7 results on '"Gallo, O."'
Search Results
2. Is elective neck dissection necessary in cases of laryngeal recurrence after previous radiotherapy for early glottic cancer?
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Deganello, A, Meccariello, G, Bini, B, Paiar, F, Santoro, R, Mannelli, G, and Gallo, O
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COMPUTED tomography ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FISHER exact test ,LARYNGEAL tumors ,LYMPH node surgery ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,REGRESSION analysis ,ELECTIVE surgery ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator - Abstract
Objectives:To assess the clinical utility of elective neck dissection in node-negative recurrent laryngeal carcinoma after curative radiotherapy for initial early glottic cancer.Methods:A retrospective review was undertaken of 110 consecutive early glottic cancer patients who developed laryngeal recurrence after radiotherapy (34 recurrent T1, 36 recurrent T2, 29 recurrent T3 and 11 recurrent T4a) and received salvage laryngeal surgery between 1995 and 2005.Results:Six patients presented with laryngeal and neck recurrence and underwent salvage laryngectomy with therapeutic neck dissection, 97 patients with recurrent node-negative tumours underwent salvage laryngeal surgery without neck dissection and only 7 underwent elective neck dissection. No occult positive lymph nodes were documented in neck dissection specimens. During follow up, only three patients with neck failure were recorded, all in the group without neck dissection. There was no significant association between the irradiation field (larynx plus neck vs larynx) and the development of regional failure. A higher rate of post-operative pharyngocutaneous fistula development occurred in the neck dissection group than in the group without neck dissection (57.2 per cent vs 13.4 per cent, p = 0.01). Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that early (recurrent tumour-positive, node-positive) or delayed (recurrent tumour-positive, node-negative) neck relapse was not significantly related to the stage of the initial tumour or the recurrent tumour. An age of less than 60 years was significantly associated with early neck failure (recurrent tumour-positive, node-positive).Conclusion:Owing to the low occult neck disease rate and high post-operative fistula rate, elective neck dissection is not recommended for recurrent node-negative laryngeal tumours after radiation therapy if the initial tumour was an early glottic cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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3. First bite syndrome as presenting symptom of parapharyngeal adenoid cystic carcinoma.
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Deganello, A, Meccariello, G, Busoni, M, Franchi, A, and Gallo, O
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PAROTID gland surgery ,PAROTID gland tumors ,ADENOID cystic carcinoma ,CAROTID artery ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,FACIAL neuralgia ,RADIOTHERAPY ,TOMOGRAPHY ,DISEASE complications ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Introduction:First bite syndrome refers to the development of pain in the parotid region after the first bite of each meal.Case report:A man was referred to our institution with first bite syndrome as his only symptom. Magnetic resonance imaging of the head and neck revealed a deep lobe parotid mass in close contact with the external carotid artery. Computed tomography guided fine needle biopsy indicated adenoid cystic carcinoma. Total parotidectomy was performed, with en bloc resection of the infiltrated external carotid artery and a selective neck dissection of levels Ib to III. High-weight ion radiotherapy was administered post-operatively.Conclusion:First bite syndrome has hitherto only been described following parapharyngeal space surgery. We present the first case of parotid gland adenoid cystic carcinoma presenting with first bite syndrome as the only symptom. The presence of first bite syndrome should prompt the clinician to investigate the parapharyngeal space and deep lobe of the parotid gland, especially in the absence of other signs or symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2011
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4. Reward Anticipation and Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia: an Electrophysiological Investigation.
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Vignapiano, A., Mucci, A., Merlotti, E., Montefusco, V., Plescia, G.M., Gallo, O., Rocco, M., Romano, P., and Galderisi, S.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *REWARD (Psychology) , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *SYMPTOMS , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Introduction Negative symptoms are the psychopathological domain most associated to poor outcome in patients with schizophrenia (SCZ). Insight into their pathophysiology might contribute to develop innovative treatments for the syndrome. Recently, it has been hypothesized that avolition is related to a difficulty in anticipating reward or integrating value and action. Objectives Our study aimed to investigate abnormalities of reward anticipation in SCZ and evaluate associations of negative symptoms dimensions with the same abnormalities using electrophysiological indices. Methods ERPs were recorded during the execution of 'Monetary Incentive Delay' task in 30 SCZ patients stabilized on second generation antipsychotics and 23 and healthy controls (HC). Measures of anticipatory and consummatory pleasure, trait anhedonia and motivation were obtained in all subjects. A measure of avolition independent of anhedonia was obtained in patients. Results Patients did not differ from HC with respect to trait anhedonia and experience of pleasure but showed a deficit of motivation. Unlike HC, P3 amplitude in patients did not discriminate stimuli relevance in the early interval and was higher for the anticipation of loss in the late interval. In SCZ, early P3 amplitude for loss and reward anticipation was inversely related to social anhedonia but not to avolition. Conclusion Patients with preserved experience and anticipation of reward seem unable to integrate the relevance and rewarding value of future events in the context of their ongoing task. Our results indicate that anhedonia and avolition are partially independent constructs and that SCZ might integrate better loss than reward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Early Auditory Deviance Detection and Functional Outcome in Patients with Schizophrenia.
