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Dive into the research topics where Lucia Dimitri is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucia Dimitri.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Clinical application of transthoracic ultrasonography in inpatients with pneumonia

Marco Sperandeo; Vincenzo Carnevale; Silvana Muscarella; Giuseppe Sperandeo; Antonio Varriale; Paola Filabozzi; Maria Luisa Piattelli; Vito D’Alessandro; Massimiliano Copetti; Fabio Pellegrini; Lucia Dimitri; Gianluigi Vendemiale

Eur J Clin Invest 2010; 41 (1): 1–7


The Journal of Urology | 2003

Transrectal Ultrasonography for the Early Diagnosis of Adenocarcinoma of the Prostate: A New Maneuver Designed to Improve the Differentiation of Malignant and Benign Lesions

Giuseppe Sperandeo; Marco Sperandeo; Michele Morcaldi; Eugenio Caturelli; Lucia Dimitri; Antonio Camagna

PURPOSE Transrectal ultrasound can reveal potentially malignant prostate lesions while they are still small. However, based on ultrasound alone they are often difficult to distinguish from benign focal lesions. We tested the reliability of a new technique for the sonographic evaluation of typical prostate lesions in differentiating adenocarcinoma from benign lesions. MATERIALS AND METHODS During 18 months 398 consecutive male patients 45 to 76 years old underwent transrectal ultrasound for the early detection of prostate cancer. When suspicious hypoechoic lesions were noted in the peripheral regions of the prostate, moderate pressure was applied on the lesion using the ultrasound probe to evaluate consistency. Based on the response lesions were classified as deformable (the shape changed from approximately spherical to oval) or nondeformable (the original shape was retained). All lesions were then diagnosed based on fine needle biopsy. RESULTS Peripheral hypoechoic prostate lesions were sonographically identified in 146 of 398 patients (36.7%). In 68 cases nondeformable lesions proved to be adenocarcinoma in 63 (92.6%), and chronic prostatitis and/or adenomatous hyperplasia in 5. In contrast, 62 of the 78 deformable nodules (79.5%) showed histological features of hyperplasia and/or chronic inflammation. The remaining 16 nodules, which showed more limited changes in shape during compression, were characterized by hyperplasia with acute inflammatory changes. In 5 cases there was also evidence of adenocarcinoma. CONCLUSIONS Ultrasound guided compression of suspicious prostate lesions detected on transrectal sonography is a simple, rapid and reliable maneuver that may increase the diagnostic potential of this examination.


International Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2011

Solitary Fibrous Tumor of the Central Nervous System Report of an Additional 5 Cases With Comprehensive Literature Review

Michele Bisceglia; Lucia Dimitri; Giuseppe Maria Giannatempo; Vincenzo Carotenuto; Mario Bianco; V. Monte; Vincenzo D’Angelo; Gaetano Magro

Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) of the central nervous system was first described in 1996. A number of cases have been reported since. The authors present 5 new cases: 4 intracranial and 1 intraspinal. All patients were adults (age range, 47 to 75 years); 4 were male and 1 female; 4 cases were primary tumors; and 1 was a second tumor recurrence. All patients were surgically treated with gross total removal. All cases were histologically examined with immunohistochemical confirmation; 2 tumors exhibited diffuse classic histology, 1 tumor was a cellular variant, 1 tumor was myxoid, and 1 was predominantly classic with focal myxoid features and focally pleomorphic. The postoperative course was uneventful in all. The patient with the cellular variant experienced 2 local recurrences and eventually died of disease 10 years after the initial diagnosis. The patient with the myxoid variant—the tumor studied—which was the second recurrence of a previously misdiagnosed fibrous meningioma surgically treated 15 years earlier, had a recurrence after 2 years for the third time and eventually died of disease. Three patients are alive and well 11.6, 6, and 4 years after surgery. SFT is a rare tumor that needs to be differentiated from some mimickers, mainly fibrous meningioma, hemangiopericytoma, and with regard to the myxoid variant, also adult-onset myxochordoid meningioma and myxoid peripheral nerve sheath tumor. Immunohistochemistry is crucial for the correct diagnosis of SFT. The authors also performed a review of the literature and found a little more than 200 cases on record.


BMC Cancer | 2015

TRIM8 downregulation in glioma affects cell proliferation and it is associated with patients survival.

Lucia Micale; Carmela Fusco; Andrea Fontana; Raffaela Barbano; Bartolomeo Augello; Pasquelena De Nittis; Massimiliano Copetti; Maria Teresa Pellico; Barbara Mandriani; Dario Cocciadiferro; Paola Parrella; Vito Michele Fazio; Lucia Dimitri; Vincenzo D’Angelo; Chiara Novielli; Lidia Larizza; Antonio Daga; