quinoline anti-malarials, platinum analog antineoplastics, loop diuretics, and acetylsalicylic acid. Among chemical agents with potential ototoxic properties are: organic solvents, heavy metals, organotins, nitriles, asphyxiants, and pesticides/herbicides. Acoustic exposure to high intensity and/or prolonged noise can also cause permanent threshold shifts in auditory perception. Ototoxic agents can influence audito…

medicine.medical_specialtypharmacological injuryEndolymphHearing lossototoxicity hearing loss pharmacological injury reactive oxygen speciesPharmacologyAudiologyProinflammatory cytokineSpeech and HearingAtrophyOtotoxicitymedicinehearing lossreactive oxygen specieschemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesbusiness.industrySettore MED/44 - Medicina Del LavoroAminoglycosidemedicine.diseaseototoxicity; hearing loss; pharmacological injury; reactive oxygen speciesSettore MED/32 - AudiologiaototoxicitySettore MED/31 - Otorinolaringoiatriamedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologychemistrySettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaSensorineural hearing lossmedicine.symptombusinessHearing, Balance and Communication
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Alcohol preference, behavioural reactivity and cognitive functioning in female rats exposed to a three-bottle choice paradigm.

2012

Alcohol abuse is a substantial and growing health problem in Western societies. In the last years in vivo and in vitro studies have suggested that males and females display a different alcohol drinking behaviour, with swingeing differences not only in the propensity for alcohol use but also in the metabolic and behavioural consequences. In this study we investigated, in adult female rats, ethanol self-administration and preference pattern using a 3-bottle paradigm with water, 10% ethanol solution, and white wine (10%, v/v), along a four-week period. The influence of alcohol free-access on explorative behaviour in the open field (OF), and on spatial learning and reference memory in the Morri…

MaleAlcohol DrinkingMorris water navigation taskAlcohol abuseAlcoholWineSettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaChoice BehaviorOpen fieldDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundCognitionmedicineAnimalsLearningRats WistarEthanolBehavior AnimalEthanolCognitive flexibilitymedicine.diseasePreferenceAlcohol free-choice paradigm female rats Alcohol preference behavioural reactivity spatial learning and memoryRatschemistryWhite WineSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyBehavioural brain research
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Evaluation of Correlation between Sleep and Psychiatric Disorders in a Population of Night Shift Workers: A Pilot Study

2023

Background: Insomnia is the perception of inadequate, insufficient or non-restorative sleep. Of all sleep-related disorders, insomnia is the most common. It is important to remember that the sleep–wake cycle also plays a central role in the genesis of anxiety and depression. The aim of our study is to evaluate the association between sleep disturbances and anxiety and depression in a group of workers of both sexes who perform night shift work. Methods: Information on sleep disorders was collected by administering the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) questionnaire. Statistical analysis was conducted using the Chi-square test to assess whether there were any differences between sex for those who…

GABAstresspsychiatric disordersworkpreventionHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisinsomniaPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthnight workanxietyanxiety depression shift work insomnia night work prevention psychiatric disorders stress work GABAdepression shift workInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Effects of pre- and postnatal exposure to 5-methoxytryptamine and early handling on an object-place association learning task in adolescent rat offsp…

2007

A reduction in 5-HT1A receptor response enhances learning and memory performance in rats. Pre- and postnatal treatment with 5-methoxytryptamine (5MT), a non-selective serotonergic agonist, and early handling, reduce the number of 5-HT1A receptors in neonatal and pre-pubertal rat progeny. The aim of this study was to investigate in adolescent male rats the consequences of pre- and postnatal treatment with 5MT and its interaction with early handling on an object-place association learning task, the "Can test", a motivated, non-aversive, spatial/object discrimination task. Results show that a single daily injection of 5MT from gestational days 12 to 21 (1 mg/kg s.c.) and from postnatal days 2 …

AgonistMalemedicine.medical_specialtyTime Factorsmedicine.drug_classOffspringHippocampusSpatial BehaviorSerotonergicHandling Psychological5-MethoxytryptaminePregnancyInternal medicineObject-place associationmedicineAnimalsReceptorPre- and postnatal 5MT Early handlingBehavior AnimalLearning performanceGeneral NeuroscienceAssociation LearningAdolescent raLong-term potentiationGeneral MedicineRatsSerotonin Receptor AgonistsEndocrinologyPrenatal Exposure Delayed EffectsFacilitationLinear ModelsGestationFemalePsychologyNeuroscience research
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Acetaldehyde as a drug of abuse: insight into AM281 administration on operant-conflict paradigm in rats

2013

Increasing evidence focuses on acetaldehyde (ACD) as the mediator of the rewarding and motivational properties of ethanol. Indeed, ACD stimulates dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens and it is self-administered under different conditions. Besides the dopaminergic transmission, the endocannabinoid system has been reported to play an important role in ethanol central effects, modulating primary alcohol rewarding effect, drug-seeking and relapse behaviour. Drug motivational properties are highlighted in operant paradigms which include response-contingent punishment, a behavioural equivalent of compulsive drug use despite adverse consequences. The aim of this study was thus to characterize…

Cannabinoid receptorPunishment (psychology)media_common.quotation_subjectCognitive NeuroscienceNucleus accumbenslcsh:RC321-571Behavioral NeuroscienceDopamineCB1 AntagonistmedicineOriginal Research ArticleGeiller-Seifter procedurelcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatrymedia_commonrelapseAddictionDopaminergicExtinction (psychology)Endocannabinoid systemGeiller–Seifter procedureNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyCB1 receptor blockade/antagonismSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAcetaldehyde Lever pressing relapse Geiller-Seifter procedure CB1 receptor blockade/antagonismPsychologyNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesmedicine.drugNeuroscienceacetaldehydelever pressingFrontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
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Reward-related limbic memory and stimulation of the cannabinoid system: An upgrade in value attribution?

2018

While a lot is known about the mechanisms promoting aversive learning, the impact of rewarding factors on memory has received comparatively less attention. This research investigates reward-related explicit memory in male rats, by taking advantage of the emotional-object recognition test. This is based on the prior association, during conditioned learning, between a rewarding experience (the encounter with a receptive female rat) and an object; afterwards rat discrimination and recognition of the â emotional objectâ is recorded in the presence of a novel object, as a measure of positive limbic memory formation. Since endocannabinoids are critical for processing reward and motivation, the co…

Male0301 basic medicineMorpholinesmedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.medical_treatmentConditioning ClassicalEmotionsStimulationNaphthalenes03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRewardMemoryAvoidance LearningLimbic SystemmedicineExplicit memoryAnimalsPharmacology (medical)Rats WistarAssociation (psychology)media_commonCannabinoid Receptor AgonistsPharmacologyMotivationAddictionreward-conditioningNoveltyRecognition PsychologyObject (computer science)emotional-object recognitionBenzoxazinesRatsPsychiatry and Mental health030104 developmental biologySettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaFemaleCannabinoidPsychologyAttributionNeurosciencecannabinoid stimulationpsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgeryEndocannabinoidsJournal of Psychopharmacology
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Acetaldehyde Oral Self-Administration: Evidence from the Operant-Conflict Paradigm

2011

Background: Acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanol's first metabolite, has been reported to interact with the dopaminergic reward system, and with the neural circuits involved in stress response. Rats self-administer ACD directly into cerebral ventricles, and multiple intracerebroventricular infusions of ACD produce conditioned place preference. Self-administration has been largely employed to assess the reinforcing and addictive properties of most drugs of abuse. In particular, operant conditioning is a valid model to investigate drug-seeking and drug-taking behavior in rats. Methods: This study was aimed at the evaluation of (i) the motivational properties of oral ACD in the induction and maintenanc…

MalePunishment (psychology)media_common.quotation_subjectAdministration OralMedicine (miscellaneous)Self AdministrationAcetaldehydePharmacologyToxicologyDevelopmental psychologyConflict PsychologicalReward systemAnimalsRats WistarReinforcementmedia_commonAcetaldehyde Lever-Pressing Punishment Reinforcement Relapse.AddictionDopaminergicAbstinenceConditioned place preferenceRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaConditioning OperantSelf-administrationPsychology
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The role of pregnenolone sulphate in spatial orientation-acquisition and retention: An interplay between cognitive potentiation and mood regulation

2013

Abstract Neurosteroids can alter neuronal excitability interacting with specific neurotransmitter receptors, thus affecting several functions such as cognition and emotionality. In this study, we investigated, in adult male rats, the effects of the acute administration of pregnenolone-sulfate (PREGS) (10 mg/Kg, s. c.) on cognitive processes using the Can test, a non aversive spatial/visual task which allows the assessment of spatial information-acquisition during the baseline training, and of memory retention in the longitudinal study. Furthermore, on the basis of PREGS pharmacological profile, the modulation of depressive-like behaviour was also evaluated in the forced swim test (FST). Our…

MalePregnenolone-sulphate Spatial orientation-acquisition Spatial orientation-retention Cognitive map Depressive-like behaviouNeuroactive steroidMotor ActivityDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceCognitionMemoryEmotionalityOrientationmedicineAnimalsLearningLongitudinal StudiesRats WistarNootropic AgentsSwimmingDepressionWorking memoryCognitionLong-term potentiationGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseRatsAffectMoodMood disordersData Interpretation StatisticalPregnenoloneSpace PerceptionSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAnimal Science and ZoologyPsychologyNeuroscienceBehavioural despair test
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Anti-inflammatory and cognitive effects of interferon-β1a (IFNβ1a) in a rat model of Alzheimer’s disease

2018

Background: Aβ 1-42 peptide abnormal production is associated with the development and maintenance of neuroinflammation and oxidative stress in brains from Alzheimer disease (AD) patients. Suppression of neuroinflammation may then represent a suitable therapeutic target in AD. We evaluated the efficacy of IFNβ1a in attenuating cognitive impairment and inflammation in an animal model of AD. Methods: A rat model of AD was obtained by intra-hippocampal injection of Aβ 1-42 peptide (23 μg/2 μl). After 6 days, 3.6 μg of IFNβ1a was given subcutaneously (s.c.) for 12 days. Using the novel object recognition (NOR) test, we evaluated changes in cognitive function. Measurement of pro-inflammatory or …

