Giacomo Gazzano
University of Milan
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Publication
Featured researches published by Giacomo Gazzano.
Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2009
Giovanni M. Colpi; Elisabetta M. Colpi; Guido Piediferro; Daniela Giacchetta; Giacomo Gazzano; Fabrizio Castiglioni; M Cristina Magli; Luca Gianaroli
In a population of non-obstructive azoospermia patients, the efficacy of microsurgical testicular sperm extraction (microTESE) and conventional TESE was evaluated in a randomized controlled study on 138 testicles, classified and paired in a 48-square table according to the different classes of the following three variables: patient plasma FSH concentration, orchidometry and testicular histology. Sperm retrieval was positive in 21/22 testicles with hypospermatogenesis (11/11, 10/11; microTESE, TESE respectively), in 12/14 with maturation arrest (6/7, 6/7), in 16/22 with incomplete Sertoli cell-only syndrome (8/11, 8/11), and in 16/80 with complete Sertoli cell-only syndrome (11/40, 5/40). Sperm recovery was positive in 5/24 patients with FSH concentration > or = 3 x maximum value of normal range (N) (4/12, 1/12), in 17/40 patients with 2N < or = FSH < 3N (9/20, 8/20), in 30/48 patients with N < FSH < 2N (17/24, 13/24), and in 13/26 patients with FSH = N (6/13, 7/13). Regarding orchidometry, sperm recovery was positive in 11/18 testicles with volume (V) > or = 12 ml (6/9, 5/9), in 27/56 testicles with 8 ml < or = V < 12 ml (15/28, 12/28), and in 27/64 testicles with V < 8 ml (15/32, 12/32). FSH value and the surgical procedure were the two variables significantly (P < 0.05) predicting positive sperm retrieval.
Obesity Surgery | 2006
Lattuada E; Marco Antonio Zappa; Enrico Mozzi; Giacomo Gazzano; Massimo Francese; Ilaria Antonini; Stefano Radaelli; Giancarlo Roviaro
Background: One of the major complications of gastric banding is intragastric migration of the band. The frequency ranges from 0.5% to 3.8%, and removal of the band is always required. We undertook a prospective study with the aim to determine the reasons for this significant complication in bariatric surgery. Methods: 480 morbidly obese patients underwent adjustable gastric banding in our Surgical Department, from February 1998 to October 2005. 31 of them were reoperated for different surgical problems, at an average time of 39 months after the bariatric procedure. During the reoperation, some fragments of fibro-adipose tissue in close contact with the band were removed. They were examined, focusing on the following parameters: acute and chronic inflammation, fibrosclerosis, and foreign body granulomatous reaction. Results: Histological assessment showed the presence of acute and chronic inflammation, generally of mild and medium grade; fibrosclerosis was present mostly in a severe form, indicating a biological periprosthesic wall that separates and protects the gastric wall from the band; no cases of foreign body reaction were observed, nor were silicone inclusions found inside the inflammatory cells. Conclusion: The histologic changes of periprosthesic tissue do not appear to account for endoluminal migration of the gastric band. Thus, band erosion could have a closer correlation with other causes, such as infection of the band or intraoperative surgical damage, possibly due to direct mechanical action or to the thermal effect of the electric scalpel.
