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Dive into the research topics where Giuliano Maggi is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuliano Maggi.


Pain | 2001

Response expectancies in placebo analgesia and their clinical relevance.

Antonella Pollo; Martina Amanzio; Anna Arslanian; Caterina Casadio; Giuliano Maggi; Fabrizio Benedetti

&NA; Response expectancies have been proposed as the major determinant of placebo effects. Here we report that different expectations produce different analgesic effects which in turn can be harnessed in clinical practice. Thoracotomized patients were treated with buprenorphine on request for 3 consecutive days, together with a basal intravenous infusion of saline solution. However, the symbolic meaning of this basal infusion was changed in three different groups of patients. The first group was told nothing about any analgesic effect (natural history). The second group was told that the basal infusion was either a powerful painkiller or a placebo (classic double‐blind administration). The third group was told that the basal infusion was a potent painkiller (deceptive administration). Therefore, whereas the analgesic treatment was exactly the same in the three groups, the verbal instructions about the basal infusion differed. The placebo effect of the saline basal infusion was measured by recording the doses of buprenorphine requested over the three‐days treatment. We found that the double‐blind group showed a reduction of buprenorphine requests compared to the natural history group. However, this reduction was even larger in the deceptive administration group. Overall, after 3 days of placebo infusion, the first group received 11.55 mg of buprenorphine, the second group 9.15 mg, and the third group 7.65 mg. Despite these dose differences, analgesia was the same in the three groups. These results indicate that different verbal instructions about certain and uncertain expectations of analgesia produce different placebo analgesic effects, which in turn trigger a dramatic change of behaviour leading to a significant reduction of opioid intake.


Pain | 2001

Response variability to analgesics: a role for non-specific activation of endogenous opioids.

Martina Amanzio; Antonella Pollo; Giuliano Maggi; Fabrizio Benedetti

&NA; Individual differences in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, the type of pain and the method of drug administration can account for the response variability to analgesics. By integrating a clinical and an experimental approach, we report here that another important source of variability is represented by individual differences in non‐specific (placebo) activation of endogenous opioid systems. In the first part of this study, we analyzed the effectiveness of buprenorphine, tramadol, ketorolac and metamizol in the clinical setting, where the placebo effect was completely eliminated by means of hidden infusions. We found that the hidden injections were significantly less effective and less variable compared with open injections (in full view of the subject), suggesting that part of the response variability was due to non‐specific factors (placebo). Since we could not administer the opioid antagonist, naloxone, to these patients, in the second part of this study, we induced experimental ischemic arm pain in healthy volunteers and found that, as occurred in clinical pain, the analgesic response to a hidden injection of the non‐opioid ketorolac was less effective and less variable than an open injection. Most importantly, we obtained the same effects by adding naloxone to an open injection of ketorolac, thus blocking the opioid‐mediated placebo component of analgesia. These findings indicate that both the psychological (hidden injection) and pharmacological (naloxone) blockade of the placebo response reduce the effectiveness of, and the response variability to, analgesic drugs. Therefore, an important source of response variability to analgesics appears to be due to differences in non‐specific activation of endogenous opioid systems.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1991

Thymoma: Results of 241 operated cases

Giuliano Maggi; Caterina Casadio; Antonio Cavallo; Roberto Cianci; Massimo Molinatti; Enrico Ruffini

Clinical and histopathological aspects of 241 thymomas were reviewed. One hundred sixty of the patients with thymoma had myasthenia gravis and 15 had other autoimmune diseases; 55% of the thymomas were encapsulated and 45% invasive. Operation was radical resection in 87.5% of the patients, subtotal resection with residual tumor in 8.7%, and simple biopsy in 3.7%. A tumor relapse was observed in 24 patients (10%): 2 (1.5%) of 133 with encapsulated thymomas and 22 (20.4%) of 108 with invasive thymomas; among these patients, a relapse was found in 20.6% of the patients who received radiotherapy postoperatively and in 24.6% who did not. Adverse prognostic factors were clinical stage IVa (multiple pleural nodes), not feasible resection (for technical reasons), inoperable tumor relapse, and association with one of the following autoimmune diseases: pure red cell aplasia, hypogammaglobulinemia, and lupus erythematosus. Conversely, myasthenia gravis is now a curable disease; it contributes to early discovery of associated thymoma, thus allowing a better survival for patients with thymoma who have myasthenia gravis compared with patients with thymoma but without myasthenia gravis (p less than 0.05). Postoperative radiotherapy does not seem necessary after removal of encapsulated thymomas, but it is advisable in case of invasive thymomas, regardless of the extent of the resection.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1997

