182 results on '"S Iurato"'
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2. The Junctional Complexes among the Cells of the Organ of Corti as Revealed by Freeze-Fracturing
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F. Pannese, S. Iurato, L. Luciano, K. Franke, E. Reale, and G. Wermbter
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medicine.anatomical_structure ,Organ of Corti ,medicine ,Freeze Fracturing ,Biology ,Cell biology - Published
- 2015
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3. Hearing Results of Ossiculoplasty in Austin-Kartush Group A Patients
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Gino Marioni, Marina Onofri, and S. Iurato
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Incus ,Myringoplasty ,Postoperative Complications ,Tympanoplasty ,Humans ,Medicine ,Hearing Disorders ,Ear Ossicles ,Retrospective Studies ,Stapes ,Postoperative Care ,Cholesteatoma, Middle Ear ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Cholesteatoma ,Auditory Threshold ,Malleus ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Private practice ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Bone Conduction - Abstract
Objective: To compare hearing results in patients who underwent ossiculoplasty for Austin-Kartush group A impairments (incus erosion, malleus handle present, stapes superstructure present) with the results in patients with an intact ossicular chain who required only myringoplasty. The literature on hearing results of ossiculoplasty with different types of prostheses and different techniques is reviewed. Patients and Study Design: This study retrospectively reviews a series of 181 consecutive ossiculoplasties and 204 consecutive myringoplasties. Setting: The study was carried out partly at a private practice and partly in an academic tertiary referral center. Main Outcome Measures: This study complies with levels 1 and 2 of the guidelines recommended by the American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery (1995). Results: When success was defined as a postoperative air-bone gap within 10 dB, the success rate was higher for myringoplasty (81%) than for ossiculoplasty (55%). When success was defined as a postoperative air-bone gap within 20 dB, the success rate was 97% in myringoplasties and 85% in ossiculoplasties. There was no significant deterioration over time of the mean postoperative air-bone gap for any frequency. Conclusion: Cumulative data from several authors show that ∼50% of patients undergoing partial ossiculoplasty have a postoperative air-bone gap of 0 to 10 dB, and 80% have a postoperative air-bone gap of 0 to 20 dB. Equally good results may be achieved with autograft (no difference was found between interposition of the incus or the head of the malleus), homograft, or alloplastic partial prostheses. With alloplastic total prostheses, 36% of patients have a postoperative air-bone gap of 0 to 10 dB, and 74% have a postoperative air-bone gap of 0 to 20 dB. Key Words: Ossiculoplasty—Tympanoplasty—Myringoplasty. Otol Neurotol 22:140–144, 2001.
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- 2001
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4. Auditory System : Anatomy Physiology (Ear)
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H. W. Ades, A. Axelsson, I. L. Baird, G. v. Békésy, R. L. Boord, C. B. G. Campbell, O. Densert, D. H. Eldredge, H. Engström, J. Fex, J. M. Harrison, O. W. Henson, M. E. Howe, S. Iurato, A. Michelsen, A. R. Møller, R. R. Pfeiffer, S. Rauch, I. Rauch, E. A. G. Shaw, J. Wersäll, E. G. Wever, H. W. Ades, A. Axelsson, I. L. Baird, G. v. Békésy, R. L. Boord, C. B. G. Campbell, O. Densert, D. H. Eldredge, H. Engström, J. Fex, J. M. Harrison, O. W. Henson, M. E. Howe, S. Iurato, A. Michelsen, A. R. Møller, R. R. Pfeiffer, S. Rauch, I. Rauch, E. A. G. Shaw, J. Wersäll, and E. G. Wever
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- Otorhinolaryngology, Human physiology
- Abstract
In planning The Handbook volumes on Audition, we, the editors, made the decision that there should be many authors, each writing about the work in the field that he knew best through his own research, rather than a few authors who would review areas of research with which they lacked first hand familiarity. For the purposes of the chapters on Audition, sensory physiology has been defined very broadly to include studies from the many disciplines that contribute to our understanding of the structures concerned with hearing and the processes that take place in these structures in man and in lower animals. A number of chapters on special topics have been included in order to present information that might not be covered by the usual chapters dealing with anatomical, physi ological and behavioral aspects of hearing. We wish to thank all authors of the volumes on Audition for the contributions that they have made. We feel confident that their efforts will also be appreciated by the many scientists and clinicians who will make use of the Handbook for many years to come. WOLF D. KEIDEL WILLIAM D. NEFF Erlangen Bloomington August 1974 Contents Introduction. By G. v. BEKESY t. With 3 Figures........ 1 Chapter 1 Consideration of the Acoustic Stimulus. By R. R. PFEIFFER. With Chapter 2 19 Figures......................... 9 Comparative Anatomy of the Middle Ear. By O. W. HENSON Jr. With Chapter 3 23 Figures....................... 39.....
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- 2012
5. Ear Cholesteatoma versus Cholesterol Granuloma
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Kenneth O. Devaney, Alfio Ferlito, Brian F. McCabe, S Iurato, Christopher M. Milroy, Bruce M. Wenig, and Alessandra Rinaldo
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Diagnostico diferencial ,Cholesteatoma ,Ear disease ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cholesterol granuloma ,0302 clinical medicine ,Otorhinolaryngology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Granuloma ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Histopathology ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business - Abstract
Cholesteatoma and cholesterol granuloma of the ear are two different pathologic conditions that have often been confused in the past, and even in the present, in the literature. The features differentiating the two lesions are presented.
