97 results on '"S, Latteri"'
Search Results
2. Hand-assisted laparoscopic approach for the treatment of gastrosplenic fistula: A case report and review of the literature
- Author
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Andrea Peri, F. S. Latteri, Luigi Pugliese, and Virginia Gallo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Gastrosplenic fistula ,business.industry ,Fistula ,lcsh:Surgery ,Hand-assisted laparoscopy ,Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma ,lcsh:RD1-811 ,medicine.disease ,Laparoscopic splenectomy ,Lymphoma ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Splenectomy ,Hand assisted ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Complication ,Splenic Lymphoma ,business ,Laparoscopic treatment ,Wedge resection (lung) - Abstract
Gastrosplenic fistula is a rare complication of gastric or splenic lymphoma. Here we report the case of a 48 years old man who developed a gastrosplenic fistula secondary to splenic diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, successfully managed with hand-assisted laparoscopic splenectomy and gastric wedge resection. A review of the available literature is also presented, 33 cases of gastrosplenic fistula associated to gastric or splenic lymphoma were found, of which 25 were treated surgically. This case represents the first report of laparoscopic treatment of lymphoma-related gastrosplenic fistula described to our knowledge in the available literature.
- Published
- 2020
3. Technical details for a robot-assisted hand-sewn esophago-gastric anastomosis during minimally invasive Ivor Lewis esophagectomy
- Author
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Andrea Peri, Andrea Pietrabissa, N. Mineo, Luigi Pugliese, F. Bruno, J. Viganò, Luca Morelli, Niccolò Furbetta, F. S. Latteri, Virginia Gallo, and G Di Franco
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Dynamic Manuscript ,Leak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Esophageal Neoplasms ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Esophageal cancer ,Robotic anastomosis ,Anastomotic Leak ,Anastomosis ,Minimally invasive surgery ,Esophagogastric anastomosis ,medicine ,Humans ,Ivor lewis ,Retrospective Studies ,Ivor Lewis esophagectomy ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,COVID-19 ,Robotics ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Esophagectomy ,Barbed suture ,business ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
Background Minimally invasive Ivor Lewis esophagectomy (MIILE) provides better outcomes than open techniques, particularly in terms of post-operative recovery and pulmonary complications. However, in addition to requiring advanced technical skills, thoracoscopic access makes it hard to perform esophagogastric anastomosis safely, and the reported rates of anastomotic leak vary from 5 to 16%. Several minimally invasive esophago-gastric anastomotic techniques have been described, but to date strong evidence to support one technique over the others is still lacking. We herein report the technical details and preliminary results of a new robot-assisted hand-sewn esophago-gastric anastomosis technique. Methods From January 2018 to December 2020, 12 cases of laparoscopic/thoracoscopic Ivor Lewis esophagectomy with robot-assisted hand-sewn esophago-gastric anastomosis were performed. The gastric conduit was prepared and tailored taking care of vascularization with a complete resection of the gastric fundus. The anastomosis consisted of a robot-assisted, hand-sewn four layers of absorbable monofilament running barbed suture (V-lock). The posterior outer layer incorporated the gastric and esophageal staple lines. Results The post-operative course was uneventful in nine cases. Two patients developed chyloperitoneum, one patient a Sars-Cov-2 infection, and one patient a late anastomotic stricture. In all cases, there were no anastomotic leaks or delayed gastric conduit emptying. The median post-operative stay was 13 days (min 7, max 37 days); the longest in-hospital stay was recorded in patients who developed chyloperitoneum. Conclusion Despite the small series, we believe that our technique looks to be promising, safe, and reproducible. Some key points may be useful to guarantee a low complications rate after MIILE, particularly regarding anastomotic leaks and delayed emptying: the resection of the gastric fundus, the use of robot assistance, the incorporation of the staple lines in the posterior aspect of the anastomosis, and the use of barbed suture. Further cases are needed to validate the preliminary, but very encouraging, results. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00464-021-08715-4.
- Published
- 2021
4. Molecular and functional characterization of a new 3' end KIT juxtamembrane deletion in a duodenal GIST treated with neoadjuvant Imatinib
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Maurizio Fermeglia, Andrea Pietrabissa, Suzana Aulic, Erik Laurini, F. S. Latteri, Sara Delfanti, Vittorio Perfetti, Sabrina Pricl, Elena Dallera, Roberta Riboni, Luigi Pugliese, Marco Lucioni, Perfetti, Vittorio, Laurini, Erik, Aulic, Suzana, Fermeglia, Maurizio, Riboni, Roberta, Lucioni, Marco, Dallera, Elena, Delfanti, Sara, Pugliese, Luigi, Latteri, Francesco Saverio, Pietrabissa, Andrea, and Pricl, Sabrina
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neoadjuvant treatment ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Neoadjuvant treatment ,Novel deletion mutation ,Molecular simulation ,03 medical and health sciences ,novel deletion mutation ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,neoplasms ,Hematology ,GiST ,business.industry ,Molecular pathogenesis ,Imatinib ,KIT ,Molecular medicine ,digestive system diseases ,GIST ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Clinical case ,business ,medicine.drug ,Research Paper - Abstract
// Vittorio Perfetti 1, * , Erik Laurini 2, * , Suzana Aulic 2 , Maurizio Fermeglia 2 , Roberta Riboni 3 , Marco Lucioni 3 , Elena Dallera 3 , Sara Delfanti 4 , Luigi Pugliese 5 , Francesco Saverio Latteri 6 , Andrea Pietrabissa 5 and Sabrina Pricl 2 1 Internal Medicine, Ospedale SS Annunziata-ASST Pavia and Department of Molecular Medicine University of Pavia, 27100 Pavia, Italy 2 Molecular Simulation Engineering (MOSE) Laboratory, Pharmaceutical and Molecular Biology Division, DEA, University of Trieste, 34127 Trieste, Italy 3 Department of Molecular Medicine and Anatomic Pathology Section, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, 27100 Pavia, Italy 4 Department of Oncology and Hematology, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, 27100 Pavia, Italy 5 Department of Surgery, General Surgery II, University of Pavia and Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, 27100 Pavia, Italy 6 General Surgery, Ospedale Cannizzaro, 95126 Catania, Italy * These authors contributed equally to this work and are First co-authors Correspondence to: Sabrina Pricl, email: sabrina.pricl@dia.units.it Keywords: KIT, GIST, novel deletion mutation, Imatinib, neoadjuvant treatment Received: April 27, 2017 Accepted: June 28, 2017 Published: July 18, 2017 ABSTRACT Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are the most common mesenchymal tumors of the gastrointestinal tract. GISTs express the receptor tyrosine kinase KIT, and the majority of GISTs present KIT gain-of-function mutations that cluster in the 5' end of the receptor juxtamembrane domain. On the other hand, little information is known about GISTs carrying mutations in the 3′ end of the KIT juxtamembrane domain. Here we report and discuss a clinical case of localized duodenal GIST whose molecular characterization revealed the presence of a new 21 nucleotide/7 amino acid deletion in the 3′ end of KIT juxtamembrane domain (Δ574–580). The patient was treated with Imatinib at standard regimen dose (400 mg/day), and responded well as the original tumor mass reduced, ultimately allowing conservative surgery. In line with these clinical evidences computer simulations, biophysical techniques and in vitro experiments demonstrated that the receptor tyrosine kinase KIT carrying the Δ574–580 mutation displays constitutive phosphorylation, which can be switched-off upon Imatinib treatment. In addition, results from this study showed that a clinical useful procedure, neoadjuvant treatment, can occasionally be of value for the understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of GIST.
- Published
- 2017
5. Neoadjuvant treatment of a duodenal GIST revealed a new imatinib-sensitive exon 11 c-KIT-mutation
- Author
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Vittorio Perfetti, Paola Rognoni, Luigi Pugliese, F. S. Latteri, Elena Dallera, Roberta Riboni, Sara Delfanti, Paolo Pedrazzoli, Andrea Pietrabissa, and Marco Lucioni
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Exon ,Oncology ,GiST ,business.industry ,Neoadjuvant treatment ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,Imatinib ,Hematology ,C-KIT Mutation ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2016
6. Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy: an Analysis on 114,005 Cases of United States Series
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R, Vecchio, B V, MacFadyen, and S, Latteri
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Iatrogenic Disease ,United States ,Treatment Outcome ,Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic ,Pancreatitis ,Cholelithiasis ,Acute Disease ,Chronic Disease ,Cholecystitis ,Humans ,Bile Ducts ,Intraoperative Complications ,Cholangiography ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
114,005 cases from 40 United States series of laparoscopic cholecystectomies (LC) were reviewed. Indications, conversion rates, rates of intra-operative cholangiography (IOC), and incidence of bile duct stone and iatrogenic bile duct injuries were assessed. Indications included acute cholecystitis in 11.6% and gallstone pancreatitis in 2.1% of reported cases. Conversion rate was to be primarily related to inflammation. Unsuspected bile duct stones were detected intra-operatively in 7.8% of cases. 561 major bile duct injuries (BDI) and 401 bile leaks (BL) were recorded and acute or chronic inflammation was their most important potential predisposing factor. In series with a high rate of IOC performed during LC, BDJ and BL were slightly lower and lesions recognized intra-operatively were much higher than in series with low rate of IOC. BDJ occurred in the first 50 patients of the surgeon's experience in about 91% of the cases.
