F Antonio
University of Naples Federico II
3 Papers
F Antonio is an academic researcher from University of Naples Federico II. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Clinical description, molecular delineation and genotype–phenotype correlation in 340 patients with KBG syndrome: addition of 67 new patients
Elena Martínez-Cayuelas,Fiona Blanco-Kelly,Fermina López-Grondona,Saoud Tahsin-Swafiri,Rosario López-Rodríguez,Rebeca Losada-Del Pozo,Ignacio Mahillo,Beatriz Moreno,María Rodrigo-Moreno,Dídac Casas-Alba,Aitor López-González,Sixto García-Miñaur,María Ángeles Mori,M. Pacio-Mínguez,E. Rikeros-Orozco,Fernando Santos-Simarro,Jaime Cruz-Rojo,Juan Francisco Quesada-Espinosa,-. MaríaTeresaSánchez,Calvin,Jaime Sanchez del Pozo,Raquel Bernadó-Fonz,María,Isidoro-García,I. Ruiz-Ayucar,M. I. Álvarez,-. RaquelBlanco,Lago,Begoña De Azua-Brea,Jesús Eirís,J J García-Peñas,Belen,Gil-Fournier,Carmen Gómez-Lado,Nadia Irazabal,Vanessa Lopez,Irene,Madrigal,I. Malaga,B. Martinez-Menendez,María Soraya,Ramiro-Leon,Maria Garcia-Hoyos,Pablo Prieto-Matos,Javier López-Pisón,Sergio Aguilera-Albesa,Sara Alvarez de Andres,Alberto Fernández-Jaén,Isabel Llano-Rivas,Blanca Gener,Carmen Ayuso,A Arteche-López,María Palomares-Bralo,Anna María Cueto,Irene Valenzuela,F Antonio,Martínez-Monseny,Isabel Lorda-Sanchez,Berta Almoguera +58 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors present a detailed phenotypical description of KBG syndrome in the largest series reported to date of 67 patients, provide evidence of a genotype-phenotype correlation between some KBG features and specific ANKRD11 variants in 340 patients, and propose updated clinical diagnostic criteria based on their findings.
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An unusual cause of “appendicular pain” in a young girl: mesenteric cystic lymphangioma
TL;DR: A 17-year-old caucasian female patient presented with abdominal pain in the right iliac fossa and flank of a 1-month duration and Histopathological examination was consistent with the diagnosis of mesenteric lymphangioma.
Third‐trimester ultrasound for antenatal diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum in women with placenta previa: results from the ADoPAD study
Nicola Fratelli,Federico Prefumo,C. Maggi,C. Cavalli,A. Sciarrone,Anna Garofalo,Elsa Viora,Patrizia Vergani,Sara Ornaghi,Marta Betti,Isadora Vaglio Tessitore,Anna Franca Cavaliere,S. Buongiorno,Annalisa Vidiri,Elisa Fabbri,Enrico Ferrazzi,Valeria Maggi,Ilkay Cetin,Tiziana Frusca,Tullio Ghi,C. Kaihura,E. di Pasquo,Tamara Stampaljia,Chiara Belcaro,Mariachiara Quadrifoglio,Massimo Veneziano,Federico Mecacci,Serena Simeone,Anna Locatelli,Sara Consonni,N Chianchiano,F. Labate,Antonella Cromi,Emma Bertucci,Fabio Facchinetti,Anna Fichera,Dianne M. Granata,F Antonio,F. Foti,Laura Avagliano,Gaetano Bulfamante,Giuseppe Calì +41 more
TL;DR: To evaluate the performance of third‐trimester ultrasound for the diagnosis of clinically significant placenta accreta spectrum disorder (PAS) in women with low‐lying Placenta or placentA previa, a large number of women were found to be pregnant with at least one foetal abnormality.