6 results on '"Monti, Massimo"'
Search Results
2. The last week of life of nursing home residents with advanced dementia: a retrospective study
- Author
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Toscani, Franco, Finetti, Silvia, Giunco, Fabrizio, Basso, Ines, Rosa, Debora, Pettenati, Francesca, Bussotti, Alessandro, Villani, Daniele, Gentile, Simona, Boncinelli, Lorenzo, Monti, Massimo, Spinsanti, Sandro, Piazza, Massimo, Charrier, Lorena, and Di Giulio, Paola
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- 2019
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3. A modified sentinel node and occult lesion localization (SNOLL) technique in non-palpable breast cancer: a pilot study.
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Follacchio, Giulia Anna, Monteleone, Francesco, Anibaldi, Paolo, De Vincentis, Giuseppe, Iacobelli, Silvia, Merola, Raffaele, D'Orazi, Valerio, Monti, Massimo, and Pasta, Vittorio
- Subjects
MAMMOGRAMS ,BREAST surgery ,BREAST cancer ,SENTINEL lymph nodes ,CARCINOGENS - Abstract
Background: The spread of mammographic screening programs has allowed an increasing amount of early breast cancer diagnosis. A modern approach to non-palpable breast lesions requires an accurate intraoperative localization, in order to achieve a complete surgical resection. In addiction, the assessment of lymph node status is mandatory as it represents a major prognostic factor in these patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate the reliability of a modified technical approach using a single nanocolloidal radiotracer to localize both sentinel node and breast occult lesion. Methods: Twenty-five patients with a single non-palpable breast lesions and clinically negative axilla were enrolled. In the same day of surgery, patients underwent intratumoral and peritumoral administration of
99m Tc-labeled nanocolloid tracer under sonographic guidance. A lymphoscintigraphy was performed to localize the sentinel lymph node and its cutaneous projection was marked on the skin in order to guide the surgeon to an optimal incision. During surgery an hand-held gamma-detection probe was used to select the best surgical access route and to guide localization of both occult breast lesion and sentinel lymph node. After specimen excision, the surgical field was checked with the gamma-probe to verify the absence of residual sources of significant radioactivity, thereby ensuring a radical treatment in a single surgical session and minimizing normal tissue excision. Results: Both targeted breast lesion and sentinel lymph node were localized and removed at the first attempt in every patients and histopathological diagnosis of malignancy was confirmed in 25/26 samples. Non-palpable lesions were included within the surgical margins in all patients and in all samples surgical margins were free from neoplastic infiltration thus avoiding any further reintervention. Only two patients showed metastatic involvement of sentinel lymph node. Conclusions: The modified sentinel node and occult lesion localization (SNOLL) technique performed with a single injection of nanocolloidal radiotracer has shown an excellent intraoperative identification rate of both non-palpable lesion and sentinel lymph node. This procedure offers, as opposed to standard techniques, an accurate, simple and reliable approach to the management of non-palpable breast cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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4. Primitive sarcoma of the breast: new insight on the proper surgical management.
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Pasta, Vittorio, Monti, Massimo, Cialini, Michela, Vergine, Massimo, Urciuoli, Paolo, Iacovelli, Annunziata, Rea, Silvio, and D'Orazi, Valerio
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BREAST cancer diagnosis , *BREAST cancer patients , *CANCER chemotherapy , *BREAST cancer surgery , *RADIOTHERAPY , *BREAST cancer prognosis - Abstract
Background: Primitive sarcoma of the breast is a rare and challenging disease at high risk of recurrence and with poor prognosis. There are controversies in the diagnosis and management of such solid tumor due to its rarity and heterogeneity. This sarcoma is poorly responsive to both chemotherapy and radiotherapy, thus, surgery is the first and most important therapeutic approach. However, given the rarity of this type tumor it has not be possible to standardize unique guidelines for the proper surgical strategy to adopt. Here, we performed a retrospective study of new 10 cases of primitive sarcoma of the breast that underwent either mastectomy or a more conservative quadrantectomy, in the attempt to better standardize correct surgical indications. Methods: Ten new cases of primitive sarcoma of the breast were registered between 2002 and 2012 and constituted the study group. They underwent either mastectomy or quadrantectomy and the clinical, prognostic and survival characteristics after surgery were analysed. Results: Within the group of patients treated with mastectomy, two had metastasis and died because of that. Among the five patients treated with quadrantectomy four are alive and free of disease after 3 to 5 years follow-up, while the patient with sarcoma arising in pregnancy, although is still alive, developed lung metastases four years after surgery. Conclusions: The first and most important therapeutic approach to primary sarcomas of the breast is surgical which has the purpose to achieve radical tumor excision to prevent local recurrence and skip metastases. However, given the rarity of the condition and the consequent small number of cases in this, like in similar studies, it is not possible to draw any definitive conclusions and further studies with larger numbers are necessary. However it would appear that performing a larger procedure such as mastectomy rather than performing a more limited one such as a quadrantectomy, has no advantage in terms of overall prognosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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5. High positive end-expiratory pressure: only a dam against oedema formation?