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- 1998
7. Appendectomy during the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy: a multicenter ambispective cohort study by the Italian Society of Endoscopic Surgery and new technologies (the CRAC study)
- Author
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Sartori A., Podda M., Botteri E., Passera R., Agresta F., Arezzo A., Guerrieri M., Ortenzi M., Cavallo F., Zese M., Prando D., Restini E., Cianci P., Millo P., Brachet Contul R., Serrao A., Abatini F., Altomare D. F., Picciariello A., Chetta G., Lattanzio F., Tonini V., Gori A., Jovine E., Mastrangelo L., Sartarelli L., Frena A., Malpaga A., Bertelli F., Pignata G., Andreuccetti J., Sanna S., Lares B., Sechi R., Cillara N., Pisanu A., Delogu D., Ciaccio G., Farulla M., Casati M., Laface L., De Luca M., Russello D., Latteri S., Longoni M., Masci E., Vigna S., Campanile F. C., Foti N., Lepiane P., Balla A., Cantore F., Raveglia V., Borghi F., Giraudo G., Verzelli A., Budassi A., Patriti A., Foghetti D., Montin U., Amadio L., Anania G., Bombardini C., Fabbri N., Feo C., Cianchi F., Manetti A., Lucchese M., Soricelli E., Ceccarelli G., Patiti M., Frascio M., Stabilini C., Filauro M., Barberis A., Troian M., Nagliati C., Campagnacci R., Maurizi A., Berti S., Gennai A., Marvaso A., D'Antonio D., Feo C. V., Mazzola L., Selvaggi F., Carini S., Costanzo F., Boccia L., Pascariello A., Perrotta N., Celiento M., Opocher E., Giovenzana M., Stella M., Ferrara F., Boni L., Abate E., Da Lio C., Valli V., Gelmini R., Serra F., Piccoli M., Gozzo D., Gattolin A., Sasia D., Balani A., Petronio B., Calo P. G., Canu G. L., Contarini E., Piatto G., Vettoretto N., Caprioli M., Braga M., Chiappetta M. F., Maida P., Tammaro P., De Palma G., Milone M., Bottino V., Canfora A., Bagaglini G., Agrusa A., Barone M., Mirabella A., Marino M. V., Gulotta G., Romano G., Sorrentino M., Ferfoglia S., Papagni V., Eramo S., Boselli C., Basti M., Caracino V., Moretto G., Inama M., Capelli P., Conti L., Muratore A., Cuoghi M. M., Zerbinati A., Corso S., Vasino M. C., Montuori M., Fidanza F., Lucchetta A., Giuliani A., Dinatale G., Zanzi F., Guariniello A., Bonilauri S., Frazzetta G., Garino M., Marafante C., Gioffre A., Del Monte S. R., Sganga G., Fransvea P., Grande M., Siragusa L., Sica G., Paola M., Passantino D. G., Catani M., Ricci F., Lauro E., Facci E., Parini D., Armellino M. F., Argenio G., Porcu A., Perra T., Bordoni P., Fleres F., Parisi A., Rossi S., Saracco R., Bono D., Viora T., Orlando F., Ferrero A., Fontana A. P., De Paolis P., Visconti D., Quaglino F., Festa F., Palagi S., Lo Secco G., Morino M., Allaix M. E., Salzano A., Tirone G., Motter M., Zanus G., Passuello N., Massani M., Tutino R., Manzini N., Terranova S., Merenda R., Nordio S., Zonta S., Lovisetto F., Guglielmi A., Campagnaro T., Amedeo E., Scollica M., Amodio P., Giannotti D., Olmi S., Oldani A., Sartori, A., Podda, M., Botteri, E., Passera, R., Agresta, F., Arezzo, A., Guerrieri, M., Ortenzi, M., Cavallo, F., Zese, M., Prando, D., Restini, E., Cianci, P., Millo, P., Brachet Contul, R., Serrao, A., Abatini, F., Altomare, D. F., Picciariello, A., Chetta, G., Lattanzio, F., Tonini, V., Gori, A., Jovine, E., Mastrangelo, L., Sartarelli, L., Frena, A., Malpaga, A., Bertelli, F., Pignata, G., Andreuccetti, J., Sanna, S., Lares, B., Sechi, R., Cillara, N., Pisanu, A., Delogu, D., Ciaccio, G., Farulla, M., Casati, M., Laface, L., De Luca, M., Russello, D., Latteri, S., Longoni, M., Masci, E., Vigna, S., Campanile, F. C., Foti, N., Lepiane, P., Balla, A., Cantore, F., Raveglia, V., Borghi, F., Giraudo, G., Verzelli, A., Budassi, A., Patriti, A., Foghetti, D., Montin, U., Amadio, L., Anania, G., Bombardini, C., Fabbri, N., Feo, C., Cianchi, F., Manetti, A., Lucchese, M., Soricelli, E., Ceccarelli, G., Patiti, M., Frascio, M., Stabilini, C., Filauro, M., Barberis, A., Troian, M., Nagliati, C., Campagnacci, R., Maurizi, A., Berti, S., Gennai, A., Marvaso, A., D'Antonio, D., Feo, C. V., Mazzola, L., Selvaggi, F., Carini, S., Costanzo, F., Boccia, L., Pascariello, A., Perrotta, N., Celiento, M., Opocher, E., Giovenzana, M., Stella, M., Ferrara, F., Boni, L., Abate, E., Da Lio, C., Valli, V., Gelmini, R., Serra, F., Piccoli, M., Gozzo, D., Gattolin, A., Sasia, D., Balani, A., Petronio, B., Calo, P. G., Canu, G. L., Contarini, E., Piatto, G., Vettoretto, N., Caprioli, M., Braga, M., Chiappetta, M. F., Maida, P., Tammaro, P., De Palma, G., Milone, M., Bottino, V., Canfora, A., Bagaglini, G., Agrusa, A., Barone, M., Mirabella, A., Marino, M. V., Gulotta, G., Romano, G., Sorrentino, M., Ferfoglia, S., Papagni, V., Eramo, S., Boselli, C., Basti, M., Caracino, V., Moretto, G., Inama, M., Capelli, P., Conti, L., Muratore, A., Cuoghi, M. M., Zerbinati, A., Corso, S., Vasino, M. C., Montuori, M., Fidanza, F., Lucchetta, A., Giuliani, A., Dinatale, G., Zanzi, F., Guariniello, A., Bonilauri, S., Frazzetta, G., Garino, M., Marafante, C., Gioffre, A., Del Monte, S. R., Sganga, G., Fransvea, P., Grande, M., Siragusa, L., Sica, G., Paola, M., Passantino, D. G., Catani, M., Ricci, F., Lauro, E., Facci, E., Parini, D., Armellino, M. F., Argenio, G., Porcu, A., Perra, T., Bordoni, P., Fleres, F., Parisi, A., Rossi, S., Saracco, R., Bono, D., Viora, T., Orlando, F., Ferrero, A., Fontana, A. P., De Paolis, P., Visconti, D., Quaglino, F., Festa, F., Palagi, S., Lo Secco, G., Morino, M., Allaix, M. E., Salzano, A., Tirone, G., Motter, M., Zanus, G., Passuello, N., Massani, M., Tutino, R., Manzini, N., Terranova, S., Merenda, R., Nordio, S., Zonta, S., Lovisetto, F., Guglielmi, A., Campagnaro, T., Amedeo, E., Scollica, M., Amodio, P., Giannotti, D., Olmi, S., Oldani, A., Sartori A., Podda M., Botteri E., Passera R., Agresta F., Arezzo A., Guerrieri M., Ortenzi M., Cavallo F., Zese M., Prando D., Restini E., Cianci P., Millo P., Brachet Contul R., Serrao A., Abatini F., Altomare D.F., Picciariello A., Chetta G., Lattanzio F., Tonini V., Gori A., Jovine E., Mastrangelo L., Sartarelli L., Frena A., Malpaga A., Bertelli F., Pignata G., Andreuccetti J., Sanna S., Lares B., Sechi R., Cillara N., Pisanu A., Delogu D., Ciaccio G., Farulla M., Casati M., Laface L., De Luca M., Russello D., Latteri S., Longoni M., Masci E., Vigna S., Campanile F.C., Foti N., Lepiane P., Balla A., Cantore F., Raveglia V., Borghi F., Giraudo G., Verzelli A., Budassi A., Patriti A., Foghetti D., Montin U., Amadio L., Anania G., Bombardini C., Fabbri N., Feo C., Cianchi F., Manetti A., Lucchese M., Soricelli E., Ceccarelli G., Patiti M., Frascio M., Stabilini C., Filauro M., Barberis A., Troian M., Nagliati C., Campagnacci R., Maurizi A., Berti S., Gennai A., Marvaso A., D'Antonio D., Feo C.V., Mazzola L., Selvaggi F., Carini S., Costanzo F., Boccia L., Pascariello A., Perrotta N., Celiento M., Opocher E., Giovenzana M., Stella M., Ferrara F., Boni L., Abate E., Da Lio C., Valli V., Gelmini R., Serra F., Piccoli M., Gozzo D., Gattolin A., Sasia D., Balani A., Petronio B., Calo P.G., Canu G.L., Contarini E., Piatto G., Vettoretto N., Caprioli M., Braga M., Chiappetta M.F., Maida P., Tammaro P., De Palma G., Milone M., Bottino V., Canfora A., Bagaglini G., Agrusa A., Barone M., Mirabella A., Marino M.V., Gulotta G., Romano G., Sorrentino M., Ferfoglia S., Papagni V., Eramo S., Boselli C., Basti M., Caracino V., Moretto G., Inama M., Capelli P., Conti L., Muratore A., Cuoghi M.M., Zerbinati A., Corso S., Vasino M.C., Montuori M., Fidanza F., Lucchetta A., Giuliani A., Dinatale G., Zanzi F., Guariniello A., Bonilauri S., Frazzetta G., Garino M., Marafante C., Gioffre A., Del Monte S.R., Sganga G., Fransvea P., Grande M., Siragusa L., Sica G., Paola M., Passantino D.G., Catani M., Ricci F., Lauro E., Facci E., Parini D., Armellino M.F., Argenio G., Porcu A., Perra T., Bordoni P., Fleres F., Parisi A., Rossi S., Saracco R., Bono D., Viora T., Orlando F., Ferrero A., Fontana A.P., De Paolis P., Visconti D., Quaglino F., Festa F., Palagi S., Lo Secco G., Morino M., Allaix M.E., Salzano A., Tirone G., Motter M., Zanus G., Passuello N., Massani M., Tutino R., Manzini N., Terranova S., Merenda R., Nordio S., Zonta S., Lovisetto F., Guglielmi A., Campagnaro T., Amedeo E., Scollica M., Amodio P., Giannotti D., Olmi S., Oldani A., Sartori, Alberto, Podda, Mauro, Botteri, Emanuele, Passera, Roberto, Agresta, Ferdinando, Arezzo, Alberto, M Guerrieri, M Ortenzi, F Cavallo, M Zese, D Prando, E Restini, P Cianci, P Millo, R Brachet Contul, A Serrao, F Abatini, D F Altomare, A Picciariello, G Chetta, F Lattanzio, V Tonini, A Gori, E Jovine, L Mastrangelo, L Sartarelli, A Frena, A Malpaga, F Bertelli, G Pignata, J Andreuccetti, S Sanna, B Lares, R Sechi, N Cillara, A Pisanu, D Delogu, G Ciaccio, M Farulla, M Casati, L Laface, M De Luca, D Russello, S Latteri, M Longoni, E Masci, S Vigna, F C Campanile, N Foti, P Lepiane, A Balla, F Cantore, V Raveglia, F Borghi, G Giraudo, A Verzelli, A Budassi, A Patriti, D Foghetti, U Montin, L Amadio, G Anania, C Bombardini, Niccolò Fabbri, Carlo Feo, F Cianchi, A Manetti, M Lucchese, E Soricelli, G Ceccarelli, M Patiti, M Frascio, C Stabilini, M Filauro, A Barberis, M Troian, C Nagliati, R Campagnacci, A Maurizi, S Berti, A Gennai, A Marvaso, D D'Antonio, C V Feo, N Fabbri, L Mazzola, F Selvaggi, S Carini, F Costanzo, L Boccia, A Pascariello, N Perrotta, M Celiento, E Opocher, M Giovenzana, M Stella, F Ferrara, L Boni, E Abate, C Da Lio, V Valli, R Gelmini, F Serra, M Piccoli, D Gozzo, A Gattolin, D Sasia, A Balani, B Petronio, P G Calò, G L Canu, E Contarini, G Piatto, N Vettoretto, M Caprioli, M Braga, M F Chiappetta, P Maida, P Tammaro, G De Palma, M Milone, V Bottino, A Canfora, F Selvaggi, G Bagaglini, A Agrusa, M Barone, A Mirabella, M V Marino, G Gulotta, G Romano, M Sorrentino, S Ferfoglia, V Papagni, S Eramo, C Boselli, M Basti, V Caracino, G Moretto, M Inama, P Capelli, L Conti, A Muratore, M M Cuoghi, A Zerbinati, S Corso, M C Vasino, M Montuori, F Fidanza, A Lucchetta, A Giuliani, G Dinatale, F Zanzi, A Guariniello, S Bonilauri, G Frazzetta, M Garino, C Marafante, A Gioffrè, S R Del Monte, G Sganga, P Fransvea, M Grande, L Siragusa, G Sica, M Paola, D G Passantino, Marco Catani, F Ricci, E Lauro, E Facci, D Parini, M F Armellino, G Argenio, A Porcu, T Perra, P Bordoni, F Fleres, A Parisi, S Rossi, R Saracco, D Bono, T Viora, F Orlando, A Ferrero, A P Fontana, P De Paolis, D Visconti, F Quaglino, F Festa, S Palagi, G Lo Secco, M Morino, M E Allaix, A Salzano, G Tirone, M Motter, G Zanus, N Passuello, M Massani, R Tutino, N Manzini, S Terranova, R Merenda, S Nordio, S Zonta, F Lovisetto, A Guglielmi, T Campagnaro, E Amedeo, M Scollica, P Amodio, D Giannotti, S Olmi, A Oldani, Sartori, A, Podda, M, Botteri, E, Passera, R, Agresta, F, Arezzo, A, Guerrieri, M, Ortenzi, M, Cavallo, F, Zese, M, Prando, D, Restini, E, Cianci, P, Millo, P, Brachet Contul, R, Serrao, A, Abatini, F, Altomare, D, Picciariello, A, Chetta, G, Lattanzio, F, Tonini, V, Gori, A, Jovine, E, Mastrangelo, L, Sartarelli, L, Frena, A, Malpaga, A, Bertelli, F, Pignata, G, Andreuccetti, J, Sanna, S, Lares, B, Sechi, R, Cillara, N, Pisanu, A, Delogu, D, Ciaccio, G, Farulla, M, Casati, M, Laface, L, De Luca, M, Russello, D, Latteri, S, Longoni, M, Masci, E, Vigna, S, Campanile, F, Foti, N, Lepiane, P, Balla, A, Cantore, F, Raveglia, V, Borghi, F, Giraudo, G, Verzelli, A, Budassi, A, Patriti, A, Foghetti, D, Montin, U, Amadio, L, Anania, G, Bombardini, C, Fabbri, N, Feo, C, Cianchi, F, Manetti, A, Lucchese, M, Soricelli, E, Ceccarelli, G, Patiti, M, Frascio, M, Stabilini, C, Filauro, M, Barberis, A, Troian, M, Nagliati, C, Campagnacci, R, Maurizi, A, Berti, S, Gennai, A, Marvaso, A, D'Antonio, D, Mazzola, L, Selvaggi, F, Carini, S, Costanzo, F, Boccia, L, Pascariello, A, Perrotta, N, Celiento, M, Opocher, E, Giovenzana, M, Stella, M, Ferrara, F, Boni, L, Abate, E, Da Lio, C, Valli, V, Gelmini, R, Serra, F, Piccoli, M, Gozzo, D, Gattolin, A, Sasia, D, Balani, A, Petronio, B, Calo, P, Canu, G, Contarini, E, Piatto, G, Vettoretto, N, Caprioli, M, Braga, M, Chiappetta, M, Maida, P, Tammaro, P, De Palma, G, Milone, M, Bottino, V, Canfora, A, Bagaglini, G, Agrusa, A, Barone, M, Mirabella, A, Marino, M, Gulotta, G, Romano, G, Sorrentino, M, Ferfoglia, S, Papagni, V, Eramo, S, Boselli, C, Basti, M, Caracino, V, Moretto, G, Inama, M, Capelli, P, Conti, L, Muratore, A, Cuoghi, M, Zerbinati, A, Corso, S, Vasino, M, Montuori, M, Fidanza, F, Lucchetta, A, Giuliani, A, Dinatale, G, Zanzi, F, Guariniello, A, Bonilauri, S, Frazzetta, G, Garino, M, Marafante, C, Gioffre, A, Del Monte, S, Sganga, G, Fransvea, P, Grande, M, Siragusa, L, Sica, G, Paola, M, Passantino, D, Catani, M, Ricci, F, Lauro, E, Facci, E, Parini, D, Armellino, M, Argenio, G, Porcu, A, Perra, T, Bordoni, P, Fleres, F, Parisi, A, Rossi, S, Saracco, R, Bono, D, Viora, T, Orlando, F, Ferrero, A, Fontana, A, De Paolis, P, Visconti, D, Quaglino, F, Festa, F, Palagi, S, Lo Secco, G, Morino, M, Allaix, M, Salzano, A, Tirone, G, Motter, M, Zanus, G, Passuello, N, Massani, M, Tutino, R, Manzini, N, Terranova, S, Merenda, R, Nordio, S, Zonta, S, Lovisetto, F, Guglielmi, A, Campagnaro, T, Amedeo, E, Scollica, M, Amodio, P, Giannotti, D, Olmi, S, and Oldani, A
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,COVID-19 Pandemic ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Endoscopic surgery ,NO ,Appendectomy ,Appendicitis ,Machine learning ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,Retrospective Studie ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,Appendiciti ,Laparoscopy ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,COVID-19 Pandemic, Appendicitis, Appendicectomy, Machine learning ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Settore MED/18 ,Surgery ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,appendicitis ,COVID-19 pandemic ,machine learning ,appendectomy ,cohort studies ,humans ,length of stay ,pandemics ,postoperative complications ,retrospective studies ,laparoscopy ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Observational study ,Original Article ,Postoperative Complication ,Appendicectomy ,Cohort Studie ,business ,Complication ,Cohort study ,Human - Abstract
Major surgical societies advised using non-operative management of appendicitis and suggested against laparoscopy during the COVID-19 pandemic. The hypothesis is that a significant reduction in the number of emergent appendectomies was observed during the pandemic, restricted to complex cases. The study aimed to analyse emergent surgical appendectomies during pandemic on a national basis and compare it to the same period of the previous year. This is a multicentre, retrospective, observational study investigating the outcomes of patients undergoing emergent appendectomy in March–April 2019 vs March–April 2020. The primary outcome was the number of appendectomies performed, classified according to the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) score. Secondary outcomes were the type of surgical technique employed (laparoscopic vs open) and the complication rates. One thousand five hundred forty one patients with acute appendicitis underwent surgery during the two study periods. 1337 (86.8%) patients met the inclusion criteria: 546 (40.8%) patients underwent surgery for acute appendicitis in 2020 and 791 (59.2%) in 2019. According to AAST, patients with complicated appendicitis operated in 2019 were 30.3% vs 39.9% in 2020 (p = 0.001). We observed an increase in the number of post-operative complications in 2020 (15.9%) compared to 2019 (9.6%) (p 24 h after admission (+ 58%), open surgery (+ 112%) and conversion to open surgery (+ 166%). In Italian hospitals, in March and April 2020, the number of appendectomies has drastically dropped. During the first pandemic wave, patients undergoing surgery were more frequently affected by more severe appendicitis than the previous year's timeframe and experienced a higher number of complications. Trial registration number and date: Research Registry ID 5789, May 7th, 2020
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- 2021
8. Denosumab for bone health in prostate and breast cancer patients receiving endocrine therapy? A systematic review and a meta-analysis of randomized trials
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L. Castellana, Sofia Cutaia, Sergio Rizzo, Mario Adelfio Latteri, Antonio Galvano, Antonio Russo, Lorena Incorvaia, Giuseppe Badalamenti, Stefania Cusenza, Daniele Santini, Letizia Mauro Giulia, Mario Roselli, Dalila Scaturro, Fiorella Guadagni, Viviana Bazan, Stefania Gori, and Galvano A, Scaturro D, Badalamenti G, Incorvaia L, Rizzo S, Castellana L, Cusenza S, Cutaia S, Santini D, Guadagni F, Roselli M, Gori S, Latteri M, Bazan V, Letizia Mauro G, Russo A
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,RCTs, randomized clinical trial ,randomized clinical trials ,lcsh:Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica ,Osteoporosis ,BMD, bone mass density ,Review Article ,androgen deprivation therapy ,ADT ,law.invention ,Androgen deprivation therapy ,Prostate cancer ,hazard ratio ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,HR ,Medicine ,Breast ,SAEs ,Cancer ,Prostate ,RANKL ,CI ,MD, mean difference ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RCTs, randomized clinical trials ,Denosumab ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,SAEs, serious adverse events ,mean difference ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,RANKL, receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB ligand ,BMD ,Internal medicine ,Adverse effect ,ADT, androgen deprivation therapy ,RCTs ,business.industry ,MD ,medicine.disease ,HR, hazard ratio ,Hormone ,receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB ligand ,Discontinuation ,CI, confidence interval ,030104 developmental biology ,Fracture ,confidence interval ,serious adverse events ,bone mass density ,lcsh:RC925-935 ,business - Abstract
Highlights • Hormonal receptors positive breast tumor and prostate cancer are managed with endocrine therapies. • Endocrine therapies designed for breast and prostate cancer are often associated to serious adverse skeletal related events, such fractures. • Denosumab is a monoclonal anti-body binding RANKL which acts as inhibitor of osteoclasts activity, thus increasing bone mass. • Denosumab was showed to strongly prevent hormonal therapies-related skeletal issues. • Denosumab administration results safe in bone mass increase and reduction of fractures risk., Hormonal therapies for receptor positive-breast and prostate cancer patients have shown clinical efficacy but also several side effects including osteoporosis, loss of bone mass and increased fracture risk. Denosumab represents an anti RANKL (receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB ligand) monoclonal anti-body acting as inhibitor of osteoclasts formation, function, and survival, then increasing bone mass. Herein, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to evaluate the role of Denosumab in saving bone health in prostate and breast cancer patients receiving respectively androgen deprivation therapy and adjuvant endocrine therapy. Moreover, selected patients have to be treated with Denosumab at the dose of 60 mg every six month or placebo. Outcomes studied included the bone mass density (BMD) increase at 24 and 36 months, BMD loss, reduction of fractures risk (in particular vertebral) at 24 and 36 months and safety (overall, serious adverse events – SAEs and discontinuation rate). Our results showed a reduction of the BMD loss up to 36 months both at the lumbar and femoral level and a BMD increase both at 24 and 36 months. It was also found a reduction in the number of new vertebral and femoral fractures at 24 and 36 months. Finally, our pooled analysis showed that Denosumab did not affect both the SAEs and therapy discontinuation risk. In conclusion, Denosumab administration can be considered effective and safe in the prevention and management of the above mentioned adverse events related to hormonal therapies designed for breast and prostate tumors.
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- 2019
9. Innovative treatments for obesity and NAFLD: A bibliometric study on antioxidants, herbs, phytochemicals, and natural compounds.
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Pezzino S, Sofia M, Mazzone C, Litrico G, Greco LP, Gallo L, La Greca G, and Latteri S
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The increasing scientific interest in antioxidants and naturally derived compounds as potential remedies for obesity and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has led to extensive research. The objective of this bibliometric analysis is to present an updated perspective on the topic of antioxidants, herbs, phytochemicals, and natural compounds, in the control of obesity and NAFLD, to identify new areas for future research. Publications from the years 2012-2022 were retrieved using the Scopus database. The research trends were analyzed using the Biblioshiny and VOSviewer tools. The field has seen a significant increase in research activity, as indicated by an annual growth rate of 10 % in the number of published manuscripts. China, Korea, and the USA emerged as the most prominent contributors in this specific field, supported by their notable volumes of publications and citations. The density analysis revealed that the most frequently occurring authors' keywords related to herbal species are, in rank order , Camelia sinensis, Momordica charantia, Curcuma longa, Ilex paraguariensis, Panax ginseng, Moringa oleifera, Garcinia cambogia, Garcinia mangostana, Zingiber officinale, and Cinnamomum verum. In the group of antioxidants, phytochemicals, and natural compounds, the top 10 were resveratrol, curcumin, quercetin, vitamin E, alpha-lipoic acid, vitamin C, chlorogenic acid, lycopene, fucoxanthin, and berberine. The co-occurrence analysis unveiled significant themes and potential trends, including a notable interest in the impact of herbal species, antioxidants, phytochemicals, and natural compounds on obesity and NAFLD through the modulation of the gut microbiome. Another recurring theme that arises, is the ongoing investigation of molecular targets that demonstrate anti-adipogenesis properties. The analysis presented in this study provides valuable insights for researchers investigating the efficacy of antioxidants, herbs, phytochemicals, and natural compounds in addressing obesity and NAFLD. Through the use of bibliometric methods, the study offers a comprehensive overview. Furthermore, the findings of this analysis can serve as a foundation for future research in this specific domain., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2024
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10. The surgical treatment of Morgagni hernias in adults: a systematic review for the standardization of laparoscopic surgical repair.
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Schembari E, Reitano E, Sofia M, Latteri S, and La Greca G
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Recurrence, Treatment Outcome, Hernias, Diaphragmatic, Congenital surgery, Herniorrhaphy methods, Laparoscopy methods, Operative Time, Surgical Mesh
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A Morgagni hernia is a congenital diaphragmatic hernia that is rarely diagnosed in adults, and the technique for its repair has not yet been standardized. This review will give an overview of the different laparoscopic methods reported by other authors, highlighting the key points indicating a good repair to help standardize the technique. A systematic review of the available articles on PubMed was conducted according to PRISMA 2020 by two authors independently in May 2022. Only articles written in English were included. A total of 180 case reports of laparoscopic Morgagni's hernia repair procedures were found; direct repair was performed in 59 patients, mesh was used in 119 patients, and mesh was not used in 2 patients. The hernia sac was removed in 71 patients, and the defect was closed before mesh placement in 49 patients. Nonabsorbable, dual or biologic mesh was used. The mean operative time was 92.65 min for direct repair and 84.11 min for mesh repair. One recurrence was reported in the direct repair series. The optimal method of repair has not yet been identified. The laparoscopic approach is associated to fewer complications and facilitates a faster recovery than the open approach. Several manoeuvres have been reported to help surgeons, who are not trained in laparoscopic knotting, perform extracorporeal knotting. Mesh should be placed when tension is too high after a direct repair or when primary closure cannot be achieved., (© 2023. Crown.)
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- 2024
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11. Exploring public interest in gut microbiome dysbiosis, NAFLD, and probiotics using Google Trends.
