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Dive into the research topics where Claudio Ungari is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudio Ungari.


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2007

Ozone therapy in the treatment of avascular bisphosphonate-related jaw osteonecrosis.

Allesandro Agrillo; Claudio Ungari; Fabio Filiaci; Paolo Priore; Giorgio Iannetti

Avascular osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) may occur as a consequence of several conditions, even including chemotherapy treatment in patients affected by tumors or osteoporosis. We report our clinical experience in treating bisphosphonate-induced ONJ with a therapeutic methodology that includes ozone therapy as a new and original approach for the clinical management of maxillary necrotic lesions. Of 58 patients with ONJ observed at our department, 33 gave their informed consent to be part of the research and were treated according to a therapeutic approach, which included noninvasive surgery associated with pre- and postsurgical cycles of ozone therapy consisting of eight sessions lasting 3 minutes each besides antibiotic and antifungal therapies. Outcomes showed how ozone therapy increases the benefits of surgical and pharmacologic treatments, increasing the complete healing of the lesions with the disappearance of symptoms and brings cases of lesion progression down to zero. In conclusion, ozone therapy is a reliable presidium in treatment of ONJ; its benefits are remarkable and improve significantly the outcomes of the surgical approach.


British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery | 2014

Staging of osteonecrosis of the jaw requires computed tomography for accurate definition of the extent of bony disease

Alberto Bedogni; Stefano Fedele; Giorgio Bedogni; Matteo Scoletta; Gianfranco Favia; Giuseppe Colella; Alessandro Agrillo; Giordana Bettini; Olga Di Fede; Giacomo Oteri; Vittorio Fusco; Mario Gabriele; Livia Ottolenghi; S. Valsecchi; Stephen Porter; Massimo Petruzzi; Paolo G. Arduino; Salvatore D’Amato; Claudio Ungari; Pok-Lam Fung Polly; Giorgia Saia; Giuseppina Campisi

Management of osteonecrosis of the jaw associated with antiresorptive agents is challenging, and outcomes are unpredictable. The severity of disease is the main guide to management, and can help to predict prognosis. Most available staging systems for osteonecrosis, including the widely-used American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons (AAOMS) system, classify severity on the basis of clinical and radiographic findings. However, clinical inspection and radiography are limited in their ability to identify the extent of necrotic bone disease compared with computed tomography (CT). We have organised a large multicentre retrospective study (known as MISSION) to investigate the agreement between the AAOMS staging system and the extent of osteonecrosis of the jaw (focal compared with diffuse involvement of bone) as detected on CT. We studied 799 patients with detailed clinical phenotyping who had CT images taken. Features of diffuse bone disease were identified on CT within all AAOMS stages (20%, 8%, 48%, and 24% of patients in stages 0, 1, 2, and 3, respectively). Of the patients classified as stage 0, 110/192 (57%) had diffuse disease on CT, and about 1 in 3 with CT evidence of diffuse bone disease was misclassified by the AAOMS system as having stages 0 and 1 osteonecrosis. In addition, more than a third of patients with AAOMS stage 2 (142/405, 35%) had focal bone disease on CT. We conclude that the AAOMS staging system does not correctly identify the extent of bony disease in patients with osteonecrosis of the jaw.


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2008

A new surgical approach for the treatment of chronic recurrent temporomandibular joint dislocation.

Piero Cascone; Claudio Ungari; Francesco Paparo; Tito Matteo Marianetti; Valerio Ramieri; Mg Fatone

Chronic recurrent temporomandibular joint (TMJ) dislocation is defined as the complete loss of articular relationships, during mouth-wide opening, between the articular fossa of the temporal bone and the condyle-disk complex. The most frequent pathogenetic factors involved in chronic recurrent dislocation of the TMJ are supposed to be trauma, abnormal chewing movements, TMJ ligaments, capsule laxity, and masticatory muscles disorders. In fact, TMJ dislocation occurs more frequently in people with general joint laxity and in patients with internal derangement of the TMJ or with occlusal disturbance. Management of TMJ dislocation remains a challenge. Eminectomy, whose validity has been demonstrated by several authors, acts on the bony obstacle, preventing condylar locking, but does not have a therapeutic effect on TMJ ligament and capsular laxity or masticatory muscle incoordination, which seem to be the real cause of TMJ dislocation in most cases. The authors present a mini-invasive modified technique of eminectomy, which aims to act on both the obstacle and the cause with respect and restoration of TMJ biomechanical constraints.


