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Featured researches published by Bove A.


International Journal of Surgery | 2014

Which differences do elderly patients present in single-stage treatment for cholecysto-choledocholithiasis?

Bove A; R.M. Di Renzo; Gino Palone; V. D'Addetta; F. Caldararo; C. Antonopulos; P. Panaccio; Chiarini S; Giuseppe Bongarzoni

Patients with symptomatic gallstones present common bile duct stones in approximately 10% of cases. It is possible to resolve both gallbladder and bile duct stones with a single procedure. The aim of this study is to determine the effectiveness of a single stage procedure for gallbladder and bile duct stones in the elderly patients and to expose the differences between the various techniques. From January 2008 to December 2013, we treated 1540 patients with gallbladder stones. In 152 cases, we also found bile duct stones. 150 of these were treated in a single stage procedure. We divided our patients into 2 groups: Group A was younger than 65 (104 patients); Group B was 65 or older (46 patients). We retrospectively compared sex, ASA score, conversion rate, success rate, post-operative complications, hospital stay, and treatment method. We had no intra-operative mortality. 1 patient in Group B, heart condition (ASA 4), died with multiple organ failure (MOF) 10 days after his operation. ASA score: 3.5 ± 0.5 in A vs 2 ± 0.9 in B (P 0.001), post-operative complications 6% in A vs 18.1% in B (P 0.0325) and hospital stay 4.1 ± 2.3 in A vs 9.5 ± 5.5 in B (P 0.0001) were significantly higher in Group B. No differences were found in term of success rate: 94% in A vs 90% in B (P 0.4944). The procedure used to obtain the clearance of the bile duct showed a different success rate across the two groups: for the patients under 65 years old, trans-cystic clearance (TC-CBDE) was successful in 90% of cases, and only 51% for those older than 65, where we had to recall 49% for laparo-endoscopic rendez-vous (RV-IOERC) (P 0.0014). In conclusion, single stage treatment is safe and effective also to elderly patients. The methods used in patients being younger than 65 years old is what appeared to be significantly different.


Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management | 2018

Single-stage procedure for the treatment of cholecysto-choledocolithiasis: a surgical procedures review

Bove A; Raffaella Maria Di Renzo; Gino Palone; Domenica Carmen Testa; Valentina Malerba; Giuseppe Bongarzoni

While laparoscopic cholecystectomy is generally accepted as the treatment of choice for simple gallbladder stones, in cases in which common bile duct stones are also present, clinical and diagnostic elements, along with intraoperative findings, define the optimal means of treatment. All available options must be accessible to the surgical team which must necessarily be multidisciplinary and include a surgeon, an endoscopist, and a radiologist in order to identify the best option for a truly personalized surgery. This review describes the different techniques and approaches used based on distinctive recommendations and factors, according to the specific cases treated and the results achieved.


Archive | 2008

Notes Concerning Current Pathophysiological Aspects of Incisional Hernia

Bove A; Laura Corradetti; Luciano Corbellini

Wound healing requires an initial haemostatic phase, an inflammatory phase lasting from minutes to hours, the migration of resident cells (fibroblasts, epidermal cells and endothelial cells) within the following 24 h and a regenerative phase during the subsequent 3 days. During the latter phase, activated fibroblasts respond to the growth factors present and initially produce type III collagen[1]. Contemporaneously, angiogenesis begins with the organisation of the collagen fibres; at this point, type I collagen and the phagocytes that remove fibrin come into play [2].


Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management | 2016

Preoperative risk factors in total thyroidectomy of substernal goiter

Bove A; Raffaella Maria Di Renzo; Gauro D'Urbano; Manuela Bellobono; Vincenzo D'Addetta; Alfonso Lapergola; Giuseppe Bongarzoni

The definition of substernal goiter (SG) is based on variable criteria leading to a considerable variation in the reported incidence (from 0.2% to 45%). The peri- and postoperative complications are higher in total thyroidectomy (TT) for SG than that for cervical goiter. The aim of this study was to evaluate the preoperative risk factors associated with postoperative complications. From 2002 to 2014, 142 (8.5%; 98 women and 44 men) of the 1690 patients who underwent TT had a SG. We retrospectively evaluated the following parameters: sex, age, histology, pre- and retrovascular position, recurrence, and extension beyond the carina. These parameters were then related to the postoperative complications: seroma/hematoma, transient and permanent hypocalcemia, transient and permanent laryngeal nerve palsy, and the length of surgery. The results were further compared with a control group of 120 patients operated on in the same period with TT for cervical goiter. All but two procedures were terminated via cervicotomy, where partial sternotomies were required. No perioperative mortality was observed. Results of the statistical analysis (Student’s t-test and Fisher’s exact test) indicated an association between recurrence and extension beyond the carina with all postoperative complications. The group that underwent TT of SG showed a statistically significant higher risk for transient hypocalcemia (relative risk =1.767 with 95% confidence interval: 1.131–2.7605, P=0.0124, and need to treat =7.1) and a trend toward significance for transient recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy (relative risk =6.7806 with 95% confidence interval: 0.8577–53.2898, P=0.0696, and need to treat =20.8) compared to the group that underwent TT of cervical goiter. TT is the procedure to perform in SG even if the incidence of complications is higher than for cervical goiters. The major risk factors associated with postoperative complications are recurrence and extension beyond the carina. In the presence of these factors, greater care should be taken.


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2009

Why is there recurrence after transcystic laparoscopic bile duct clearance? Risk factor analysis

Bove A; Giuseppe Bongarzoni; Gino Palone; R.M. Di Renzo; E. M. Calisesi; L. Corradetti; M. Di Nicola; Luciano Corbellini


Microsurgery | 1998

FACIAL NERVE PALSY: WHICH FLAP? MICROSURGICAL, ANATOMICAL, AND FUNCTIONAL CONSIDERATIONS

Bove A; Chiarini S; Vito D'Andrea; Filippo Maria Di Matteo; Giulio Lanzi; Enrico De Antoni


Annali Italiani Di Chirurgia | 2011

Efficacy and safety of ablative techniques in elderly HCC patients.

Bove A; Bongarzoni G; Di Renzo Rm; Marsili L; Chiarini S; Corbellini L


International Journal of Surgery | 2014

Early biomarkers of hypocalcemia following total thyroidectomy

Bove A; R.M. Di Renzo; Gino Palone; V. D'Addetta; R. Percario; P. Panaccio; Giuseppe Bongarzoni


Annali Italiani Di Chirurgia | 2009

Effective treatment of haemorrhoids: early complication and late results after 150 consecutive stapled haemorrhoidectomies.

Bove A; Giuseppe Bongarzoni; Gino Palone; Chiarini S; Enrico Maria Calisesi; Luciano Corbellini


Hepato-gastroenterology | 2001

Surgical controversies in the treatment of recurrent achalasia of the esophagus.

Bove A; Luciano Corbellini; Catania A; Chiarini S; Giuseppe Bongarzoni; Stella S; De Antoni E; De Matteo G

Collaboration


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Chiarini S

Sapienza University of Rome

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M. Di Nicola

University of Chieti-Pescara

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Peter A. Mattei

Sapienza University of Rome

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Enrico De Antoni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giulio Lanzi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Vito D'Andrea

Sapienza University of Rome

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