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Pezzino S, Sofia M, Mazzone C, Litrico G, Agosta M, La Greca G, and Latteri S
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- Humans, Dysbiosis, Search Engine, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease epidemiology, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease therapy, Probiotics therapeutic use
- Abstract
Scientific interest related to the role of gut microbiome dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has now been established and is constantly growing. Therefore, balancing dysbiosis, through probiotics, would be a potential therapy. In addition to scientific interest, on the other hand, it is important to evaluate the interest in these topics among the population. This study aimed to analyze, temporally and geographically, the public's interest in gut microbiome dysbiosis, NAFLD, and the use of gut probiotics. The most widely used free tool for analyzing online behavior is Google Trends. Using Google Trends data, we have analyzed worldwide volume searches for the terms "gut microbiome", "dysbiosis", "NAFLD" and "gut probiotic" for the period from 1, January 2007 to 31 December 2022. Google's relative search volume (RSV) was collected for all terms and analyzed temporally and geographically. The RSV for the term "gut microbiome" has a growth rate of more than 1400% followed, by "gut probiotics" (829%), NAFLD (795%), and "dysbiosis" (267%) from 2007 to 2012. In Australia and New Zealand, we found the highest RSV score for the term "dysbiosis" and "gut probiotics". Moreover, we found the highest RSV score for the term "NAFLD" in the three countries: South Korea, Singapore, and the Philippines. Google Trends analysis showed that people all over the world are interested in and aware of gut microbiome dysbiosis, NAFLD, and the use of gut probiotics. These data change over time and have a geographical distribution that could reflect the epidemiological worldwide condition of NAFLD and the state of the probiotic market., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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12. Role of Perturbated Hemostasis in MASLD and Its Correlation with Adipokines.
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Pezzino S, Luca T, Castorina M, Puleo S, Latteri S, and Castorina S
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The prevalence of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) continues to rise, making it one of the most prevalent chronic liver disorders. MASLD encompasses a range of liver pathologies, from simple steatosis to metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) with inflammation, hepatocyte damage, and fibrosis. Interestingly, the liver exhibits close intercommunication with fatty tissue. In fact, adipose tissue could contribute to the etiology and advancement of MASLD, acting as an endocrine organ that releases several hormones and cytokines, with the adipokines assuming a pivotal role. The levels of adipokines in the blood are altered in people with MASLD, and recent research has shed light on the crucial role played by adipokines in regulating energy expenditure, inflammation, and fibrosis in MASLD. However, MASLD disease is a multifaceted condition that affects various aspects of health beyond liver function, including its impact on hemostasis. The alterations in coagulation mechanisms and endothelial and platelet functions may play a role in the increased vulnerability and severity of MASLD. Therefore, more attention is being given to imbalanced adipokines as causative agents in causing disturbances in hemostasis in MASLD. Metabolic inflammation and hepatic injury are fundamental components of MASLD, and the interrelation between these biological components and the hemostasis pathway is delineated by reciprocal influences, as well as the induction of alterations. Adipokines have the potential to serve as the shared elements within this complex interrelationship. The objective of this review is to thoroughly examine the existing scientific knowledge on the impairment of hemostasis in MASLD and its connection with adipokines, with the aim of enhancing our comprehension of the disease.
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- 2024
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13. Awake laparoscopic cholecystectomy: A case report and review of literature.
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Mazzone C, Sofia M, Sarvà I, Litrico G, Di Stefano AML, La Greca G, and Latteri S
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Background: Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) is one of the most widely practiced surgical procedures in abdominal surgery. Patients undergo LC during general anaesthesia; however, in recent years, several studies have suggested the ability to perform LC in patients who are awake. We report a case of awake LC and a literature review., Case Summary: A 69-year-old patient with severe pulmonary disease affected by cholelithiasis was scheduled for LC under regional anaesthesia. We first performed peridural anaesthesia at the T8-T9 level and then spinal anaesthesia at the T12-L1 level. The procedure was managed in total comfort for both the patient and the surgeon. The intra-abdominal pressure was 8 mmHg. The patient remained stable throughout the procedure, and the postoperative course was uneventful., Conclusion: Evidence has warranted the safe use of spinal and epidural anaesthesia, with minimal side effects easily managed with medications. Regional anaesthesia in selected patients may provide some advantages over general anaesthesia, such as no airway manipulation, maintenance of spontaneous breathing, effective postoperative analgesia, less nausea and vomiting, and early recovery. However, this technique for LC is not widely used in Europe; this is the first case reported in Italy in the literature. Regional anaesthesia is feasible and safe in performing some types of laparoscopic procedures. Further studies should be carried out to introduce this type of anaesthesia in routine clinical practice., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: All the authors report no relevant conflicts of interest for this article., (©The Author(s) 2023. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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14. Gut Microbiome in the Progression of NAFLD, NASH and Cirrhosis, and Its Connection with Biotics: A Bibliometric Study Using Dimensions Scientific Research Database.
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Pezzino S, Sofia M, Mazzone C, Castorina S, Puleo S, Barchitta M, Agodi A, Gallo L, La Greca G, and Latteri S
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There is growing evidence that gut microbiota dysbiosis is linked to the etiopathogenesis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), from the initial stage of disease until the progressive stage of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and the final stage of cirrhosis. Conversely, probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics have shown promise in restoring dysbiosis and lowering clinical indicators of disease in a number of both preclinical and clinical studies. Additionally, postbiotics and parabiotics have recently garnered some attention. The purpose of this bibliometric analysis is to assess recent publishing trends concerning the role of the gut microbiome in the progression of NAFLD, NASH and cirrhosis and its connection with biotics. The free access version of the Dimensions scientific research database was used to find publications in this field from 2002 to 2022. VOSviewer and Dimensions' integrated tools were used to analyze current research trends. Research into the following topics is expected to emerge in this field: (1) evaluation of risk factors which are correlated with the progression of NAFLD, such as obesity and metabolic syndrome; (2) pathogenic mechanisms, such as liver inflammation through toll-like receptors activation, or alteration of short-chain fatty acids metabolisms, which contribute to NAFLD development and its progression in more severe forms, such as cirrhosis; (3) therapy for cirrhosis through dysbiosis reduction, and research on hepatic encephalopathy a common consequence of cirrhosis; (4) evaluation of diversity, and composition of gut microbiome under NAFLD, and as it varies under NASH and cirrhosis by rRNA gene sequencing, a tool which can also be used for the development of new probiotics and explore into the impact of biotics on the gut microbiome; (5) treatments to reduce dysbiosis with new probiotics, such as Akkermansia , or with fecal microbiome transplantation.
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- 2023
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15. Mechanisms linking bariatric surgery to adipose tissue, glucose metabolism, fatty liver disease and gut microbiota.
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Latteri S, Sofia M, Puleo S, Di Vincenzo A, Cinti S, and Castorina S
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- Humans, Adipose Tissue metabolism, Obesity surgery, Glucose metabolism, Liver, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease metabolism, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Bariatric Surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: In the last 20 years, bariatric surgery has achieved an important role in translational and clinical research because of obesity comorbidities. Initially, a tool to lose weight, bariatric surgery now has been shown to be involved in several metabolic pathways., Methods: We conducted a narrative review discussing the underlying mechanisms that could explain the impact of bariatric surgery and the relationship between obesity and adipose tissue, T2D, gut microbiota, and NAFLD., Results: Bariatric surgery has an impact in the relation between obesity and type 2 diabetes, but in addition it induces the white-to-brown adipocyte trans-differentiation, by enhancing thermogenesis. Another issue is the connection of bariatric surgery with the gut microbiota and its role in the complex mechanism underlying weight gain., Conclusion: Bariatric surgery modifies gut microbiota, and these modifications influence lipid metabolism, leading to improvement of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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16. The impact of bariatric surgery on colorectal cancer risk.
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D'Amato S, Sofia M, Agosta M, Litrico G, Sarvà I, La Greca G, and Latteri S
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- Animals, Humans, Obesity complications, Obesity surgery, Gastrectomy methods, Retrospective Studies, Obesity, Morbid complications, Obesity, Morbid surgery, Gastric Bypass methods, Bariatric Surgery adverse effects, Colorectal Neoplasms etiology, Colorectal Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Obesity is considered a risk factor for different types of cancer, including colorectal cancer (CRC). Bariatric surgery has been associated with improvements in obesity-related co-morbidities and reductions in overall cancer risk. However, given the contradictory outcomes of several cohort studies, the impact of bariatric surgery on CRC risk appears controversial. Furthermore, measurement of CRC biomarkers following Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) has revealed hyperproliferation and increased pro-inflammatory gene expression in the rectal mucosa. The proposed mechanisms leading to increased CRC risk are alterations of the gut microbiota and exposure of the colorectum to high concentrations of bile acids, both of which are caused by RYGB-induced anatomical rearrangements. Studies in animals and humans have highlighted the similarities between RYGB-induced microbial profiles and the gut microbiota documented in CRC. Microbial alterations common to post-RYGB cases and CRC include the enrichment of pro-inflammatory microbes and reduction in butyrate-producing bacteria. Lower concentrations of butyrate following RYGB may also contribute to an increased risk of CRC, given the anti-inflammatory and anticarcinogenic properties of this molecule. Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy appears to have a more moderate impact than RYGB; however, relatively few animal and human studies have investigated its effects on CRC risk. Moreover, evidence regarding the impact of anastomosis gastric bypass on one is even more limited. Therefore, further studies are required to establish whether the potential increase in CRC risk is restricted to RYGB or may also be associated with other bariatric procedures., (Copyright © 2023 American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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17. Microbiome Dysbiosis: A Pathological Mechanism at the Intersection of Obesity and Glaucoma.
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Pezzino S, Sofia M, Greco LP, Litrico G, Filippello G, Sarvà I, La Greca G, and Latteri S
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- Humans, Dysbiosis pathology, Neuroinflammatory Diseases, Ecosystem, Retina pathology, Obesity pathology, Glaucoma pathology, Gastrointestinal Microbiome physiology
- Abstract
The rate at which obesity is becoming an epidemic in many countries is alarming. Obese individuals have a high risk of developing elevated intraocular pressure and glaucoma. Additionally, glaucoma is a disease of epidemic proportions. It is characterized by neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation with optic neuropathy and the death of retinal ganglion cells (RGC). On the other hand, there is growing interest in microbiome dysbiosis, particularly in the gut, which has been widely acknowledged to play a prominent role in the etiology of metabolic illnesses such as obesity. Recently, studies have begun to highlight the fact that microbiome dysbiosis could play a critical role in the onset and progression of several neurodegenerative diseases, as well as in the development and progression of several ocular disorders. In obese individuals, gut microbiome dysbiosis can induce endotoxemia and systemic inflammation by causing intestinal barrier malfunction. As a result, bacteria and their metabolites could be delivered via the bloodstream or mesenteric lymphatic vessels to ocular regions at the level of the retina and optic nerve, causing tissue degeneration and neuroinflammation. Nowadays, there is preliminary evidence for the existence of brain and intraocular microbiomes. The altered microbiome of the gut could perturb the resident brain-ocular microbiome ecosystem which, in turn, could exacerbate the local inflammation. All these processes, finally, could lead to the death of RGC and neurodegeneration. The purpose of this literature review is to explore the recent evidence on the role of gut microbiome dysbiosis and related inflammation as common mechanisms underlying obesity and glaucoma.
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- 2023
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18. Gut-Liver Axis and Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: A Vicious Circle of Dysfunctions Orchestrated by the Gut Microbiome.
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Pezzino S, Sofia M, Faletra G, Mazzone C, Litrico G, La Greca G, and Latteri S
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Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a prevalent, multifactorial, and poorly understood liver disease with an increasing incidence worldwide. NAFLD is typically asymptomatic and coupled with other symptoms of metabolic syndrome. The prevalence of NAFLD is rising in tandem with the prevalence of obesity. In the Western hemisphere, NAFLD is one of the most prevalent causes of liver disease and liver transplantation. Recent research suggests that gut microbiome dysbiosis may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of NAFLD by dysregulating the gut-liver axis. The so-called "gut-liver axis" refers to the communication and feedback loop between the digestive system and the liver. Several pathological mechanisms characterized the alteration of the gut-liver axis, such as the impairment of the gut barrier and the increase of the intestinal permeability which result in endotoxemia and inflammation, and changes in bile acid profiles and metabolite levels produced by the gut microbiome. This review will explore the role of gut-liver axis disruption, mediated by gut microbiome dysbiosis, on NAFLD development.