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- 1997
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6. Comments on 'Stapes surgery in profound hearing loss due to otosclerosis'
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S. Iurato
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Audiology ,Stapes Surgery ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,Stapes surgery ,Profound hearing loss ,Otosclerosis ,Otorhinolaryngology ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Hearing Loss - Published
- 2013
7. The junctions of the spindle-shaped cells of the stria vascularis: A link that completes the barrier between perilymph and endolymph
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L. Luciano, E. Reale, G. Reiss, and S. Iurato
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Male ,Endolymph ,Guinea Pigs ,Perilymph ,Biology ,Filipin ,Cell junction ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Animals ,Freeze Fracturing ,Inner ear ,Cell Size ,Tight junction ,Compartment (ship) ,Gap junction ,Stria Vascularis ,Anatomy ,Sensory Systems ,Cholesterol ,Intercellular Junctions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Biophysics ,sense organs - Abstract
It is current opinion that the intercellular spaces of the stria vascularis represent a closed compartment isolated from the endolymph by the tight junctions of the marginal cells and from the perilymph by the junctional complexes of the basel cells. However, it has not yet been investigated whether these two barriers meet at the stria margins toward Reissner's membrane and the spiral prominence. Possible candidates for this sealing could be junctions between the spindle-shaped cells. In the present study freeze-fracture replicas of guinea pig specimens fixed in the presence of filipin were used in order to investigate the junctions of the spindle-shaped cells and to localize the cholesterol in their plasma membrane. Replicas reveal that, below the belt-like apical zonula occludens, the basolateral plasma membranes of the spindle-shaped cells adjacent to each other and to the basal cells are joined over their entire extension by a large number of junctional strands intermingled with numerous filipin-cholesterol-complexes. Gap junctions are present in the meshes formed by these junctional strands. Thus, the plasma membrane of the spindle-shaped cells shows morphological and cytochemical characteristics which indicate that they are the anatomical components completing the barrier isolating the intrastrial compartment from the surrounding fluids.
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- 1995
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8. Diseases of the Auricle and of the External Auditory Canal
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S. Iurato
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Auricle ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Bite wounds ,Parotid gland ,Auditory canal ,Position (obstetrics) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blunt trauma ,medicine ,Basal cell carcinoma ,business ,Extreme Cold - Abstract
Owing to its position, shape and prominence, the auricle is at risk of sharp and blunt trauma, lacerations, bite wounds, burns and damage from extreme cold.
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- 2010
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9. Middle Ear/Inner Ear
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Christian Martin, S. Iurato, Wolfgang Arnold, Oliver Sterkers, and Vincent Darrouzet
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musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Hearing loss ,Decompression illness ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Facial nerve ,Otitis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Temporal bone ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Middle ear ,Medicine ,Inner ear ,Sensorineural hearing loss ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,human activities - Abstract
Aerotitis media, barotraumatic otitis media, otitic barotrauma, inner ear decompression illness.
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- 2010
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10. Multicentre Evaluation of the Temporal Bones Obtained from a Patient with Suspected Menièe's Disease
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E. Reale, L. Luciano, H. Spoendlin, L.-G. Johnsson, Göran Bredberg, G. Reiss, Helge Rask-Andersen, Heidi Felix, S. Iurato, G. Bock, V. Balle, Niklas Danckwardt-Lillieström, Michael Gleeson, and Anneliese Schrott-Fischer
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Utricle ,Temporal bone ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Meniere Disease ,Cochlea ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Vestibular system ,business.industry ,Cochlear nerve ,Temporal Bone ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Presbycusis ,medicine.disease ,Vestibular nerve ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Ear, Inner ,Female ,Vestibule, Labyrinth ,sense organs ,Saccule ,Endolymphatic Sac ,business ,Meniere's disease - Abstract
A multicentre study of the inner ears of an 88-year-old patient with vertiginous spells and severe hearing loss in the left ear was performed, employing regular and block surface preparations, light and electron microscopy with qualitative and quantitative evaluation of the cochlear and vestibular nerves. There was severe hydrops of the left cochlea and saccule. Reissner's membrane extended into the vestibule and herniated into the perilymphatic space of the non-ampullated end of the horizontal canal. Furthermore, the short canal connecting the posterior ampulla with the utricle had a small, exceedingly thin balloon-like expansion. Only slight hydrops limited to the cochlea was found in the right ear. Sensorineural degeneration was much more pronounced in the left cochlea than in the right. The number of cochlear and vestibular nerve fibres was greatly reduced in the left ear where more fibres with degenerative changes were present. In both specimens the number of myelinated nerve fibres in osseous spiral lamina was smaller than that in the cochlear nerve in the internal auditory canal. Changes occurred in the endolymphatic sacs but were considered non-specific. In this case severe, apparently progressive hydrops and sensorineural degeneration, characteristic of Menière's disease, were associated with atypical onset of clinical symptoms at a late age.