0301 basic medicineTime Factorsmedicine.medical_treatmentHippocampusCell CountPharmacologymedicine.disease_causeHippocampuslcsh:RC346-429Superoxide Dismutase-10302 clinical medicineNeuroinflammationNF-kBMicrogliaGeneral NeuroscienceMicrofilament ProteinsROSPro-inflammatory cytokineIFNβ1amedicine.anatomical_structureCytokineNeurologyIL-10CytokinesFemalemedicine.symptomAlzheimer's diseaseInterferon beta-1aPro-inflammatory cytokinesImmunologyAβ 1-42InflammationProinflammatory cytokine03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceHippocampuAlzheimer DiseaseGlial Fibrillary Acidic ProteinmedicineAnimalsAβ1-42Rats WistarSODMaze Learninglcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous systemNeuroinflammationInflammationAmyloid beta-PeptidesNeuroscience (all)Superoxide Dismutasebusiness.industryResearchCalcium-Binding ProteinsRecognition Psychologymedicine.diseasePeptide FragmentsRatsDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyLipid PeroxidationCognition DisordersReactive Oxygen Speciesbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryOxidative stressJournal of Neuroinflammation
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Prenatal Exposure to Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Affects Hippocampus-Related Cognitive Functions in the Adolescent Rat Offspring: Focus on Specific Marke…

2023

Previous evidence suggests that prenatal exposure to THC (pTHC) derails the neurodevelopmental trajectories towards a vulnerable phenotype for impaired emotional regulation and limbic memory. Here we aimed to investigate pTHC effect on hippocampus-related cognitive functions and markers of neuroplasticity in adolescent male offspring. Wistar rats were exposed to THC (2 mg/kg) from gestational day 5 to 20 and tested for spatial memory, object recognition memory and reversal learning in the reinforce-motivated Can test and in the aversion-driven Barnes maze test; locomotor activity and exploration, anxiety-like behaviour, and response to natural reward were assessed in the open field, elevate…

hippocampal excitatory plasticitySettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaCB1R expressionPharmaceutical Scienceadolescent rat offspringspatial learning and memoryprenatal THC exposure
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Pyrazolobenzotriazinones Derivatives as COX Inhibitors: Synthesis Biological Activity and Molecular Modeling Studies

2010

Pyrazolylbenzotriazinones are endowed with structural analogy with the COX-2 selective inhibitor celecoxib. Considering that our research group has long been interested in the 3-pyrazolyl-substituted benzotriazinones as anti-inflammatory agents, six new pyrazolylbenzotriazinone derivatives 16a-c and 18a-c have been prepared by reacting the opportune ethyl 5-(2-aminobenzamido)-1-(pyridin-2-yl)-1H-pyrazole-4-carboxylate or 5-(2-aminobenzamido)-1-(pyridin-2-yl)-1H-pyrazole-4-carboxyic acid with sodium nitrite in glacial acetic acid. The biological studies revealed a good pharmacological profile for some pyrazolylbenzotriazinones and, in the case of the ethyl 5-(4-oxo-1,2,3-benzotriazin-3(4H)-y…

Models MolecularMolecular modelAnti-Inflammatory AgentsPharmaceutical Science2-(1H-pyrazol-1-yl)pyridines 4(3H)-Benzotriazinones docking COX-2 inhibitorsCOX-2 inhibitorschemistry.chemical_compoundAcetic acidStructure-Activity Relationship4(3H)-BenzotriazinonesDrug DiscoverymedicineStructure–activity relationshipOrganic chemistryHumansSodium nitriteSulfonamidesCyclooxygenase 2 InhibitorsTriazinesBiological activitySettore CHIM/08 - Chimica FarmaceuticachemistryDocking (molecular)CelecoxibCelecoxibSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaPyrazolesSelectivitymedicine.drug
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Alcohol addiction: a role for acetaldehyde

2009

Alcoholism is a chronically relapsing disorder characterized by cycles of repeated high alcohol intake and negative emotional consequences of withdrawal thought to contribute to excessive drinking and susceptibility to relapse. In the past years, the pharmacological and behavioural effects of alcohol, such us sedation, memory and learning impairment, were assigned to the main component of alcoholic drinks, ethanol. Recently acetaldehyde, the first metabolite of ethanol, seems to exert biological activity, besides its adverse effects. The aim of the present review is to elucidate the putative role of acetaldehyde in mediating the neuronal and behavioural features induced by ethanol intake.

AlcoholismEthanolSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAcetaldehyde
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Long-Term COVID: Case Report and Methodological Proposals for Return to Work

2022

Almost two years after the beginning of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, the knowledge of which in the infectious and therapeutic spheres is constantly evolving, attention paid to the medicolegal aspects linked to this emergency phenomenon has mainly focused on the liability implications falling on healthcare personnel. With regard to the medicolegal assessment of the outcomes of COVID-19 illness, although it is a procedure that is commonly used, and although references in the assessment tables in force have been adhered to, a specific assessment protocol has not been standardized that takes into account, from an objective point of view, the degree of severity of the long-term residual outcomes and…

long-term COVIDRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentoutcomes for COVID patientsGeography Planning and Developmentoccupational diseaserisk assessmentworker evaluationBuilding and ConstructionManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawlong-term COVID; risk assessment; outcomes for COVID patients; occupational disease; worker evaluation
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Alcohol abuse and insomnia disorder: Focus on a group of night and day workers

2021

The sleep-wake cycle plays a fundamental role in maintaining the physiological balance of our body. Its alteration favours the genesis of several organic alterations and diseases including sleep disorders and the consumption of several substances of abuse. It has been reported that the work activity, especially that carried out during the night, is able to influence the sleep-wake cycle, promoting the development of insomnia, which, in turn, would subject the worker to a stressful condition such as to encourage adverse behaviour such as the use/abuse of psychotropic substances. Based on the above premises, the aim of our research was to evaluate, in night workers: (i) the pattern of consump…

MaleAlcohol DrinkingalcoholHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisRPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthArticleAlcoholismSleep QualitySleep Initiation and Maintenance DisordersSurveys and Questionnairesnight workersalcohol; sleep disorders; night workers; AUDIT-CHumansMedicineAlcohol AUDIT-C Night workers Sleep disorders Alcohol Drinking Female Humans Male Sleep Sleep Quality Surveys and Questionnaires Alcoholism Sleep Initiation and Maintenance DisordersFemalesleep disordersAUDIT-CSleep
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Evaluation of chronic alcohol self-administration by a 3-bottle choice paradigm in adult male rats. Effects on behavioural reactivity, spatial learni…

2011

Chronic ethanol consumption is able to modify emotional behaviour and cognition in humans. In particular, the effects exerted by alcohol may depend on doses, time and modalities of administration. In this study we investigated, in adult male rats, ethanol self-administration and preference patterns using a 3-bottle choice paradigm with water, 10% ethanol solution, and white wine (10%, v/v), along a four-week period. The influence of alcohol free-access on novelty-induced explorative behaviour in the open field, and on spatial learning and reference memory in the Morris water maze was also evaluated. Our results indicate that: (i) rats show a higher preference for alcohol, in the first two w…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyMemory Long-TermMorris water navigation taskAlcoholSpatial learningReversal LearningSelf AdministrationWineAlcohol self-administrationAudiologyMotor ActivityChoice BehaviorOpen fieldDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundEatingmedicineAnimalsRats WistarAlcoholic preferenceMaze LearningEthanolSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaBehavior AnimalDose-Response Relationship DrugEthanolExplorative behaviourBody WeightFree-choice paradigmCentral Nervous System DepressantsWaterCognitionPreferenceRatschemistryReference memoryWhite WineSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaExploratory BehaviorAlcohol self-administration; Free-choice paradigm; Alcoholic preference; Explorative behaviour; Spatial learning; Reference memorySelf-administrationPsychologyBehavioural brain research
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Single, intense prenatal stress decreases emotionality and enhances learning performance in the adolescent rat offspring: Interaction with a brief, d…

2006

Perinatal manipulations can lead to neurobehavioural changes in the progeny. In this study we investigated, in adolescent male rat offspring, the consequences of a single, intense prenatal stress induced by a 120 min-maternal immobilization at gestational day 16, and of a daily, brief maternal separation from postnatal day 2 until 21, on: unconditioned fear/anxiety-like behaviour in open field and in elevated plus-maze; learning performance in the "Can test", a non-aversive spatial and tactile/visual task; corticosterone plasma levels under basal and stress-induced conditions. Our results indicate that both prenatal stress and maternal separation procedures decrease emotionality and enhance…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtySettore BIO/14 - FARMACOLOGIAOffspringPrenatal stress Maternal separation Adolescent ra tBehaviour CorticosteroneAnxietyStatistics NonparametricOpen fieldDiscrimination LearningRandom AllocationBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundPregnancyEmotionalityCorticosteroneInternal medicineAdaptation PsychologicalmedicineAnimalslearning performanceRats WistarAnalysis of VarianceMaternal deprivationPregnancyMaternal DeprivationAge Factorsmedicine.diseaseRatsbehaviourEndocrinologyPrenatal stresschemistryprenatal stressPrenatal Exposure Delayed EffectsExploratory BehaviorFemaleAnalysis of varianceCorticosteronePsychologyStress Psychological
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Alcohol and Nicotine Use among Adolescents: An Observational Study in a Sicilian Cohort of High School Students

2022

In recent years, the mode of alcoholic intake known as binge drinking (BD) has become a common practice, especially among adolescents who, due to socio-environmental motives, tend to reach a rapid state of drunkenness. This drunkeness leads to alterations in brain areas responsible for executive functions and cognitive processes, as well as to the genesis of factors that predispose to lasting addiction. Likewise, nicotine leads to a comparable degree of addiction. On this basis, the aim of this research was to evaluate, on a cohort of 349 high school students (15–17 years old) in the province of Palermo, the following: (I) the drinking model of alcoholic beverages; (II) the use of nic…

alcohol; nicotine use; adolescence; binge drinking; nicotine dependenceMaleNicotineAdolescentEthanolAlcohol DrinkingalcoholHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAlcoholic BeveragesSettore MED/44 - Medicina Del LavoroPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthbinge drinkingSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaHumansadolescenceFemalenicotine dependenceStudents
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COVID-19 Pandemic: Prevention and protection measures to be adopted at the workplace