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- 2022
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19. Traumatic limb wounds management: Efficacy of silver and hyaluronic acid-containing dressings.
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Schembari E, Latteri S, Reitano E, Russello D, and La Greca G
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- Bandages, Extremities, Humans, Wound Healing, Hyaluronic Acid therapeutic use, Silver
- Abstract
Traumatic limb wound management represents a common and challenging health problem. Conservative treatment can be a good option when surgery fails or surgical reconstruction is planned. Wound healing is a complex process that involves several factors and can be delayed if wound details are not noticed. So, expert healthcare professionals should take care of these delicate patients to obtain satisfactory outcomes in terms of cosmesis and functionality of the residual scar. Thanks to the description of three patients with traumatic limb injuries, this article emphasizes the importance of respecting what we call the three golden rules of wound management: correct cleaning of the wound, its accurate inspection and choose the appropriate dressing according to the wound aspect., (Copyright © 2021 Tissue Viability Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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20. Quantifying the scientific interest in surgical training and education: numerical evidence of a PubMed analysis.
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La Greca G, Schembari E, Bortolussi C, Pesce A, Vitale M, Latteri S, Reitano E, and Russello D
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- Education, Medical trends, Humans, Time Factors, Bibliography of Medicine, Education, Medical methods, Education, Medical statistics & numerical data, General Surgery education, PubMed statistics & numerical data, Publishing statistics & numerical data, Publishing trends, Research statistics & numerical data, Research trends
- Abstract
The scientific interest (SI) for a given field can be ascertained by quantifying the volume of published research. We quantified the SI in surgical education to clarify the extent of worldwide efforts on this crucial factor required to improve health-care systems. A set of Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) was defined for the PubMed search. The number of Pubmed Indexed Papers (nPIP) relevant to the SI was extracted from database conception to December 2016 and their distribution and evolution by country were analyzed at 10-year intervals. Population Adjusted Index (PAI) and Medical School Adjusted Index (MSAI) analyses were performed for countries with the nPIP > 30. We identified 51,713 articles written in 33 different languages related to surgical education; 87.6% of these were written in English. General surgery was the leading surgical specialty. The overall nPIP doubled every 10 years from 1987 (from 6009 to 13,501, to 26,272) but stabilized at 3707, 3800 and 3433 in the past 3 years, respectively. The PAI and MSAI analyses showed that the USA, United Kingdom, New Zealand, Canada, Australia and Ireland are top producers of published research in surgical education, constituting a combined 62.88% of the nPIP. Our quantification of the change in SI in surgical education and training gives a clear picture of evolution, efforts and leadership worldwide over time. This picture mirrors an international academic society that should encourage all those involved in surgical education to improve efforts in educational research.
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- 2021
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21. Blunt liver trauma: effectiveness and evolution of non-operative management (NOM) in 145 consecutive cases.
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Schembari E, Sofia M, Latteri S, Pesce A, Palumbo V, Mannino M, Russello D, and La Greca G
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Clinical Decision-Making, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Selection, Retrospective Studies, Trauma Severity Indices, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Abdominal Injuries therapy, Conservative Treatment methods, Liver injuries, Wounds, Nonpenetrating therapy
- Abstract
In recent decades, haemodynamically stable patients with traumatic liver injuries have been managed conservatively. The primary aim of this study is to retrospectively analyse the outcomes of the authors' approach to blunt hepatic trauma according to the degree of injury. The secondary aim is to analyse the changes in the decision-making process for blunt liver trauma management over the last 10 years. A total of 145 patients with blunt liver trauma managed by one trauma team were included in the study. Causes, sites and grades of injury, clinical conditions, ultrasonography and CT results, associated injuries, laboratory data, types of treatment (surgical or non-operative management/NOM), blood transfusions, complications, and lengths of hospitalization were recorded and analysed. A total of 85.5% of patients had extrahepatic injuries. The most frequently involved liver segments were VII (50.3%), VI (48.3%) and V (40.7%). The most common injury was grade III OIS (40.6%). Fifty-nine patients (40.7%) were treated surgically, with complications in 23.7% of patients, whereas 86 patients (59.3%) underwent NOM, with a complication rate of only 10.5%. The evolution over the last 10 years showed an overall increase in the NOM rate. This clinical experience confirmed that NOM was the most appropriate therapeutic choice for blunt liver trauma even in high-grade injuries and resulted in a 100% effectiveness rate with a 0% rate of conversion to surgical treatment. The relevant increase in the use of NOM did not influence the effectiveness or safety levels over the last 10 years; this was certainly related to the increasing experience of the team and the meticulous selection and monitoring of patients.
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- 2020
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22. Is the sublay self-gripping mesh effective for incisional ventral hernia repair? Our experience and a systematic review of the literature.
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Schembari E, Sofia M, Lombardo R, Randazzo V, Coco O, Mattone E, La Greca G, Russello D, and Latteri S
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- Elective Surgical Procedures methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Recurrence, Treatment Outcome, Hernia, Ventral surgery, Herniorrhaphy methods, Incisional Hernia surgery, Surgical Mesh
- Abstract
Sublay mesh repair seems to be the most effective method for treating incisional hernias (IHs). The aim of this study was to report our experience with retromuscular repair and self-gripping mesh for the treatment of midline IHs. In addition, we provided a systematic review of the literature regarding the use of this novel combination. All patients undergoing elective IH repair from June 2016 to November 2018 were included. The self-gripping mesh was placed in the sublay position. Demographic data, defect sizes, postoperative complications and follow-up durations were collected. A systematic review of the available literature was conducted in January 2020 using main databases. A total of 37 patients (20/17M/F) were included in this study, and the mean age and body mass index (BMI) were 58 years and 27 kg/m
2 , respectively. Minor complications occurred in six patients. Long-term follow-up demonstrated recurrence in three patients. Regarding the review, five publications were considered relevant. The highest complication rate was 28.6%, and the recurrence rate varied from 0 to 5.1%. This is the first review of the literature regarding sublay IH repair using a self-gripping mesh. The low rates of postoperative complications and recurrence in our experience and those reported by most of the reviewed articles demonstrate that this is a safe and effective method for repairing IHs.- Published
- 2020
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23. Folate levels in hepatocellular carcinoma patients with portal vein thrombosis.
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Malaguarnera G, Catania VE, Latteri S, Borzì AM, Bertino G, Madeddu R, Drago F, and Malaguarnera M
- Subjects
- Female, Folic Acid, Humans, Male, Portal Vein, Retrospective Studies, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular complications, Liver Neoplasms complications, Venous Thrombosis complications
- Abstract
Background: Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) occurs frequently in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and is often diagnosed in the course of a routine patient evaluation and surveillance for liver cancer. The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between folate status and portal vein thrombosis., Methods: HCC with PVT patients were 78, HCC without PVT were 60 and control subjects were 70 randomly selected. We evaluate serum and red blood cellular folate, homocysteine, alpha fetal protein cholesterol, triglycerides, prothrombin time., Results: HCC patients with PVT showed lower levels of serum folate, respect HCC patients without PVT, with an average difference of 1.6 nmol/l p < 0.01 (95% CI - 2.54 to - 0.66), red cell folate 33.6 nmol/l p < 0.001 (95% CI - 43.64 to - 23.55) and albumin 0.29 g/dl p < 0.001 (95% CI - 0.42 to - 0.15); PVT patients displayed higher levels of bilirubin 0.53 mg/dl p < 0.001 (95% CI 0.23 to 0.78), INR 0.91 p < 0.001 (95% CI 0.72 to 1.09), γGT 7.9 IU/l (95% CI 4.14 to 11.65) and homocysteine 4.6 μmol/l p < 0.05 (95% CI 0.32 to 8.87) CONCLUSION: The low folate concentration and higher levels of homocysteine are associated with the loss of antithrombotic function, and with a more aggressive course of HCC and with a higher change of complications related to portal vein thrombosis.
- Published
- 2020
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24. Acute acalculous cholecystitis on a COVID-19 patient: a case report.
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Mattone E, Sofia M, Schembari E, Palumbo V, Bonaccorso R, Randazzo V, La Greca G, Iacobello C, Russello D, and Latteri S
- Abstract
Introduction: We report an extremely rare case of acute acalculous cholecystitis on a COVID-19 patient. In our knowledge, this is the first report of laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed on a COVID-19 patient., Presentation of Case: A COVID-19 patient was diagnosed with acute acalculous cholecystitis and a multidisciplinary team decided to perform a percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD) as the first treatment. SARS-CoV-2 RNA was not found in the bile fluid. Because of deterioration of the patient's clinical conditions, laparoscopic cholecystectomy had to be performed and since the gallbladder was gangrenous, the severe inflammation made surgery difficult to perform., Discussion: Acalculous cholecystitis was related with mechanical ventilation and prolonged total parenteral nutrition, in this case the gangrenous histopathology pattern and the gallbladder wall ischemia was probably caused by vascular insufficiency secondary to severe acute respiratory distress syndrome of COVID-19 pneumonia. The percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage (PTBD) was performed according to Tokyo Guidelines because of high surgical risk. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy was next performed due to no clinical improvement. The absence of viral RNA in the bile highlights that SARS-CoV-2 is not eliminated with the bile while it probably infects small intestinal enterocytes which is responsible of gastrointestinal symptoms such as anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea., Conclusions: Although the lack of evidence and guidelines about the management of patient with acute cholecystitis during COVID-19 pandemic, laparoscopic cholecystectomy, at most preceded by PTGBD on high surgical risk patients, remains the gold standard for the treatment of acute cholecystitis on COVID-19 patients., Competing Interests: All authors of the manuscript have read and agreed to its content and are accountable for all aspects of the accuracy and integrity of the manuscript in accordance with ICMJE criteria. The article is original, has not already been published in a journal, and is not currently under consideration by another journal. All authors agree to the terms of the BioMed Central Copyright and License Agreement and Open Data policy., (© 2020 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2020
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25. Corrigendum to "Iatrogenic nerve lesion following laparoscopic surgery. A case reportˮ [Ann. Med. Surg. 28 (2018) 34-37].
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Vecchio M, Santamato A, Genovese F, Malaguarnera G, Catania VE, and Latteri S
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1016/j.amsu.2018.02.002.]., (© 2020 The Author(s).)
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- 2020
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26. High Carbohydrate 19-9 Antigen Serum Levels in Patients with Nonmelanoma Skin Cancer and Primary Occult Cancer.
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Malaguarnera G, Latteri S, Madeddu R, Catania VE, Bertino G, Perrotta RE, Dinotta F, and Malaguarnera M
- Abstract
Background: Non-melanoma skin cancers (NMSC), despite having a favourable prognosis, present an increased risk of occult malignancies. The aim of this study was the evaluation of the usefulness of the mucinous marker carbohydrate 19-9 antigen (CA 19-9) in the diagnosis of occult cancers. (1) Patients and Methods: This is a case control study in which 480 patients with NMSC and 480 matched control subjects with dermatitis were enrolled; 208 patients with NMSC showed upper-normal CA 19-9 values, and 272 showed under-normal CA 19-9 values. (2) Results: The 208 patients positive for CA 19-9 included 87 with basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and 121 with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). The 272 patients negative for CA 19-9 included 107 with BCC and 165 with SCC. For the SCC patients, CA 19-9 serum levels were significant in 121 of the patients (positive), 66 of which were affected by cancer; CA 19-9 was within the normal range in 165 patients, of which 30 were diagnosed with cancer. In the SCC patients, the CA 19-9 sensitivity was 68%, the specificity was 70%, the positive predictive value (PPV) was 54% (95%) and the negative predictive value (NPV) was 81%. In the BCC patients, the CA 19-9 sensitivity was 70%, the specificity was 66%, the PPV was 48% and the NPV was 83%. In the dermatitis patients (controls), we observed 121 patients that were CA 19-9 positive, with 15 malignancies, and 359 CA 19-9-negative patients, with three malignancies. (3) Conclusions: To confirm the association between CA 19-9 and an elevated risk of malignancies in NMSC, prospective cohort studies should be performed.
- Published
- 2020
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27. Traumatic perforated diverticulum of the fourth duodenal portion: First case report and literature review.
