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2.
Am J Perinatol ; 2023 Jan 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36693387

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: In this study, we evaluated the safety of early discharge (ED) of newborns born to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-positive mothers. STUDY DESIGN: All ED newborns from the postpartum wards of the Fondazione Policlinico Gemelli between January 1, 2022, and February 28, 2022, were retrospectively analyzed. Newborns from mothers with COVID-19 and those from uninfected mothers were considered. The primary outcome was to evaluate whether the rate of the composite outcome, which was the percentage of rehospitalization/access in emergency room (RH/ER) within the first week from discharge, differed between neonates born to mother with COVID-19 (COVID-19 group) and those born to uninfected mothers (no COVID-19 group). The secondary outcomes were to assess the quality of feeding and number of outpatient visits in the follow-up clinic between the two cohorts of patients. RESULTS: One hundred and thirty-four newborns in the no COVID-19 group and 26 in the COVID-19 group were analyzed. The rate of RH/ER in the no COVID-19 group was of 6 over 134 newborns (0.045, 95% confidence image [CI]: 0.017-0.095), while in COVID-19 group, it was of 2 over 26 newborns (0.077), which does not differ from the expected rate (1.17 over 26 newborns, 0.045, 95% CI: 0.017-0.095). CONCLUSION: ED for newborns from mothers with COVID-19 could be an actionable safe strategy. KEY POINTS: · We evaluated the feasibility of early discharge (ED) of mothers with COVID-19 and their newborns.. · Rate of rehospitalization between newborns from uninfected mothers and infected ones was comparable.. · ED could be an actionable practice for newborns from mothers with COVID-19..

3.
Genes (Basel) ; 13(1)2022 01 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35052476

ABSTRACT

This paper aims to provide a first glimpse into the genomic characterization of individuals buried in Casal Bertone (Rome, first-third centuries AD) to gain preliminary insight into the genetic makeup of people who lived near a tannery workshop, fullonica. Therefore, we explored the genetic characteristics of individuals who were putatively recruited as fuller workers outside the Roman population. Moreover, we identified the microbial communities associated with humans to detect microbes associated with the unhealthy environment supposed for such a workshop. We examined five individuals from Casal Bertone for ancient DNA analysis through whole-genome sequencing via a shotgun approach. We conducted multiple investigations to unveil the genetic components featured in the samples studied and their associated microbial communities. We generated reliable whole-genome data for three samples surviving the quality controls. The individuals were descendants of people from North African and the Near East, two of the main foci for tannery and dyeing activity in the past. Our evaluation of the microbes associated with the skeletal samples showed microbes growing in soils with waste products used in the tannery process, indicating that people lived, died, and were buried around places where they worked. In that perspective, the results represent the first genomic characterization of fullers from the past. This analysis broadens our knowledge about the presence of multiple ancestries in Imperial Rome, marking a starting point for future data integration as part of interdisciplinary research on human mobility and the bio-cultural characteristics of people employed in dedicated workshops.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/classification , Bone and Bones/metabolism , Bone and Bones/microbiology , DNA, Ancient/analysis , Genomics/methods , Adolescent , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Child , Child, Preschool , DNA, Ancient/isolation & purification , Female , Genome, Human , Humans , Infant , Male , Paleopathology , Rome , Whole Genome Sequencing
4.
Ann Hum Biol ; 48(3): 234-246, 2021 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34459338

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Rome became the prosperous Capital of the Roman Empire through the political and military conquests of neighbouring areas. People were able to move Romeward modifying the Rome area's demographic structure. However, the genomic evidence for the population of one of the broadest Empires in antiquity has been sparse until recently. AIM: The genomic analysis of people buried in Quarto Cappello del Prete (QCP) necropolis was carried out to help elucidate the genomic structure of Imperial Rome inhabitants. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We recruited twenty-five individuals from QCP for ancient DNA analysis through whole-genome sequencing. Multiple investigations were carried out to unveil the genetic components featuring in the studied samples and the community's putative demographic structure. RESULTS: We generated reliable whole-genome data for 7 samples surviving quality controls. The distribution of Imperial Romans from QCP partly overlaps with present-day Southern Mediterranean and Southern-Near Eastern populations. CONCLUSION: The genomic legacy with the south-eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea and the Central and Western Northern-African coast funerary influence pave the way for considering people buried in QCP as resembling a Punic-derived human group.


