Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore.
BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia | 2009
Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; La Critchley; Anna Lee; L Bindi; M Bisà; Massimo Esposito; Luca Meacci; Roberto Mozzo; P Desimone; L Urbani; Franco Filipponi
BACKGROUND The pulmonary artery catheter is invasive and may cause serious complications. A safe method of cardiac output (CO) measurement is needed. We have assessed the accuracy and reliability of a recently marketed self-calibrating arterial pulse contour CO monitoring system (FloTrac/Vigileo) in end-stage liver failure patients undergoing liver transplant. The pattern of alterations known as cirrhotic cardiomyopathy, and the transplant procedure itself, provided an evaluation under varying clinical conditions. METHODS The cardiac index was measured simultaneously by thermodilution (CI(TD): mean of four readings) using a pulmonary artery catheter and pulse contour analysis (CI(V): mean value computed by the FloTrac/Vigileo over the same time period). Readings were made at 10 time-points during liver transplant surgery (T1-T5) and on the intensive care unit (T6-T10). CI(V) was computed using the latest Vigileo software version 01.10. RESULTS A total of 290 paired readings from 29 patients were collected. Mean (SD) CI(TD) was 5.2 (1.3) and CI(V) was 3.9 (0.9) litre min(-1) m(-2), with a corrected for repeated measures bias between readings of 1.3 (0.2) litre min(-1) m(-2) and 95% limits of agreement of -1.5 (0.2) to 4.1 (0.3) litre min(-1) m(-2). The percentage error (2SD(Bias)/meanCI(TD)) was 54%, which exceeded a 30% limit of acceptance. Low peripheral resistance and increasing bias were related (r=0.69; P<0.001). The Vigileo system failed to reliably trend CI data, with a concordance compared with thermodilution below an acceptable level (at best 68% of sequential readings). CONCLUSIONS In cirrhotic patients with hyperdynamic circulation, the Vigileo system showed a degree of error and unreliability higher than that considered acceptable for clinical purposes.
European Journal of Anaesthesiology | 2005
Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; Ml Bindi; Am Romanelli; A Boldrini; M Bisà; Massimo Esposito; L Urbani; G Catalano; Franco Mosca; Franco Filipponi
Background and objective: Reducing postoperative mechanical ventilation in patients undergoing liver transplantation may have clinical and organizational advantages. On the basis of our experience, we here evaluate the possibility of practising immediate tracheal extubation in the operating theatre. Methods: In this prospective study, patients consecutively undergoing liver transplantation between 1 June 1999 and 31 May 2004 were extubated in the operating theatre at the end of surgery on the basis of standardized and universally accepted criteria, under conditions of haemodynamic and metabolic stability. Results: Two hundred and seven of the 354 patients (58.5%) were extubated immediately after the completion of the surgical procedure (mean time between end of surgery and extubation: 0.4 ± 1.4 min); two were re‐intubated. In the last of the 5 yr of the study, the percentage of immediate extubations increased to 82.5%. During the study period, there was a progressive increase in the number of immediate extubations per individual member of the team of anaesthetists. The pre‐transplant Child‐Pugh severity of the underlying liver disease did not predict rapid extubation, but the Model for End‐stage Liver Disease score of <11 did (receiver operator characteristic area under the curve = 0.61; P < 0.05). Conclusions: Immediate extubation after liver transplantation is possible in a substantial percentage of cases; confidence, habit and a spirit of emulation are decisive factors in encouraging anaesthetists to extend this practice to the largest possible number of patients. A successful immediate extubation may be an important indicator of perioperative quality of care in liver transplantation.
Transplantation Proceedings | 2002
L Urbani; Roberto Cioni; G Catalano; G Iaria; L Bindi; Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; C Vignali; Franco Mosca; Franco Filipponi
A SUCCESSFUL liver transplantation needs an adequate portal inflow. In cases of grade 4 portal vein (PV) thrombosis, ie, complete thrombosis of the PV, and the proximal and distal superior mesenteric veins, salvage procedures have been described to restore portal inflow: anastomosis of the donor PV with a suitable recipient PV tributary, arterialization of the donor PV to increase flow through the portal system, and multivisceral transplantation. Since the report of Tzakis et al, proposing cavoportal hemitransposition (CPHT) as a possible means of overcoming the problem of extensive PV thrombosis, individual case studies of CPHT have been published. The common complications after CPHT are severe ascites, renal insufficiency, and variceal bleeding. We here report the patient selection criteria and outcomes of the first eight transplantations performed using this technique at our Centre between July 2000 and February 2002.