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- 1992
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11. Introduction
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S. IURATO, D. HENDERSON, A. QUARANTA, and R. J. SALVI
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History and Philosophy of Science ,General Neuroscience ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Published
- 1999
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12. Stapes Surgery in the Elderly
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S. Iurato, Marina Onori, Salvatore Mevoli, and Giuseppe Bux
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Stapedectomy ,business ,Clinical record ,humanities ,Stapes surgery ,Surgery - Abstract
Thirty-eight patients aged 70 years and older submitted to stapedectomy by the same surgeon were identified and their clinical records retrospectively reviewed. The comparison group consisted of 38
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- 2007
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13. Cholesteatoma in Children: Histopathologic Findings in Middle Ear Ossicles
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Leonardo Resta, S. Iurato, Antonio Quaranta, Bartoli R, and E. Lozupone
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Adult ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Plasma Cells ,Osteoclasts ,Bone resorption ,Periosteum ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymphocytes ,Mast Cells ,Ear ossicles ,Bone Resorption ,Child ,Osteitis ,Ear Ossicles ,Cholesteatoma, Middle Ear ,Ossicles ,business.industry ,Macrophages ,Middle ear disease ,Cholesteatoma ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Haversian System ,Otitis Media ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Chronic Disease ,Disease Progression ,Granulation Tissue ,Middle ear ,Histopathology ,sense organs ,business ,Granulocytes - Abstract
Middle ear ossicles removed during ear surgery in 40 patients were examined in order to compare the histopathologic changes in children with those observed in adults. Bone resorption, mainly localized at the level of the periosteum and haversian canals in adults, was much more extensive in children. Replacement of bone by fibrous granulation tissue was observed in 60% of children's ossicles and in 27% of those belonging to adults. In children, extensive active resorptive osteitis of the ossicles was frequently associated with intensive round cell infiltration, which seems to play an important role in bone absorption and in the aggressiveness of cholesteatoma.
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- 1995
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14. Pathology of idiopathic encephaloceles into the middle ear
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Silvia Colucci, S. Iurato, Alberta Zambonin, Giuseppe Bux, Salvatore Mevoli, Marina Onofri, and Antonio Dal Sasso
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Adolescent ,Ear, Middle ,Brain herniation ,Encephalocele ,Central nervous system disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Aged ,Neurons ,Mucous Membrane ,business.industry ,Brain ,Dendrites ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Herniated tissue ,Chronic infection ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Gliosis ,Middle ear ,Histopathology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Meningoencephalic herniations into the middle ear and mastoid are rare and histologic information has been supplied only in few reports. Sections from two idiopathic encephaloceles were compared with those from encephaloceles associated with previous trauma, infection or surgery described in the literature. In the idiopathic encephaloceles, the herniated tissue consisted of cortical neural tissue with degenerative changes and gliosis like that described in cases with a history of chronic infection, previous surgery or trauma, but no inflammatory cells were present.
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- 2002
15. Malleus-handle fracture: historical review and three new cases
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S, Iurato and A, Quaranta
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Adult ,Male ,Fractures, Bone ,Acoustic Impedance Tests ,Hearing Loss, Conductive ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Humans ,Female ,Malleus ,Middle Aged ,Foreign Bodies ,Medical History Taking - Abstract
Isolated malleus-handle fracture is a clinical entity seldom reported in the medical literature but well known in the last century. The purpose of this paper was to review the literature over the last 150 years and describe three new cases.Extensive review of the literature and chart review of three patients with isolated malleus-handle fracture.The study was performed partly at a private practice and partly in an academic tertiary referral center.At least 43 malleus-handle fractures have been reported in the literature. Three new occurrences were studied.The review of the literature showed that head trauma with skull base fracture was the most frequent cause of malleus-handle fracture, followed by blows on the tympanic membrane and barotrauma, penetration of pen-holders or hair pins, penetration of twigs, and attempts to remove a foreign body pushed inside the ear. In the first patient reported here, the malleus-handle fracture was caused by a whirlpool bath, in the second, the cause was unknown, and, in the third, it was caused by a brisk decompression inside the ear canal.This lesion is not rare, and the diagnosis frequently is missed because the tympanic membrane appears intact. A careful otoscopic examination with pneumomassage, an abnormally high compliance at tympanometry, and a carefully recorded medical history may lead to the diagnosis of isolated malleus-handle fracture in a patient with a mild conductive hearing loss.
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- 1999
16. Comparison of long-term hearing results after vestibular neurectomy, endolymphatic mastoid shunt, and medical therapy
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A, Quaranta, M, Onofri, V, Sallustio, and S, Iurato
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Adult ,Male ,Analysis of Variance ,Time Factors ,Speech Reception Threshold Test ,Infant, Newborn ,Middle Aged ,Vestibular Nerve ,Mastoid ,Endolymphatic Shunt ,Speech Discrimination Tests ,Humans ,Female ,Endolymphatic Sac ,Hearing Disorders ,Meniere Disease ,Aged - Abstract
This study aimed to compare the hearing changes in the long term after vestibular neurectomy, endolymphatic mastoid shunt, and medical treatment in classic Meniere's disease.A retrospective case review was conducted based on audiologic follow-up between 5 and 21 years.The study was performed at two centers in Bari University Hospital, one performing vestibular neurectomy as the first surgical procedure for Meinere's disease and the other, endolymphatic mastoid shunt.Of 68 patients with intractable idiopathic Meniere's disease, 29 underwent middle fossa vestibular neurectomy, and 17 had endolymphatic mastoid shunt; 22 were offered surgery but declined.Outcome measures were puretone average (PTA), speech reception threshold, and speech discrimination score before and after treatment.PTA declined by an average of 9.3 dB in neurectomy patients, 13.3 dB in patients undergoing endolymphatic mastoid shunt, and 18.1 dB in patients who were offered surgery but declined. Patients were subdivided into two cohorts based on their preoperative or initial PTA. In the patients who had PTA scores worse than 50 dB initially, the PTA declined an average of 4.3 dB in the vestibular neurectomy group, 11.5 dB in the endolymphatic sac group, and 4 dB in the nonsurgical group. In the patients with PTAor = 50 dB initially, the PTA declined an average of of 25.3 dB in the vestibular neurectomy group, 16.1 in the endolymphatic sac group, and 26.2 dB in the nonsurgical group. Although shunt patients with good hearing initially deteriorated less than neurectomy patients and less than patients who declined surgery, the difference was not significant.These results indicate that patients with poor hearing stabilized, while patients with good hearing continued to deteriorate. The same conditions were observed in the patients who had surgery and those who were offered surgery but declined.
