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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Mora is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Mora.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 2001

Presence of Autoantibodies in the Sera of Meniere's Disease

T. J. Yoo; Xianxi Ge; Osman Sener; Massimilliano Mora; Soon Seog Kwon; Francesco Mora; Marco Barbieri; John J. Shea; Yoshiro Yazawa; Renzo Mora; Xiaoping Du

We examined the sera of patients with Menieres disease for the presence of antibodies against 8 inner ear antigens by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). One hundred eight patients with Menieres disease and 28 control subjects were studied. The antibodies against chicken type II collagen, bovine type II collagen, the cyanogen bromide cleaved peptide 11 (CB11) of each, type IX and XI collagens, C-Raf, and tubulin were measured by ELISA. The sensitivity of each antigen was between 37% and 60% individually, and was 91% when all 8 inner ear antigens were combined. These results showed that 91% of Menieres disease sera have antibody activities to 1 or more of these inner ear antigens. The results suggest that performing ELISA for these 8 inner ear antigens was useful as a diagnostic tool for Menieres disease. Further study is required for elucidating the role of these antigens in the pathogenesis of Menieres disease, which might eventually result in better therapy.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 2015

Intraoperative Narrow Band Imaging Better Delineates Superficial Resection Margins During Transoral Laser Microsurgery for Early Glottic Cancer

Sabrina Garofolo; Cesare Piazza; Francesca Del Bon; Stefano Mangili; Luca Guastini; Francesco Mora; Piero Nicolai; Giorgio Peretti

Objective: The high rate of positive margins after transoral laser microsurgery (TLM) remains a matter of debate. This study investigates the effect of intraoperative narrow band imaging (NBI) examination on the incidence of positive superficial surgical margins in early glottic cancer treated by TLM. Methods: Between January 2012 and October 2013, 82 patients affected by Tis-T1a glottic cancer were treated with TLM by type I or II cordectomies. Intraoperative NBI evaluation was performed using 0-degree and 70-degree rigid telescopes. Surgical specimens were oriented by marking the superior edge with black ink and sent to a dedicated pathologist. Comparison between the rate of positive superficial margins in the present cohort and in a matched historical control group treated in the same way without intraoperative NBI was calculated by chi-square test. Results: At histopathological examination, all surgical margins were negative in 70 patients, whereas 7 had positive deep margins, 2 close, and 3 positive superficial margins. The rate of positive superficial margins was thus 3.6% in the present group and 23.7% in the control cohort (P < .001). Conclusion: Routine use of intraoperative NBI increases the accuracy of neoplastic superficial spreading evaluation during TLM for early glottic cancer.


Journal of Voice | 2009

Effects of Tonsillectomy on Speech and Voice

Renzo Mora; Barbara Jankowska; Francesco Mora; Barbara Crippa; Massimo Dellepiane; Angelo Salami

The aim of this study was to evaluate changes in acoustic features of speech after tonsillectomy and to establish concepts of patient management and rational therapeutic approach. Before and 1 month after surgery, phonetically balanced sentences and sustained vowels a, e, i were carried out and digitalized with Multi-Dimensional Voice Program (Kay Elemetrics, Lincoln Park, NJ) in all the patients, as an evaluation of nasal resonance, speech articulation, and voice handicap index (VHI). These parameters were estimated: average of fundamental frequency, Jitter percent, Shimmer, noise-to-harmonics ratio, voice turbulence index, soft phonation index, degree of voiceless, degree of voice breaks, and peak amplitude variation. Our data showed that 1 month after tonsillectomy, improvements in all the acoustic parameters, a subjective decrease of hypernasality, and an improvement of speech articulation and VHI were achieved. These data suggest the reduction of the nasal resonance and highlight the role of tonsillectomy in the improvement of voice and speech quality. Furthermore, tonsillectomy should be performed before consideration of pharyngeal flap surgery. Our results highlight that objective evaluation of speech and voice helps the specialist to improve patient management and avoid unnecessary and dangerous surgical procedures.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2009

Visual analog scale (VAS) and nasal obstruction in persistent allergic rhinitis

Giorgio Ciprandi; Francesco Mora; Michele Cassano; Anna Maria Gallina; Renzo Mora