Recurrence of thymoma: Analysis of clinicopathologic features, treatment, and outcome

Enrico Ruffini; Maurizio Mancuso; Alberto Oliaro; Caterina Casadio; Antonio Cavallo; Roberto Cianci; Pier Luigi Filosso; Massimo Molinatti; Calogero Porrello; Nazario Cappello; Giuliano Maggi

OBJECTIVE AND METHODS This study reports clinicopathologic features, treatment, and outcome of 30 recurrent thymomas out of 266 totally resected thymomas. RESULTS The mean disease-free interval to recurrence was 86 months. Recurrence occurred less frequently and after a longer disease-free interval after resection of encapsulated versus invasive thymomas. The presence of associated myasthenia gravis did not affect recurrence proportion, disease-free interval, or survival after recurrence. A local recurrence occurred in 11 patients, 17 patients had a distant recurrence, and the extent of the recurrence could not be determined in 2 cases. Surgical treatment of the recurrent tumor was attempted in 16 cases, and a total resection was possible in 10 cases; exclusive radiotherapy was done in 11 cases. Overall 5- and 10-year survivals were 48% and 24%, respectively. In a univariate analysis, survival was significantly better in the presence of a local recurrence and in case of a total resection of the recurrent tumor. The use of adjuvant therapy after the resection of the initial thymoma had no effect on reducing the incidence of recurrence, in prolonging the disease-free interval, or in improving survival after the development of the recurrence. In a multivariate survival analysis, significant prognostic factors were the presence of a local recurrence and total resection of the recurrent tumor. CONCLUSIONS Surgical resection is recommended in patients with recurrent thymoma. Local recurrence and total resection of the recurrent tumor are associated with excellent prognosis. A poor prognosis may be anticipated in the presence of distant recurrence and when radical surgical treatment is not done.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1998

Neurophysiologic assessment of nerve impairment in posterolateral and muscle-sparing thoracotomy

Fabrizio Benedetti; Sergio Vighetti; Claudia Ricco; Martina Amanzio; Luciana Bergamasco; Caterina Casadio; Roberto Cianci; Roberto Giobbe; Alberto Oliaro; B. Bergamasco; Giuliano Maggi

OBJECTIVE This study was aimed at analyzing the degree of intercostal nerve impairment in posterolateral and muscle-sparing thoracotomy and at correlating the nerve damage to the severity of long-lasting postthoracotomy pain. METHODS Neurophysiologic recordings were performed 1 month after either posterolateral or muscle-sparing thoracotomy to assess the presence of the superficial abdominal reflexes (mediated in part by the intercostal nerves), the somatosensory-evoked responses after electrical stimulation of the surgical scar, and the electrical thresholds for tactile and pain sensations of the surgical incision. RESULTS The patients who underwent a posterolateral thoracotomy showed a higher degree of intercostal nerve impairment than the muscle-sparing thoracotomy patients as revealed by the disappearance of the abdominal reflexes, a larger reduction in amplitude of the somatosensory-evoked potentials, and a larger increase of the sensory thresholds to electrical stimulation for both tactile perception and pain. In addition, these neurophysiologic parameters were highly correlated to the postthoracotomy pain experienced by the patients 1 month after surgery, indicating a causal role for nerve impairment in the long-lasting postoperative pain. CONCLUSIONS This study shows for the first time the pathophysiologic differences between posterolateral and muscle-sparing thoracotomy and suggests that the minor long-lasting postthoracotomy pain in muscle-sparing thoracotomy patients is partly due to a minor nerve damage. In addition, because nerve impairment is responsible for the long-lasting neuropathic component of postoperative pain, it is necessary to match specific treatments to the neuropathic pain-generating mechanisms.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Pulmonary resection for metastases from colorectal cancer: factors influencing prognosis. Twenty-year experience

