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Dive into the research topics where Ignazio Massimo Civello is active.

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Featured researches published by Ignazio Massimo Civello.


Urology | 2003

Relief by botulinum toxin of voiding dysfunction due to benign prostatic hyperplasia: results of a randomized, placebo-controlled study

Giorgio Maria; Giuseppe Brisinda; Ignazio Massimo Civello; Anna Rita Bentivoglio; Gabriele Sganga; Alberto Albanese

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the therapeutic role of botulinum toxin injection in men with benign prostatic hyperplasia. METHODS Men with benign prostatic hyperplasia were enrolled in a randomized, placebo-controlled study. After a baseline evaluation, each participant received 4 mL of solution injected into the prostate gland. Patients in the control group received saline solution and patients in the treated group received 200 U of botulinum toxin A. The outcome of each group was evaluated by comparing the symptom scores, serum prostate-specific antigen concentration, prostate volume, postvoid residual urine volume, and peak urinary flow rates. RESULTS Thirty consecutive patients were enrolled. No local complications or systemic side effects were observed in any patient. After 2 months, 13 patients in the treated group and 3 in the control group had subjective symptomatic relief (P = 0.0007). In patients who received botulinum toxin, the symptom score was reduced by 65% compared with baseline values and the serum prostate-specific antigen concentration by 51% from baseline. In patients who received saline, the symptom score and serum prostate-specific antigen concentration were not significantly changed compared with the baseline values and 1-month values. Follow-up averaged 19.6 +/- 3.8 months. CONCLUSIONS Botulinum toxin injected into the prostate seems to be a promising approach for the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia. It is safe, effective, and well-tolerated. Furthermore, it is not related to the patients willingness to complete treatment.


American Journal of Surgery | 1998

Anoplasty for the treatment of anal stenosis

Giorgio Maria; Giuseppe Brisinda; Ignazio Massimo Civello

BACKGROUND Cicatricial stenosis of the anal canal is a disabling complication of anal surgery. Many different surgical techniques have been described for the management of this disorder. METHODS In this study we report 42 patients with severe anal stricture treated with anoplasty. Twenty-nine of these patients underwent a Y-V anoplasty while 13 had a diamond flap anoplasty. All patients were seen 4 weeks, 6 months, and 2 years after surgery. RESULTS Three patients who had undergone Y-V anoplasty experienced, as a minor early operative complication, a suture dehiscence and 1 patient had an ischemic contracture of the leading edge of the flap. Two patients had urinary infections. None of these complications needed further surgical intervention and were all managed with local and medical therapy. At 2 years follow-up 93% of patients had been successfully treated while the remaining 7% had improved. Fifteen percent of patients who had undergone Y-V anoplasty complained of postoperative complications, and all patients with incomplete results had been treated with an Y-V anoplasty. CONCLUSIONS Based on our cohort of patients we believe that both techniques are satisfactory in treating anal stricture but diamond flap anoplasty seems more reliable because of the reduced tension at the suture line and the better blood supply to the flap.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2009

End-to-end versus end-to-side stapled anastomoses after anterior resection for rectal cancer.

Giuseppe Brisinda; Serafino Vanella; Federica Cadeddu; Ignazio Massimo Civello; Francesco Brandara; C Nigro; Pasquale Mazzeo; Gaia Marniga; Giorgio Maria

Sphincter‐saving procedures for resection of mid and, in some cases, of distal rectal tumors have become prevalent as their safety have been established. Increased anastomotic leak rate, associated with the type of anastomosis and the distance from the anal verge, has been reported. To compare surgical outcomes of end‐to‐end and end‐to‐side anastomosis after anterior resection for T1–T2 rectal cancer.


Surgery | 1999

Identification of anti-endothelial cell antibodies in patients with chronic anal fissure

Giorgio Maria; Donatella Brisinda; Maria Pia Ruggieri; Ignazio Massimo Civello; Giuseppe Brisinda

BACKGROUND Recent studies demonstrate that chronic anal fissure can be the consequence of a local ischemic process. Thus hypothesizing that at the perianal level the interaction of immune component with endothelium could constitute a mechanism determining ischemia and hypertonia, the presence or absence of circulating anti-endothelial cell antibodies (AECAs) was determined in the serum of patients with anal fissure. METHODS The study was carried out on 30 patients: 10 with posterior chronic anal fissure (group 1), 10 with grades III and IV hemorrhoids (group 2), and 10 without previous or active anorectal disease, or both (group 3). An indirect immunofluorescence assay on sections of rat kidney tissue was used to identify AECA in the peripheral blood. RESULTS The assay result was positive for AECAs in 12 patients, all with anorectal disease when compared to the control group (P = .001). The basal anal tone was higher in the AECA-positive patients than in the AECA-negative patients (P = .001). CONCLUSIONS Only the patients with anal fissure or hemorrhoids were AECA positive. All healthy controls tested negative for AECA. Although the number of subjects studied is small, the presence of auto-antibodies directed against the endothelial cells in the serum of these patients supports the hypothesis that the endothelium is involved in the anal disease.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2003

Gastrointestinal smooth muscles and sphincters spasms: treatment with botulinum neurotoxin.