Vox Sanguinis | 2013
Ml Bindi; Mario Miccoli; M. Marietta; Luca Meacci; Massimo Esposito; M Bisà; Roberto Mozzo; Alessandro Mazzoni; Angelo Baggiani; F. Scatena; Franco Filipponi; Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore
Although orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is nowadays considered standard practice at experienced centres, it can still be affected by a significant risk of massive bleeding and its related complications. Solvent/detergent plasma (S/D Plasma) has been proposed as an alternative to fresh frozen plasma (FFP) to curtail such complications. This study aimed at evaluating the efficacy of S/D Plasma in OLT patients by comparing it to FFP.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2001
Arianna Tavanti; Antonella Lupetti; Emilia Ghelardi; Valerio Corsini; Paola Davini; Franco Filipponi; Ugo Boggi; Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; Mario Campa; Sonia Senesi
This report describes the use of the 27A probe for the molecular monitoring of Candida albicans infections in liver transplant recipients. Nosocomial candidiasis is the major fungal infection in liver transplant recipients, with Candida albicans being the species most frequently isolated. The molecular epidemiology of Candida albicans infections has been widely investigated, but scant attention has been focused on monitoring the identity of infecting strains in individual patients over the entire course of their hospitalization. In the study presented here, a total of 179 Candida albicans isolates were collected from 10 liver transplant recipients during multiple surveillance cultures performed before and after liver transplantation and from three healthcare workers at the Transplant Unit of Ospedale di Cisanello, Pisa (Italy). Computer-aided analysis of the 27A-probed DNA fingerprints, used to compare the genetic relatedness of all the Candida albicans isolates, showed that most of the patients colonized with Candida albicans before transplantation harbored a unique Candida albicans genotype. This genotype persisted over the entire course of hospitalization and caused multiorgan failure in two patients, both of whom died from endogenously borne Candidaalbicans infections. Nosocomial acquisition of Candidaalbicans strains could be monitored in a timely manner in the other patients; for some of them, subsequent strain replacement was registered at different body sites during the post-transplant period. Neither cross-infection between patients nor transmission from healthcare workers to patients occurred in this hospital setting. These results indicate that the molecular monitoring of Candidaalbicans strains isolated from liver transplant recipients during their hospitalization may provide timely information about the identity of individual Candida albicans strains causing infections.
Digestive and Liver Disease | 2017
Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; Maria L. Bindi; Davide Ghinolfi; Quirino Lai; M Bisà; Massimo Esposito; Luca Meacci; Roberto Mozzo; Alicia Spelta; Franco Filipponi
BACKGROUND Use of grafts from very old donors for liver transplantation is controversial. AIM To compare the perioperative course of patients receiving liver grafts from young ideal vs octogenarian donors. METHODS Analysis of the perioperative course of patients receiving liver grafts from young, ideal (18-39 years) vs octogenarian (≥80years) deceased donors between 2001 and 2014. RESULTS 346 patients were studied: 179 (51.7%) received grafts aged 18-39 years whereas 167 (48.3%) received a graft from a donor aged ≥80years. Intra-operative cardiovascular (p=0.2), coagulopathy (p=0.5) and respiratory (p=1.0) complications and incidence of reperfusion syndrome (p=0.3) were similar. Patients receiving a young graft required more fresh frozen plasma units (p≤0.03) but did not differ for the need of packed red cells (p=0.2) and platelet (p=0.3) transfusions. Median ICU stay was identical (p=0.4). Patients receiving octogenarian vs young grafts did not differ in terms of death or re-transplant (p=1.0) during the ICU stay. Similar cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, infectious and neurological postoperative complication rates were observed in the two groups. CONCLUSIONS Octogenarian donors in liver transplantation grant an equivalent perioperative course to ideal young donors.
