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Featured researches published by Franco Pisello.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2006

Plasma calprotectin levels in patients suffering from acute pancreatitis.

Antonio Carroccio; Pasquale Rocco; Pier Giorgio Rabitti; Lidia Di Prima; Giovanni Battista Forte; Angelo B. Cefalù; Franco Pisello; Girolamo Geraci; Generoso Uomo

Calprotectin (Cal) concentration is elevated in acute inflammatory reactions and its increase in the plasma suggests a diagnostic potential for Cal assay. This study aimed (a) to evaluate the Cal plasma levels in patients suffering from acute pancreatitis (AP) and (b) to assess whether early assay of Cal plasma levels can be helpful in assessment of the severity of AP. Forty-six consecutive patients, median age 45 years, suffering from a first attack of AP were recruited at two medical centers. Data collected on admission included age, sex, delay between pain onset and admission, and Glasgow score. A severe outcome was defined according to the Atlanta criteria. AP was defined as edematous or necrotic according to the CT findings. Plasma Cal and serum C reactive protein (CRP) were assayed in all patients within the first 24 hr after hospitalization. Sixty subjects suffering from blood hypertension were recruited as controls. Plasma Cal was measured by a commercial ELISA system. In all AP patients and in none of the controls, plasma Cal concentration was higher than the normal limit. Cal values in AP patients were significantly higher than in controls (P < 0.0001). There was not a statistically significant difference in Cal values between patients with severe and patients with mild AP. Plasma Cal values did not differ in necrotizing and edematous AP. During the follow-up plasma Cal was reassayed in six of the patients with abdominal fluid collection and the values were higher in the two patients with infected necrosis. We conclude that plasma Cal is elevated in patients with AP but it is not a useful marker for early prediction of pancreatitis severity. Further studies could evaluate its usefulness in pancreatic infected necrosis.


Case Reports in Gastroenterology | 2010

Endoscopic Resection of a Large Colonic Lipoma: Case Report and Review of Literature

Girolamo Geraci; Franco Pisello; Enrico Arnone; Antonio Sciuto; Giuseppe Modica; Carmelo Sciume

Colonic lipomas are uncommon, benign, submucosal adipose tumors that are usually asymptomatic. Large lipomas can cause symptoms such as constipation, abdominal pain, rectal bleeding and intussusception. We report the case of a 60-year-old man with a history of lower abdominal pain and pseudoobstructive symptoms. Colonoscopy revealed a large polypoid sessile lesion in the sigma. We used a standardized technique of polypectomy, preceded by submucosal injection of dilute 5 ml polygelin with epinephrine 1:10,000 solution, to fully resect large colonic lipomas. The lipoma size was 3.5 cm. No bleeding or perforation developed. Histology showed the polyp to be a submucosul lipoma. On follow-up, there was no residual lesion. Colonic lipomas larger than 2 cm can be safely and efficaciously removed using electrosurgical snare polypectomy technique. The technique of submucosal injection before resection and using an electrocautery snare appears to be safe and reduces the risk of perforation reported in the literature.


Diagnostic and Therapeutic Endoscopy | 2009

Herpes simplex esophagitis in immunocompetent host: a case report.

Girolamo Geraci; Franco Pisello; Giuseppe Modica; F Li Volsi; Massimo Cajozzo; Carmelo Sciume

Introduction. Herpes simplex esophagitis is well recognized in immunosuppressed subjects, but it is infrequent in immunocompetent patients. We present a case of HSE in a 53-year-old healthy man. Materials and Methods. The patient was admitted with dysphagia, odynophagia, and retrosternal chest pain. An esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealed minute erosive area in distal esophagus and biopsies confirmed esophagitis and findings characteristic of Herpes Simplex Virus infection. Results. The patients was treated with high dose of protonpump inhibitor, sucralfate, and acyclovir, orally, with rapid resolution of symptoms. Discussion. HSV type I is the second most common cause of infectious esophagitis. The majority of symptomatic immunocompetent patients with HSE will present with an acute onset of esophagitis. Endoscopic biopsies from the ulcer edges should be obtained for both histopathology and viral culture. In immunocompetent host, HSE is generally a self-limited condition. Conclusions. HSE should be suspected in case of esophagitis without evident cause, even if the patient is immunocompetent. When the diagnosis of HSE is confirmed, careful history and assessment for an immune disorder such as HIV infection is crucial, to look for underlying immune deficiency.