Giuseppe Brisinda; Ignazio Massimo Civello; Albanese Albanese; Giorgio Maria

More than fifty years following the discovery that botulinum neurotoxins inhibit neuromuscular transmission, these powerful poisons have become drugs with many indications. First used to treat strabismus, local injections of botulinum neurotoxin are now considered a safe and efficacious treatment for neurological and non-neurological conditions. One of the most recent achievements in the field is the observation that botulinum neurotoxin is a treatment for diseases of the gastrointestinal tract. Botulinum neurotoxin is not only potent in blocking skeletal neuromuscular transmission, but also block cholinergic nerve endings in the autonomic nervous system. The capability to inhibit contraction of smooth muscles of the gastrointestinal tract was first suggested based on in vitro observations and later demonstrated in vivo; it has also been shown that botulinum neurotoxin does not block non adrenergic non cholinergic responses mediated by nitric oxide. This has further promoted the interest to use botulinum neurotoxin as a treatment for overactive smooth muscles and sphincters, such as the lower esophageal sphincter to treat esophageal achalasia, or the internal anal sphincter to treat anal fissure. Information on the anatomical and functional organization of innervation of the gastrointestinal tract is a prerequisite to understand many features of botulinum neurotoxin action on the gut and the effects of injections placed into specific sphincters. This review presents current data on the use of botulinum neurotoxin to treat diseases of the gastrointestinal tract and summarizes recent knowledge on the pathogenesis of disorders of the gut due to a dysfunction of the enteric nervous system.


Digestive Surgery | 1998

Truncal vagotomy, antrectomy and Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy in the treatment of duodenogastric reflux disease

Ignazio Massimo Civello; Giuseppe Brisinda; Alessandra Palermo; Maria Agresti; Stefano Minelli; Gabriele Sganga; Giorgio Maria

Background/Aims: The surgical treatment of duodenogastric reflux (DGR), resistant to medical therapy, in patients with intact stomach is difficult to standardize. The aim of this study is to present our experience on 5 patients, all cholecystectomized, with severe DGR disease treated surgically. Methods: Out of a group of 223 patients suffering from nonulcerous dispeptic pathology presenting to our department, we selected 5 patients suffering from alkaline reflux gastritis in intact stomach. The diagnosis of primary DGR was made using Wilson’s criteria. The surgical procedure adopted consisted of a truncal vagotomy, antrectomy, and a Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy. Results: No perioperative mortality was observed. Twelve months after surgery all patients expressed satisfaction with the result of the operation and complained of no severe disturbances. A sense of postprandial fullness with a sense of pain in the left shoulder persisted in one case only, requiring the consumption of small and frequent meals. Radiological examination of the upper gastrointestinal tract of these patients showed notably delayed emptying of the gastric stump, while the endoscopic picture was completely normal. Conclusion: The antrectomy and Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy is a better known operation, easily executed, and has the advantage that it can be performed on patients previously operated on for gastric resection and therefore suffering from secondary reflux. It also has the advantage of removing the gastric antrum where mucous atrophy is more frequent and is susceptible to neoplastic degeneration. However, at the present time the choice between different types of operation depends exclusively on the personal conviction and experience of the surgeon.


British Journal of Surgery | 2002

Botulinum neurotoxin and other treatments for fissure-in-ano and pelvic floor disorders

Giorgio Maria; Gabriele Sganga; Ignazio Massimo Civello; Giuseppe Brisinda


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2003

Safety of botulinum neurotoxin treatment in patients with chronic anal fissure.

Donatella Brisinda; Giorgio Maria; Riccardo Fenici; Ignazio Massimo Civello; Giuseppe Brisinda


The Lancet | 2000

Haemorrhoidectomy : painful choice

Giuseppe Brisinda; Ignazio Massimo Civello; Giorgio Maria


Hepato-gastroenterology | 2005

Laparoscopic fenestration of symptomatic non-parasitic cysts of the liver.

Ignazio Massimo Civello; Daniele Matera; Giorgio Maria; C Nigro; Francesco Brandara; Giuseppe Brisinda

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Giuseppe Brisinda

The Catholic University of America

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Giorgio Maria

The Catholic University of America

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Francesco Brandara

The Catholic University of America

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Gabriele Sganga

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Gaia Marniga

The Catholic University of America

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Serafino Vanella

The Catholic University of America

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C Nigro

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Pasquale Mazzeo

The Catholic University of America

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Federica Cadeddu

The Catholic University of America

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Donatella Brisinda

The Catholic University of America

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