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- 1997
17. Clinicopathological consultation. Ear cholesteatoma versus cholesterol granuloma
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A, Ferlito, K O, Devaney, A, Rinaldo, C M, Milroy, B M, Wenig, S, Iurato, and B F, McCabe
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Diagnosis, Differential ,Cholesterol ,Cholesteatoma, Middle Ear ,Granuloma, Foreign-Body ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Humans - Published
- 1997
18. [Letter to the editor]
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S, Iurato
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Publishing ,Humans ,Periodicals as Topic - Published
- 1996
19. Long-term follow-up after middle fossa vestibular neurectomy for Ménière's disease
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Marina Onofri and S. Iurato
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Long term follow up ,Vestibular Nerve ,Vestibular neurectomy ,MENIERE DISEASE ,Postoperative Complications ,Audiometry ,Vertigo ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Medicine ,Humans ,Hearing Disorders ,Meniere Disease ,biology ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Middle fossa ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Vestibule ,Female ,sense organs ,business ,Meniere's disease - Abstract
Thirty-seven patients operated on by total vestibular neurectomy for Ménière's disease underwent follow-up examination for at least 5 years. Vertigo has been controlled in all the patients excepting one who developed Ménière's disease in the opposite ear. Three patients had a total hearing loss. Overall results in this study are comparable to those of other series in the literature. Vestibular neurectomy has been confirmed to be an effective procedure for relieving vertigo in intractable Ménière's disease with a success rate of 90-100% while preserving hearing in most of the patients. The results of vestibular neurectomy are far better than those obtainable with endolymphatic sac surgery.
- Published
- 1995
20. Very far-advanced otosclerosis
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S, Iurato, G C, Ettorre, M, Onofri, and C, Davidson
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Adult ,Male ,Cochlear Implants ,Otosclerosis ,Hearing Loss, Sensorineural ,Terminology as Topic ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Stapes Surgery ,Bone Conduction ,Aged - Abstract
The term very far-advanced otosclerosis is proposed to indicate otosclerotic patients with both bone and air conduction thresholds nonmeasurable on a standard clinical audiometer (blank audiogram). Three of these patients have undergone stapedotomy with satisfactory results. This confirms that cochlear implantation is not the best treatment for all profoundly deaf patients at least with implants available today. Some of the patients with a blank audiogram are better off with exploratory tympanotomy and stapedotomy.
- Published
- 1992
21. [Clinical study of the efficacy and tolerability of nimesulide in suppositories compared to flurbiprofen in gynecology]
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C, Montoneri, A, Garofalo, S, Iurato, I, Scaricabarozzi, and R, Trezzani
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Analgesics ,Sulfonamides ,Flurbiprofen ,Suppositories ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Drug Evaluation ,Humans ,Female ,Drug Tolerance ,Genital Diseases, Female - Abstract
The efficacy and tolerability of nimesulide in a new pharmaceutical suppository form were assessed in a double blind study versus flurbiprofen in pain-inflammatory pathologies of obstetrico-gynecological nature. One hundred patients with pelvic inflammatory disease were randomly assigned to treatment with nimesulide or flurbiprofen. Both drugs, administered in a dose of 2 suppositories a day for 7 days, evidenced speedy, effective analgesic and anti-inflammatory activity combined with good tolerability. Specifically, as regards the pain component, nimesulide demonstrated a significantly more marked analgesic effect than flurbiprofen in the first two hours of treatment.