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Palumbo V, Sofia M, Mattone E, Bonaccorso R, Guastella T, La Greca G, Russello D, and Latteri S
- Abstract
Introduction: Duodenal rupture following blunt abdominal trauma is rare, and traumatic rupture of duodenal diverticula is exceptional. However, duodenum is the second most frequent location of intestinal diverticula following colon. Duodenal diverticula are common but only in few cases they are symptomatic due to the onset of complications such as inflammation, hemorrhage, or perforation. Perforation, although rare, especially post-trauma, is the most serious life threatening complication., Case Presentation: We report the case of a patient who, 24 hours after a blunt trauma secondary to a car accident, complained symptoms related to the perforation of a diverticulum of the fourth portion of the duodenum. A computed tomography was performed and extraluminal fluid-air collection was identified. During emergent laparotomy, a fourth portion perforated duodenal diverticulum was diagnosed, and resected. The recovery was uneventful., Discussion: Diagnosis of perforated duodenal diverticulum represents a challenge in diagnosis and few guidelines exist about the management of this rare occurrence, especially in a traumatic setting. The present case is the first report of traumatic perforated diverticulum of the fourth duodenal portion., Conclusion: Surgery still remain the most common approach in the treatment of this pathology, including diverticulectomy and primary repair., (© 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of IJS Publishing Group Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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28. Comparison of clinical and pathological findings of patients undergoing elective colectomy for uncomplicated diverticulitis.
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Pesce A, Barchitta M, Agodi A, Salerno M, La Greca G, Magro G, Latteri S, and Puleo S
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Colectomy, Colonic Diseases pathology, Diverticulitis pathology, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Retrospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Sex Factors, Colonic Diseases surgery, Diverticulitis surgery
- Abstract
Diverticular disease affects ∼5-10% people worldwide, yet the indications for elective colectomy in uncomplicated diverticulitis are unclear. As there is no strong scientific evidence regarding histology in diverticular disease, the primary outcome of the study was to analyze the degree of inflammation of colonic wall in patients that underwent elective colectomy for uncomplicated diverticulitis and to retrospectively assess the correlation between patient clinical history and pathological features of surgical specimens in order to find some predictive factors that may be strictly correlated with histology. An observational retrospective study was conducted. Patients undergoing elective colectomy for uncomplicated diverticulitis between January 2014 and January 2016 in an academic medical center were collected. The majority of patients (46.2%) had previously encountered one episode of acute diverticulitis prior to colectomy, while 21.5% and 10.8% had experienced two and three or more prior episodes respectively. Most patients had recurrent or chronic abdominal pain in the left iliac fossa (66.2%) for diverticular disease and a large proportion also experienced constipation (40.0%). Diverticulitis was identified pathologically as being "mild" in 44.6% patients and "severe" in 55.4% patients. The mean age was significantly lower in patients with severe diverticulitis (56.7 years) than in patients with mild diverticulitis (67.0 years). 71.9% of males had severe diverticulitis compared to 39.4% of females. Males have a 3.9 times higher risk of histological severe diverticulitis than females (OR = 3.932; 1.390-11.122; p = 0.008). Multivariate logistic regression analysis confirmed that age and gender were independent factors associated with histological diagnosis. Single-institution data and retrospective design were main limitations of this study. Age and gender are independent factors associated with severity inflammation index derived at histological analysis and they could be translated to clinical practice to better categorize patients with uncomplicated diverticulitis at the bedside.
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- 2020
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29. Biological Mesh Combined With Topical Negative Pressure Therapy in Complex Abdominal Wounds: A Short Series and a Review of the Literature.
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Schembari E, Santangelo A, Pesce A, Mannino M, Maria S, Russello D, Latteri S, and La Greca G
- Subjects
- Aged, Combined Modality Therapy methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy instrumentation, Abdominal Injuries surgery, Bioprosthesis, Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy methods, Surgical Mesh
- Abstract
Introduction: Complex abdominal wounds (CAWs) are an increasing clinical problem in abdominal surgery and pose a challenge for the surgeon., Objective: This review analyzes the results of treating CAWs with a porcine biological mesh and topical negative pressure (TNP) to address the feasibility, effectiveness, level of risk, and overall results., Materials and Methods: A series of 4 consecutive cases treated with the biologic mesh and TNP at the General Surgery Unit of the Cannizzaro Hospital (Catania, Italy) is reported and analyzed. In addition, a review of the literature published in all languages from 2000 to 2015 in the MEDLINE/PubMed database was performed to identify cases of CAWs treated with the association of biologic mesh and TNP., Results: Taking into account the authors' experience and review of literature, a total of 12 patients (4 treated in the authors' department) were treated with the aforementioned combination. The main indications for using this association were a large abdominal wall defect, laparotomy, or wound dehiscence and wound infection. In almost all cases, this combination demonstrated a successful outcome with a clear improvement in wound healing and no adverse effects., Conclusions: From these cases and the review of the literature, the authors believe TNP can be applied on a biological mesh with effectiveness in improving the treatment of the CAWs without relevant risk to the patient or biological mesh.
- Published
- 2020
30. Axillary Nodal Burden in Breast Cancer Patients With Pre-operative Fine Needle Aspiration-proven Positive Lymph Nodes Compared to Those With Positive Sentinel Nodes.
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Cipolla C, Valerio MR, Grassi N, Calamia S, Latteri S, Latteri M, Graceffa G, and Vieni S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Axilla pathology, Biopsy, Fine-Needle, Breast pathology, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Fine Needle Aspiration, Female, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Cytodiagnosis methods, Lymph Nodes pathology, Preoperative Care methods
- Abstract
Background/aim: Recent years have seen a considerable shift to a more conservative management of the axilla in patients with positive axillary sentinel lymph nodes. The aim of this study was to determine whether some breast cancer patients with a preoperative ultrasound-guided needle aspiration biopsy proven positive node could potentially be spared an axillary lymph node dissection according to the ACOSOG Z0011 trial criteria., Patients and Methods: A retrospective review was performed involving 623 breast cancer patients who underwent axillary lymph node dissection after either ultrasound-guided needle aspiration biopsy proven positive node or sentinel lymph node biopsy., Results: Patients with fine needle aspiration biopsy-proven positive node had worse prognosis and a higher nodal burden (6.7 vs 1.9 nodes, p<0.001), compared to those with positive sentinel lymph nodes., Conclusion: Patients with an ultrasound guided needle aspiration biopsy proven positive node are more likely to have tumor with more aggressive pathological characteristics and a higher nodal burden than those with a positive sentinel lymph node biopsy., (Copyright© 2020, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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31. A retrospective, Italian multicenter study of complex abdominal wall defect repair with a Permacol biological mesh.
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Russello D, Sofia M, Conti P, Latteri S, Pesce A, Scaravilli F, Vasta F, Trombatore G, Randazzo V, Schembari E, Barchitta M, Agodi A, and La Greca G
- Subjects
- Abdominal Wall physiopathology, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Biocompatible Materials administration & dosage, Female, Hernia, Ventral physiopathology, Herniorrhaphy, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications physiopathology, Prostheses and Implants, Swine, Abdominal Wall surgery, Collagen administration & dosage, Hernia, Ventral surgery, Surgical Mesh
- Abstract
Complex abdominal wall defects (CAWDs) can be difficult to repair and using a conventional synthetic mesh is often unsuitable. A biological mesh might offer a solution for CAWD repair, but the clinical outcomes are unclear. Here, we evaluated the efficacy of a cross-linked, acellular porcine dermal collagen matrix implant (Permacol) for CAWD repair in a cohort of 60 patients. Here, 58.3% patients presented with a grade 3 hernia (according to the Ventral Hernia Working Group grading system) and a contaminated surgical field. Permacol was implanted as a bridge in 46.7%, as an underlay (intraperitoneal position) in 38.3% and as a sublay (retromuscolar position) in 15% of patients. Fascia closure was achieved in 53.3% of patients. The surgical site occurrence rate was 35% and the defect size significantly influenced the probability of post-operative complications. The long-term (2 year) hernia recurrence rate was 36.2%. This study represents the first large multi-centre Italian case series on Permacol implants in patients with a CAWD. Our data suggest that Permacol is a feasible strategy to repair a CAWD, with acceptable early complications and long-term (2 year) recurrence rates.
- Published
- 2020
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32. Safety Profile of the New Harmonic Focus: Different Emissivity and Temperature Behavior Between the Active and the Inactive Blade.
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Latteri S, Stella G, Gueli AM, Mazzaglia S, Palumbo V, and Guastella T
- Subjects
- Animals, Burns prevention & control, Hot Temperature, Liver, Safety, Skin, Sus scrofa, Swine, Thermography, Time Factors, Ultrasonic Surgical Procedures instrumentation
- Abstract
Ultrasonic devices disperse less energy in the tissues. The new Harmonic Focus+ (HF+) seems to be more efficient but thermal damages have been reported. This study examined the temperature and the emissivity profile of the active and passive blades of the HF+, on a pig tissue model at different power settings. The FLIR System B series thermal imaging camera has been used on various biological pig tissues to evaluate the emissivity of the ultrasonic device. The active blade heats up faster than the passive one and the increase in power increases the speed of the temperature raising only on the active blade. Increasing the power setting reduces the dissection time and the temperature of both blades. Active blade temperatures of <60°C are obtained with cutting times close to 5 seconds; with these cutting times, the inactive blade does not exceed 30°C. The HF+ emissivity profiles demonstrate that the behavior of the inactive blade is significantly different from the active one. To prevent thermal damages, keep the active blade toward the operator, do not exceed 5 seconds of activation, use the maximum power, and avoid the use of the instrument as a dissector immediately after its activation.
- Published
- 2019
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33. Gastrointestinal stromal tumours of stomach: Robot-assisted excision with the da Vinci Surgical System regardless of size and location site.
- Author
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Furbetta N, Palmeri M, Guadagni S, Di Franco G, Gianardi D, Latteri S, Marciano E, Moglia A, Cuschieri A, Di Candio G, Mosca F, and Morelli L
- Abstract
Aims: The role of minimally invasive surgery of gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) of the stomach remains uncertain especially for large and/or difficult located tumours. We are hereby presenting a single-centre series of robot-assisted resections using the da Vinci Surgical System (Si or Xi)., Subjects and Methods: Data of patients undergoing robot-assisted treatment of gastric GIST were retrieved from the prospectively collected institutional database and a retrospective analysis was performed. Patients were stratified according to size and location of the tumour. Difficult cases (DCs) were considered for size if tumour was >50 mm and/or for location if the tumour was Type II, III or IV sec. Privette/Al-Thani classification., Results: Between May 2010 and February 2017, 12 consecutive patients underwent robot-assisted treatment of GIST at our institution. DCs were 10/12 cases (83.3%), of which 6/10 (50%) for location, 2/10 (25%) for size and 2/10 (25%) for both. The da Vinci Si was used in 8 patients, of which 6 (75%) were DC, and the da Vinci Xi in 4, all of which (100%) were DC. In all patients, excision was by wedge resection. All lesions had microscopically negative resection margins. There was no conversion to open surgery, no tumour ruptures or spillage and no intraoperative complications., Conclusion: Our experience suggests a positive role of the robot da Vinci in getting gastric GIST removal with a conservative approach, regardless of size and location site. Comparative studies with a greater number of patients are necessary for a more robust assessment., Competing Interests: None
- Published
- 2019
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34. Predictive Value of the Number of Harvested Lymph Nodes and Cut-Off for Lymph Node Ratio in the Prognosis of Stage II and III Colorectal Cancer Patients.