Fertility and Sterility | 2014
Luigi Fedele; Nicola Berlanda; Giacomo Gazzano; Martina Morini; Paolo Vercellini
OBJECTIVE To review our experience with surgical treatment of ileocecal endometriosis. DESIGN Observational study. SETTING Tertiary university hospital in Italy. PATIENT(S) Eight consecutive patients with infiltrating ileocecal endometriosis operated on between 2003 and 2005. INTERVENTION(S) All of the women underwent laparotomic ileocecal or cecal resection and had radical treatment of rectovaginal endometriosis as well. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Long-term relief of pelvic pain, constipation, and dyschezia. RESULT(S) There were no postoperative intestinal complications. At a mean ± SD follow-up of 106 ± 10 months, all of the patients reported significant improvement of pelvic pain and bowel symptoms. CONCLUSION(S) Infiltrating ileocecal endometriosis requiring bowel resection was associated in all cases with infiltrating rectovaginal endometriosis, possibly reflecting a common pathogenesis. A thorough clinical evaluation of women with rectovaginal endometriosis might allow an improvement in the difficult preoperative diagnosis of ileocecal endometriosis. Our data support the long-term efficacy of the radical surgical resection of associated ileocecal and rectovaginal endometriotic lesions in reducing pelvic pain, constipation, and dyschezia.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Irene Forno; Stefano Ferrero; Maria Veronica Russo; Giacomo Gazzano; Sara Giangiobbe; E. Montanari; Alberto Del Nero; Bernardo Rocco; Giancarlo Albo; Lucia R. Languino; Dario C. Altieri; Valentina Vaira; Silvano Bosari
Most men diagnosed with prostate cancer will have an indolent and curable disease, whereas approximately 15% of these patients will rapidly progress to a castrate-resistant and metastatic stage with high morbidity and mortality. Therefore, the identification of molecular signature(s) that detect men at risk of progressing disease remains a pressing and still unmet need for these patients. Here, we used an integrated discovery platform combining prostate cancer cell lines, a Transgenic Adenocarcinoma of the Mouse Prostate (TRAMP) model and clinically-annotated human tissue samples to identify loss of expression of microRNA-34b as consistently associated with prostate cancer relapse. Mechanistically, this was associated with epigenetics silencing of the MIR34B/C locus and increased DNA copy number loss, selectively in androgen-dependent prostate cancer. In turn, loss of miR-34b resulted in downstream deregulation and overexpression of the “stemness” marker, Sox2. These findings identify loss of miR-34b as a robust biomarker for prostate cancer progression in androgen-sensitive tumors, and anticipate a potential role of progenitor/stem cell signaling in this stage of disease.
Pathology | 2014
Francesco Massari; Chiara Ciccarese; Antonio Bentito Porcaro; Stefano Ferrero; Giacomo Gazzano; Walter Artibani; Alessandra Modena; Emilio Bria; Teodoro Sava; Anna Caliò; Giacomo Novara; Vincenzo Ficarra; Marco Chilosi; Guido Martignoni; Silvano Bosari; Liang Cheng; Giampaolo Tortora; Matteo Brunelli
Summary We sought to evaluate the expression of HSP27 and HSP90 chaperones in renal cell carcinomas as a target for cancer therapeutics. A total of 127 clear cell renal cell carcinomas stratified according to the Mayo Clinic SSIGN (size, staging, grading, and necrosis) risk groups (good, 1; poor, 5) and 20 cases with metastases, were available. Immunostaining for both HSP27 and HSP90 was performed on tissue microarrays. Results were detailed per scorable arrays per SSIGN risk groups. Immunolabelling for HSP90 and HSP27 was seen in 109 of 127 (86%) and 114 of 127 (89%) cases, respectively. HSP90 scored 4.9 in 32 cases risked SSIGN 1, 3.5 in 41 cases SSIGN 2, 4.8 in 11 cases SSIGN 3, 4.2 in 22 cases SSIGN 4, and 5.0 in three cases SSIGN 5. HSP27 scored 4.6 in 33 risked SSIGN 1, 3.1 in 43 SSIGN 2, 2.6 in 11 SSIGN 3, 3.6 in 24 SSIGN 4, and 2.7 in three SSIGN 5. Metastases ranged from 2.9–5.0. A trend of increasing value for HSP90 was observed when comparing SSIGN 1–2 versus SSIGN 3–5 risk groups (4.2 versus 4.6 mean values; p = 0.06); no difference has been observed for HSP27 (3.8 to 3.9; p = 0.08). A score modulation of HSPs is observed in renal cell carcinoma and may affect the efficacy of targeted therapy.
The Journal of Urology | 2006
Francesco Rocco; Luca Carmignani; Pietro Acquati; Franco Gadda; P. Dell’Orto; Bernardo Rocco; Giorgio Bozzini; Giacomo Gazzano; A. Morabito
European Urology | 2007
Francesco Rocco; Luca Carmignani; Pietro Acquati; Franco Gadda; Paolo Guido Dell’Orto; Bernardo Rocco; Stefano Casellato; Giacomo Gazzano; Dario Consonni
The Journal of Urology | 2003
Luca Carmignani; Franco Gadda; Giacomo Gazzano; Franco Nerva; Mario Mancini; Mario Ferruti; Gaetano Bulfamante; Silvano Bosari; Guido Coggi; Francesco Rocco; Giovanni M. Colpi
Human Reproduction | 2007
Mario Mancini; Luca Carmignani; Giacomo Gazzano; P. Sagone; Franco Gadda; Silvano Bosari; Francesco Rocco; Giovanni M. Colpi
The Journal of Urology | 2004
Luca Carmignani; Franco Gadda; Mario Mancini; Giacomo Gazzano; Franco Nerva; Francesco Rocco; Giovanni M. Colpi
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Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico
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