Diego Spagnoli
University of Milan
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Featured researches published by Diego Spagnoli.
Neurosurgery | 1996
De Benedittis G; Lorenzetti A; Migliore M; Diego Spagnoli; Tiberio F; R. Villani
The incidence, magnitude, and duration of acute pain experienced by neurosurgical patients after various brain operations are not precisely known, because of a lack of well-designed clinical and epidemiological studies. We assessed these important pain variables in 37 consecutive patients who underwent various brain neurosurgical procedures. Postoperative pain was more common than generally assumed (60%). In two-thirds of the patients with postoperative pain, the intensity was moderate to severe. Pain most frequently occurred within the first 48 hours after surgery, but a significant number of patients endured pain for longer periods. Pain was predominantly superficial (86%), suggesting somatic rather than visceral origin and possibly involving pericranial muscles and soft tissues. Subtemporal and suboccipital surgical routes yielded the highest incidence of postoperative pain. Age and sex were significantly associated with the onset of pain, with female and younger patients reporting higher percentages of postoperative pain. Psychological Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory profiles of patients with and without pain significantly differed on the Hypochondriasis scale, with patients without pain scoring unexpectedly higher than patients with pain. It is possible that hypochondriasis serves as a defense mechanism against pain, at least in some patients. Results of this pilot study indicate that postoperative pain after brain surgery is an important, although neglected, clinical problem, that deserves greater attention by surgical teams, to provide better and more appropriate treatment.
Glia | 2007
C. Marchesi; Mauro Pluderi; Federica Colleoni; Marzia Belicchi; Mirella Meregalli; Andrea Farini; D. Parolini; L. Draghi; M. E. Fruguglietti; Manuela Gavina; Laura Porretti; Alessandra Cattaneo; M. Battistelli; Alessandro Prelle; Maurizio Moggio; S. Borsa; Luca Bello; Diego Spagnoli; S. M. Gaini; Maria Cristina Tanzi; Nereo Bresolin; Nadia Grimoldi; Yvan Torrente
The regeneration in the peripheral nervous system is often incomplete and the treatment of severe lesions with nerve tissue loss is primarily aimed at recreating nerve continuity. Guide tubes of various types, filled with Schwann cells, stem cells, or nerve growth factors are attractive as an alternative therapy to nerve grafts. In this study, we evaluated whether skin‐derived stem cells (SDSCs) can improve peripheral nerve regeneration after transplantation into nerve guides. We compared peripheral nerve regeneration in adult rats with sciatic nerve gaps of 16 mm after autologous transplantation of GFP‐labeled SDSCs into two different types of guides: a synthetic guide, obtained by dip coating with a L‐lactide and trimethylene carbonate (PLA‐TMC) copolymer and a collagen‐based guide. The sciatic function index and the recovery rates of the compound muscle action potential were significantly higher in the animals that received SDSCs transplantation, in particular, into the collagen guide, compared to the control guides filled only with PBS. For these guides the morphological and immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated an increased number of myelinated axons expressing S100 and Neurofilament 70, suggesting the presence of regenerating nerve fibers along the gap. GFP positive cells were found around regenerating nerve fibers and few of them were positive for the expression of glial markers as S‐100 and glial fibrillary acidic protein. RT‐PCR analysis confirmed the expression of S100 and myelin basic protein in the animals treated with the collagen guide filled with SDSCs. These data support the hypothesis that SDSCs could represent a tool for future cell therapy applications in peripheral nerve regeneration.
Cortex | 1989
Marcella Laiacona; A. De Santis; Riccardo Barbarotto; Anna Basso; Diego Spagnoli; Erminio Capitani
The neuropsychological outcome of 43 patients operated for ACoA aneurysms was assessed with a battery of 15 tests, tapping a wide spectrum of cognitive abilities. As a group ACoA aneurysms patients were impaired on 8 tests, including the three assessing memory. When however, patients falling below the cut-off point determined in normal controls were considered, 42% of the sample was unimpaired and only 35% fell on two or more tests. The analysis of single cases showed that memory was often affected, but short-term memory even more than long-term memory. In addition to the well known memory disorder, the patients showed a wide range of neuropsychological defects, including language and space functions. The hypotheses that could account for this broad-based neuropsychological impairment are discussed.