- Published
- 1990
22. New and conventional techniques in human auditory and vestibular pathology
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S, Iurato, G, Bredberg, and G, Bock
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Europe ,Manuals as Topic ,Fetus ,Tissue Fixation ,Ear, Inner ,Ear, Middle ,Humans ,Temporal Bone ,Autopsy ,Specimen Handling - Published
- 1990
23. Far-Advanced Otosclerosis
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Onofri M, Quaranta A, and S. Iurato
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Otorhinolaryngology ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Otosclerosis ,business ,medicine.disease ,Data science - Published
- 1998
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24. Functional Histopathology of the Human Audio-Vestibular OrganEuro-Data-Hearing
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Gregory R. Bock, Göran Bredberg, and S. Iurato
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Vestibular system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Data Collection ,Labyrinth Diseases ,Ear ,General Medicine ,Audiology ,Surgery ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Histopathology ,European Union ,Vestibule, Labyrinth ,business - Abstract
The present paper describes the setting-up of a new project, sponsored by the Commission of the European Communities, to promote the study of functional histopathology of the human audio-vestibular organ. The project has the purpose of co-ordinating in Europe morphological research on the hearing and equilibrium organ and promoting the comparison of data from clinical, physiological and morphological studies in the field of hearing and equilibrium impairment. A manual (Iurato et al., 1982) has been prepared with the objectives of (1) stimulating clinicians to participate in the project, (2) encouraging the collection of audiological data for comparison with pathology, and (3) supplying clinicians with the necessary information about the technique of fixation and preparation of the specimens. The fixation procedures for the two major techniques of studying ear pathology: (1) microdissection and electron microscopy, and (2) embedding of the whole block for serial sectioning and light microscopy, are described in detail. Special paragraphs deal with the technique of fixation of the brain and with the technique of removal of the temporal bones and brain at autopsy. The instructions for delivery of the specimens and the publication rules are enclosed in the main body of the manual. Appendix 1 contains a list of the participating laboratories. Appendix 2 deals with autopsy legislation in the different European countries. Appendix 3 contains the sender's data sheet which supplies the instructions for collecting the clinical history of the patient and the audiological and vestibular data.
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- 1983
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25. Verbindungskomplexe An Zellen Der Reissner-Membran In Gefriergebrochenen Präparaten
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L. Luciano, G. Wermbter, E. Reale, K. Franke, Ennio Pannese, and S. Iurato
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Basement membrane ,Chinchilla ,Tight junction ,biology ,Endolymph ,Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Cell junction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,biology.animal ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Intercellular space ,Inner ear ,sense organs ,Cochlea - Abstract
The Reissner membrane of the chinchilla inner ear was studied with the freeze-fracture method. Zonulae occludentes, composed of 2 to 8 strands, seal the intercellular space close to the endolymphatic surface. They are morphologically simialr to those seen between the marginal cells of the stri vascularis, but much less developed than those between the basal strial cells.
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- 1975
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26. European Programme on Functional Histopathology of the Human Audio-Vestibular Organ
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Göran Bredberg, S. Iurato, and Gregory R. Bock
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Gynecology ,Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,International Cooperation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Histological Techniques ,Labyrinth Diseases ,Ear, Middle ,Art ,Audiology ,Language and Linguistics ,Europe ,Manuals as Topic ,Speech and Hearing ,medicine ,Humans ,European Union ,Vestibule, Labyrinth ,Hearing Disorders ,media_common - Abstract
Cet article decrit l'organisation d'un nouveau projet, commandite par la Commission des Communautes Europeennes, concernant l'etude fonctionnelle et histopathologique de l'organe audio-vestibulaire humain. Le but de ce projet est de coordonner en Europe la recherche anatomique sur l'organe de l'audition et de l'equilibre et aussi de promouvoir la comparaison de donnees cliniques, physiologiques et morphologiques dans le domaine de la pathologie. Un manuel [Iurato, S.; Bredberg, G.; Bock, G.: Functional histopathology of the human audio-vestibular organ. European Data - Hearing Project, catalogue Nr. CD-NJ-82-003-EN-C 1982, Office of Official Publications of the European Communities, Luxembourg 1982] a ete redige dans le but de: (1) stimuler les cliniciens a participer au projet; (2) encourager la collecte de donnees audiologiques pour comparaison avec la pathologie et (3) fournir aux cliniciens les informations techniques necessaires pour la fixation et la preparation des specimens. On decrit en detail de...
- Published
- 1984
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27. Childhood Deafness in the European Community
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M. L. Meyer, A. Morgon, O. Bentzen, J. R. T. Colley, W. J. Moore, D. Hennebert, S. Iurato, O. McCullen, J. A. M. Martin, C. Holm, and G. A. De Jonge
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,European community ,Hearing loss ,Deafness ,Audiology ,Rubella ,Hearing Aids ,Sex Factors ,Sex factors ,Epidemiology ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Child ,Perceptive deafness ,business.industry ,Communication ,Public health ,Auditory Threshold ,medicine.disease ,Europe ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Education, Special ,Etiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Child Language - Abstract
This is a summary of a report which was the result of an epidemiological investigation, carried out under the sponsorship of the Commission for the European Communities (CEC) and its Committee on Medical and Public Health Research (CRM) in the nine countries of the European Community, in order to determine the prevalence of childhood deafness. The design of the study specified that all children born during the year 1969 would be included if their hearing loss averaged 50 dB or worse in the better ear. Most of the children were enumerated in 1977 when they were eight years old.The prevalence of the degree of deafness in the CEC was 0.9/1000 live births in 1969. There were more deaf children born in the winter than in the summer months. Perceptive hearing loss accounts for 92% of all the cases of deafness and Rubella was the largest single cause of the deafness where the aetiology was known. If perceptive deafness is considered as a whole, in 42% of the children no cause was reported. 29% of the children we...
