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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Corradi is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Corradi.


Critical Care Medicine | 2010

Ultrasound localization of central vein catheter and detection of postprocedural pneumothorax: An alternative to chest radiography

Antonella Vezzani; Claudia Brusasco; Salvatore Palermo; Claudio Launo; Mario Mergoni; Francesco Corradi

Objective: To determine the usefulness of ultrasound to evaluate central venous catheter misplacements and detection of pneumothorax, thus obviating postprocedural radiograph. After the insertion of a central venous catheter, chest radiograph is usually obtained to ensure correct positioning of the catheter tip and detect postprocedural complications. Design: Prospective observational study. Setting: Adult intensive care unit. Patients: 111 consecutive patients undergoing central venous catheter positioning, using a landmark technique and contrast-enhanced ultrasonography. Measurements and Main Results: A postprocedural chest radiograph was obtained for all patients and was considered as a reference technique. At the end of the procedure, a B-mode ultrasonography was first performed to assess catheter position and detect pneumothorax. Right atrium positioning was detected in 19 patients by ultrasonography, and an additional six by contrast enhanced ultrasonography. Combining ultrasonography and contrast enhanced ultrasonography yielded a 96% sensitivity and 93% specificity in detecting catheter misplacement. Concordance was 95% and &kgr; value was 0.88 (p < .001). Pneumothorax was detected in four patients by ultrasonography and in two by chest radiograph (concordance = 98%). The mean time required to perform ultrasonography plus contrast enhanced ultrasonography was 10 ± 5 mins vs. 83 ± 79 mins for chest radiograph (p < .05). Conclusions: The close concordance between ultrasonography plus contrast enhanced ultrasonography and chest radiograph justifies the use of sonography as a standard technique to ensure the correct positioning of the catheter tip and to detect pneumothorax after central venous catheter cannulation to optimize use of hospital resources and minimize time consumption and radiation. Chest radiograph will be necessary when sonographic examination is impossible to perform by technical limitations.


Radiology | 2011

Hemorrhagic Shock in Polytrauma Patients: Early Detection with Renal Doppler Resistive Index Measurements

Francesco Corradi; Claudia Brusasco; Antonella Vezzani; Salvatore Palermo; Fiorella Altomonte; Paolo Moscatelli; Paolo Pelosi

PURPOSE To investigate whether renal Doppler resistive index (RI) changes occur early during posttraumatic bleeding and may be predictive of occult hypoperfusion-and thus hemorrhagic shock-in patients with polytrauma. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study was approved by the institutional ethics committee, and informed consent was obtained from all patients. The renal Doppler RI was measured in 52 hemodynamically stable adult patients admitted to the emergency department (ED) because of polytrauma. Renal Doppler RI, hemoglobin, standard base excess, lactate, systolic blood pressure, pH, heart rate, and inferior vena cava diameter values were recorded at admittance and correlated with outcome (progression or nonprogression to hemorrhagic shock). Logistic regression analysis was performed to assess the risk factors for progression to hemorrhagic shock. RESULTS Twenty-nine patients developed hemorrhagic shock, and 23 did not. At univariable analysis, the hemorrhagic shock group, as compared with the nonhemorrhagic shock group, had higher renal Doppler RI (mean, 0.80 ± 0.10 [standard deviation] vs 0.63 ± 0.03; P < .01), injury severity score (mean, 36 ± 11 vs 26 ± 5; P < .01), and standard base excess (mean, -4.0 mEq/L ± 4 vs 1 mEq/L ± 3; P = .04) values. At logistic regression analysis, a renal Doppler RI greater than 0.7 (vs less than or equal to 0.7) was the only independent risk factor for progression to hemorrhagic shock (odds ratio, 57.8; 95% confidence interval: 10.5, 317.0) (P < .001). CONCLUSION In polytrauma patients who are hemodynamically stable at admittance to the ED, renal cortical blood flow redistribution occurs very early in response to occult bleeding and might be noninvasively detected by using the renal Doppler RI. A renal Doppler RI greater than 0.7 is predictive of progression to hemorrhagic shock in polytrauma patients.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2013

Assessment of extravascular lung water by quantitative ultrasound and CT in isolated bovine lung