Acta Neuropathologica | 1990
G. Tomei; Diego Spagnoli; A. Ducati; A. Landi; R. Villani; Guido Fumagalli; Carlo Sala; Thomas A. Gennarelli
SummaryA new model of focal axonal injury was reproduced by rapid and controlled elongation (uniaxial stretch) of the guinea pig optic nerve. Light microscopy study of optic nerve specimens after horseradish peroxidase injection into the vitreous of the animals eye showed that axonal lesions were identical to those seen in human and primate post-traumatic diffuse axonal injury (DAI). The lesions were characterized by the formation of terminal clubs in severed axons and focal axonal enlargements in those axons that were lesioned-in-continuity. Visual-evoked potentials upon flash stimulation were recorded before and after injury. Mean amplitude and mean latency of occipital peaks were significantly elongated in the acute post-traumatic phase. Electron microscopy examination showed that the main axonal changes observed in this model were cytoskeleton disorganization, accumulation of axoplasm membrane-bound bodies at the site of terminal balls and dilatations-in-continuity and detachment of the axolemma from the myelin sheath. Such axonal alterations were similar to those found in many other biological models of central and peripheral axonal injuries in which the lesion was produced by invasive methods. This model is unique since it reproduces the same mechanism of injury and the identical lesions that have been demonstrated in humans and primates with post-traumatic (DAI).
Journal of Neurotrauma | 2001
Sandra Rossi; Nino Stocchetti; Luca Longhi; Marcella Balestreri; Diego Spagnoli; Elisa R. Zanier; Guido Bellinzona
We investigated the changes in brain oxygen tension (ptiO2) after ventilation with pure O2 in order to (1) clarify the pathophysiology of O2 exchange in the cerebral microcirculation; and (2) investigate the relationship between brain O2 tension, O2 delivery, and consumption in steady-state conditions during stepwise cerebral blood flow (CBF) reductions. A swine model was developed to reduce CBF in three stable steps: (1) baseline (CBF 100%), (2) CBF of 50-60% of baseline, and (3) CBF of <30% of baseline. CBF was reduced by infusing saline into the left lateral ventricle through a catheter connected with an infusion pump. At each step, hyperoxia was tested by increasing the inspired oxygen fraction up to 100%, PtiO2 reflected the CBF reductions, since it was respectively 27.95 (+/-10.15), 14.77 (+/-3.58), and 3.45 (+/-2.89) mm Hg during the three CBF steps. Hyperoxia was followed by an increase in ptiO2, although the increase was significantly lower when hyperoxia was applied during progressive ischemia. O2 supply to the brain did not change during hyperoxia. Arteriovenous oxygen difference (AVDO2) decreased during the phases of intact CBF and moderate impairment, but not during the phase of severe CBF reduction. In conclusion, ptiO2 reductions closely reflect the imbalance between oxygen delivery and demand; this implies a link between low ptiO2 and defective O2 supply due to impaired CBF. However, this relation is not necessarily reciprocal, since manipulating brain oxygen tension does not always influence brain oxygen delivery, as in the case of ventilation with pure oxygen.
Surgical Neurology | 2000
Diego Spagnoli; G. Tomei; Giovanni Ceccarelli; Nadia Grimoldi; Andrea Lanterna; Lorenzo Bello; Marco Sinisi; Antonio De Santis; R. Villani
BACKGROUND This study investigated the relevance of prognostic factors and the impact of histological features in posterior fossa ependymoma. METHODS The charts of 26 patients (aged 1-59 years, mean 20.6 years; 11 adults) with posterior fossa ependymoma operated on between January 1983 and December 1994 were reviewed and patients followed up (mean: 93 months). RESULTS Gross total resection was performed in 18 patients (69%), subtotal in seven patients (27%), biopsy in one patient (4%). One patient (3.8%) developed respiratory complications and died. All patients underwent posterior fossa radiotherapy (5000 cGy) after surgery. Four children first received chemotherapy and then radiotherapy only when at least 3 years old. Eleven patients (42%) received radiotherapy and subsequently chemotherapy. The 5-year survival rate was 90% for adults and 40% for children (</= 6 years). CONCLUSIONS This review suggests that a) younger patients (</= 6 years), despite multimodality treatment, have a poor prognosis; b) the microanatomical location of the tumor (lateral recess, roof, and floor) influences the extent of tumor removal (p < 0.05); c) longer survivals are associated with complete removal (p < 0.05); d) the histological feature most often related to a poor prognosis is a high mitotic index (p < 0.05), whereas vascular proliferation (p = 0.149), necrosis (p = 0.215), nuclear atypia (p = 0.384) and high cellularity (p = 0.786) do not affect survival; e) histological classification (WHO) does not reflect different survival rates between ependymomas and anaplastic ependymomas (p = 0.082).