Subject(s)
DNA, Ancient/analysis , Genome, Human , Human Migration , Rural Population , Adolescent , Archaeology , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Italy , Male , Roman World , Whole Genome Sequencing
5.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 2697, 2021 01 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33514802

ABSTRACT

As a means for investigating human mobility during late the Neolithic to the Copper Age in central and southern Italy, this study presents a novel dataset of enamel oxygen and carbon isotope values (δ18Oca and δ13Cca) from the carbonate fraction of biogenic apatite for one hundred and twenty-six individual teeth coming from two Neolithic and eight Copper Age communities. The measured δ18Oca values suggest a significant role of local sources in the water inputs to the body water, whereas δ13Cca values indicate food resources, principally based on C3 plants. Both δ13Cca and δ18Oca ranges vary substantially when samples are broken down into local populations. Statistically defined thresholds, accounting for intra-site variability, allow the identification of only a few outliers in the eight Copper Age communities, suggesting that sedentary lifestyle rather than extensive mobility characterized the investigated populations. This seems to be also typical of the two studied Neolithic communities. Overall, this research shows that the investigated periods in peninsular Italy differed in mobility pattern from the following Bronze Age communities from more northern areas.

6.
Pathobiology ; 85(5-6): 289-299, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30223259

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study describes and discusses a rare case of metastatic carcinoma that affected the skeleton of an adult male recovered in the necropolis of Casal Bertone in Rome (Italy). The necropolis, which dates back to the Imperial Age (1st to 2nd century AD), is located near some residential structures and a large place identified as a fullery (fullonica). METHODS: Anthropological and paleopathological studies of the skeletal remains were performed via careful macroscopic, microscopic, radiological (X-ray and CT scan), and histological investigation. RESULTS: The skeleton displayed mixed osteoclastic and osteoblastic lesions that mainly involved the axial bones, in particular the sternum, the ribs, the spine, and the scapular and pelvic girdles. The anatomical distribution and the destructive and proliferative nature of the lesions suggested diffuse metastases arising from a soft-tissue primary cancer. The age and sex of the individual, as well as radiographic and histological pictures, allowed diagnosis of an advanced prostate cancer with extensively diffused bone metastases. CONCLUSION: At present, this is the only case of prostate cancer from the Imperial Age recovered in Rome.


Subject(s)
Body Remains/pathology , Bone and Bones/pathology , Paleopathology/history , Prostate/pathology , Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology , History, Ancient , Humans , Italy , Male , Middle Aged , Rome
7.
Int J Paleopathol ; 20: 60-64, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29496217

ABSTRACT

The archaeological excavations carried out in 1999 in the Collatina necropolis of the Roman Imperial Age (1st-3rd centuries AD) (Rome, Italy) discovered the skeletal remains of two adult males with evidence of paranasal lesions. Both individuals showed postmortem damage in the frontal bone, through which it was possible to macroscopically detect an oblong new bone formation. In both specimens, radiological examination of the defects' morphology showed new pediculated-based bone formations. Radiology also confirmed the presence of benign osseous masses arising from the right frontal sinus and interpreted as osteomata. Their dimensions did not exceed 10 mm, so that mechanical complications and compression of the adjacent structures could be ruled out. The osteomata of paranasal sinuses are rarely reported in paleopathology, since they can be discovered only incidental to bone breakage or radiography. Hence, the evaluation of their occurrence in past populations represents an important challenge. The two cases presented here show direct and rare evidence of frontal sinus osteomata dating back to the Roman Imperial Age.