Francesco Corradi; Lorenzo Ball; Claudia Brusasco; Anna Maria Riccio; Michele Baroffio; Giulio Bovio; Paolo Pelosi; Vito Brusasco

Lung ultrasonography (LUS) and computed tomography (CT) were compared for quantitative assessment of extravascular lung water (EVLW) in 10 isolated bovine lung lobes. LUS and CT were obtained at different inflation pressures before and after instillation with known amounts of hypotonic saline. A video-based quantitative LUS analysis was superior to both single-frame quantitative analysis and visual scoring in the assessment of EVLW. Video-based mean LUS intensity was strongly correlated with EVLW density (r(2)=0.87) but weakly correlated with mean CT attenuation (r(2)=0.49) and physical density (r(2)=0.49). Mean CT attenuation was weakly correlated with EVLW density (r(2)=0.62) but strongly correlated with physical density (r(2)=0.99). When the effect of physical density was removed by partial correlation analysis, EVLW density was significantly correlated with video-based LUS intensity (r(2)=0.75) but not mean CT attenuation (r(2)=0.007). In conclusion, these findings suggest that quantitative LUS by video gray-scale analysis can assess EVLW more reliably than LUS visual scoring or quantitative CT.


Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 2017

Randomized Evidence for Reduction of Perioperative Mortality: An Updated Consensus Process

Giovanni Landoni; Antonio Pisano; Vladimir Lomivorotov; Gabriele Alvaro; Ludhmila Abrahão Hajjar; Gianluca Paternoster; Caetano Nigro Neto; Nicola Latronico; Evgeny Fominskiy; Laura Pasin; Gabriele Finco; Rosetta Lobreglio; Maria Luisa Azzolini; Giuseppe Buscaglia; Alberto Castella; Marco Comis; Adele Conte; Massimiliano Conte; Francesco Corradi; Erika Dal Checco; Giovanni De Vuono; Marco Ganzaroli; Eugenio Garofalo; Gordana Gazivoda; Rosalba Lembo; Daniele Marianello; Martina Baiardo Redaelli; Fabrizio Monaco; Valentina Tarzia; Marta Mucchetti

OBJECTIVE Of the 230 million patients undergoing major surgical procedures every year, more than 1 million will die within 30 days. Thus, any nonsurgical interventions that help reduce perioperative mortality might save thousands of lives. The authors have updated a previous consensus process to identify all the nonsurgical interventions, supported by randomized evidence, that may help reduce perioperative mortality. DESIGN AND SETTING A web-based international consensus conference. PARTICIPANTS The study comprised 500 clinicians from 61 countries. INTERVENTIONS A systematic literature search was performed to identify published literature about nonsurgical interventions, supported by randomized evidence, showing a statistically significant impact on mortality. A consensus conference of experts discussed eligible papers. The interventions identified by the conference then were submitted to colleagues worldwide through a web-based survey. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS The authors identified 11 interventions contributing to increased survival (perioperative hemodynamic optimization, neuraxial anesthesia, noninvasive ventilation, tranexamic acid, selective decontamination of the gastrointestinal tract, insulin for tight glycemic control, preoperative intra-aortic balloon pump, leuko-depleted red blood cells transfusion, levosimendan, volatile agents, and remote ischemic preconditioning) and 2 interventions showing increased mortality (beta-blocker therapy and aprotinin). Interventions then were voted on by participating clinicians. Percentages of agreement among clinicians in different countries differed significantly for 6 interventions, and a variable gap between evidence and clinical practice was noted. CONCLUSIONS The authors identified 13 nonsurgical interventions that may decrease or increase perioperative mortality, with variable agreement by clinicians. Such interventions may be optimal candidates for investigation in high-quality trials and discussion in international guidelines to reduce perioperative mortality.


Current Opinion in Anesthesiology | 2012

Lung imaging for titration of mechanical ventilation.