2020

Introduction: SARS-CoV-2, identified in Wuhan, China, for the first time in December 2019, is a new viral strain, which has not been previously identified in humans; it can be transmitted both by air and via direct and indirect contact; however, the most frequent way it spreads is via droplets. Like the other viruses belonging to the same family of coronaviruses, it can cause from mild flu-like symptoms, such as cold, sore throat, cough and fever, to more severe ones such as pneumonia and breathing difficulties, and it can even lead to death. Since no effective specific drug therapy has been found yet, nor any vaccine capable of limiting the spread of this pathogen, it is important for way…

WorkGeography Planning and Development010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesRenewable energy sources0302 clinical medicinestrePandemicEpidemiologySore throatProtocolMedicineGE1-350030212 general & internal medicineFatigueProtectionEnvironmental effects of industries and plantsTransmission (medicine)DPIPPEmedicine.symptomenvironmental measuregloveInfectionPneumonia (non-human)medicine.medical_specialtyGlovesTJ807-830organizational measureManagement Monitoring Policy and LawTD194-195StressOccupational medicine03 medical and health sciencesPharmacotherapyEnvironmental healthTransmissiongloves ; work ; COVID-19 ; environmental measures ; infection ; occupational medicine ; Coronavirus ; PPE ; protection ; pandemic ; protocol ; organizational measures ; mask ; DPI ; prevention ; SARS-CoV-2Inanimate surfaceAerosolDroplets0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMaskPandemicRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industrySARS-CoV-2Settore MED/44 - Medicina Del LavoroPreventionCompetitive sportCOVID-19medicine.diseaseOrganizational measurescoronaviruEnvironmental sciencesCoronavirusEnvironmental measuresSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiadropletSuspectOccupational medicinebusiness
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Effects of DA-Phen, a dopamine-aminoacidic conjugate, on alcohol intake and forced abstinence

2016

The mesolimbic dopamine (DA) system plays a key role in drug reinforcement and is involved in the development of alcohol addiction. Manipulation of the DAergic system represents a promising strategy to control drug-seeking behavior. Previous studies on 2-amino-N-[2-(3,4-dihydroxy-phenyl)-ethyl]-3-phenyl-propionamide (DA-Phen) showed in vivo effects as a DA-ergic modulator. This study was aimed at investigate DA-Phen effects on operant behavior for alcohol seeking behavior, during reinstatement following subsequent periods of alcohol deprivation. For this purpose, male Wistar rats were tested in an operant paradigm of self-administration; behavioral reactivity and anxiety like-behavior durin…

Male0301 basic medicineAlcohol DrinkingDopaminePhenylalaninemedia_common.quotation_subjectDopamine AgentsDrug-Seeking BehaviorAddictionSelf AdministrationAlcoholAnxietyPharmacologyDopamine derivativeCNS targeting03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineRecurrenceEmotionalityDopamineIn vivomedicineAnimalsRats Wistarmedia_commonEthanolAddictionCentral Nervous System DepressantsAbstinenceAlcoholismDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologychemistryPharmacodynamicsOperant self-administration paradigmConditioning OperantAnxietymedicine.symptomPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDopaminergic neurotransmissionAlcohol Deterrentsmedicine.drugBehavioural Brain Research
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The role of (E)-6-chloro-3-(3-methyl-1-phenyl-1H-pyrazol-5-yl)-2-styrylquinazolin-4(3H)-one in the modulation of cannabinoidergic system. A pilot stu…

2018

Abstract Background Compounds acting on endocannabinoid system regulate different neuronal processes through the cannabinoid receptors activation. The main aim of this study was determining whether the 2-styrylquinazolin-4(3H)-one 5, a structural analogue of rimonabant, was able to counteract the behavioural signs of the activation of the endocannabinoidergic system induced by CP 55.940. Methods Behavioural assessment was carried out using the tetrad task and the novel object recognition test. The endocannabinoidergic system activation was possible by the administration of CP 55.940 and 30 min after rats were tested in the tetrad task for the evaluation of the antinociceptive-, cataleptic-,…

0301 basic medicineAgonistCannabinoid receptormedicine.drug_classmedicine.medical_treatmentPilot ProjectsPharmacologyCannabinoidergicStyrenes03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRimonabantmedicineAnimalsRats WistarLatency (engineering)PharmacologyDose-Response Relationship DrugCannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonist Quinazolinone derivate Tetrad task Declarative memoryCannabinoidsChemistryRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineCyclohexanolsEndocannabinoid systemSettore CHIM/08 - Chimica FarmaceuticaRats030104 developmental biologyNociceptionQuinazolinesSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaCannabinoidLocomotion030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drug
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Ethanol Modulates Corticotropin Releasing Hormone Release From the Rat Hypothalamus: Does Acetaldehyde Play a Role?

2010

BACKGROUND AND METHODS Ethanol (EtOH) activates hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, resulting in adrenocorticotropin hormone, glucocorticoid release, and in modifications of the response of the axis to other stressors. The initial site of EtOH action within the HPA system seems to be the hypothalamus. Thus, to determine the mechanisms responsible for these effects, we investigated: (i) whether EtOH was able to release corticotrophic releasing hormone (CRH) from incubated hypothalamic explants; (ii) whether acetaldehyde (ACD), its first metabolite formed in the brain by catalase activity, might play a role in EtOH activity. To this aim, rat hypothalamic explants were incubated with: (…

Maleendocrine systemmedicine.medical_specialtySettore BIO/14 - FARMACOLOGIACorticotropin-Releasing HormoneHypothalamusMedicine (miscellaneous)AcetaldehydeIn Vitro TechniquesToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundCorticotropin-releasing hormoneInternal medicinemental disordersmedicineAnimalsRats Wistarreproductive and urinary physiologyEthanolbiologyEthanolAcetaldehydeRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologyMechanism of actionchemistryEthanol Acetaldehyde Hypothalamic CRH Release 3-Amino-124-triazole d-Penicillamine.CatalaseHypothalamusCRHbiology.proteinLiberationmedicine.symptomhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsGlucocorticoidmedicine.drug
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Acetaldehyde, motivation and stress: Behavioral evidence of an addictive ménage à trois

2017

Acetaldehyde contributes to alcohol’s psychoactive effects through its own rewarding properties. Recent studies shed light on the behavioral correlates of acetaldehyde administration and the possible interactions with key neurotransmitters for motivation, reward and stress-related response, such as dopamine and endocannabinoids. This mini review critically examines acetaldehyde psychoactive properties, focusing on behavioral investigations able to unveil acetaldehyde motivational effects and their pharmacological modulation in vivo. Similarly to alcohol, rats spontaneously drink acetaldehyde, whose presence is detected in the brain following chronic self-administration paradigm. Acetaldehyd…

Punishment (psychology)Stremedia_common.quotation_subjectMini ReviewDopamineCognitive NeuroscienceAlcohol abuseAcetaldehydeOperant behavior03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundstressBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineDopamineNeuroplasticitymedicineendocannabinoidsmedia_commonEndocannabinoidAcetaldehyde; Dopamine; Endocannabinoids; Operant behavior; Stress; Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology; Cognitive Neuroscience; Behavioral NeuroscienceAddictionAcetaldehydeExtinction (psychology)medicine.diseaseEndocannabinoid system030227 psychiatryNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologychemistryPsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drugNeuroscience
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Clinical observations and risk factors for tinnitus in a Sicilian cohort.

2014

The aims of this study were to determine the distribution of risk factors associated with tinnitus analysing their role in the development of tinnitus and the effects of their interaction; to evidence the importance of a suitable and adequate clinical and audiologic assessment to avoid those modifiable risk factors responsible for cochlear dysfunction and tinnitus onset. 46 subjects with tinnitus and 74 controls were studied according to: age, sex, Body Mass Index (BMI), neck circumference, tobacco smoking, feeling fatigue or headache, self reporting snoring, hypertension, diabetes, coronary heart disease, and/or hyperlipidemia, and laboratory finding as lipid profile and levels of reactive…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyTinnitus Hearing loss Risk factors Multi-frequency audiometry TEOAEAdolescentHearing lossOtoacoustic Emissions SpontaneousAudiologyMulti-frequency audiometry TEOAERisk AssessmentTinnitusYoung AdultAudiometryRisk Factorsotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicinePrevalenceHumansSicilyAgedAged 80 and overUnivariate analysismedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrySettore MED/44 - Medicina Del LavoroGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseComorbiditySettore MED/32 - AudiologiaSettore MED/31 - OtorinolaringoiatriaOtorhinolaryngologyCohortTinnitus Hearing loss Risk factorFemalemedicine.symptomAudiometrybusinessLipid profileBody mass indexTinnitusFollow-Up StudiesEuropean archives of oto-rhino-laryngology : official journal of the European Federation of Oto-Rhino-Laryngological Societies (EUFOS) : affiliated with the German Society for Oto-Rhino-Laryngology - Head and Neck Surgery
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The endocannabinoid-alcohol crosstalk: Recent advances on a bi-faceted target

2018

Increasing evidence has focusesed on the endocannabinoid system as a relevant player in the induction of aberrant synaptic plasticity and related addictive phenotype following chronic excessive alcohol drinking. In addition, the endocannabinoid system is implicated in the pathogenesis of alcoholic liver disease. Interestingly, whereas the involvement of CB1 receptors in alcohol rewarding properties is established, the central and peripheral action of CB2 signalling is still to be elucidated. This review aims at giving the input to deepen knowledge on the role of the endocannabinoid system, highlighting the advancing evidence that suggests that CB1 and CB2 receptors may play opposite roles i…

0301 basic medicineAlcoholic liver diseaseCannabinoid receptorSettore BIO/14 - FARMACOLOGIAPhysiologybrain12Inflammationliver03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysiology (medical)Cannabinoid receptor type 2MedicineCB; 2CB; 1endocannabinoidsReceptorPharmacologybusiness.industryalcoholmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyendocannabinoidmedicine.diseaseEndocannabinoid systemCBCrosstalk (biology)030104 developmental biologynervous systemSynaptic plasticitylipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)medicine.symptombusinessNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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The use of the Emotional-Object Recognition as an assay to assess learning and memory associated to an aversive stimulus in rodents