Subject(s)
Frontal Sinus , Osteoma/history , Paleopathology , Paranasal Sinus Neoplasms/history , Roman World/history , Adult , Age Determination by Teeth , Body Remains/diagnostic imaging , Body Remains/pathology , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography , Diagnosis, Differential , Frontal Sinus/diagnostic imaging , Frontal Sinus/pathology , History, Ancient , Humans , Male , Osteoma/diagnostic imaging , Osteoma/pathology , Paranasal Sinus Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Paranasal Sinus Neoplasms/pathology , Rome , Sex Determination by Skeleton
8.
Med Secoli ; 27(3): 767-72, 2015.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27348985
9.
Med Secoli ; 27(3): 773-85, 2015.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27348986

ABSTRACT

The recent excavations carried out by the Superintendence for the Colosseum, the Roman National Museum and the Archaeological Area of Rome allowed to uncover a large number of burial grounds of Imperial Age. In this work we present the data for 11 cemeteries scattered throughout the Suburbiumn, dating between 1st and 3rd centuries AD. A whole sample of 6061 tombs has been investigated and 5280 skeletons were anthropologically analyzed. All the field data have been scored in appropriate standardized charts in order to make easy their storage and processing in a dedicated database.


Subject(s)
Archaeology , Cemeteries , Roman World/history , Anthropology, Physical , Burial , History, Ancient , Humans , Rome
11.
Med Secoli ; 26(1): 9-22, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25702379

ABSTRACT

This paper describes some cases of individuals affected by skeletal deformities resulting in "freak" appearance. The skeletal remains were found during large archaeological excavations in the Roman territory, carried out by the Special Superintendence to the Archeological Heritage of Rome in the last years, dated back to the Imperial Age. The first cases reported are referred to two growth disorders with opposite effects: a case of dwarfism and another of gigantism. The former concerns a young man from the Collatina necropolis with very short and malformed limbs, which allowed a diagnosis of acondroplasic dwarfism, a rare congenital disorder that limits height below 130 cm. The latter case comes from the necropolis of Torre Serpentana in Fidenae, and is instead referred to a young person of very high stature, about 204 cm, suffering from Gigantism, a rare condition which in this case seems to have been linked to a hormonal dysfunction due to a pituitary adenoma. A third case regards a joint disease affecting the vertebral column and causing severe deformities. The skeleton was found in the Collatina necropolis and belongs to an old woman, suffering from ankylosing spondylitis. Finally, the last and very peculiar case is related to an individual recovered in the necropolis of Castel Malnome. The skeletal remains belong to an adult man with a complete fusion of the temporo-mandibular joint, which compromised mastication and caused severe deformation of the maxillofacial complex. These cases are described in detail together with the possible implications that these deformities could have on in the social context.


Subject(s)
Abnormalities, Severe Teratoid/history , Bone and Bones/abnormalities , Female , History, Ancient , Humans , Male , Rome
12.
Acta Med Hist Adriat ; 12(2): 315-20, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25811689

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: An original case of incomplete (and reasonably fatal) human trepanation is described in this short paper. The diagnosis was made on the cremated remains of a young adult individual who died in Rome, Italy during the 2nd century AD. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: The trepanation was incomplete, as death occurred quickly due to vascular lesions, according to the anatomic analysis of the bone piece. Comparable trepanation from Roman times are described and related to this case. CONCLUSION: Even if archaeological, this case highlights the possibility of such a diagnosis on post-fire fragmented bones. Very suggestive lesions of section are of great interest for the history of such a practice during classical Antiquity. Lastly, from a medical and forensic point of view, such a diagnosis may be of interest during any identification process and research for a cause of death during anthropological analyses.


Subject(s)
Trephining/history , Archaeology , Cremation , History, Ancient , Humans , Rome
13.
Med Secoli ; 25(1): 119-37, 2013.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25807703

ABSTRACT

The increasing attention of archaeological and anthropological research towards palaepathological studies has allowed to focus the examination of many skeletal samples on this aspect and to evaluate the presence of many diseases afflicting ancient populations. This paper describes the most interesting diseases observed in skeletal samples from some necropoles found in urban and suburban areas of Rome during archaeological excavations in the last decades, and dating back to the Imperial Age. The diseases observed were grouped into the following categories: articular diseases, traumas, infections, metabolic or nutritional diseases, congenital diseases and tumours, and some examples are reported for each group. Although extensive epidemiological investigation in ancient skeletal records is impossible, the palaeopathological study allowed to highlight the spread of numerous illnesses, many of which can be related to the life and health conditions of the Roman population.