- Published
- 1981
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28. EEC Hearing Impairment Programme: Collaboration in Europe, 1974–1988
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S. Iurato and G.R. Bock
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medicine.medical_specialty ,European community ,Emerging technologies ,Commission ,Deafness ,Audiology ,Europe ,Cochlear Implants ,Hearing Aids ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Action (philosophy) ,Child, Preschool ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Hearing impaired ,European Union ,Child ,Hearing Loss ,Psychology - Abstract
The Commission of the European Communities funds a 'concerted action' programme in the area of hearing impairment. The programme does not fund research directly, but is intended to provide funds for coordination of research in different countries. Previous projects funded by the programme include a comprehensive study of the prevalence of childhood deafness in the European Community, and meetings on cochlear implants, human temporal bone histopathology, diagnostic techniques and hearing impairment in children. The programme is currently concerned with new technologies for communication in the hearing impaired and activities in 1988 will include workshops on signal processing hearing aids and early diagnosis in children.
- Published
- 1988
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29. Freeze-Fracture Study of the Cell Junctions in the Utricle and Saccule
- Author
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S. Iurato, K. Franke, E. Reale, and L. Luciano
- Subjects
Intracellular Fluid ,Chinchilla ,animal structures ,Sensory system ,Cell junction ,biology.animal ,Utricle ,Hair Cells, Auditory ,Vestibular labyrinth ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Freeze Fracturing ,Saccule and Utricle ,Nerve Endings ,biology ,Gap junction ,Desmosomes ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,eye diseases ,Body Fluids ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Ear, Inner ,Synapses ,Fracture (geology) ,sense organs ,Saccule - Abstract
The maculae sacculi and utriculi of the chinchilla vestibular labyrinth have been studied by freeze-fracture method. In the replicas extensive zonulae oc-cludentes have been found between sensory and supporting cells at the endolymphatic surface. Gap junctions are located between the supporting cells. Some intramem-branous specializations of the synoptic regions are described in both types of the sensory cells.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Hair Cell Distributions in the Normal Human Cochlea: A Report of a European Working Group
- Author
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A, Wright, A, Davis, G, Bredberg, L, Ulehlová, H, Spencer, G, Bock, H, Felix, S, Iurato, L G, Johnsson, and M, Pauler
- Subjects
Adult ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Cell Count ,Biology ,Fetus ,Reference Values ,Cochlear hair cell ,Hair Cells, Auditory ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Outer hair cells ,Cochlea ,Aged ,Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner ,integumentary system ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Normal population ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Child, Preschool ,sense organs ,Hair cell - Abstract
Cochlear hair cell counts from individuals who had clinically normal hearing prior to their death have been plotted for various age bands as a function of the number of hair cells per millimetre against their position in the cochlea. Position has been expressed as the distance of that observation of hair cell density from the base of the cochlea, divided by the total length of the cochlea, thereby giving a proportional representation of the cochlea in the range of 0.0 to 1.0 with 20 subdivisions of 0.05. There is an age-related decrease in the number of hair cells in the normal population, and this is more marked for the outer hair cells.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Fracture faces of the junctional complexes in the reticular membrane of the organ of corti
- Author
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L. Luciano, Ennio Pannese, S. Iurato, K. Franke, G. Wermbter, and E. Reale
- Subjects
Reticular membrane ,Chinchilla ,biology ,Tight junction ,Chemistry ,Endolymph ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Organ of Corti ,biology.animal ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Inner ear ,sense organs - Abstract
The junctional complexes in the reticular membrane of the organ of Corti have been investigated in chinchilla inner ear by the freeze-fracture method. Extremely developed zonulae occludentes were observed where the supporting cells contact each other and the sensory cells. These junctions can be considered “very tight” and completely seal off the tunnel of Corti, Nuel's space and the outer tunnel from the endolymph, as observed by investigations carried out by using tracers. The zonulae occludentes between Hensen's cells are always uninterrupted but considerably lower than among supporting and sensory cells.
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Contents, Vol. 50, 1988
- Author
-
A. Kollàr, Samy Elwany, Dagmar Löfler-Badzek, Rudolf Häusler, Wolfgang Arnold, Philippe Guillemin, Pierre Montandon, Sasa Zagar, S. Iurato, Joseph B. Nadol, Makoto Miyazaki, Hans Christian Larsen, G.R. Bock, P. Santabarbara, Yoshinobu Hirono, Elisabeth Hultcrantz, M. Hillerdal, C. Angelborg, J. Doménech, Etsuo Yamamoto, Hidehaku Kumagami, Traserra J, and M. Carulla
- Subjects
Otorhinolaryngology - Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Histochemical Localization of Acetylcholinesterase Activity in the Cochlear and Vestibular Ganglion Cells
- Author
-
Ennio Pannese, S. Iurato, L. Luciano, K. Franke, and E. Reale
- Subjects
Chinchilla ,Cytoplasm ,Golgi Apparatus ,Scarpa's ganglion ,Vestibular Nerve ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,biology.animal ,Methods ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Inner ear ,Cochlear Nerve ,biology ,Histocytochemistry ,Cell Membrane ,Cochlear nerve ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Golgi apparatus ,Vestibular nerve ,Acetylcholinesterase ,Axolemma ,Cell biology ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Otorhinolaryngology ,chemistry ,symbols ,Schwann Cells ,sense organs - Abstract
The localization of AChE activity was investigated in the cochlear and vestibular ganglion cells of the chinchilla inner ear with the electron microscope by Karnovsky's method. The reaction product was localized within the rough-surfaced cisterns of the E. R., including the perinuclear cistern, and in some cisterns of the Golgi complex. In a few myelinated nerve fibres and in most of the unmyelinated ones the reaction product was present along the axolemma. The reaction product was absent in the satellite and Schwann cells. The controls indicated that the reaction was due to AChE activity.