2016

Abstract Background Emotionally salient experiences induce the formation of explicit memory traces, besides eliciting automatic or implicit emotional memory in rodents. This study aims at investigating the implementation of a novel task for studying the formation of limbic memory engrams as a result of the acquisition- and retrieval- of fear-conditioning – biased declarative memory traces, measured by animal discrimination of an “emotional-object”. Moreover, by using this new method we investigated the potential interactions between stimulation of cannabinoid transmission and integration of emotional information and cognitive functioning. New method The Emotional-Object Recognition task is …

MaleNociceptionLimbic memory engramCB1 receptorMorpholinesConditioning ClassicalExplicit emotional memoryNaphthalenesSpatial memory03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineExplicit memoryAvoidance LearningSemantic memoryAnimalsVisual short-term memoryRats WistarMaze LearningGeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.dictionariesencyclopediasglossaries)Episodic memoryMethods used to study memoryAnalgesicsAnalysis of VarianceNeuroscience (all)Long-term memoryGeneral NeuroscienceRecognition PsychologyFearElectric Stimulation030227 psychiatryBenzoxazinesRatsObject discriminationExploratory BehaviorMemory consolidationCuesPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryLocomotionCognitive psychology
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Acetaldehyde as the first hit of addictive behaviour

2016

Unhealthy alcohol use is common in the Western society, which puts risk of health consequences, causing multiple behavioural injuries. Increasing evidence focuses on acetaldehyde, the first metabolite of ethanol, as the mediator of the several behavioural actions of alcohol, including its rewarding and motivational effects. In particular, acetaldehyde induces dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens modulating primary alcohol rewarding effect, drug seeking, and relapse behaviour. Recent behavioural studies point at acetaldehyde as a drug of abuse since its oral self-administration is induced and maintained in an operant/conflict paradigm. These findings provide further evidence on the role…

0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyAddictive behaviourmedia_common.quotation_subjectAlcohol abuseAlcoholAcetaldehydePlant SciencePharmacologyNucleus accumbensGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEthanol-related effect03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineMediatorDopamineEthanol-related effectsAcetaldehyde; Addictive behaviour; Ethanol-related effects; Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Plant Science; Biochemistry (medical)medicinePsychiatrylcsh:QH301-705.5media_commonBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)EthanolAddictionBiochemistry (medical)Acetaldehydemedicine.disease030104 developmental biologylcsh:Biology (General)chemistryPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drugJournal of Biological Research - Bollettino della Società Italiana di Biologia Sperimentale
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COVID-19 Pandemic: New Prevention and Protection Measures

2022

As of the end of February 2021, more than 420,000,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 have been reported worldwide, with 5,856,224 deaths. Transmission of the different genetically engineered variants of SARS-CoV-2, which have been isolated since the beginning of the pandemic, occurs from one infected person to another by the same means: the airborne route, indirect contact, and occasionally the fecal–oral route. Infection is asymptomatic or may present with flulike symptoms such as fever, cough, and mild to moderate and severe respiratory distress, requiring hospitalization and assisted ventilation support. To control the spread of COVID-19, the World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers for …

glovesRenewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentSARS-CoV-2pandemicoccupational medicineSettore MED/44 - Medicina Del LavoroGeography Planning and DevelopmentCOVID-19organizational measureManagement Monitoring Policy and LawprotectioninfectioncoronavirumaskworkpreventionSettore MED/43 - Medicina LegaleSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaPPEprotocolenvironmental measure
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Risk Factors for Sensorineural Hearing Loss and Auditory Maturation in Children Admitted to Neonatal Intensive Care Units: Who Recovered?

2022

Background: Newborns admitted to neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) are at higher risk of developing sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL), which may improve over time. The aim of this study was to describe the prevalence of the main risk factors for SNHL in a NICU cohort, focusing on children who underwent auditory maturation. Methods: An observational study of 378 children admitted to NICUs, who were followed for at least 18 months, with periodic audiologic assessments. Results: Out of 378 patients, 338 had normal hearing and 40 were hearing-impaired; we found a higher percentage of extremely preterm (EPT) and extremely low-birthweight (ELBW) infants in SNHL children (p < 0.05). Sevente…

NICUNICU; sensorineural hearing loss; auditory maturationauditory maturationNICU auditory maturation sensorineural hearing lossPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthNICU; auditory maturation; sensorineural hearing losssensorineural hearing loss
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The role of temporomandibular disorders in the genesis of tinnitus

2016

Temporomandibular disorders (TMD) are musculoskeletal pain conditions characterized by pain in the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) and/or mastication muscles. Patients with TMD are frequently affected by otolaryngological symptoms like tinnitus, with a prevalence ranging from 2% to 59% of cases. There is still a debate in the scientific community about the relationship between tinnitus and TMD and actually the causal connection between them is not well understood. A possible explanation could be found in the ontogenetic development and in the mechanical and neuronal connections of the masticatory system and the middle ear. Additionally a potential role of TMD in tinnitus onset is suggested by…

Medicine (all)
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Fatores que influenciam a ocorrência de otite media entre crianças sicilianas com infecções de vias aéreas superiores

2016

ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION: Upper respiratory tract infection is a nonspecific term used to describe an acute infection involving the nose, paranasal sinuses, pharynx and larynx. Upper respiratory tract infections in children are often associated with Eustachian tube dysfunction and complicated by otitis media, an inflammatory process within the middle ear. Environmental, epidemiologic and familial risk factors for otitis media (such as sex, socioeconomic and educational factors, smoke exposure, allergy or duration of breastfeeding) have been previously reported, but actually no data about their diffusion among Sicilian children with upper respiratory tract infections are available. OBJECTIVE: T…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyPopulationBreastfeedingOtite média03 medical and health sciencesLaryngopharyngeal reflux0302 clinical medicineRecurrenceInternal medicinemedicinePrevalenceHumans030212 general & internal medicine030223 otorhinolaryngologyeducationChildIVASRespiratory Tract InfectionsNoseOtitis mediaAsthmaeducation.field_of_studyOtitis media; Risk factors; URTI; Otorhinolaryngology2734 Pathology and Forensic MedicineURTIRespiratory tract infectionsFatores de riscobusiness.industryOtorhinolaryngology2734 Pathology and Forensic MedicineInfantmedicine.diseaselcsh:Otorhinolaryngologylcsh:RF1-547SurgerySettore MED/32 - AudiologiaUpper respiratory tract infectionmedicine.anatomical_structureOtitisSettore MED/31 - OtorinolaringoiatriaItalySocioeconomic FactorsOtorhinolaryngologyRisk factorsCase-Control StudiesChild PreschoolFemaleRisk factormedicine.symptombusinessBrazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology
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Work-Related Stress, Physio-Pathological Mechanisms, and the Influence of Environmental Genetic Factors

2019

Work-related stress is a growing health problem in modern society. The stress response is characterized by numerous neurochemicals, neuroendocrine and immune modifications that involve various neurological systems and circuits, and regulation of the gene expression of the different receptors. In this regard, a lot of research has focused the attention on the role played by the environment in influencing gene expression, which in turn can control the stress response. In particular, genetic factors can moderate the sensitivities of specific types of neural cells or circuits mediating the imprinting of the environment on different biological systems. In this current review, we wish to analyze …

Health Toxicology and Mutagenesislcsh:MedicineWork related stressReviewBiologyEpigenesis GeneticFight-or-flight responsestressOccupational Stress03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineEpigeneticsPathologicalSettore MED/44 - Medicina Del Lavorolcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthgenetic factorwork-related streExperimental researchSystematic reviewwork-related stressSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologiagenetic factorsenvironmentNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Pregnenolone sulphate enhances spatial orientation and object discrimination in adult male rats: Evidence from a behavioural and electrophysiological…

2013

Abstract Neurosteroids can alter neuronal excitability interacting with specific neurotransmitter receptors, thus affecting several functions such as cognition and emotionality. In this study we investigated, in adult male rats, the effects of the acute administration of pregnenolone-sulfate (PREGS) (10 mg/kg, s.c.) on cognitive processes using the Can test, a non aversive spatial/visual task which allows the assessment of both spatial orientation–acquisition and object discrimination in a simple and in a complex version of the visual task. Electrophysiological recordings were also performed in vivo , after acute PREGS systemic administration in order to investigate on the neuronal activati…

MaleNeuroactive steroidAction PotentialsHippocampusHippocampusSettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaBehavioral NeurosciencePregnenolone-sulphate Spatial orientation Object discrimination Perirhinal cortex HippocampusDiscrimination PsychologicalNeurotransmitter receptorOrientationPerirhinal cortexmedicineAnimalsPremovement neuronal activityRats WistarNootropic AgentsCerebral CortexNeuronsLong-term potentiationCognitionRatsElectrophysiologymedicine.anatomical_structurePregnenoloneSpace PerceptionSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaPsychologyNeuroscience
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The Influence of the COVID‑19 Pandemic Emergency on Alcohol Use: A Focus on a Cohort of Sicilian Workers

2023

The period between the beginning and the end of the COVID-19 pandemic emergency generated a general state of stress, affecting both the mental state and physical well-being of the general population. Stress is the body’s reaction to events or stimuli perceived as potentially harmful or distressing. Particularly when prolonged over time, it can promote the consumption of different psychotropic substances such as alcohol, and thus the genesis of various pathologies. Therefore, our research aimed to evaluate the differences in alcohol consumption in a cohort of 640 video workers who carried out activities in smart working, subjects particularly exposed to stressful situations due to the string…

AUDIT‑CSettore MED/43 - Medicina LegalealcoholHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisstreCOVID‑19Settore MED/44 - Medicina Del LavoroPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologiaalcohol; stress; workers; AUDIT-C; COVID-19workerSettore MED/32 - Audiologia
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Seeding nerve sutures with minced nerve-graft (MINE-G): a simple method to improve nerve regeneration in rats