Subject(s)
Bone Diseases/history , Roman World , Bone Diseases/epidemiology , Bone Diseases/etiology , History, Ancient , Humans , Paleopathology , Rome
14.
Med Secoli ; 25(1): 101-17, 2013.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25807702

ABSTRACT

The relations between fractures and living conditions of a population are important to reconstruct the biological status of a population. This work is focused on the description and interpretation of trauma in the skeletal remains: the sample consist of 218 individuals, coming from Roman imperial necropolis of Castel Malnome (I-II century AD). The trauma incidence has been considered by the calculation offrequencies per individual and per bone. The examination of the pattern offractures in the skeleton for this site indicates that the individuals are characterized by high level of trauma and reveals that ulna and ribs were the mostfrequently affected bones. The evidence of trauma in this population may reflect many factors about the lifestyle of individuals,for example their occupation and environmental conditions, moreover the state of healing of the injuries may also indicate the availability of treatments.


Subject(s)
Fractures, Bone/history , Life Style/history , Roman World , Fractures, Bone/epidemiology , Fractures, Bone/etiology , History, Ancient , Humans , Paleopathology , Rome
16.
Pathobiology ; 79(5): 268-83, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22722566

ABSTRACT

The increasing attention of archaeological and anthropological research towards palaeopathological studies has allowed to focus the examination of many skeletal samples on this aspect and to evaluate the presence of many diseases afflicting ancient populations. This paper describes the most interesting diseases observed in skeletal samples from five necropolises found in urban and suburban areas of Rome during archaeological excavations in the last decades, and dating back to the Imperial Age. The diseases observed were grouped into the following categories: articular diseases, traumas, infections, metabolic or nutritional diseases, congenital diseases and tumors, and some examples are reported for each group. Although extensive epidemiological investigation in ancient skeletal records is impossible, palaeopathology allowed highlighting the spread of numerous illnesses, many of which can be related to the life and health conditions of the Roman population.


Subject(s)
Mummies/pathology , Paleopathology , Adolescent , Adult , Child, Preschool , Communicable Diseases/history , Communicable Diseases/pathology , Congenital Abnormalities/history , Congenital Abnormalities/pathology , Female , History, Ancient , Humans , Joint Diseases/history , Joint Diseases/pathology , Male , Metabolic Diseases/history , Metabolic Diseases/pathology , Middle Aged , Mummies/history , Paleopathology/methods , Rome , Wounds and Injuries/history , Wounds and Injuries/pathology , Young Adult
17.
Med Secoli ; 23(1): 41-64, 2011.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21941985

ABSTRACT

The archaeological investigation carried out from 2003 in the Castellaccio locality, undertaken to realize the "Europarco" town planning, brought to light a part ofa road dated to the roman age, identified as the ancient via Laurentina. The road is oriented N/NE-S/SW, is 400 metres long and cross with a bridge the Fosso dell'Acqua Acetosa. Two buildings run alongside this trait of the ancient Laurentina: one can be interpreted as a rural structure, the other one as a mansio. A sidestreet starts from the final edge of the recovered road and run toward East, along the original route of the Fosso dell'Acqua Acetosa Ostiense: the historians recognized it as a boundary of the Ager Romanus Antiquus nearby the VI mile, place of the god Terminus sanctuary. A necropolis made up ofmore than 130 graves, mainly inhumations, was found in the southern part of the crossroads, near the oriental side of the Laurentina. The stratigraphical analysis and the examination of the grave goods allowed the characterization of three period of funerary use of the necropolis, between the middle republican age and the first two century of the Empire. In all three period stand out graves of infants and women, of extreme interest from the ritual point of view and supplied with rich grave goods.


Subject(s)
Cemeteries/history , Roman World/history , Women/history , History, Ancient , Rome
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