Digestive and Liver Disease | 2001
Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; C Valentini; F Cellai; Franco Filipponi; Franco Mosca; Antonio Vagelli
The long QT syndrome affects heart rhythm by prolonging ventricular repolarisation; it is potentially life-threatening since it can evolve into torsades de pointes (a polymorphic ventricular tachycardia) and/or ventricular fibrillation. The case is presented of a 55-year-old liver transplant recipient with a genetically determined long QT syndrome not detected by the standard preoperative cardiological evaluation. It was mild in the immediate post-operative period but developed into torsades de pointes after discharge, probably as a result of therapy. This case was particularly challenging because the first arrhythmic episodes were short and electocardiographically silent, and thus the related faints were thought to have a neurological basis. When the true cause emerged during a monitored episode of torsades de pointes, electric defibrillation was used to restore sinus rhythm and isoproterenol administered to increase heart rate and thus shorten the prolonged QT interval Long-term control was obtained by means of an implantable intracardiac defibrillator. In orthotopic liver transplant recipients with long QT syndrome, particular attention should be given to post-operative therapy as some routinely used drugs can trigger life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias.
Liver Transplantation | 2018
Davide Ghinolfi; Erion Rreka; Vincenzo De Tata; Maria Franzini; Daniele Pezzati; Vanna Fierabracci; Matilde Masini; Andrea Cacciatoinsilla; Maria L. Bindi; Lorella Marselli; Valentina Mazzotti; Riccardo Morganti; Piero Marchetti; Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; Daniela Campani; Aldo Paolicchi; Paolo De Simone
Ex situ normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) might minimize ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI) of liver grafts. In this study, 20 primary liver transplantation recipients of older grafts (≥70 years) were randomized 1:1 to NMP or cold storage (CS) groups. The primary study endpoint was to evaluate graft and patient survival at 6 months posttransplantation. The secondary endpoint was to evaluate liver and bile duct biopsies; IRI by means of peak transaminases within 7 days after surgery; and incidence of biliary complications at month 6. Liver and bile duct biopsies were collected at bench surgery, end of ex situ NMP, and end of transplant surgery. Interleukin (IL) 6, IL10, and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF‐α) perfusate concentrations were tested during NMP. All grafts were successfully transplanted. Median (interquartile range) posttransplant aspartate aminotransferase peak was 709 (371‐1575) IU/L for NMP and 574 (377‐1162) IU/L for CS (P = 0.597). There was 1 hepatic artery thrombosis in the NMP group and 1 death in the CS group. In NMP, we observed high TNF‐α perfusate levels, and these were inversely correlated with lactate (P < 0.001). Electron microscopy showed decreased mitochondrial volume density and steatosis and an increased volume density of autophagic vacuoles at the end of transplantation in NMP versus CS patients (P < 0.001). Use of NMP with older liver grafts is associated with histological evidence of reduced IRI, although the clinical benefit remains to be demonstrated.
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2017
Francesca Galiero; Giovanni Consani; Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; Stefano Ruschi; Francesco Forfori
Vasopressin is a potent vasopressor used for improving organ perfusion during cardiac arrest, septic and catecholamine-resistant shock; with reference to this, it is useful for the treatment of vasoplegic shock because, restoring organ perfusion pressure by contraction of vascular smooth muscle through a non-catecholamine receptor pathway, it can be employed when catecholamines are ineffective. A 49-yr-old woman was admitted to the Emergency Department after having intentionally taken 95.2g of metformin, 1.6g of pioglitazone and 40 UI of insulin glargine in a suicide attempt. Despite fluid resuscitation, CVVHDF (continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration) treatment, norepinephrine and epinephrine infusion, she developed a severe lactic acidosis and a catecholamines-refractive vasodilatory shock. Only the vasopressin infusion, in association with catecholamines, gradually stabilized the patients hemodynamic status.
Transplantation Proceedings | 2004
Giandomenico Luigi Biancofiore; Ml Bindi; A Boldrini; G Consani; M Bisà; Massimo Esposito; L Urbani; G Catalano; Franco Filipponi; Franco Mosca