2017

Background: The aim of this study was to assess the effect of seeding the distal nerve suture with nerve fragments in rats. Methods: On 20 rats, a 15 mm sciatic nerve defect was reconstructed with a nerve autograft. In the Study Group (10 rats), a minced 1 mm nerve segment was seeded around the nerve suture. In the Control Group (10 rats), a nerve graft alone was used. At 4 and 12 weeks, a walking track analysis with open field test (WTA), hystomorphometry (number of myelinated fibers (n), fiber density (FD) and fiber area (FA) and soleus and gastrocnemius muscle weight ratios (MWR) were evaluated. The Student t-test was used for statistical analysis. Results: At 4 and 12 weeks the Study Gr…

0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyrat sciatic nerveTransplantation AutologousRats sprague dawleyNeurosurgical ProceduresRats Sprague-Dawley03 medical and health sciencesRandom Allocation0302 clinical medicinePeripheral Nerve InjuriesRisk FactorsImage Interpretation Computer-AssistedMedicineAnimalsnerve regenerationRandom allocationNerve reconstructionAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industryRegeneration (biology)Graft SurvivalSuture TechniquesNerve graftGeneral MedicineAnatomySciatic NerveSurgeryRatsDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyTissue TransplantationNerve graftTissue and Organ HarvestingSeedingSurgerySciatic nervenerve reconstructionbusinessNerve suture030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Guanosine-Mediated Anxiolytic-Like Effect: Interplay with Adenosine A1 and A2A Receptors

2020

Acute or chronic administration of guanosine (GUO) induces anxiolytic-like effects, for which the adenosine (ADO) system involvement has been postulated yet without a direct experimental evidence. Thus, we aimed to investigate whether adenosine receptors (ARs) are involved in the GUO-mediated anxiolytic-like effect, evaluated by three anxiety-related paradigms in rats. First, we confirmed that acute treatment with GUO exerts an anxiolytic-like effect. Subsequently, we investigated the effects of pretreatment with ADO or A1R (CPA, CCPA) or A2AR (CGS21680) agonists 10 min prior to GUO on a GUO-induced anxiolytic-like effect. All the combined treatments blocked the GUO anxiolytic-like effect, …

LightPharmacologyAnxietySettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaHippocampuslcsh:Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineReceptorlcsh:QH301-705.5Spectroscopycaffeine0303 health sciencesBehavior AnimalRGeneral MedicineDarkness3. Good healthComputer Science ApplicationsadenosineCCPA[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]A<sub>1</sub>RCaffeineA1Rmedicine.drugReceptor Adenosine A2A1GuanosineCatalysisArticleInorganic Chemistry03 medical and health sciencesAmedicineAnimals[SDV.NEU] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]Physical and Theoretical ChemistryBinding site2AMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyDose-Response Relationship DrugReceptor Adenosine A1behaviorOrganic ChemistryCell MembraneAntagonistAdenosineAdenosine receptorRatsguanosineA<sub>2A</sub>Rlcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999chemistryA2AR030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Pre-conceptional and Peri-Gestational Maternal Binge Alcohol Drinking Produces Inheritance of Mood Disturbances and Alcohol Vulnerability in the Adol…

2018

Although binge drinking is on the rise in women of reproductive age and during pregnancy, the consequences in the offspring, in particular the inheritance of alcohol-related mood disturbances and alcohol abuse vulnerability, are still poorly investigated. In this study, we modeled both Habitual- and Binge Alcohol Drinking (HAD and BAD) in female rats by employing a two-bottle choice paradigm, with 20% alcohol and water. The exposure started 12 weeks before pregnancy and continued during gestation and lactation. The consequences induced by the two alcohol drinking patterns in female rats were assessed before conception in terms of behavioral reactivity, anxiety- and depressive-like behavior.…

lcsh:RC435-571Offspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlAlcohol abusePhysiologyBinge drinkingAffect (psychology)03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinelcsh:PsychiatrymedicineperinatalOriginal Researchmedia_commonPsychiatryPregnancyalcoholbusiness.industryabuse vulnerabilityAbstinencemedicine.diseasebinge drinking030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthfemaleSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAnxietyadolescencemedicine.symptombusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Psychiatry
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Effect of Acetaldehyde Intoxication and Withdrawal on NPY Expression: Focus on Endocannabinoidergic System Involvement

2014

Acetaldehyde (ACD), the first alcohol metabolite, plays a pivotal role in the rewarding, motivational and addictive properties of the parental compound. Many studies have investigated the role of ACD in mediating neurochemical and behavioral effects induced by alcohol administration, but very little is known about the modulation of neuropeptide systems following ACD intoxication and withdrawal. Indeed the neuropeptide Y (NPY) system is altered during alcohol withdrawal in key regions for cerebrocortical excitability and neuroplasticity. The primary goal of this research was to investigate the effects of ACD intoxication and withdrawal by recording rat behavior and by measuring neuropeptide …

medicine.medical_specialtylcsh:RC435-571hippocampusnucleus accumbensHippocampusNeuropeptidePhysical dependenceNucleus accumbensendocannabinoidergic systemNeurochemicallcsh:PsychiatryInternal medicinemental disordersmedicineendocannabinoid systemneuropeptide Y expressionOriginal ResearchPsychiatryacetaldehyde withdrawal neuropeptide Y expression endocannabinoidergic system hippocampus nucleus accumbensKindlingAlcohol dependenceacetaldehyde withdrawal neuropeptide Y expression endocannabinoidergic system hippocampusnucleus accumbensNeuropeptide Y receptorPsychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologyacetaldehyde withdrawalmedicine.symptomPsychologyFrontiers in Psychiatry
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Involvement of Dopamine D2 Receptors in Addictive-Like Behaviour for Acetaldehyde

2014

Acetaldehyde, the first metabolite of ethanol, is active in the central nervous system, where it exerts motivational properties. Acetaldehyde is able to induce drinking behaviour in operant-conflict paradigms that resemble the core features of the addictive phenotype: drug-intake acquisition and maintenance, drug-seeking, relapse and drug use despite negative consequences. Since acetaldehyde directly stimulates dopamine neuronal firing in the mesolimbic system, the aim of this study was the investigation of dopamine D2-receptors' role in the onset of the operant drinking behaviour for acetaldehyde in different functional stages, by the administration of two different D2-receptor agonists, q…

MaleIndoleslcsh:MedicinePharmacologyBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundquinpiroleMedicine and Health Scienceslcsh:ScienceNeuropharmacologyDrug DependenceMultidisciplinaryDopaminergicD2 dopamine receptorsAcetaldehyde; Operant self-administration; D2 dopamine receptors; quinpiroleNeurologyBehavioral PharmacologyDopamine AgonistsSignal TransductionResearch Articlemedicine.drugAlcohol DrinkingDrug-Seeking BehaviorAcetaldehydeAddictive-Like BehaviourNeuropharmacologyQuinpiroleDopamineDopamine receptor D2medicineAnimalsRats WistarAcetaldehyde; Addictive-Like Behaviour; Dopamine D2 ReceptorsPharmacologyOperant self-administrationEthanolReceptors Dopamine D2Neurotransmissionlcsh:RAcetaldehydeBiology and Life SciencesDopamine D2 ReceptorsRatsRopinirolePharmacodynamicschemistrySettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaConditioning Operantlcsh:QNeurosciencePLoS ONE
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Acetaldehyde self-administration by a two-bottle choice paradigm: Consequences on emotional reactivity, spatial learning, and memory

2015

Abstract Acetaldehyde, the first alcohol metabolite, is responsible for many pharmacological effects that are not clearly distinguishable from those exerted by its parent compound. It alters motor performance, induces reinforced learning and motivated behavior, and produces different reactions according to the route of administration and the relative accumulation in the brain or in the periphery. The effective activity of oral acetaldehyde represents an unresolved field of inquiry that deserves further investigation. Thus, this study explores the acquisition and maintenance of acetaldehyde drinking behavior in adult male rats, employing a two-bottle choice paradigm for water and acetaldehyd…

MaleHealth (social science)MetaboliteEmotionsWistarSpatial LearningMorris water navigation taskSelf AdministrationAlcoholAcetaldehydeMotor ActivityToxicologyChoice BehaviorBiochemistryDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundMemoryAnimalsSpatial learning and memoryRats WistarMaze LearningMedicine (all)Cognitive flexibilityAcetaldehydeBrainAnxiety-like behaviorCognitionGeneral MedicineRatsAcetaldehyde in the brain; Anxiety-like behavior; Emotional reactivity; Spatial learning and memory; Two-bottle choice paradigm; Acetaldehyde; Animals; Brain; Choice Behavior; Emotions; Male; Maze Learning; Memory; Motor Activity; Rats; Rats Wistar; Self Administration; Spatial LearningTwo-bottle choice paradigmNeurologychemistryAnxiogenicEmotional reactivitySettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoAcetaldehyde in the brainSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaSelf-administrationPsychologyNeuroscienceAlcohol
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Early handling effect on female rat spatial and non-spatial learning and memory

2014

This study aims at providing an insight into early handling procedures on learning and memory performance in adult female rats. Early handling procedures were started on post-natal day 2 until 21, and consisted in 15 min, daily separations of the dams from their litters. Assessment of declarative memory was carried out in the novel-object recognition task; spatial learning, reference- and working memory were evaluated in the Morris water maze (MWM). Our results indicate that early handling induced an enhancement in: (1) declarative memory, in the object recognition task, both at 1h and 24h intervals; (2) reference memory in the probe test and working memory and behavioral flexibility in the…

Early handling; maternal separationMorris water navigation taskHandling PsychologicalDevelopmental psychologyTask (project management)Behavioral NeuroscienceEarly handlingCognitionMemoryNon spatialDeclarative memoryAnimalsLearningFemale ratsRats WistarMaternal BehaviorMaze LearningDeclarative memoryWorking memoryMaternal DeprivationWorking memoryCognitive neuroscience of visual object recognitionFlexibility (personality)Recognition PsychologyCognitionGeneral MedicineRatsMemory Short-TermMaternal careFemaleAnimal Science and ZoologyBehavioral flexibilityPsychologyCognitive psychologyBehavioural Processes
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Anxiolytic effects of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors agonist oxotremorine in chronically stressed rats and related changes in BDNF and FGF2 level…