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Vignapiano, A., Mucci, A., Merlotti, E., Di Lorenzo, G., Daverio, A., Ribolsi, M., Niolu, C., Montefusco, V., Plescia, G.M., Gallo, O., Rocco, M., Romano, P., and Galderisi, S.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *DEVIANT behavior , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *PSYCHOSES , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Introduction The Mismatch Negativity (MMN) is an event-related potential (ERP) sensitive to early auditory deviance detection and has been shown to be reduced in patients with schizophrenia. Moreover, MMN amplitude reduction to duration deviant tones was found to be related to functional outcomes particularly, to social cognition and real-life functioning. Objectives In the context of a multicentre study of the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses, our study focused on the investigation of early auditory discrimination components in relation to functioning in real-life in patients with schizophrenia. Methods ERPs were recorded in 64 chronic, stabilized patients with schizophrenia during the presentation of standard, duration deviants and frequency deviants tones while watching a cartoon. The Specific Level of Functioning (SLOF) scale was used to measure real-life functioning. Psychopathology, neurocognition and social cognition were measured by state of art instruments. Regression analyses were carried out using SLOF domains as dependent variables and MMN, psychopathology, neurocognition, extrapyramidal symptoms and social cognition as independent predictors. Results Latency of MMN entered the regression equation only for the SLOF domain of common activities explaining less variance than social cognition and positive symptoms. Conclusion In stabilized patients with schizophrenia pre-attentive deficits, as indexed by MMN and P3a amplitude reduction, do not show any association with psychopathology or functioning. Latency of MMN was an independent predictor of some aspects of functioning with a smaller effect than social cognition and psychopathology domains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. P300 Correlates of Cognitive Dysfunctions in Schizophrenia.
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Di Lorenzo, G., Mucci, A., Daverio, A., Ferrentino, F., Vignapiano, A., Romano, P., Ribolsi, M., Niolu, C., Montefusco, V., Plescia, G., Gallo, O., and Galderisi, S.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment , *COGNITION disorders , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *STATISTICAL correlation , *SHORT-term memory , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Introduction P300 is an event-related potential (ERP) thought to reflect attention, working memory and context integration and has been shown to be consistently reduced in patients with Schizophrenia. Despite a possible relation between P300 components and cognitive deficits in Schizophrenia has been hypothesized, few studies addressed this hypothesis. Objectives In the context of a multicenter study of the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses, our study focused on the investigation of auditory P300 component in relation to clinical and cognitive domains in patients with Schizophrenia. Methods ERPs were recorded in 64 chronic, stabilized patients with Schizophrenia during a standard oddball task. N1 and P3b latency and amplitude were assessed at Fz and Pz, respectively. State of art instruments was used for clinical assessment. Cognitive indices (from the seven cognitive domains of the Measurement and Treatment of Cognition in Schizophrenia, MATRICS) were expressed as Z-scores from an Italian normative sample. Results Correlation analysis revealed associations of P3b latency with age, education, PANSS-DIS, processing speed, working memory, St. Hans parkinsonism subscale. In a multiple linear regression model, processing speed was an independent significant predictor of P3b latency. Conclusion For the first time, a strong relation between P3b latency and processing speed impairment was shown in Schizophrenia. Processing speed is considered a central factor in the relation between cognitive deficits and functional outcome in chronic schizophrenia. The association with P3b latency might shed lights in the neural basis of this complex construct. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. Epidemiological analysis of a COVID-19 outbreak associated with an infected surgeon.
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Gallo O, Peris A, Trotta M, Orlando P, Maggiore G, Cilona M, Trovati M, and Locatello LG
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- COVID-19 etiology, COVID-19 psychology, Contact Tracing instrumentation, Contact Tracing methods, Epidemiology, Humans, Infection Control standards, Pandemics prevention & control, Personal Protective Equipment standards, COVID-19 diagnosis, Surgeons
- Abstract
Control of the novel COronaVIrus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) in a hospital setting is a priority. A COVID-19-infected surgeon performed surgical activities before being tested. An exposure risk classification was applied to the identified exposed subjects and high- and medium-risk contacts underwent active symptom monitoring for 14 days at home. All healthcare professionals (HCPs) were tested for severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) at the end of the quarantine and serological tests were performed. Three household contacts and 20 HCPs were identified as high- or medium-risk contacts and underwent a 14-day quarantine. Fourteen HCPs and 19 patients were instead classified as low risk. All the contacts remained asymptomatic and all HCPs tested negative for SARS-CoV-2. About 25-28 days after their last exposure, HCPs underwent serological testing and two of them had positive IgM but negative confirmatory swabs. In a low COVID-19 burden area, the in-hospital transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from an infectious doctor did not occur and, despite multiple and frequent contacts, a hospital outbreak was avoided. This may be linked to the adoption of specific recommendations and to the use of standard personal protective equipment by HCPs.
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- 2021
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