- Author
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Li Destri G, Barchitta M, Pesce A, Latteri S, Bosco D, Di Cataldo A, Agodi A, and Puleo S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Colorectal Neoplasms mortality, Colorectal Neoplasms surgery, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Lymph Nodes pathology, Lymph Nodes surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local prevention & control, Neoplasm Staging, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Survival Analysis, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Lymph Node Excision statistics & numerical data, Lymphatic Metastasis pathology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose/aim: The appropriate staging of colorectal cancer requires at least 12 lymph nodes to be sampled. We evaluated whether lymph node sampling (LNS) and lymph node ratio (LNR) can predict the prognosis of stage II-III patients., Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective study on 432 patients classified in LNS ≥12 and LNS <12. Disease-free survival (DFS) was computed using the Kaplan-Meier method. We stratified stage III patients into 4 quartiles base on LNR values. To determine the optimal LNR cut-off, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was performed., Results: There was a positive association between the number of lymph node sampled and the number of metastatic lymph nodes (p < 0.01). Among stage II patients, the DFS was 81% for LNS ≥ 12 and 72% for LNS < 12 (p = 0.158). Among stage III patients, the DFS was 58% (p < 0.001). We found a significant association between LNR quartiles and relapse in stage III patients but only in the LNS ≥ 12 group. ROC curve analysis indicated an ideal LNR cut-off value at 0.194 (sensitivity 65% and specificity 61%). The DFS of patients with LNR below 0.194 was 71%, and that of patients with LNR above 0.194 was 45% (log-rank test, p < 0.001). In the patients with LNS ≥ 12, the cut-off of 0.257 could predict recurrence (specificity 86%)., Conclusions: Stage II patients with LNS < 12 tend to have shorter DFS than stage II patients with LNS ≥ 12. In stage III patients, an appropriate LNR cut-off is a better prognostic predictor than LNR quartile, especially in patients with LNS ≥ 12.
- Published
- 2019
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35. Homocysteine Serum Levels as Prognostic Marker of Hepatocellular Carcinoma with Portal Vein Thrombosis.
- Author
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Latteri S, Malaguarnera G, Catania VE, La Greca G, Bertino G, Borzì AM, Drago F, and Malaguarnera M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Budd-Chiari Syndrome blood, Budd-Chiari Syndrome genetics, Budd-Chiari Syndrome pathology, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular genetics, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular pathology, Cholesterol, LDL blood, Female, Folic Acid genetics, Folic Acid metabolism, Humans, Liver Neoplasms genetics, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Portal Vein metabolism, Portal Vein pathology, Prognosis, Vitamin B 12 genetics, Vitamin B 12 metabolism, Vitamin B 6 genetics, Vitamin B 6 metabolism, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular blood, Homocysteine blood, Liver Neoplasms blood
- Abstract
Background: Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) is a common complication of endstage hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The aim of our study was to evaluate the role of Homocysteine (Hcy) in HCC patient with PVT. Hcy is a sulphur amino-acid involved in two pathways, trans-sulphuration and remethylation, that involve vitamins B6, B12 and folates., Methods: We recruited 54 patients with HCC and PVT, 60 patients with HCC and without PVT and 60 control subjects. We measured serum levels of Hcy, folate, vitamins B6 and B12., Results: The comparison between HCC patients with PVT versus HCC without PVT was shown that mean values of Hcy were 6.4 nmol/L (p<0.0073) higher, LDL cholesterol were 4.8 mg/dl (p<0.0079) lower, vitamin B6 were 4.6 nmol/L(p=0.0544) lower, vitamins B 12 were 22.1 pg/ml (p=0.0001) lower., Conclusion: High serum levels of Hcy are an established thrombotic risk factor in the general population. We found significantly higher levels of Hcy in HCC patients with PVT versus both HCC patients without PVT and controls., (Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.)
- Published
- 2019
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36. Management of Staple Line Leaks Following Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy for Morbid Obesity.
- Author
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Currò G, Komaei I, Lazzara C, Sarra F, Cogliandolo A, Latteri S, and Navarra G
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Surgical Stapling adverse effects, Young Adult, Anastomotic Leak diagnostic imaging, Anastomotic Leak surgery, Gastrectomy adverse effects, Laparoscopy adverse effects, Obesity, Morbid surgery
- Abstract
Purposes: Management of staple-line leaks following laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) is challenging and controversial. Guidelines for leak treatment are not standardized and often involve multidisciplinary management by surgical, medical and radiological methods. Herein we present our experience and proposed strategy for handling leaks after LSG., Patients and Methods: Retrospective data regarding LSG performed from April 2012 to October 2017 at the Surgical Oncology Division, Department of Human Pathology in Adulthood and Childhood ''G. Barresi'', University Hospital "G. Martino", University of Messina, Italy, were reviewed. The management approaches and the surgical, endoscopic, and percutaneous procedures used were examined. Outcomes measured included the prevalence of gastric leaks, radiological features, related morbidities and mortalities, hospital stay and management., Results: LSG was performed in 310 patients. Eight patients were managed for gastric leak within the 5-year period: 5 (1.6% overall prevalence) from our division, 3 referred from another hospital. All cases were successfully treated conservatively with combined CT/US-guided drainage using a locking pigtail catheter and endoscopic gastric stent positioning. Endoscopic therapy included the use of fully covered self-expanding esophageal metal stents (Hanarostent® 24 cm; M.I. Tech, Seoul, Korea) in addition to pigtail drains (Drainage Catheter Locking Pigtail 8F/21cm; Tru-Set® Ure-Sil, Skokie, IL, USA). Complete closure of the leak was achieved in all patients. The mean time from presentation to healing was 74 days ± 37.76 (SD). None of the patients underwent remedial surgery., Conclusion: This study presents our management strategy for leak resolution in LSG patients. Based on our results, we strongly recommend the conservative and combined management of gastric leaks following LSG by endoscopic stenting and percutaneous drainage.
- Published
- 2018
37. Adherence to the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer recommendations in clinical practice.
- Author
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Pesce A, Latteri S, and Puleo S
- Subjects
- Humans, Neoplasm Staging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular, Liver Neoplasms
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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38. D-dimer plasmatic levels as a marker for diagnosis and prognosis of hepatocellular carcinoma patients with portal vein thrombosis.
- Author
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Malaguarnera M, Latteri S, Bertino G, Madeddu R, Catania VE, Currò G, Borzì AM, Drago F, and Malaguarnera G
- Abstract
Purpose: Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) is one of the severe complications of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). PVT deteriorates the liver, and its dysfunction increases the risk of bleeding, influencing the prognosis of patients with liver cirrhosis and HCC. The aim of our study was to investigate whether D-dimer testing could be a sensitive marker for the diagnosis and prognosis of HCC patients with PVT., Patients and Methods: Between June 2010 and December 2015, 118 HCC patients were admitted to Cannizzaro Hospital, Catania, and 50 controls were recruited from their relatives for health examinations. All enrolled patients were diagnosed and pathologically confirmed as having HCC. D-dimer was measured with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using 2 monoclonal antibodies against nonoverlapping determinants of D-dimer., Results: D-dimer levels in HCC patients with PVT were significantly higher vs HCC patients without PVT, P <0.002, and vs controls, P <0.001., Conclusion: Plasma D-dimer is a sensitive marker of fibrin turnover and allows for the recognition of activated coagulation which may be manifested in HCC with PVT., Competing Interests: Disclosure The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.
- Published
- 2018
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39. Ultrasound-Guided Breast-Conservative Surgery Decreases the Rate of Reoperations for Palpable Breast Cancer.
- Author
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Vieni S, Graceffa G, Priola R, Fricano M, Latteri S, Latteri MA, and Cipolla C
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma pathology, Female, Humans, Margins of Excision, Middle Aged, Palpation, Reoperation, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Carcinoma diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma surgery, Mastectomy, Segmental, Ultrasonography, Mammary
- Abstract
The purpose of this study is to verify whether the performance of ultrasound-guided quadrantectomy (USGQ) versus palpation-guided quadrantectomy (PGQ) can reduce the incidence of positive margins and if it can change the attitude of the surgeon. A retrospective study was conducted on 842 patients underwent quadrantectomy for breast cancer, 332 of them underwent USGQ, whereas 550 underwent PGQ. The histological type of the tumors and the margin status obtained with the histological examination were compared. The histological examination of the surgical specimen showed involvement of the margins in 24/842 patients (2.85%), 22 (2.61%) of them belonged to the PGQ group, and two to the USGQ group (P = 0.0011). The highest rate of microscopically positive margins was, statistically significant, for carcinoma in situ, when compared with patients with invasive carcinoma (0.0001). USGQ technique showed several advantages compared with PGQ. In fact, the former notes a lower positive margin rate and, consequently, a lower rate of reintervention. In addition, it may change the surgeon's attitude by causing him to remove another slice of margin to ensure more histological negativity. It should be the gold standard technique for breast-conservative surgery of palpable tumors.
- Published
- 2018
40. Near-infrared fluorescent cholangiography - real-time visualization of the biliary tree during elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
- Author
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Pesce A, Latteri S, Barchitta M, Portale TR, Di Stefano B, Agodi A, Russello D, Puleo S, and La Greca G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bile Ducts injuries, Databases, Factual, Dissection, Elective Surgical Procedures, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Treatment Outcome, Wounds and Injuries etiology, Wounds and Injuries prevention & control, Young Adult, Bile Ducts diagnostic imaging, Cholangiography methods, Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic adverse effects, Fluorescent Dyes administration & dosage, Indocyanine Green administration & dosage, Intraoperative Care methods, Optical Imaging methods
- Abstract
Background: The purpose was to evaluate the efficacy of near-infrared fluorescent cholangiography (FC) in real-time visualization of the biliary tree during elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy., Methods: Fifty consecutive elective laparoscopic cholecystectomies were performed with fluorescent cholangiography. FC was performed at three time points: following exposure of Calot's triangle, prior to any dissection; and after partial and complete dissection of Calot's triangle., Results: The cystic duct (CD) was identified successfully by FC in 43 of 50 patients (86%) and in 45 of 50 patients (90%) before and after Calot's dissection respectively (p > 0.05). The common hepatic duct (CHD) and the common bile duct (CBD) were identified successfully in 12 of 50 patients (24%) and in 33 of 50 patients (66%) before Calot's dissection respectively and in 26 of 50 patients (52%) and in 47 of 50 patients (94%) after complete Calot's dissection (p = 0.007 and p = 0.001, respectively). Significant differences were observed for CBD visualization rate, in relation to BMI after Calot's dissection (p < 0.05) and history of cholecystitis, before Calot's dissection (p = 0.017). No bile duct injuries were reported., Conclusion: Fluorescent cholangiography can be considered as a useful tool for intra-operative visualization of the biliary tree during laparoscopic cholecystectomies., (Copyright © 2017 International Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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41. Iatrogenic nerve lesion following laparoscopic surgery. A case report.
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Vecchio M, Santamato A, Geneovese F, Malaguarnera G, Catania VE, and Latteri S
- Abstract
Background: Peripheral neuropathy after surgical treatment is an under recognized potential untoward event. Pelvic surgery may be associated with nerve lesions by essentially three main mechanisms: transection, entrapment and pressure-stretching; the latter is the modality most frequently linked to patient's positioning on the operating room table., Presentation of the Case: A 25 years old woman, after undergoing a laparoscopic gynaecologic procedure lasted >3 hours, on postoperative day one presented with numbness over her lateral right leg and dorsum of the foot, right foot drop and gait instability due to compression-stretching of the right superficial peroneal nerve., Discussion: Patient's diagnostic work up, treatment and outcome are reported and measures on how to prevent the occurrence of such type of lesion are outlined together with the importance of an early postoperative diagnosis in order to avoid permanent nerve damage., Conclusion: Such lesions are sometimes so unexpected that delayed diagnosis leads to damages which are difficult or impossible to repair. Primary prevention plays a key role and it is realized by adhering to specific protocols. In the occurrence of the lesion a prompt diagnosis is highly recommendable and a comprehensive therapeutic plan is necessary to correctly address the specific pathology.
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- 2018
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42. Carcinoembryonic Antigen Serum Levels in Nonmelanoma Skin Cancer.