2017

Rationale: In depressive disorders, one of the mechanisms proposed for antidepressant drugs is the enhancement of synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex. Previously, we showed that the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) agonist oxotremorine (Oxo) increases neuronal plasticity in hippocampal neurons via FGFR1 transactivation. Objectives: Here, we aimed to explore (a) whether Oxo exerts anxiolytic effect in the rat model of anxiety-depression-like behavior induced by chronic restraint stress (CRS), and (b) if the anxiolytic effect of Oxo is associated with the modulation of neurotrophic factors, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and fibroblast growth factor-2…

0301 basic medicineMalemedicine.medical_specialtyElevated plus mazemedicine.drug_classBehavioral testPrefrontal CortexHippocampal formationAnxietyMuscarinic AgonistsAnxiolyticHippocampus03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineMuscarinic acetylcholine receptormedicineOxotremorineMuscarinic acetylcholine receptor M4AnimalsElevated plus maze testRats WistarPrefrontal cortexmAChRChronic restraint streForced swimming testPharmacologyNeuronsChemistryBrain-Derived Neurotrophic FactorOxotremorineCerebral cortexRats030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyAnti-Anxiety AgentsCerebral cortexFibroblast Growth Factor 2Anxiety; Behavioral test; Cerebral cortex; Chronic restraint stress; Elevated plus maze test; Forced swimming test; mAChR; Neurotrophins; Novelty suppressed feeding test; PharmacologyNeurotrophinNovelty suppressed feeding testNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryStress Psychologicalmedicine.drugPsychopharmacology
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Efficacy and pharmacological appropriateness of cinnarizine and dimenhydrinate in the treatment of vertigo and related symptoms

2021

Vertigo is not itself a disease, but rather a symptom of various syndromes and disorders that jeopardize balance function, which is essential for daily activities. It is an abnormal sensation of motion that usually occurs in the absence of motion, or when a motion is sensed inaccurately. Due to the complexity of the etiopathogenesis of vertigo, many pharmacological treatments have been tested for efficacy on vertigo. Among these drugs, cinnarizine, usually given together with dimenhydrinate, appears to be the first-line pharmacotherapy for the management of vertigo and inner ear disorders. Based on these considerations, the present non-interventional study aimed to investigate the clinical …

AdultMalepharmacological treatment of vertigomedicine.medical_specialtyCinnarizineHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisDiseasedimenhydrinateArticleCinnarizine Dimenhydrinate Dizziness Pharmacological treatment of vertigo Vertigo Adult Double-Blind Method Drug Combinations Female Histamine H1 Antagonists Humans Male Middle Aged Cinnarizine Dimenhydrinatevertigo03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePharmacotherapyDouble-Blind MethodVertigoInternal medicinemedicineotorhinolaryngologic diseasesHumans030212 general & internal medicinecinnarizine030223 otorhinolaryngologydizzinessBalance (ability)biologybusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthRMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationDimenhydrinateDrug CombinationsTolerabilityConcomitantHistamine H1 AntagonistsMedicineFemalebusinessmedicine.drug
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Night-Time Shift Work and Related Stress Responses: A Study on Security Guards

2020

Work-related stress can induce a break in homeostasis by placing demands on the body that are met by the activation of two different systems, the hypothalamic&ndash

AdultMaleSympathetic nervous systemHypothalamo-Hypophyseal SystemHydrocortisoneHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPhysiologyPituitary-Adrenal Systemlcsh:MedicineBlood PressureArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRhythmWork Schedule ToleranceMedicineHumansCircadian rhythmVagal toneAnxiety-like behavior; HPA axis activation; Occupational stress; Work-related stressSalivabusiness.industryfungianxiety-like behaviorlcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthfood and beveragesShift Work ScheduleMiddle Agedhpa axis activationCircadian RhythmBlood pressuremedicine.anatomical_structureSecurity guard030220 oncology & carcinogenesiswork-related stressOccupational stressbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHomeostasisOccupational streBiomarkersoccupational stressInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Nutrition, obesity and hormones

2018

Obesity is a chronic pathological condition with a multifactorial aetiology, characterised by an excessive body fat accumulation with multiple organ-specific consequences. Emerging evidence highlights that obesity appears to be associated with multiple alterations in the endocrine system. However, the mechanisms underlying the interactions between obesity and this system remain still controversial. This review discusses the impact of obesity on various endocrine systems and, in particular, would provide a general overview on the biochemical changes that may occur in each of these axes in association with obesity.

0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyobesityPlant ScienceGrowth hormoneSettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicinemedicineEndocrine systemlcsh:QH301-705.5thyroid hormonesbusiness.industryBiochemistry (medical)medicine.diseaseObesityThyroid hormone030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologyendocrine systemnutritionlcsh:Biology (General)Thyroid hormonesgrowth hormoneSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiabusinessHormoneJournal of Biological Research
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Pregnenolone sulphate improves memory processing in early-handled female rats

2013

Early life experiences lead to sex-specific behavioural and neurochemical changes in adulthood. Indeed, early handling enhances learning and memory in male rats (Cannizzaro et al., 2005), whereas it impairs learning performance in female adult rats, a finding that has been correlated to decreased nitric oxide (NO) production in the hippocampus (Noschang et al., 2010). Pregnenolone sulfate (PREGS) is considered as one of the most potent memory-enhancing neurosteroids, since its activity as a potent positive modulator of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) and a negative modulator of gamma-aminobutyric acid(A) receptors (GABA(A)Rs) (Vallée et al., 2001). Given these premises, this study a…

Pregnenolone-sulphate Spatial orientation Can Test Maternal Separation
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Chronic prenatal treatment with 5-methoxytryptamine reduced depressive-like behaviour induced by forced swim test in mature male rats

2005

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Ethanol stimulates corticotropic releasing hormone (CRH) release from rat hypothalamic explants; role of acetaldehyde

2009

Ethanol is able to activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and to modify its response to other stressors, releasing adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and glucocorticoid release, (Lee et al 1999, 2000). In the brain ethanol is diverted by catalase activity into acetaldehyde, which is reported to mediate some of its behavioural and neurochemical effects. (Peana et al 2008, Melis et al 2007) Thus, to clarifìy the mechanisms underlying ethanol activity on the HPA axis we investigated :1) ethanol effect on CRH release from incubated hypothalamic explants; 2) the role of acetaldehyde (ACD), in mediating ethanol activity. To this aim, rat hypothalamic explants were incubated with…

EthanolCRHSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaHypotalamuacetaldehyde
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Manipulations of glucocorticoid induced stress response may differently affect the acquisition of a reward-facilitated spatial-visual learning task.

2007

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The neurosteroids sulfate PREGS and DHEAS exert a facilitative role in learning performance in male rats.

2006

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Perinatal treatment with 5-methoxytryptamine reduces depressive – like behaviour induced by forced swim in mature male rats

2005

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Manipulations of glucocorticoids induced stress response may differently affect the acquisition of a reward-facilitated spatially/visual learning tas…

2007

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Perinatal treatment with 5-methoxytriptamine affects cognition and behavioural reactivity in the juvenile male rat progeny: influence of maternal sep…

2004

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Single intense prenatal stress reduce behavioural suppression in an operant conflict paradigm in the adult progeny. Influence of Metyrapone administr…

2008

Stressors presented during late prenatal period can have long-term effects on offspring behaviour (1). Indeed we showed that in the rat progeny a single immobilization procedure at gestational day 16 enhances spatial learning in a non-aversive, rewarded-facilitated learning task, the Can Test, and decreases anxiety-like behaviour in the elevated plus maze (2). In this study, we wanted to investigate: (i) the effects of a single prenatal immobilization-stress on the operant conflict task (OCT), an anxiety-related procedure, in which positively reinforced responses are suppressed by contingent punishment (3); (ii) the expression of mineralcorticoid and glucocorticoid receptors (MRs, GRs) in t…

Settore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaHomeostatic and neuroendocrine systems Stress and the brain / Early life experience
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Perinatal Treatment with 5-metoxytriptamine affects cognition and behavioural reactivity in the juvenile male rat progeny; influence of maternal sepa…

2004

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Gender-related effects on emotionality, learning and memory performance in adult rats

2007

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Manipulation of the DA signal on the onset of relapse of ACD

2013

It's widely known that all addictive drugs show analogous pathological behaviours consisting in compulsive drug seeking,loss of self –control and propensity to relapse. This evidence is suggestive of a common brain mechanism involving the Ventral Tegmental Area and Nucleus Accumbens whereby mesocorticolimbimc dopamine pathway. Dfferent and apparently anthitetic classes of drugs of abuse manage to increase DA release, in the aforementioned areas (Di Chiara, 1988; 1995). Reductions in activity of the mesolimbic dopamine system in the nucleus accumbes occur during drug withdrawal in animal studies (Weiss F et al. 1992; 1996). Experimental evidences have proven D2 receptor involvement in drug s…

Dopamine signal Acetaldehyde Self administration
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Effects of prenatal acute stress on the behavioural reactivity in handled and non-handled rat progeny

2003

The effects of prenatal stress are dependent on the intensity and duration of the stress treatment: chronic, uncontrollable stress causes an impairment in the normal adaptive responses to physical and physiological stimuli whereas acute and mild stress facilitates the morphological development of fetal brain neurons. The presents study was designed to investigate whether a single stress exposure during pregnancy may exert a facilitatory effect on the behaviour of the juvenile progeny. The effects of a postnatal handling procedure have been also investigated. One-month prenatally stressed rats (PSR) whose dams had been restrained for 120 minutes at the 16th day of gestation, showed an increa…

Prenatal stress Postnatal handling Emotionality LearningSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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Repeated and single prenatal stress differently affect stress reactivity and learning performance in adolescent male rats

2006

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Reversal of prenatal diazepam-induced deficit in spatial-object learning task by brief, periodic maternal separation in adult male rats

2005

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Sexually dimorphic effects of alcohol self-administration on cognitive processes

2012

Chronic alcohol consumption is able to modify cognitive and emotional behaviour in humans. Many studies on gender diversity have identified swingeing differences between man and woman, not only in the propensity for alcohol abuse, but also in their behavioural effects. In this study we investigate in adult male and female rats: i) alcohol drinking behaviour and preference pattern using a 3-bottle choice paradigm with water, 10% ethanol solution and white wine (10%v/v), along a four-week period; ii) Alcohol free access (AFA) effects on locomotion and behavioural reactivity in the Open Field; iii) The influence of AFA on spatial learning and reference memory, employing the Morris Water Maze. …