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Some Initial Electron-Microscope Investigations of a Case of Ménière's Syndrome
- Author
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L. Pietrantoni and S. Iurato
- Subjects
Microscopy ,S syndrome ,Materials science ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Otorhinolaryngology ,law ,Humans ,Electrons ,General Medicine ,Electron microscope ,Meniere Disease ,law.invention - Abstract
(1960). Some Initial Electron-Microscope Investigations of a Case of Meniere's Syndrome. Acta Oto-Laryngologica: Vol. 52, No. 1-6, pp. 15-26.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Elektronenoptische struktur der innenohr-membranen mit r�ckschlussen auf ihre eignung zum stoffaustausch
- Author
-
S. Iurato
- Subjects
Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Otorhinolaryngology ,business.industry ,Head and neck surgery ,medicine ,General Medicine ,business - Abstract
Die Reissnersche Membran, die Membrana reticularis und die Basilarmembran werden elektronenmikroskopisch untersucht. Dabei ergibt sich, das entsprechend ihrer submikroskopischen Struktur offenbar nur die Reissnersche Membran fur einen Stoffaustausch zwischen den Skalen geeignet ist (durch Pinocytose), wahrend den anderen beiden Membranen these Eigenschaft fehlt. Eine einfache Diffusion durch die Intercellularspalten kann uberall ausgeschlossen werden (Zonulae occludentes).
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Cochlear Morphology from Würzburg (1951) to Turin (1987): Old and New Aspects
- Author
-
S. Iurato
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,History, 19th Century ,Morphology (biology) ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Art ,History, 20th Century ,Cochlea ,law.invention ,Europe ,Microscopy, Electron ,Otolaryngology ,Otorhinolaryngology ,law ,Temporal bone ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Humans ,Camera lucida ,media_common - Abstract
A review is given of the methods employed in human temporal bone pathology, from the camera lucida drawings of the last century to the sophisticated techniques of today.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Efferent fibers to the sensory cells of Corti's organ
- Author
-
S. Iurato
- Subjects
Efferent ,Sensory system ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Neuroscience - Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Submicroscopic structure of the spiral ligament in man
- Author
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C, Morera, A, dal Sasso, and S, Iurato
- Subjects
Microscopy, Electron ,Ligaments ,Humans ,Organ of Corti - Published
- 1980
39. [Connection complex on the cells of Reissner's membrane in freeze-fractured preparations]
- Author
-
K D, Franke, E, Reale, S, Iurato, L, Luciano, G, Wermbter, and E, Pannese
- Subjects
Endolymph ,Intercellular Junctions ,Chinchilla ,Animals ,Freeze Fracturing ,Basement Membrane ,Cochlea - Abstract
The Reissner membrane of the chinchilla inner ear was studied with the freeze-fracture method. Zonulae occludentes, composed of 2 to 8 strands, seal the intercellular space close to the endolymphatic surface. They are morphologically simialr to those seen between the marginal cells of the stri vascularis, but much less developed than those between the basal strial cells.
- Published
- 1975
40. The junctional complexes among the cells of the organ of Corti as revealed by freeze-fracturing
- Author
-
S, Iurato, K D, Franke, L, Luciano, G, Wermbter, F, Pannese, and E, Reale
- Subjects
Intercellular Junctions ,Freeze Fracturing ,Humans ,Organ of Corti - Published
- 1977
41. Speech discrimination in advanced otosclerosis following stapedectomy
- Author
-
M. Onofri and S. Iurato
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hearing Loss, Sensorineural ,Ear disease ,Stapedectomy ,Audiology ,Stapes Surgery ,medicine.disease ,Stapes surgery ,Surgery ,Bone conduction ,Speech discrimination ,Otosclerosis ,Otorhinolaryngology ,medicine ,Speech Perception ,Humans ,In patient ,Audiometry ,business ,Bone Conduction - Abstract
This paper studies the changes in speech discrimination following stapes surgery in patients with advanced otosclerosis. Two thirds of these patients showed a postoperative improvement in the discrimination score with obvious correlation with closure of bone-air gap. The results were slightly worse in comparison to those obtained on otosclerotic patients with good bone conduction. In advanced otosclerosis even a minimal impairment in bone conduction and/or an incomplete closure of the gap interfere with discrimination.
- Published
- 1985
42. Intercellular junctions in the vascular stria and spiral ligament
- Author
-
G. Wermbter, K. Franke, L. Luciano, Ennio Pannese, S. Iurato, and E. Reale
- Subjects
Male ,Cytoplasm ,Endolymph ,Cochlear duct ,Biology ,Cell junction ,Epithelium ,Chinchilla ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Inner ear ,Molecular Biology ,Tight junction ,Cell Membrane ,Gap junction ,Epithelial Cells ,Anatomy ,Cochlear Duct ,Perilymph ,Capillaries ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Intercellular Junctions ,nervous system ,Ear, Inner ,Spiral ligament ,Biophysics ,Female ,sense organs - Abstract
The junctional complexes in the vascular stria and spiral ligament of the chinchilla inner ear have been studied using the electron microscope with freeze-fracture technique. The intercellular spaces of the vascular stria are sealed towards the endolymph by the zonulae occludentes “intermediate to tight” of the marginal cells and towards the perilymph by the zonulae occludentes “very tight” of the basal cells. All the cells of the vascular stria and spiral ligament have their cytoplasms in direct communication, which is mediated by numerous gap junctions. The significance of the junctional complexes of the vascular stria probably is connected with the unique ionic composition of the cochlear endolymph and with the maintenance of steep solute gradients by active transport in the stria.