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2004

Hypophosphaturic mesenchymal tumor of the ethmoid associated with oncogenic osteomalacia.

Claudio Ungari; Giovanni Rocchi; Claudio Rinna; Alessandro Agrillo; Alessandro Lattanzi; Mario Pagnoni

Oncogenic osteomalacia is an uncommon syndrome characterized by bone pain, proximal muscle weakness, hypophosphatemia, hyperphosphaturia, and a low plasma concentration of 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D. The disease affects both sexes at around 40 years of age, although it can sometimes affect children and adolescents. Generally, the syndrome is associated with a tumor, usually benign, of mesenchymal origin and is resolved after removal of the tumor; this syndrome can sometimes be associated with malignant tumors. These tumors seem to be histologically heterogeneous and are generally localized in soft tissues and bone. In this article, a case of oncogenic osteomalacia associated with a hypophosphaturic mesenchymal tumor of the ethmoid is reported in a 24-year-old man. After surgical and radical removal of the tumor, the patient noted a decrease in the clinical symptoms and signs.


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2005

Pigmented villonodular synovitis of the temporomandibular joint.

Piero Cascone; Claudio Rinna; Claudio Ungari; Poladas Giulio; Fabio Filiaci

Abstract:Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) is a relatively rare disease, affecting the synovial-lined joints. PVNS was first fully described by Jaffè in 1941, who considered it to be a benign inflammatory state of the synovium of an uncertain etiology. Reports of this disease in the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) are extremely rare. The authors report a case of a 38-year-old woman affected by pigmented villonodular synovitis of the TMJ. Clinical examination revealed the presence of a preauricular mass in the left side; a computed tomography scan showed a 3.0 × 2.0 cm preauricular mass in close continuity to the TMJ capsule. The purpose of this report is to describe the clinicopathological features of a case involving the TMJ. The previously reported cases in the literature are also reviewed.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2010

A dental implant in the anterior cranial fossae

Piero Cascone; Claudio Ungari; Fabio Filiaci; Guido Gabriele; Valerio Ramieri

Foreign bodies in the anterior cranial fossa are unusual. This is a case of a 50-year-old man who presented with a dental implant displaced into the anterior cranial fossae, which was removed endoscopically with dural reconstruction.


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2008

Isolated sphenoid sinus mucocele: etiology and management.

Filippo Giovannetti; Fabio Filiaci; Valerio Ramieri; Claudio Ungari

Sphenoid isolated lesions are rare; they occur in 2% to 3% out of all paranasal sinus lesions. Diagnosis is based on the endoscopic examination and computed tomography scan or magnetic resonance imaging of the maxillofacial area. In this study, we present patients with sphenoid mucocele in the Maxillo-facial Surgery Department, University of Rome La Sapienza, treated with the endoscopic technique. Moreover, a literature review is performed, dealing with the evolution of approaches to the sphenoid sinus. From January 2001 to January 2007, we treated 75 patients affected by paranasal sinus mucocele. Out of this number, 8 patients (11%) presented an isolated localization in the sphenoid sinus. These patients were divided as follows: 5 involved the right sphenoid sinus and 3 involved the left sphenoid sinus. Isolated sphenoid sinus disease is a rare entity that can result in serious sequelae if diagnosis and treatment are inappropriately delayed. In our study, we highlighted how the endoscopic approach allows the removal of even large mucocele with the use of 45-degree angle optic and if it is possible to control and remove lateral walls of the sphenoid sinus. In our experience, we shifted from a traditional approach to the endoscopic approach. At the present time, the endoscopic approach represents the gold standard for sphenoid sinus mucocele treatment because it allows the best view of the sphenoid sinus and grants a better restoring of respiratory function and a higher compliance from the patient.


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2009

Open surgery versus endoscopic surgery in benign neoplasm involving the frontal sinus.