Alcohol self administration cognitionSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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A new dopamine amino-acid conjugate: preclinical in vitro studies and evaluation of behavioural effects in rats

2012

It is well established that alterations in the functionality of dopaminergic transmission are associated with neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s Disease. The purpose of this study was to investigate the activity of a new dopamine amino-acid conjugate: L-phenylalanine-β-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl) etilamide(DA-Phe) in the central nervous system, by assessing its influence on different behavioural parameters in the rat. Preliminarily, we tested the in vitro stability in plasmatic environment following the disappearance of DA-Phen from human plasma and the concurrent appearance of dopamine. Using rat brain homogenate, we also evaluated the level of DA-Phen cleavage by cerebral enzymes an…

Settore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoDopamine prodrugs
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DA-Phen as a new potential DA-mimetic agent for treatment of alcohol addiction: preclinical in vivo studies

2015

Rewarding and reinforcing properties of alcohol are mediated by activation of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system1. This neurosystem is hypofunctional in the addicted brain, even beyond somatic and psychological signs of withdrawal. Boosting strategy on the dopaminergic tone could represent a valid approach to alcohol addiction treatment2. The effects of a new dopamine conjugate3 (2-amino-N-[2-(3,4-dihydroxy-phenyl)-ethyl]-3-phenyl-propionamide, DA-Phen) on operant behaviour and on withdrawal behaviour, following alcohol deprivation, were evaluated. The concentration of acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanol's first metabolite, as an indirect measure of the possible DA-Phen modulation in alcohol consum…

Settore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAlcohol consumption - DA-Phen -
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Effects of prenatal treatment with 5-metoxytriptamine on learning performance of juvenile male rat progeny. Influence of maternal separation

2004

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Risposte endocrine ed immunitarie in calciatori professionisti dopo allenamento e competizione ufficiale

2002

risposte endocrine e immunitarieSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologiasport competitivo
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Evaluation of neuropeptide Y expression during acetaldehyde withdrawal in rats. Focus on hippocampus and nucleus accumbens

2012

Stress-related neuropeptides are involved in setting up alcohol addiction. Ethanol is able to acutely induce CRH and ACTH release, while cronically a dampered response of the hypothalamus -pituitary- adrenal (HPA) axis has been observed. Also neuropeptide Y (NPY) has been shown to modulate ethanol consumption, and its central expression seems inversely correlated to ethanol intake. Recent in vivo and in vitro evidence have highlighted the key role of acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanol first metabolite, as a mediator of the central effects of ethanol, even as modulator of the neuropeptidergic transmission in the rat brain. The aim of this study was to investigate NPY immunoreactivity following a 4-…

Settore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAlcohol Addiction NPY
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Effects of 8-OH-DPAT on open field performance of young and aged rats prenatally exposed to diazepam: a tool to rveal 5-HT1a receptor function

2003

Central GABAergic and serotoninergic systems interact with one another and are implicated in controlling different behaviours. A gentle early long-lasting handling can prevent the deficits in locomotion and exploration in open field (O.F.) in 3-month-old male rats prenatally exposed to diazepam (DZ). Purpose of this study was to extend the research to older handled rats prenatally exposed to DZ and to assess the activity of 5-HT1A receptors (Rs), evaluating the performance in O.F. at 3 and 18 months of age following 8-OH-DPAT administration. A single daily s.c. injection of DZ (1.5 mg/kg) from gestation day 14 to gestation day 20 induced in aged, but not in young rats, a decrease in total d…

Open field testAging8-OH-DPATLong-lasting handlingSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaRatPrenatal diazepam
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The neurosteroids sulphate PREGS and DHEAS exert a facilitative role on learning performance in adult male rats

2006

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Pregnenolone sulphate faciltates object recognition and reduces depressive-like behaviour in male adult rats

2007

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Addictive-like behaviour for Acetaldehyde: involvement of D2 receptors

2013

Acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanol's first metabolite, is centrally active and shows rewarding and motivational properties. It is able to activate mesolimbic dopamine system, since it enhances neuronal firing of dopamine cells in ventral tegmental area and exerts dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens (Foddai et al., 2004; Melis et al., 2007; Deehan et al., 2013). ACD motivational properties are demonstrated by self-administration studies in rodents (Rodd et al., 2005), particularly behavioural evidence suggests that ACD could produce positive reinforcing effects in operant-conflict paradigms (Cacace et al., 2012). In order to shed light on neurobiological substrate underpinning ACD-related beh…

Acetaldehyde Dopamine system Quinpirole Ropinirole D2 D2-autoreceptors modulation
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Manipulatios of glucocortioid induced stress response may differently affect the acquisition of a reward-facilitated spatial/visual learning task

2007

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Drinking pattern matters: effects on maternal care and offspring vulnerability to alcohol in rats

2015

Alcohol drinking during pregnancy and post-partum period is a major concern because of the persistent neurobehavioral deficits in the offspring, which include increased vulnerability to substance abuse (1). The intermittent pattern of alcohol consumption induces higher drinking levels and deeper neurobiological changes in addiction-related brain regions, with respect to traditional free-access paradigms in male rats (2, 3). Nevertheless, no studies investigated on the effects of the drinking pattern on female subjects during pregnancy and perinatal time. To this aim, this study explored the consequences of continuous vs. intermittent drinking pattern on maternal behaviour and on offspring v…

Settore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAlcohol Drinking patterns maternal care offspring vulnerability rats
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The neurosteroids DHEAS and PREGS may affect learning performance by altering affective state

2005

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Single, intense prenatal stress can differently affect emotional behaviour according to the nature of the task. Influence of Metyrapone.

2007

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The role of neurosteoids sulphate in a spatial and object recognition learning task

2012

The term “neuroactive steroid” refers to steroids that have rapid modulatory effects on ligand-gated ion channels via non-genomic mechanism. Specifically, neurosteroids can alter neuronal excitability via the cell surface interacting with specific neurotransmitter receptors. The neurosteroid pregnenolone sulphate (PREGS) has been described as negative modulator of GABAA receptor and positive modulator of NMDA receptor, affecting cognition as well as emotionality. The present study was aimed to assess the effects of the acute administration of PREGS (10 mg/Kg, s. c.) on rats cognitive functions using a novel task, the Can test. This task explores, under reinforcement, the spatial/visual cues…

Settore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaPREGS hippocampus perirhinal cortexSettore BIO/09 - Fisiologia
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Gender-related affects of pregs on emotional, learning and memory performance in adult rats

2007

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The neurosteroids sulfate pregs and DHEAS selectively improve memory retention in adult female rats

2006

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Intermittent- vs continuous alcohol access in female rats: Effects on deprivation phenotype and maternal behavior as a consequence of the drinking pa…

2015

In male rats, the intermittent alcohol access paradigm produces relevant and specific consequences on neuronal activity and behavior, with respect to traditional free-access paradigms (Carnicella et al., 2014). In order to explore gender-related effects, this study aimed at assessing the consequences of two different patterns of alcohol self-administration on peculiar feminine behavioral repertoire, such as deprivation phenotype and maternal care. Animals underwent long-term, home cage, two-bottle “alcohol (20% v/v) or water” choice regimen, with continuous (7 days a week) or intermittent (3 days a week) access, and were tested for alcohol intake and preference. During acute deprivation, th…

femalealcoholbehaviorSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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Neurosteroid PREGS differently affects learning and memory performance by altering emotionality in a gender-related manner

2007

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DYSPHORIC-LIKE BEHAVIOUR DURING ETHANOL WITHDRAWAL IN FEMALE RATS. EFFECT OF CONTINUOUS VS INTERMITTENT ACCESS PARADIGM.

2014

Women show higher vulnerability for neuroadaptation to alcohol, which may contribute to negative emotional state during withdrawal (Sharrett-Field et al., 2013; Koob and Le Moal, 1997). This study aimed at exploring the effects of different patterns of voluntary ethanol consumption on female rat"s affective behaviour during withdrawal. Female rats underwent 12-week-, 2-bottle choice- continuous or intermittent (3 days/week ) access to 20% ethanol and were respectively named CARs and IARs. They were tested for alcohol preference; dysphoric-like state during withdrawal (24-48h); depressive- and anhedonic-like behaviours explored by forced swim- and saccharin preference tests; anxiety-like beh…

chronic ethanolwithdrawalintermittent acceSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologiafemale rat
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Gender-related effects of PREGS on emotionality, learning and memory performance in adult rats.

2007

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Effects of Prenatal Treatment with 5-Metoxytryptamine on Learning Performance of Juvenile Male Rat Progeny. Influence of Maternal Separation

2004

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Activity of orally self-administered acetaldehyde in an operant/conflict paradigm in rats; involvement of cannabinoid cb1 receptors

2012

Acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanol first metabolite, interacts with the dopaminergic reward system, and with the neuropeptidergic transmission in the hypothalamus. Self-administration within operant conditioning is a valid model to investigate drug-seeking and drug-taking behaviour in rats. Cannabinoid CB1 receptors are involved in reinstatement of alcohol-seeking behaviour and of many other drugs of abuse (3). Accordingly, this study was aimed at the evaluation of: 1) the motivational properties of oral ACD in the induction and maintenance of an operant-drinking behaviour; 2) the onset of a relapse drinking behaviour, following ACD deprivation; 3) ACD effect in a conflict situation employing the …

Acetaldehyde CB1 receptor alcohol seeking behaviourSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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Effects with prenatal treatment with 5-metoxytriptamine on learning performance of juvenile male rat progeny. Influence of maternal separation

2004

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Effects of a single intense prenatal stress on emotionality and learning performance in adolescent male rat progeny.Influence of a daily short-term m…

2005

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Chronic perinatal treatment with 5-methoxytryptamine reduces depressive-like behaviour induced by forced swim in mature male rats

2005

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ETHANOL PREFERENCE DURING PREGNANCY AFTER LONG-TERM ETHANOL CONSUMPTION: EFFECT OF DRINKING PATTERN AND MATERNAL BEHAVIOUR ANALYSIS

2014

Several studies suggest that pregnancy can reduce ethanol preference and consumption in rats and mice when self-administration starts early during pregnancy (Randall et al., 1980; Means and Goy, 1982). Our first aim was to explore the effect of pregnancy on long-term habit to ethanol, in female rats subjected to 12-week continuous or intermittent (3 days/week) access to 20% ethanol; they were named CARs and IARs respectively. The second aim was to observe their maternal behaviour. Rats were deprived from ethanol during mating and the first gestational week, and then re-exposed to respective ethanol self-administration schedule, starting from the second week of pregnancy. Maternal behaviour …

EthanolPregnancyMaternal Behaviour
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Gender-related effects on emotionality, learning and memory performance in adult rats. 33° Congresso Società Italiana Farmacologia.