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2000
Nino Stocchetti; Marco Croci; Diego Spagnoli; Felicetta Gilardoni; Federico Resta; Angelo Colombo
OBJECTIVE To assess the clinical feasibility and the accuracy of two pragmatic methods in comparison with a conventional computer based method of measurement of masses from CT. METHODS Nineteen CT scans of 11 patients with severe head injury, showing 34 traumatic lesions, were examined. The volume of every lesion was digitally measured, then a panel of three examiners independently repeated the measurement using the ellipsoid and the Cavalieri method in random order. RESULTS All the lesions were identified by all the readers and the mean volume measured by each examiner differed by less than 1.5 ml. The average reading time for each scan was 4 minutes for the ellipsoid and 7 minutes for the Cavalieri method. The average volume of the lesions was 34.2 (SD 35) ml with the digital system, and 38.4 (SD 41) ml and 34.8 (SD 36) ml for the ellipsoid and the Cavalieri readings respectively. The average difference between the applied technique and the digital system was 0.57 (SD 9.99) ml for the Cavalieri direct estimator and 0.20 (SD 15.48) ml for the ellipsoid method. The 95% confidence interval for this difference fell between –2.75 and 3.89 ml for the Cavalieri, and between –4.94 and 5.35 ml for the ellipsoid method. There were 19 lesions >25 ml; the ellipsoid method identified 16 of them, whereas 17 were classified with the Cavalieri method. When considering individual lesions rather than the average volume, discrepancies were detected with both methods. The ellipsoid method was less precise, especially when extracerebral lesions were measured. CONCLUSIONS Both pragmatic methods are inferior to computer based reading, which is the choice when accurate volume estimation is necessary. However, if a digital volumetric determination of the lesions using a CT computer is not possible, the two pragmatic methods offer an alternative.
Cortex | 1989
Riccardo Barbarotto; A. De Santis; Marcella Laiacona; Anna Basso; Diego Spagnoli; Erminio Capitani
This study assessed with a neuropsychological battery the outcome of 27 patients operated on for an aneurysm of the Middle Cerebral Artery a mean of 35 months before, and of 27 patients operated for aneurysms of the Posterior Communicating Artery, a mean of 47 months before. Both groups showed a defective pattern of performance that was related to the hemispheric side of the aneurysm with left-sided patients impaired on naming, verbal fluency and verbal short-term memory and right sided patients on both short-term and long-term spatial memory and discrimination of line orientation. In single cases, the scope of neuropsychological impairment was sometimes wider than that expected only on the basis of the competence of the affected hemisphere.
Childs Nervous System | 1995
R. Villani; Giustiro Tomei; S. M. Gaini; Nadia Grimoldi; Diego Spagnoli; Lorenzo Bello
In this study, 78 patients with aqueductal stenosis were submitted to detailed neurodevelopmental assessment with a follow-up of 5–25 years. Sixty-eight percent of patients were categorized as normal; they either attended normal school courses or had regular jobs. Among these, 34% had some motor abnormalities (ataxia, mild hemiparesis, visual disturbances). Twenty-four percent (19 cases) were moderately disabled (trainable retardation) and 8% (6 cases) were severely handicapped. Epilepsy was observed in 13% of the cases. Incidence of recurrent and generalized seizures paralleled neurodevelopmental outcome (5% in normal, 16% in moderately disabled and 50% in severely disabled patients). Endocrine dysfunctions were evident in 28% of the cases and were characterized by precocious or delayed puberty, amenorrhea and somatic underdevelopment. No patient with ventricular enlargement and a cortical mantle width below 20 mm showed a good outcome. Large ventricles were compatible with normal mental development when compensated with a corresponding cranial vault enlargement. In patients with normal mental status and motor abnormalities, longterm CT scan findings revealed the presence of focal brain abnormalities (poroencephaly, brain atrophy, calcifications, extracerebral collections).
Surgical Neurology International | 2011
Marco Locatelli; Giorgio Carrabba; Claudio Guastella; S. M. Gaini; Diego Spagnoli
Background: Cavernous hemangioma are the most common benign lesions of the orbit. Their surgical resection is still challenging and several surgical approaches have been proposed. Case Description: We present the case of a 59-year-old woman with a cavernous hemangioma of the orbital apex, which was diagnosed incidentally. The hemangioma was extraconal and involved mainly the medial orbital apex; it also extended to the pterygoid fossa, to the middle fossa, to the maxillary and sphenoid sinuses. The surgical resection was performed by a pure endoscopic transphenoidal, transmaxillary, transethmoidal approach, achieving a total removal. The patient had a transient and incomplete paresis of the VI cranial nerve on the left side and did not experience other postoperative complications. Conclusion: The endoscopic endonasal approach proved successful in the management of this case and it should be considered in the surgical management of extraconal orbital apex lesions with medial or inferior extension.
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Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico
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