Thomas Luecke; Francesco Corradi; Paolo Pelosi

Purpose of review Computed tomography (CT) has fostered pivotal advancements in the understanding of acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome and ventilator-induced lung injury. Apart from CT-based studies, the past years have seen fascinating work using positron emission tomography, electrical impedance tomography and lung ultrasound as diagnostic tools to optimize mechanical ventilation. This review aims to present the major findings of recent studies on lung imaging. Recent findings Patients presenting with a focal loss of aeration on CT may not be suitable candidates for recruitment maneuvers and high levels of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in supine position. PET/CT has provided valuable insights into the inflammatory response of the lung. Electrical impedance tomography has been used to assess lung recruitability and to titrate PEEP. Finally, lung ultrasound has proven to be reliable diagnostic tool for assessing PEEP-induced recruitment. Summary Whereas quantitative CT remains the gold standard to assess lung morphology, recruitment and hyperinflation of lung tissue at different inflation pressures, EIT and LUS have emerged as valuable, radiation-free, noninvasive bedside lung imaging tools that should be used together with global parameters like lung mechanics and gas exchange to acquire additional information on recruitability and ventilation distribution.


Current Opinion in Critical Care | 2014

Chest ultrasound in acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Francesco Corradi; Claudia Brusasco; Paolo Pelosi

Purpose of reviewThis review discusses the role of chest ultrasound in diagnosis and management of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and the most recent technical progresses in this field. Recent findingsClinically, suspected ARDS can be easily confirmed by lung ultrasonography through the recognition of a typical pattern characterized by B-lines, spared areas, pleural line thickening, and subpleural consolidations. A visual score based on number and thickness of B-lines permits a semiquantitative evaluation of the amount of extravascular lung water and lung density. Recently, a quantitative lung ultrasound method has been proposed. The heart may be also involved in ARDS either primarily or by the application of positive pressure ventilation. The incidence of acute cor pulmonale during ARDS is, even if under protective ventilation, not negligible. The use of echocardiography combined with lung ultrasound is important for early detection of cor pulmonale, identification of the best ventilator strategy to preserve heart-to-lung interaction, and prediction of weaning success. SummaryAn ultrasound-integrated approach combining lung ultrasound and echocardiography should be recommended as a suitable technique to manage ARDS during diagnosis, mechanical ventilation setting, and weaning.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2014

REAL-TIME ELASTOGRAPHY IN THE ASSESSMENT OF LIVER FIBROSIS: A REVIEW OF QUALITATIVE AND SEMI-QUANTITATIVE METHODS FOR ELASTOGRAM ANALYSIS

Francesco Paparo; Francesco Corradi; Luca Cevasco; Matteo Revelli; Andrea Marziano; Lucio Molini; Giovanni Cenderello; Giovanni Cassola; Gian Andrea Rollandi

Despite its invasiveness, liver biopsy is still considered the gold standard for the assessment of hepatic fibrosis. Non-invasive ultrasound-based techniques are increasingly employed to assess parenchymal stiffness and the progression of chronic diffuse liver diseases. Real-time elastography is a rapidly evolving technique that can reveal the elastic properties of tissues. This review examines qualitative and semi-quantitative methods developed for analysis of real-time liver elastograms, to estimate parenchymal stiffness and, indirectly, the stage of fibrosis. Qualitative analysis is the most immediate approach for elastogram analysis, but this method increases intra- and inter-observer variability, which is seen as a major limitation of real-time elastography. Semi-quantitative methods include analysis of the histogram derived from color-coded maps, as well as calculation of the elastic ratio and fibrosis index.


Obesity Surgery | 2009

Ultrasound-Guided Central Venous Cannulation in Bariatric Patients

Claudia Brusasco; Francesco Corradi; Pier Luigi Zattoni; Claudio Launo; Yigal Leykin; Salvatore Palermo

BackgroundCentral venous catheterization may be difficult in morbidly obese patients because anatomic landmarks are often obscured.MethodsWe evaluated the efficacy and safety of ultrasound-guided central venous cannulation in 55 patients undergoing bariatric surgery. The usefulness of ultrasonic examination combined with intraatrial electrocardiogram as a diagnostic tool for catheter misplacement was studied.ResultsPreliminary ultrasound examination of the neck vessels demonstrated anatomical variations in the position of internal jugular vein in 19 cases and four unrecognized asymptomatic thromboses of the right internal jugular vein. Central venous catheterization was successful in all 55 patients, in 51 with single skin puncture, and in 42 with single vein puncture. In three cases in whom the catheter was misplaced, this was detected by bedside ultrasonic examination during the procedure and immediately corrected by real-time echographic visualization. No arterial puncture, no hematoma, and no pneumothorax occurred in any patient. Successful catheter placement was also confirmed in all patients by post-operative chest X-ray. No evidence of infection or thrombosis subsequently was noted.ConclusionsThe use of ultrasound guidance may increase the success rate and decrease the incidence of complications associated with central venous cannulation. The advantages of this approach is visualization of the anatomical structures at puncture site prior to skin puncture and the ability to track needle and guide-wire placement during the procedure. With its high accuracy in detecting catheter misplacement, bedside ultrasonic examination combined with intraatrial electrocardiogram may further decrease morbidity associated with misplaced central venous catheters.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2012