Case Reports in Gastroenterology | 2009

Duodenal Signet Ring Cell Carcinoma in a Celiac Patient

Franco Pisello; Girolamo Geraci; Francesco Li Volsi; Francesca Stassi; Giuseppe Modica; Carmelo Sciume

Celiac disease results from damage to the small intestinal mucosa due to an inappropriate immune response to a cereal protein. Long-standing or ‘refractory’ celiac disease is associated with an increased risk of autoimmunity and malignancy. We produced a brief literature review starting from a case of duodenal cancer in a celiac patient. The patient with an history of celiac disease since six months presented with acute manifestation of gastric outlet syndrome. A duodenal stricture was diagnosed at upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and confirmed by abdominal computed tomography. He was successfully treated by segmental duodenal resection. In the resected specimens, the diagnosis was duodenal signet cell adenocarcinoma. 6-month follow-up is uneventful. Primary carcinoma of the duodenum is rare (duodenal adenocarcinoma accounts for less than 0.5% of all gastrointestinal cancers and 30–45% of small intestinal cancers). Some patients with duodenal carcinoma are potentially curable by surgery, but conflicting opinions exist on the factors influencing the survival rate and on surgical treatment as the gold standard. Nevertheless, the goal in surgical treatment is to achieve clear margins. At present, surgical resection (pancreaticoduodenectomy or pancreas-sparing duodenal segmental resection) is the only available option for cure of this disease.


Case Reports in Gastroenterology | 2010

A Strange Case of Left Bowel Ischemia after Right Hernioplasty

Girolamo Geraci; Franco Pisello; Giuseppe Modica; Francesco Li Volsi; Massimo Cajozzo; Carmelo Sciume

We report the first observed case of a young man who suffered of large and unsuspected left bowel ischemia following an elective right open hernioplasty. A 54-year-old man had a 2-year history of right inguinal reducible mass and was admitted to hospital for an elective day case open inguinal hernioplasty for a direct right inguinal hernia. Apart from mild hypertension controlled with ACE inhibitor, he was medically fit and well. The patient was submitted to open tension-free mesh repair with polypropylene preshaped mesh with local infiltration anesthesia and additive sedation with midazolam. The local anesthesia and surgery were uneventful and he was discharged home on the same day as per day case protocol. He was readmitted about 12 h after discharge with a history of central and left lower abdominal pain with palpable mass, and distension and fever (38°C). After imaging and laboratory studies the patient was submitted to explorative surgery with the suspicion of left colonic ischemia. After intraoperative confirmation we performed standard left hemicolectomy. The postoperative course was uneventful; the patient was discharged in good general condition on the 7th postoperative day. Actually, the patient is in follow-up, with normal coagulation and hemochromocytometric pattern, asymptomatic for hypercholesterolemia and atrial flutter/fibrillation. Complications relating to bowel during open techniques of hernia repair are limited to two situations: the freeing of an incarcerated or strangulated segment of bowel and inadvertent laceration of large bowel in the presence of a sliding hernia. Following this strange case of colonic ischemia, a boolean Medline search (terms: hernia, complication, repair, groin, herniorrhaphy, hernioplasty, all major MESH subjects without language restriction) revealed no previous similar cases reported. However, to our knowledge, there is another trouble hypothesis: not causality but casualty. In conclusion, to our knowledge this is the first reported case of large left bowel ischemia following right open hernioplasty. We can conclude that the presence of a dolichocolon is an added risk factor for this rare and uneventful complication, but further investigations and case reports are necessary to estabilish the real causality.


Archive | 2008

Common Bile Duct Stones in Cholecystectomized Patients

Carmelo Sciume; Girolamo Geraci; Franco Pisello; Tiziana Facella; Francesco Li Volsi; Giuseppe Modica

The incidence of retained or primary stones is approximately 2–5% after conventional and laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) and 5–15% after common bile duct exploration (CBDE) [1]: in principle these patients are in need of further intervention [2, 3].


Il Giornale di chirurgia | 2008

The importance of pyramidal lobe in thyroid surgery

Giuseppe Modica; Carmelo Sciume; Girolamo Geraci; Franco Pisello; Geraci G; Pisello F; Li Volsi F; Modica G; Sciume C


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2008

Permanent stenting in “unextractable” common bile duct stones in high risk patients. A prospective randomized study comparing two different stents

Franco Pisello; Girolamo Geraci; Francesco Li Volsi; Giuseppe Modica; Carmelo Sciume


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2008

Secondary aortoduodenal fistula

Girolamo Geraci; Franco Pisello; Francesco Li Volsi; Tiziana Facella; Lina Platia; Giuseppe Modica; Carmelo Sciume


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2006

Trocar-related abdominal wall bleeding in 200 patients after laparoscopic cholecistectomy: Personal experience

Girolamo Geraci; Carmelo Sciume; Franco Pisello; Francesco Li Volsi; Tiziana Facella; Giuseppe Modica

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Pisello F

University of Palermo

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