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Latteri S, Catania VE, Malaguarnera G, Peri A, Bertino G, Frazzetto G, Borzì AM, Biondi A, Perrotta RE, and Malaguarnera M
- Abstract
Background: Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is a glycoprotein, which is present in the foetal colon, some benign conditions and different malignancies, particularly in colon adenocarcinoma. We focused this study on non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC). NMSC is a common malignancy and it is an important source of morbidity and death in the world. In this study we evaluated whether CEA level increases in NMSC., Patients and Methods: A total of 566 patients with non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC) were enrolled; 286 patients with NMSC showed CEA levels above normal values, and 280 showed CEA levels below normal values. Patients with high levels of CEA underwent abdominal ultrasound, gastro endoscopy, colonoscopy, and abdominal CT scans., Results: We studied 566 patients, 286 were positive to CEA and 280 were negative. Of the 286 patients positive to CEA, 132 had basal cell carcinoma (64 patients had an associated cancer) and 154 had squamous cell carcinoma (75 patients were affected by cancer). Of the 280 patients negative to CEA, 130 had basal cell carcinoma (12 were associated with cancer), and 150 had squamous cell carcinoma (18 were associated with cancer). The mean age of the 566 case control subjects were 65-81 years. Of the 10 subjects that were the positive control for CEA, two had cancer. Of the 556 subjects that were the negative control for CEA, three had cancer., Conclusions: In patients that present high serum levels of CEA, we give attention to adenocarcinoma tumour first. The pattern of association may be attributable to bias because the group with NMSC were frequently evaluated than those with no history of NMSC. Our results showed that out of 286 patients that were CEA-positive, 139 had cancer, and of the 280 that were CEA-negative, 30 had cancer. Therefore, 20% of patients do not follow the trend. Other markers should be investigated., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2018
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43. The Antioxidant Activity of Pistachios Reduces Cardiac Tissue Injury of Acute Ischemia/Reperfusion (I/R) in Diabetic Streptozotocin (STZ)-Induced Hyperglycaemic Rats.
- Author
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Di Paola R, Fusco R, Gugliandolo E, D'Amico R, Campolo M, Latteri S, Carughi A, Mandalari G, and Cuzzocrea S
- Abstract
Diabetes mellitus is an important risk factor for the development of heart pathology. Myocardial infarction is the cause of death occurring after prolonged ischemia of the coronary arteries. Restoration of blood flow is the first intervention against heart attack, although the process of restoring blood flow to the ischemic myocardium could cause additional injury. This phenomenon, termed myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (MI-R) injury, is characterized by the formation of oxygen radicals. Pistachios have significant glucose- and insulin-lowering effects and can improve the inflammatory contest by downregulating both the expression and the circulating levels of several metabolic risk markers. The monocyte/macrophage cell line J774 was used to assess the extent of protection by natural raw (NP) and roasted salted (RP) pistachios against lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammation. Moreover, antioxidant activity of NP and RP was assessed in an in vivo model of paw edema in rats induced by carrageenan (CAR) injection in the paw. This study evaluates the antioxidant properties of pistachios on the inflammatory process associated with myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury (I/R) in diabetic rats. Rats were pre-treated with either NP or RP pistachios (30 mg/kg) 18 h prior to the experimental procedure. Results: Here, we demonstrated that treatment with NP reduced myocardial tissue injury, neutrophil infiltration, adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, P-selectin) expression, proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β) production, nitrotyrosine and PAR formation, NF-κB expression and apoptosis (Bax, Bcl-2) activation. This data clearly showes modulation of the inflammatory process, associated with MI-R injury, following administration of pistachios.
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- 2018
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44. Dystopic retrohepatic gallbladder and cholecysto-choledocho lithiasis: the rendez-vous and indocyanine green fluorescence.
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Mattone E, Latteri S, Teodoro M, Pesce A, Mannino M, Romano G, Russello D, and La Greca G
- Abstract
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a well-known procedure for the treatment of most gallbladder diseases. Sometimes, it could be very difficult, in the presence of aberrations regarding the cystic duct, the cystic artery, or the gallbladder itself. Fluorescence laparoscopy using indocyanine green could be very useful for all the situations of anatomy aberrations.
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- 2018
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45. Aging and Parkinson's Disease: Inflammaging, neuroinflammation and biological remodeling as key factors in pathogenesis.
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Calabrese V, Santoro A, Monti D, Crupi R, Di Paola R, Latteri S, Cuzzocrea S, Zappia M, Giordano J, Calabrese EJ, and Franceschi C
- Subjects
- Animals, Cellular Senescence, Humans, Aging, Gastrointestinal Microbiome physiology, Inflammation, Neurogenic Inflammation, Parkinson Disease immunology
- Abstract
In order to better understand the pathogenesis of Parkinson's Disease (PD) it is important to consider possible contributory factors inherent to the aging process, as age-related changes in a number of physiological systems (perhaps incurred within particular environments) appear to influence the onset and progression of neurodegenerative disorders. Accordingly, we posit that a principal mechanism underlying PD is inflammaging, i.e. the chronic inflammatory process characterized by an imbalance of pro- and anti-inflammatory mechanisms which has been recognized as operative in several age-related, and notably neurodegenerative diseases. Recent conceptualization suggests that inflammaging is part of the complex adaptive mechanisms ("re-modeling") that are ongoing through the lifespan, and which function to prevent or mitigate endogenous processes of tissue disruption and degenerative change(s). The absence of an adequate anti-inflammatory response can fuel inflammaging, which propagates on both local (i.e.- from cell to cell) and systemic levels (e.g.- via exosomes and other molecules present in the blood). In general, this scenario is compatible with the hypothesis that inflammaging represents a hormetic or hormetic-like effect, in which low levels of inflammatory stress may prompt induction of anti-inflammatory mediators and mechanisms, while sustained pro-inflammatory stress incurs higher and more durable levels of inflammatory substances, which, in turn prompt a local-to-systemic effect and more diverse inflammatory response(s). Given this perspective, new treatments of PD may be envisioned that strategically are aimed at exerting hormetic effects to sustain anti-inflammatory responses, inclusive perhaps, of modulating the inflammatory influence of the gut microbiota., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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46. Anorectal mucosal melanoma.
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Malaguarnera G, Madeddu R, Catania VE, Bertino G, Morelli L, Perrotta RE, Drago F, Malaguarnera M, and Latteri S
- Abstract
Anorectal melanoma is an uncommon and aggressive mucosal melanocytic malignancy. Due to its rarity, the pre-operative diagnosis remains difficult. The first symptoms are non-specific such as anal bleeding, anal mass or pain. Although anorectal melanoma carries a poor prognosis; optimal therapeutics strategies are unclear. Surgical resection remains the mainstay of treatment. The optimal surgical procedure for primary tumours is controversial and can vary from wide local excision or endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) to an abdomino-perineal resection. A high degree of uncertainly exists regarding the benefit of radiation therapy or chemotherapy. The treatment of advanced melanoma is evolving rapidly with better understanding of the disease biology and immunology. Considerable effort has been devoted to the identification of molecular determinants of response to target therapies and immunotherapy., Competing Interests: CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None.
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- 2018
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47. Completion axillary lymph node dissection can be avoid in patients with invasive breast cancer and sentinel lymph node micrometastases.
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Cipolla C, Graceffa G, Calamia S, Latteri S, Marino MV, Latteri M, and Vieni S
- Abstract
Background: The prognostic value of sentinel lymph node (SLN) micrometastases in invasive breast cancer patients is still widely debated. Even if, in the absence of unequivocal guidelines, the axillary lynphadenectomy is not still performed in the routine clinical care of these patients., Materials and Method: We have retrospectively analyzed 897 patients with operable invasive breast cancer and clinically negative axillary lymph nodes underwent conservative surgery or total mastectomy with SLN biopsy. Two groups of patients with SLN micrometastases and isolated tumor cells (ITC) were considered, the first one treated with completion axillary dissection, the second one not followed by further surgical axillary procedure. The incidence of axillary recurrences has BEEN evaluated in both groups and only in the first group of patients the involvement of the remaining lymph nodes was analyzed., Results: Micrometastases were found in 67 (7.4%) patients and ITC in 8 (0,9%) patients. 14 (20.9%) patients with micrometastases and 1 (12.5%) patient with ITC underwent completion axillary dissection. 53 (79.1%) patients with micrometastases and 7 (87.5%) with ITC didn't receive further surgical axillary procedure. No axillary recurrences were found during a median follow up of 65.7±8.69 months in both groups of patients., Conclusions: Based on the results and according to some recent randomized trials we can say that completion axillary dissection can be safely avoided when micrometastases are found in sentinel lymph nodes. It should be performed anyway, depending on the analysis of the biomedical profile of the tumor., Key Words: Breast Carcinoma, Micrometastases Axillary Lymphonode Dissection, Sentinel Lymphonode.
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- 2018
48. Value of 3D printing for the comprehension of surgical anatomy.
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Marconi S, Pugliese L, Botti M, Peri A, Cavazzi E, Latteri S, Auricchio F, and Pietrabissa A
- Subjects
- Comprehension, Hand-Assisted Laparoscopy methods, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Laparoscopy methods, Multidetector Computed Tomography, Preoperative Period, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Models, Anatomic, Nephrectomy methods, Pancreatectomy methods, Printing, Three-Dimensional, Splenectomy methods
- Abstract
Background: In a preliminary experience, we claimed the potential value of 3D printing technology for pre-operative counseling and surgical planning. However, no objective analysis has ever assessed its additional benefit in transferring anatomical information from radiology to final users. We decided to validate the pre-operative use of 3D-printed anatomical models in patients with solid organs' diseases as a new tool to deliver morphological information., Methods: Fifteen patients scheduled for laparoscopic splenectomy, nephrectomy, or pancreatectomy were selected and, for each, a full-size 3D virtual anatomical object was reconstructed from a contrast-enhanced MDCT (Multiple Detector Computed Tomography) and then prototyped using a 3D printer. After having carefully evaluated-in a random sequence-conventional contrast MDCT scans, virtual 3D reconstructions on a flat monitor, and 3D-printed models of the same anatomy for each selected case, thirty subjects with different expertise in radiological imaging (10 medical students, 10 surgeons and 10 radiologists) were administered a multiple-item questionnaire. Crucial issues for the anatomical understanding and the pre-operative planning of the scheduled procedure were addressed., Results: The visual and tactile inspection of 3D models allowed the best anatomical understanding, with faster and clearer comprehension of the surgical anatomy. As expected, less experienced medical students perceived the highest benefit (53.9% ± 4.14 of correct answers with 3D-printed models, compared to 53.4 % ± 4.6 with virtual models and 45.5% ± 4.6 with MDCT), followed by surgeons and radiologists. The average time spent by participants in 3D model assessing was shorter (60.67 ± 25.5 s) than the one of the corresponding virtual 3D reconstruction (70.8 ± 28.18 s) or conventional MDCT scan (127.04 ± 35.91 s)., Conclusions: 3D-printed models help to transfer complex anatomical information to clinicians, resulting useful in the pre-operative planning, for intra-operative navigation and for surgical training purposes.
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- 2017
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49. Reduction of cardiovascular risk in subjects with high lipoprotein (a) levels.
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Malaguarnera G, Latteri S, Catania VE, and Malaguarnera M
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
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- 2017
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50. Efficacy of the Laparoendoscopic "Rendezvous" to Treat Cholecystocholedocholithiasis in 210 Consecutive Patients: A Single Center Experience.
- Author
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La Greca G, Pesce A, Vitale M, Mannino M, Di Marco F, Di Blasi M, Lombardo R, Puleo S, Russello D, and Latteri S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Conversion to Open Surgery statistics & numerical data, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic methods, Choledocholithiasis surgery, Gallstones surgery
- Abstract
Objective: The simultaneous laparoendoscopic "rendezvous" (LERV) represents an alternative to sequential or totally laparoscopic approaches for patients affected by cholecystocholedocholithiasis. The aim of this study was to analyze the results in a large series of 210 consecutive patients., Materials and Methods: From 2002 to 2016 all patients affected by cholecystocholedocholithiasis were treated with a standardized "tailored" LERV. The relevant technical features of the procedure were recorded. An analysis of feasibility, effectiveness in stone clearance, and safety was performed., Results: Among 214 patients with common bile duct stones, 210 were treated with LERV and 4 with open rendezvous approach. Intraoperative cholangiography confirmed common bile duct stones in 179 patients (85.2%) or sludge in 18 (8.5%) and in 98.9% stone clearance was obtained endoscopically. Endoscopic papilla cannulation was feasible in 161 patients (76.7%), whereas in 49 (23.3%) a transcystic guidewire was needed. The overall LERV feasibility was 96.6%. The conversion rate to open surgery was 3.3%. Minor morbidity was observed in 1.9% of cases, mortality in 0.47%, and the mean hospital stay was 4.3 days., Conclusions: These results confirm the high effectiveness of LERV. This approach to treat cholecystocholedocholithiasis should be preferred and therefore implemented where a strong collaboration between surgeons and endoscopists is possible.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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