Ottavio Rena; Caterina Casadio; Franco Viano; Riccardo Carlo Cristofori; Enrico Ruffini; Pier Luigi Filosso; Giuliano Maggi

OBJECTIVE We reviewed our experience in the surgical management of 80 patients with colorectal pulmonary metastases and investigated factors affecting survival. MATERIAL AND METHODS From January 1980 to December 2000, 80 patients, 43 women and 37 men with median age 63 years (range 38-79 years) underwent 98 open surgical procedure (96 muscle-sparing thoracotomy, one clamshell and one median sternotomy) for pulmonary metastases from colorectal cancer (three pneumonectomy, 17 lobectomy, seven lobectomy plus wedge resection, six segmentectomy, three segmentectomy plus wedge resection and 62 wedge resection). Pulmonary metastases were identified at a median interval of 37.5 months (range 0-167) from primary colorectal resection. Second and third resections for recurrent metastases were done in seven and in four patients, respectively. RESULTS Operative mortality rate was 2%. Overall, 5-year survival was 41.1%. Five-year survival was 43.6% for patients submitted to single metastasectomy and 34% for those submitted to multiple ones. Five-year survival was 55% for patients with disease-free interval (DFI) of 36 months or more, 38% for those with DFI of 0-11 months and 22.6% for those with DFI of 12-35 months (P=0.04). Five-year survival was 58.2% for patients with normal preoperative carcino-embryonic antigen (CEA) levels and 0% for those with pathologic ones (P=0.0001). Patients submitted to second-stage operation for recurrent local disease had 5-year survival rate of 50 vs. 41.1% of those submitted to single resection (P=0.326). CONCLUSIONS Pulmonary resection for metastases from colorectal cancer may help survival in selected patients. Single metastasis, DFI>36 months, normal preoperative CEA levels are important prognostic factors. When feasible, re-operation is a safe procedure with satisfactory long-term results.


Pain | 1997

Blockade of nocebo hyperalgesia by the cholecystokinin antagonist proglumide

Fabrizio Benedetti; Martina Amanzio; Caterina Casadio; Alberto Oliaro; Giuliano Maggi

Abstract In patients who reported mild postoperative pain, we evoked a nocebo response, a phenomenon equal but opposite to placebo. Patients who gave informed consent to increase their pain for 30 min received a substance known to be non–hyperalgesic (saline solution) and were told that it produced a pain increase. A nocebo effect was observed when saline was administered. However, if a dose of 0.5 or 5 mg of the cholecystokinin antagonist proglumide was added to the saline solution, the nocebo effect was abolished. A dose of 0.05 mg of proglumide was ineffective. The blockade of the nocebo hyperalgesic response was not reversed by 10 mg of naloxone. These results suggest that cholecystokinin mediates pain increase in the nocebo response and that proglumide blocks nocebo through mechanisms not involving opioids. Since the nocebo procedure represents an anxiogenic stimulus and previous studies showed a role for cholecystokinin in anxiety, we suggest that nocebo hyperalgesia may be due to a cholecystokinin‐dependent increase of anxiety.


Cancer | 1986

Thymomas: A review of 169 cases, with particular reference to results of surgical treatment

Giuliano Maggi; Giuseppe Giaccone; Michela Donadio; Libero Ciuffreda; Otilia Dalesio; Gabriella Leria; Guglielmo Trifiletti; Caterina Casadio; Giorgio Palestro; Maurizio Mancuso; Alessandro Calciati