OBJECTIVE: Nasal airflow resistance, as measured by rhinomanometry, is frequently impaired in allergic rhinitis (AR). However, rhinomanometry is scarcely available. The aim of this study was to verify the suitability of the use of visual analog scales (VAS) as a surrogate for rhinomanometry in quantifying nasal obstruction in patients with persistent allergic rhinitis. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective study on patients with allergic rhinitis. SETTING: ENT clinic. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Fifty patients (27 males, mean age 23 years, SD 2.24) were studied. VAS for nasal obstruction and other AR symptoms and rhinomanometry were performed in all patients. RESULTS: A significant, very strong correlation has been observed between VAS for nasal obstruction and nasal airflow resistance (Spearman r = 0.879, P < 0.001). Moreover, a significant correlation exists between VAS for rhinorrhea and resistance (Spearman r = 0.313, P = 0.027). CONCLUSION: The use of VAS for assessing the nasal obstruction appears clinically relevant in that it allows, with good reliability, the quantification of this symptom in the absence of rhinomanometry.


International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology | 2008

Sulphurous water inhalations in the prophylaxis of recurrent upper respiratory tract infections

Angelo Salami; Massimo Dellepiane; Barbara Crippa; Francesco Mora; Luca Guastini; Barbara Jankowska; Renzo Mora

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and the effect of sulphurous thermal water inhalations in the treatment of the recurrent upper respiratory tract (RURT) infections in children. METHODS A total of 100 children with RURT infections were included. All children underwent a 12-day course warm vapour inhalations. For the inhalations, we used sulphurous thermal water in the group A, while physiological solution in the group B. At the beginning, at the end and 3 months after start, all children underwent medical history, ENT examination, plasma levels of immunoglobulins class E, G, A, M (IgE, IgG, IgA, IgM), subjective assessment of symptoms (VAS), nasal mucociliar transport time (NMTT) determination, and evaluation of frequency, duration, severity and social impact of RURT episodes. RESULTS Compared with group B, after the treatment and at the end of the study, in children treated with sulphurous thermal water, the serum concentration of IgE was significantly (p<0.05) lower (75.13+/-27.1mg/dl vs 96.87+/-41.3mg/dl; 74.23+/-26.2mg/dl vs 98.24+/-42.7 mg/dl), IgA titers were higher (238.14+/-122.1mg/dl vs 218.62+/-115.8 mg/dl; 239.72+/-119.7 mg/dl vs 210.46+/-107.3mg/dl), serum concentrations of IgG and IgM unchanged, VAS scores presented a significant (p<0.05) improvement (1.8+/-0.19 vs 6.8+/-0.54; 1.9+/-0.21 vs 6.9+/-0.61), NMTT was normal (11.15+/-1.59 min vs 17.63+/-2.17; 11.25+/-2.10 min vs 17.77+/-2.19 min) and frequency, duration, severity and social impact of RURT episodes were significantly (p<0.05) lower. CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that, in addition to their known effects, the sulphurous water also have an immunomodulant activity that contributes to their therapeutic effects.


Current Opinion in Otolaryngology & Head and Neck Surgery | 2016

Reasonable limits for transoral laser microsurgery in laryngeal cancer

Giorgio Peretti; Cesare Piazza; Francesco Mora; Sabrina Garofolo; Luca Guastini

Purpose of reviewTransoral laser microsurgery (TLM) is widely acknowledged to offer several advantages in the treatment of early and selected intermediate-advanced laryngeal cancers. Nevertheless, a number of issues are still under debate. The purpose of this review is to discuss the reasonable limits for TLM in laryngeal cancer to highlight its most appropriate and reproducible indications, putting this therapeutic tool in the right perspective within a comprehensive frame of alternative treatment strategies such as open partial laryngectomies and nonsurgical organ preservation protocols. Recent findingsInadequate laryngeal exposure, anterior commissure involvement in the cranio-caudal plane (T2), invasion of the posterior paraglottic space with arytenoid fixation, massive infiltration of the preepiglottic space, and even minor thyroid cartilage erosion (T3) represent the most controversial applications of TLM in management of glottic and supraglottic cancer. SummaryPublished oncological results appear to be satisfactory when TLM is applied to T1-T2 and accurately selected T3 glottic and supraglottic cancers with favourable exposure. Caution should be used for more advanced tumours.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2010

Learning Curve for Piezosurgery in Well-Trained Otological Surgeons

Angelo Salami; Renzo Mora; Francesco Mora; Luca Guastini; Francesco Antonio Salzano; Massimo Dellepiane

