During 1983 and 1984, 240 newly diagnosed cases of brain glioma and 742 controls (465 non-glioma nervous system tumors and 277 patients with other neurologic diseases) were recruited and interviewed in the neurologic and neurosurgical departments of two hospitals in Milan, Italy. The occupational histories of cases and controls were compared, and relative risk estimates, adjusted for sex, age, residence, and socioeconomic status, were computed using the Mantel-Haenszel method. A statistically significant risk increase was found for farmers (relative risk (RR) = 1.6, p = 0.0025). This risk increase was attributable to those farmers who reported the use of chemicals (insecticides or fungicides, herbicides, and fertilizers). Among the three groups of investigated agrochemicals, only the use of insecticides or fungicides was associated with a significant increase in relative risk (RR = 2.0, p = 0.006). Many farmers exposed to fungicides reported the use of commercial compounds of copper sulfate. Some of these compounds contain methyl urea, which has a specific carcinogenic effect on the nervous system in animals. These data suggest that the occupational exposure of farmers to agrochemicals might be responsible for the observed excess risk of brain glioma in farmers.
The expression and regulation of intestinal oligopeptide transporter (PepT)-1 when vegetable sources are used as a substitute for fish meal in the diet of marine fish has not yet been explored. In the present study, as part of our ongoing work on elucidating PepT1 gene expression in relation to different dietary treatments, we have now isolated and deposited in Genbank database (accession no. GU733710) a cDNA sequence representing the PepT1 in the sea bream (Sparus aurata). The “de novo” prediction of the three-dimensional structure of PepT1 protein is presented.We also analyzed diet-induced changes in the expression of PepT1 mRNA via real-time RT-PCR using the standard curve method. Sea bream were fed for 140 days with one of the following four diet formulations (43% protein/21% lipid): a control fast growth-promoting diet (C), and three diets with the same formulation but in which 15% of the fish meal was substituted by protein concentrates either from lupine (LPC), chick pea (CPC), or green pea (PPC). Fish fed PPC had significantly (p < 0.05) lower levels of PepT1 transcripts in the proximal intestine than the controls, whereas PepT1 transcript levels in fish fed LPC or CPC were not significantly different from the controls. Although growth was similar between fish fed with different diets during the first 72 days of feeding, growth of the fish fed with PPC was reduced during the second part of the trial and was significantly (p < 0.05) lower than fish fed LPC and CPC diets by the end of the experiment. Correlation between these results and fish growth performances highlights that the intestinal PepT1 mRNA level may serve as a useful marker of the dietary protein quality and absorption efficiency.
To evaluate the role of parenteral and sexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus, we studied seronegative intravenous drug users recruited from 25 drug dependence treatment centers in northern Italy. All attending intravenous drug users were asked for their consent and screened for antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus; those who were seronegative were enrolled, interviewed about their habits, and invited to follow-up visits. Between 1987 and 1989, 1,195 seronegative intravenous drug users were enrolled, 635 were followed up (mean duration, 11.9 months), and 35 seroconversions were observed. The incidence rate ratios were 3.3 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.4-7.5) for subjects aged less than 20 years, 2.4 (95% CI 1.2-4.7) for less than 2 years of intravenous drug use, 2.2 (95% CI 0.9-5.5) for syringe sharing, and 1.0 for subjects with a sexual partner who had tested positive for human immunodeficiency virus. A case-control approach, using logistic regression and adjusting for sex, age, area, and prevalence, showed odds ratios of 13.2 (95% CI 3.1-56.8) for frequent syringe sharing and 4.0 (95% CI 1.5-10.4) for sexual contacts with seropositive partners; frequent use of condoms was associated with a reduction in risk that did not reach statistical significance. Parenteral transmission is the most important route of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus among intravenous drug users, and sexual transmission plays a relevant, additive role.
The prevalence of risk behaviors in 933 intravenous drug users from Milan and other areas of Northern Italy was studied from 1 January 1987 to 15 April 1989. A preventive intervention, based on counseling with HIV antibody testing, was undertaken with i.v. drug users attending detoxication centers, and subjects were followed up in order to evaluate its effects. At enrollment all subjects reported heroin use, 18% also used cocaine and 6% morphine. Seventy-two per cent reported sharing or having shared syringes, with variation across geographical areas. Four hundred and sixty subjects were visited at least twice (mean follow-up was 10.4 months): 30% of these stopped injecting altogether and the frequency of injecting as well as of syringe sharing decreased whereas no improvement was seen in sexual behaviour. Detoxication therapy, combined with HIV testing and counseling proved effective in reducing heroin assumption and the frequency of syringe sharing, whereas the prevalence of risk behaviors in i.v. drug users at recruitment over the years 1987-1988 showed no change, or even increased, despite of general information and health education campaigns against AIDS.
Various diseases are described as antecedents of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), particularly gastroenteritis and respiratory infectious diseases, but epidemiological surveys are rare. This paper details a multicentre matched case-control study carried out within a well-defined Italian population. For each GBS case fulfilling the Asbury and Cornblath criteria, one control was recruited from a neurological (NC) ward and another from a non-neurological (NNC) ward, matched for age, sex, season of disease onset and area of residence. All cases and controls were administered a semistructured questionnaire. The OR was calculated according to the Mantel-Haenszel equation for triplets. Between 1 October 1996 and 30 September 1998, 75 triplets were included in the case-control study. The OR for flu-like syndrome was 7.14 (CI 95%, 3.28-15.52) and for gastroenteritis 3.57 (CI 95%, 1.31-9.72); no other factor reached significance. Our results, based on the clinical and anamnestic features of triplets of patients, support the possible role as risk factors for GBS of infectious diseases, particularly flu-like syndrome and gastroenteritis.
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