Effects of pentoxifylline on intestinal bacterial overgrowth, bacterial translocation and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhotic rats with ascites

Francesco Corradi; Claudia Brusasco; Javier Fernández; Jordi Vila; Marı́a José Ramı́rez; Tiago Seva-Pereira; Guillermo Fernández-Varo; Ismail Ben Mosbah; Juan Acevedo; Anibal Silva; Patricia Rieken Macedo Rocco; Paolo Pelosi; Pere Ginès; Miquel Navasa

BACKGROUND Prophylaxis of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis with norfloxacin has been associated to development of antibiotic resistance. We investigated whether pentoxifylline compared to norfloxacin reduces bacterial translocation and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in rats with CCl(4)-induced cirrhosis and ascites. METHOD After development of cirrhosis and ascites, animals were randomly allocated to receive pentoxifylline (16 mg/kg/d every 8h, oral route, n=13) or placebo (n=12) for 15 days. An additional group of 8 cirrhotic rats was given norfloxacin (5mg/kg/d for 15 days). Six healthy rats served as controls. Cecal flora and the prevalence of bacterial translocation and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis were analysed. Serum and ascitic fluid levels of TNF-alpha and cecal levels of malondialdehyde were also measured. RESULTS Pentoxifylline in comparison to placebo reduced intestinal bacterial overgrowth (21% vs. 67%, p=0.04), bacterial translocation to cecal lymph nodes (23% vs. 75%, p=0.03) and prevented spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (0% vs. 33%, p=0.04) by Enterobacteriaceae. Norfloxacin administration induced similar results. Pentoxifylline (0.18 ± 0.10 nmol/mg), but not norfloxacin (0.25 ± 0.13; p=0.02), significantly reduced cecal mucosal levels of malondialdehyde compared to placebo (0.33 ± 0.16; p=0.03). CONCLUSION In cirrhotic rats with ascites: (a) pentoxifylline as well as norfloxacin reduced intestinal bacterial overgrowth and bacterial translocation and prevented spontaneous bacterial peritonitis; (b) pentoxifylline, but not norfloxacin, reduced oxidative stress in cecal mucosal.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Quantitative Analysis of Lung Ultrasonography for the Detection of Community-Acquired Pneumonia: A Pilot Study

Francesco Corradi; Claudia Brusasco; Alessandro Garlaschi; Francesco Paparo; Lorenzo Ball; Gregorio Santori; Paolo Pelosi; Fiorella Altomonte; Antonella Vezzani; Vito Brusasco

Background and Objective. Chest X-ray is recommended for routine use in patients with suspected pneumonia, but its use in emergency settings is limited. In this study, the diagnostic performance of a new method for quantitative analysis of lung ultrasonography was compared with bedside chest X-ray and visual lung ultrasonography for detection of community-acquired pneumonia, using thoracic computed tomography as a gold standard. Methods. Thirty-two spontaneously breathing patients with suspected community-acquired pneumonia, undergoing computed tomography examination, were consecutively enrolled. Each hemithorax was evaluated for the presence or absence of abnormalities by chest X-ray and quantitative or visual ultrasonography. Results. Quantitative ultrasonography showed higher sensitivity (93%), specificity (95%), and diagnostic accuracy (94%) than chest X-ray (64%, 80%, and 69%, resp.), visual ultrasonography (68%, 95%, and 77%, resp.), or their combination (77%, 75%, and 77%, resp.). Conclusions. Quantitative lung ultrasonography was considerably more accurate than either chest X-ray or visual ultrasonography in the diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia and it may represent a useful first-line approach for confirmation of clinical diagnosis in emergency settings.

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