OBJECTIVE: Piezosurgery is an ultrasound instrument (24.7–29.5 kHz) capable of cutting bone without necrosis and nonmineralized tissue damage. The aim of this work has been to determine the time required for a well-trained surgeon to perform otological surgery with the piezoelectric device. STUDY DESIGN: Case series with planned data collection. Sixty-three patients affected by otosclerosis and 63 by chronic otitis media were enrolled. For each disease, patients were divided into three numerically equal groups, with each group assigned to a well-trained otological surgeon. Patients underwent stapedotomy (n = 63) and intact canal wall tympanoplasty (n = 63) with the piezoelectric device. SETTING: ENT Department, University of Genoa (Italy). SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We recorded “skin-to-skin” operation time, surgical success, surgical complication, and hospital stay duration. Before and one year after surgery, all patients underwent pure-tone audiometry, tympanometry, recording of transient-evoked otoacoustic emission, recording of distortion product otoacoustic emission, auditory brainstem response, and electronystamographic recording. RESULTS: In each surgical technique, the piezoelectric device provided excellent control without side effects on the adjacent structures of the middle and inner ear. CONCLUSION: The piezoelectric device is a new bony scalpel that uses microvibrations at ultrasonic frequency so that soft tissue (nerve, vessel, dura mater, etc) will not be damaged even on accidental contact with the cutting tip. A feature of the piezoelectric device is its good manageability, which makes it easy for a well-trained otological surgeon to create a straight osteotomy line without any learning period: this renders the piezoelectric device suitable for bone surgery.


American Journal of Rhinology & Allergy | 2010

Restoration of nasal cytology after endoscopic turbinoplasty versus laser-assisted turbinoplasty.

Michele Cassano; Carla Granieri; Alessandro Maselli Del Giudice; Francesco Mora; Emily Fiocca-Matthews; Pasquale Cassano

Background Insult from surgical trauma leads to a degeneration of the nasal epithelium, resulting in morphological–volumetric changes involving the entire cell or a specific cell component. Alterations in normal nasal mucosa were assessed by nasal cytology and other functional tests after either endoscopic turbinoplasty or laser-assisted turbinoplasty for reducing inferior turbinate enlargement. Methods A total of 150 patients with chronic nasal obstruction due to inferior turbinate hypertrophy were randomly assigned to undergo laser-assisted turbinoplasty or endoscopic turbinoplasty. Preoperative and postoperative assessment at 1 and 3 months follow-up included active anterior rhinomanometry, measurement of mucociliary transport time (MCTt), and nasal cytology to determine whether improved nasal breathing was accompanied by a restoration of preoperative nasal cytology and MCTt. One year after the operation, nasal cytology was repeated to definitively evaluate the presence of surgery-related cytological damage. Results At both postoperative visits, nasal resistance had decreased similarly in both treatment groups; mean MCTt was significantly shorter in the endoscopic turbinoplasty-treated group (p < 0.05); at both visits, the number of altered ciliated cells had increased in the laser-assisted turbinoplasty-treated group but decreased in the endoscopic turbinoplasty-treated group, which, unlike the laser-assisted turbinoplasty-treated group, was also noted to have progressed toward a significant improvement in the goblet-to-ciliated cell ratio (p < 0.01). Conclusion When compared with laser-assisted turbinoplasty, endoscopic turbinoplasty is a conservative technique for inferior turbinate reduction that allows better restoration of preoperative nasal cytology and shorter MCTt.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 2003

Intravenous Infusion of Recombinant Tissue Plasminogen Activator for the Treatment of Patients with Sudden and/or Chronic Hearing Loss

Renzo Mora; Marco Barbieri; Massimilliano Mora; Francesco Mora; T. J. Yoo

Seventeen patients with sudden hearing loss and 10 patients with chronic hearing loss were treated with intravenous infusion of tissue plasminogen activator. For sudden hearing loss, the recombinant tissue plasminogen activator was used, and 3 mg (in 3 mL of diluent) was diluted into 250 mL of physiological saline solution and given intravenously every 12 hours. Sixteen patients of the sudden hearing loss group and all 10 patients of the chronic hearing loss group showed an improvement after this treatment. No patients had side effects from the treatment. The results indicate that this would be an excellent mode of therapy for patients with hearing loss.


Operations Research Letters | 2002

Primitive Malignant Melanoma of the Parotid Gland

Marco Barbieri; Raffaella Gentile; Maria Paola Cordone; Renzo Mora; Francesco Mora

Melanoma of the parotid gland is a very rare event: it can occur as a primary disease or as spread of the intraglandular nodes. The authors report a case and review the few cases of primary melanoma of the parotid gland reported in the literature.

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