- Published
- 1975
43. Intercellular junctions in the organ of Corti as revealed by freeze fracturing
- Author
-
Ennio Pannese, S. Iurato, K. Franke, E. Reale, L. Luciano, and G. Wermbter
- Subjects
Chinchilla ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sensory system ,Cell junction ,biology.animal ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Freeze Fracturing ,Inner ear ,Organ of Corti ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cell Membrane ,Gap junction ,General Medicine ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Intercellular Junctions ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Cytoplasm ,Female ,sense organs ,Free nerve ending - Abstract
The junctions between the cells of the organ of Corti have been investigated with the freeze-fracture method in the chinchilla inner ear. Numerous gap junctions have been found among all the supporting cells, particularly at the level of their basal part. This means that the supporting cells have their cytoplasm electro-tonically and metabolically coupled. Gap junctions were not observed between supporting and sensory cells nor between sensory cells and nerve endings. At this level the transmission should be chemically mediated.
- Published
- 1976
44. Metaplasic bone tissue in tympanosclerosis
- Author
-
S. Iurato, Anna Teti, and Zambonin Zallone A
- Subjects
Dense connective tissue ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Metaplasia ,Sclerosis ,Chemistry ,Ear, Middle ,Osteoclasts ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Fibroblasts ,medicine.disease ,Bone tissue ,law.invention ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,law ,medicine ,Vascular channel ,Humans ,Electron microscope ,Tympanosclerosis ,Calcification - Abstract
Two different tissues have been observed in specimens of tympanosclerotic material studied under light and electron microscopy. The first. devoid of cells and blood vessels, is a dense fibrous tissue similar to that already described in fibrous tympanosclerosis. The sec ond resembles a bone tissue, containing osteocytes and vascular channels: it is laid down by metaplasic fibro-blasts following the invasion of the first tissue by osteo-clasts and blood vessels after its calcification.
- Published
- 1983
45. [Ultrastructural aspects of tympanosclerosis]
- Author
-
M, Bertossi and S, Iurato
- Subjects
Otitis Media ,Sclerosis ,Tympanic Membrane ,Ear, Middle ,Humans ,Ear Diseases - Published
- 1975
46. An ultrastructural study of the calcification process in tympanosclerotic tissues
- Author
-
M, Bertossi and S, Iurato
- Subjects
Organoids ,Cytoplasm ,Microscopy, Electron ,Tympanic Membrane ,Connective Tissue ,Calcinosis ,Humans ,Fibroblasts ,Ear Diseases ,Basement Membrane - Abstract
The alterations of the connective tissue components in the middle ear during tympanosclerosis have been analyzed at ultrastructural level. The final steps of this pathological condition are characterized by the disappearance of the blood vessels, cellular degeneration, hyalin degeneration, and calcification. The different features of the inorganic deposits and the cellular origin of the organic structures involved in the calcification process are described.
- Published
- 1981
47. [Ectopic ossification: ultrastructural observations on bone tissue formed in tympanosclerosis]
- Author
-
A, Zambonin Zallone, A, Teti, and S, Iurato
- Subjects
Microscopy, Electron ,Sclerosis ,Ossification, Heterotopic ,Ear, Middle ,Humans ,Ear Diseases ,Bone and Bones - Abstract
The structure of the bone tissue ectopically formed during tympanosclerosis has been analyzed with the aid of light and electron microscopy. Methaplasic fibroblasts appear to be involved in the deposition of calcifying matrix, while completely normal osteoclasts resorb the tissue already formed. Signs of several deposition-resorption phases are present.
- Published
- 1983
48. Microdissection, cytocochleogram and transmission electron microscopy: a technique for a comprehensive evaluation of human cochlear pathology
- Author
-
Anna Teti, V. Balle, A. Zambonin Zallone, S. Iurato, G. Salomon, and M. Roberto
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dissection ,Labyrinth Diseases ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Cochlea ,Specimen Handling ,Microscopy, Electron ,Otorhinolaryngology ,medicine ,Humans ,Cochlear pathology ,Microdissection ,Fixation (histology) - Abstract
A technique combining microdissection with cytocochleogram and TEM is described as a tool for studying human cochlear pathology. It is recommended in cases well studied from a clinical point of view and with a short time interval between death and fixation.
- Published
- 1985
49. Stenosis of the internal auditory canal
- Author
-
S. Iurato, G. C. Ettorre, and M. Roberto
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Labyrinth Diseases ,General Medicine ,Constriction, Pathologic ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Auditory canal ,Radiography ,Stenosis ,Text mining ,Otorhinolaryngology ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,business ,Hearing Loss - Published
- 1979
50. [Submicroscopic structure of human vestibular ganglia in Menière's disease (preliminary report)]
- Author
-
E, García-Ibáñez, J L, García-Ibáñez, and S, Iurato
- Subjects
Humans ,Vestibular Nerve ,Meniere Disease - Published
- 1977
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