One hundred sixty‐five patients with surgically treated thymoma were followed over 28 years; 73% had myasthenia gravis at presentation. Invasiveness was based on macroscopic findings at operation. Post‐surgical radiotherapy or chemotherapy were not routinely used. Overall survival was 84%, 79%, and 65% at 3, 5, and 10 years, respectively. Patients with invasive thymoma survived for a shorter period than patients with noninvasive tumors (67% versus 85% at 5 years); when radical excision was possible, no difference was detectable between the two groups. Patients with subtotally resected or only biopsied invasive thymomas survived 59% and 42% at 5 years, respectively. Lymphoepithelial cases had the worst prognosis of the histologic types considered. Myasthenia gravis did not adversely affect survival. Surgery is the basic treatment of thymomas. Macroscopic invasiveness and degree of excision judged by the surgeon have prognostic value and are reliable criteria of malignancy. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy may be effective, but their use should be limited to controlled trials. Cancer 58:765‐776, 1986.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1997

Control of postoperative pain by transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation after thoracic operations

Fabrizio Benedetti; Martina Amanzio; Caterina Casadio; Antonio Cavallo; Roberto Cianci; Roberto Giobbe; Maurizio Mancuso; Enrico Ruffini; Giuliano Maggi

BACKGROUND Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) has been used extensively to control postoperative pain, but its effects are controversial. This is probably due to the different types of operations performed and, therefore, to the varying intensity of postoperative pain. Here we present an extensive study with TENS in 324 patients who underwent different types of thoracic surgical procedures: posterolateral thoracotomy, muscle-sparing thoracotomy, costotomy, sternotomy, and video-assisted thoracoscopy. METHODS Each patient cohort was randomly subdivided into three treatment groups: TENS, placebo TENS and control. The effectiveness of TENS was assessed by two factors: the time from the beginning of treatment to the request for further analgesia and the total medication intake during the first 12 hours after operation. RESULTS Whereas posterolateral thoracotomy produced severe pain, muscle-sparing thoracotomy, costotomy, and sternotomy caused moderate pain, and video-assisted thoracoscopy caused only mild pain. The TENS treatment was not effective in the posterolateral thoracotomy group, but it was useful as an adjunct to other medications in the muscle-sparing thoracotomy, costotomy, and sternotomy groups. In contrast, representing the only pain control treatment with no adjunct drugs, it was very effective in patients having video-assisted thoracoscopy. CONCLUSIONS These findings show that TENS is useful after thoracic surgical procedures only when postoperative pain is mild to moderate; it is uneffective for severe pain.


Pain | 1998

Dose-response relationship of opioids in nociceptive and neuropathic postoperative pain

Fabrizio Benedetti; Sergio Vighetti; Martina Amanzio; Caterina Casadio; Alberto Oliaro; B. Bergamasco; Giuliano Maggi

&NA; The treatment of neuropathic pain with opioid analgesics is a matter of controversy among clinicians and clinician scientists. Although neuropathic pain is usually believed to be only slightly responsive to opioids, several studies show that satisfactory analgesia can be obtained if adequate doses are administered. In the present study, we tested the effectiveness of buprenorphine in 21 patients soon after thoracic surgery (nociceptive postoperative pain) and 1 month after surgery in the same 21 patients who developed postthoracotomy neuropathic pain with a burning, electrical and shooting quality. According to a double‐blind randomized study, the analgesic dose (AD) of buprenorphine needed to reduce the long‐term neuropathic pain by 50% (AD50) was calculated and compared to the AD50 in the immediate postoperative period. We found that long‐term neuropathic pain could be adequately reduced by buprenorphine. However, the AD50 in neuropathic pain was significantly higher relative to the AD50 in the short‐term postoperative pain, indicating a lower responsiveness of neuropathic pain to opioids. We also found a strict relationship between the short‐term and long‐term AD50, characterized by a saturating effect. In fact, if the AD50 soon after surgery was low, the AD50 increase in the long‐term neuropathic pain was threefold. By contrast, if the AD50 soon after surgery was high, the AD50 in neuropathic pain was only slightly increased. This suggests that, though neuropathic pain is indeed less sensitive to opioids, in some neuropathic patients a large amount of opioid resistance is already present in other painful conditions.

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Caterina Casadio

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Ottavio Rena

University of Eastern Piedmont

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