Paolo Castelnuovo; Filippo Giovannetti; Maurizio Bignami; Claudio Ungari; Giorgio Iannetti

The frontal sinus, because of its proper anatomic features, has a particular relation with nasal cavities. Indeed, its anatomic opening (ostium) is strictly related to a complex ethmoidal structure prechamber mainly composed of the frontal recess. This constitutional feature makes the endoscopic approach more complex in comparison with other major sinuses treatment. In the following work, we present a systematization of surgical approach in relation to different pathologies, analyzing differences and results throughout the comparison of 2 groups: one treated with the endoscopic approach, and the other with open surgery. From these observations, we can assess that surgical approach choice must consider several parameters such as neoplasm localization, extension, dimension, and frontal recess anatomic features.


BMC Surgery | 2014

Open reduction and internal fixation of extracapsular mandibular condyle fractures: a long-term clinical and radiological follow-up of 25 patients

Alessia Spinzia; Renato Patrone; Evaristo Belli; Giovanni Dell’Aversana Orabona; Claudio Ungari; Fabio Filiaci; Alessandro Agrillo; Giacomo De Riu; Silvio Mario Meloni; Gianmauro Liberatore; Pasquale Piombino

BackgroundDuring the last 2 decades, many studies on the treatment of mandibular condyle fracture have been published. The incidence of mandibular condyle fractures is variable, ranging from 17.5% to 52% of all mandibular fractures. This retrospective study evaluated the long-term clinical and radiological outcomes after surgical treatment of 25 patients with a total of 26 extracapsular condyle fractures.MethodsWe used 2 types of surgical approaches, the retromandibular retroparotid or preauricular approach. Three kinds of rigid internal fixation plates were used—single plate, double plate, and trapezoidal plate. The following post-operative clinical parameters were evaluated: dental occlusion, facial nerve functionality, skin scarring, and temporomandibular joint functionality. All patients underwent post-operative orthopanoramic radiography and computed tomography. The patients were also monitored for complications such as Frey’s syndrome, infection, salivary fistula, plate fracture, and permanent paralysis of the facial nerve; the patient’s satisfaction was also recorded.ResultsOf the 25 patients, 80% showed occlusion recovery, 88% had no facial nerve injury, and 88% presented good surgical skin scarring. The patients showed early complete recovery of temporomandibular joint functionality and 72% of them were found to be asymptomatic. The postoperative radiographs of all patients indicated good recovery of the anatomical condylar region, and 80% of them had no postoperative complications. The average degree of patient satisfaction was 8.32 out of 10. Our results confirm that the technique of open reduction and internal fixation in association with postoperative functional rehabilitation therapy should be considered for treating patients with extracapsular condylar fractures.ConclusionThe topic of condylar injury has generated more discussion and controversy than any other topic in the field of maxillofacial trauma. We confirm that open reduction and internal fixation is the treatment of choice for patients with neck and sub-condylar mandibular fractures.


Clinical Interventions in Aging | 2014

Bisphosphonate therapy and osteonecrosis of the jaw complicated with a temporal abscess in an elderly woman with rheumatoid arthritis: a case report

Licia Manzon; Evaristo Ettorre; Giovanni Viscogliosi; Stefano Ippoliti; Fabio Filiaci; Claudio Ungari; Giovanni Fratto; Alessandro Agrillo

Bisphosphonate-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (BRONJ) is an adverse drug reaction described as the progressive destruction and death of bone tissue of the mandible or maxilla, in the course of bisphosphonate therapy. Orally administered bisphosphonates, widely used for the treatment of osteoporosis, are rarely associated with BRONJ. Instead, the risk greatly increases whether the patient is concomitantly taking steroid and/or immunosuppressant agents. The aims of this paper are to briefly discuss the evidence of the associations between bisphosphonate therapy and BRONJ, and the effects of co-occurring factors such as the presence of rheumatoid arthritis, dental surgery, and concomitant corticosteroid therapy. In particular, we present the case of an elderly woman with BRONJ suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, with a recent dental extraction and with a very unusual complication: a temporal abscess, who was successfully treated.

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Fabio Filiaci

Sapienza University of Rome

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Alessandro Agrillo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Claudio Rinna

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giorgio Iannetti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Piero Cascone

Sapienza University of Rome

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Valerio Ramieri

Sapienza University of Rome

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Davide Quarato

Sapienza University of Rome

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Emiliano Riccardi

Sapienza University of Rome

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