2007

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PHARMACOLOGICAL MODULATION OF OPERANT BEHAVIOUR FOR ACETALDEHYDE. INVOLVEMENT OF D2 AND CB1 RECEPTORS.

2013

Acetaldehyde (ACD), the first metabolite of ethanol, has rewarding and motivational properties, as shown by behavioural studies specifically tailored for studying addictive-like behaviour (1, 2). The rewarding and incentive effects of alcohol and others addictive substances, result from their capability to enhance mesolimbic dopamine (DA) transmission, as well as to affect the cannabinoid system, which is able to fine-tune the activity of DA neurons (3). ACD directly increases DA neurotransmission (4), but the neural underpinning the operant behaviour for oral-self administered ACD still remains poorly understood. Since D2 and CB1 receptors are involved in alcohol addiction (3), as well as …

D2-receptorSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAcetaldehydeCB1-receptorsoperant self-administration
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Acetaldehyde operant self-administration in rats: focus on D2-receptor activation.

2013

Acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanol first metabolite, is rewarding in rodents and humans; it induces “place preference”, is self-administer directly in the VTA, orally in an operant/conflict paradigm and increases DA neurons’ firing. This research aims at investigating DA2-receptor role in the reinstatement of acetaldehyde operant-drinking behaviour, following induction, maintenance and abstinence in the rat. Male Wistar rats are trained to orally self-administer ACD solution (3.2% v/v) or water, in an operant chamber under a FR1. Afterwards animals undergo cyclic periods of deprivation and relapse to ACD. The effect ofD2-receptor activation by quinpirole (0.03mg/kg,i.p.) on operant ACD self-admini…

Acetaldehyde self-administration D2 agonistSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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The neurosteroids PREGS and DHEAS selectively improve memory retention in adult female rats.

2006

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Neurosteroid PREGS differently affects learning and memory performance by altering emotionality in a gender-related manner. 4th International Meeting…

2007

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Effects of prenatal treatment with 5-methoxytryptamine on learning performance of juvenile male rat progeny. Influence of maternal separation

2004

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Pregnenolone sulphate (PREGS) affects spatial learning and memory in two different cognitive tasks in adult rats. Influence of the emotional state.

2009

Pregnenolone sulphate (PREGS) is one of the most potent memory-enhancing neurosteroids in rodent learning studies, also involved in the modulation of the emotional state (Valleè et al 2001). Neurosteroids exert an important role as modulators of the neuronal activity by interacting with different receptors or ion channels (Urani et al 1998). Indeed PREGS acts as negative modulator of GABAA- and as positive modulator of NMDA -receptors. Altered levels of PREGS have also been reported during aging and in human neurodegenerative pathologies like Alzheimer’s disease. The aim of this study was to investigate, in adult male rats, the effects of a single injection of PREGS (10 mg/kg s.c.) on: i) o…

cognitionSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaratPregnenolone sulphateemotional state
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Ethanol releases corticotropic releasing hormone (CRH) from rat hypothalamic explants; role of acetaldehyde

2009

Ethanol activates hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, resulting in adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) glucocorticoid release, and a modification of the response of this axis to other stressors (Lee et al 1999, 2000). To determine the mechanisms responsible for these effects we investigated : 1) whether ethanol was able to release CRH from incubated hypothalamic explants; 2) whether acetaldehyde (ACD), its first metabolite formed in the brain by catalase activity, might play a role in ethanol effects. To this aim, rat hypothalamic explants were incubated with: 1) medium containing ethanol at 150 mg %; 2) different concentrations of ACD (4.4, 13.2, 44, 132 x 10-3 mg%); 3) ethanol plus …

Ethanol CRH Hypotalamus AcetaldehydeSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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Evaluation of chronic alcohol self-administration in male and female rats using a 3-bottle choice paradigm. Sexually dimorphic effects on spatial lea…

2011

Settore M-PSI/01 - Psicologia Generalealcohol self-administrationlearning memory ratsSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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Single intense prenatal stress can differently affect emotional behavior according to the nature of the task. Influence of metyrapone

2007

stremetyraponeSettore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
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The neurosteroids sulfate PREGS and DHEAS exert a facilitative role in learning performance in adult male rats

2006

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Disturbi emozionali nel trattamento chirurgico della cataratta

2010

Aim.The aim of this study was to appraise the degree of phychic uneasiness and anxiety in subjects who undergo surgical intervention of the cataract and the degree of satisfaction for the result of the interventetion.Methods.A sample of 50 subjects(22 males and 28 females)has been evaluated before the intervention on the cataract: the level of anxiety was measured by means of the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scales T(HARS) and the degree of psychic uneasiness and psychopathological (phobia,somatization,depression) demonstrations by means of the test of psychic uneasiness-questionnaire IGD.The evalution of the degree of satisfaction for the results of the intervention has been obtained by means o…

Quality of lifeAnxiety.Cataract
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EFFECT OF ACETALDEHYDE INTOXICATION AND WITHDRAWAL ON NEUROPEPTIDE Y EXPRESSION. FOCUS ON CB1 RECEPTOR ROLE.

2014

Neuropeptide Y (NPY) acts as an endogenous anxiolytic, and, like endocannabinoids, plays an important role in the regulation of neuronal excitability during ethanol withdrawal (Rubio et al., 2011). Since acetaldehyde is considered a mediator of ethanol central effects, this research aims at investigating, following intoxication and during withdrawal, the effects of acetaldehyde on NPY expression in brain areas particularly vulnerable to alcohol, and the influence of cannabinoid system on it. Rats underwent acetaldehyde intoxication (450mg/kg, i.g., 4 times daily for 4 days); AM281, a CB1 selective antagonist (2,5 mg/kg, i.p.) was administered during abstinence. Immunohistochemical analysis …

Neuropeptide YAcetaldehydeCB1 antagonist
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Effect of Acetaldehyde on CRF release form incubated hypothalamic explants

2008

In the past, Acetaldehyde (ACD), the main metabolite of ethanol (ETOH), was mainly studied for its toxic and adverse effects (1). However, recently, ACD was reported to determine behavioural and neurochemical effects, following ETOH assumption in rodents (2, 3). Indeed, ACD enhances dopamine levels in nucleus accumbens, stimulates beta-endorphin release from hypothalamic cells, mediating alcohol reinforcing effects (4). Since little is known about the effects of ACD on other central neuropeptides, in this research we aimed to investigate ACD influence on hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) release. In order to ascertain this hypothesis, different doses of ACD (1, 10, 3x10 micr…

EthanolSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAcetaldehydeHypotalamic CRF release
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Vulnerability to alcohol operant-drinking behaviour: implications of environmental stim

2013

Environmental stimuli, occurring early in life, shape the drinking trajectories and the psychopathological outcome of alcohol consumption in adult life. In particular, early perinatal procedures can permanently alter various patterns of drug use and behaviour in rat adulthood (Pryce CR, 2001). Early handling (EH) apparently is responsible for neurochemical and behavioural changes in adulthood, due to boosts in maternal care after daily reunion. It has been suggested that fostered maternal care, in the form of licking and grooming, is a key feature in determining neural changes and offspring fear responses and alter the reward/reinforcement pathway through epigenetic mechanisms that likely u…

Operant-drinking behaviourAddictionMaternal Separation
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Environmental enrichment reverts the effects of continuous or intermittent perinatal alcohol exposure. Focus on alcohol vulnerability and affectivity…

2015

Alcohol consumption during perinatal periods is common, despite the warning of adverse effects on the foetal development. In female rats, the intermittent pattern of alcohol consumption is responsible for higher drinking levels and more profound disruption of maternal care than traditional continuous free-access paradigm, which can have persistent effects on the offspring. The environmental enrichment, a powerful form of experience-dependent plasticity that allows high cognitive, motor and sensory stimulations, is helpful for recovering from different neurological pathologies. Thus, this study aimed at exploring the effects of environmental enrichment on alcohol vulnerability and affective …

Alcohol perinatal exposure offspring vulnerability affectivity environmental enrichment
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Dopamine involvement in Acetaldehyde drinking behaviour: role of Ropinirole on.

2013

Rats self-administer acetaldehyde(ACD), ethanol's first metabolite, directly into cerebral ventricles (1), and multiple ICV infusions of ACD produce conditioned place preference (2). ACD, such as alcohol and other substances of abuse, interacts with dopaminergic reward system (3) and its reinforcing and addictive properties have been assessed through an operant-conflict conditioning procedure (4). Since dopamine D2receptor over-expression in the Nacc attenuates alcohol intake (5), this study aims at exploring the effects of ropinirole administration during abstinence, on ACD relapse. The protocol has been scheduled into 3 different periods: training ( animals have been trained to self-admin…

RopiniroleSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaAcetaldehydeself-administration
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Single intense prenatal stress can diffrently affect emotional behavior according to the nature of the task.Influence of metyrapone.

2007

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Psychological assessment in pathological gamblers treated with escitalopram

2013

Pathological Gambling (PG) is classified as a "Disorder of Impulse Control", but due to similarities with drug addiction is frequently described as a drug-free addiction (Potenza et al., 2012). PG is conceptualized as a behavioural addiction because of its neurobiologic, neurophysiologic and psychological features. Current therapeutical approaches seem unsatisfactory as they do not achieve definitive positive outcomes. Considering the well known psycopathological comorbidities, PG represents both a social (impact on relatives money/life) and a sanitary cost, in terms of pharmacological and psychological support. The compulsive behaviour detectable in PG, is a disease with neurophysiopatholo…

Pathological Gambling Behavioural addiction Escitalopram
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Effects of a single intense prenatal stress on emotionality and learning performance in adolescent male rat progeny. influence of a daily early short…

2005

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