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Protti, Alessandro, Andreis, Davide T., Iapichino, Giacomo E., Monti, Massimo, Comini, Beatrice, Milesi, Marta, Zani, Loredana, Gatti, Stefano, Lombardi, Luciano, and Gattinoni, Luciano
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POSITIVE end-expiratory pressure ,PULMONARY edema ,TOMOGRAPHY ,POSITIVE pressure ventilation ,CARDIOPULMONARY system ,LUNG diseases - Abstract
Introduction: Healthy piglets ventilated with no positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and with tidal volume (VT) close to inspiratory capacity (IC) develop fatal pulmonary oedema within 36 h. In contrast, those ventilated with high PEEP and low VT, resulting in the same volume of gas inflated (close to IC), do not. If the real threat to the blood-gas barrier is lung overinflation, then a similar damage will occur with the two settings. If PEEP only hydrostatically counteracts fluid filtration, then its removal will lead to oedema formation, thus revealing the deleterious effects of overinflation. Methods: Following baseline lung computed tomography (CT), five healthy piglets were ventilated with high PEEP (volume of gas around 75% of IC) and low VT (25% of IC) for 36 h. PEEP was then suddenly zeroed and low V
T was maintained for 18 h. Oedema was diagnosed if final lung weight (measured on a balance following autopsy) exceeded the initial one (CT). Results: Animals were ventilated with PEEP 18 ± 1 cmH2 O (volume of gas 875 ± 178 ml, 89 ± 7% of IC) and VT 213 ± 10 ml (22 ± 5% of IC) for the first 36 h, and with no PEEP and VT 213 ± 10 ml for the last 18 h. On average, final lung weight was not higher, and actually it was even lower, than the initial one (284 ± 62 vs. 347 ± 36 g; P = 0.01). Conclusions: High PEEP (and low VT) do not merely impede fluid extravasation but rather preserve the integrity of the blood-gas barrier in healthy lungs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
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6. Metformin overdose, but not lactic acidosis per se, inhibits oxygen consumption in pigs.
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Protti, Alessandro, Fortunato, Francesco, Monti, Massimo, Vecchio, Sarah, Gatti, Stefano, Comi, Giacomo P., de Giuseppe, Rachele, and Gattinoni, Luciano
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MITOCHONDRIAL pathology ,OXYGEN consumption ,CARCINOGENESIS ,METFORMIN ,LACTIC acid - Abstract
Introduction: Hepatic mitochondrial dysfunction may play a critical role in the pathogenesis of metformin-induced lactic acidosis. However, patients with severe metformin intoxication may have a 30 to 60% decrease in their global oxygen consumption, as for generalized inhibition of mitochondrial respiration. We developed a pig model of severe metformin intoxication to validate this clinical finding and assess mitochondrial function in liver and other tissues. Methods: Twenty healthy pigs were sedated and mechanically ventilated. Ten were infused with a large dose of metformin (4 to 8 g) and five were not (sham controls). Five others were infused with lactic acid to clarify whether lactic acidosis per se diminishes global oxygen use. Arterial pH, lactatemia, global oxygen consumption (VO
2 ) (metabolic module) and delivery (DO2 ) (cardiac output by thermodilution) were monitored for nine hours. Oxygen extraction was computed as VO2 /DO2 . Activities of the main components of the mitochondrial respiratory chain (complex I, II and III, and IV) were measured with spectrophotometry (and expressed relative to citrate synthase activity) in heart, kidney, liver, skeletal muscle and platelets taken at the end of the study. Results: Pigs infused with metformin (6 ± 2 g; final serum drug level 77 ± 45 mg/L) progressively developed lactic acidosis (final arterial pH 6.93 ± 0.24 and lactate 18 ± 7 mmol/L, P < 0.001 for both). Their VO2 declined over time (from 115 ± 34 to 71 ± 30 ml/min, P < 0.001) despite grossly preserved DO2 (from 269 ± 68 to 239 ± 51 ml/min, P = 0.58). Oxygen extraction accordingly fell from 43 ± 10 to 30 ± 10% (P = 0.008). None of these changes occurred in either sham controls or pigs infused with lactic acid (final arterial pH 6.86 ± 0.16 and lactate 22 ± 3 mmol/L). Metformin intoxication was associated with inhibition of complex I in the liver (P < 0.001), heart (P < 0.001), kidney (P = 0.003), skeletal muscle (P = 0.012) and platelets (P = 0.053). The activity of complex II and III diminished in the liver (P < 0.001), heart (P < 0.001) and kidney (P < 0.005) while that of complex IV declined in the heart (P < 0.001). Conclusions: Metformin intoxication induces lactic acidosis, inhibits global oxygen consumption and causes mitochondrial dysfunction in liver and other tissues. Lactic acidosis per se does not decrease whole-body respiration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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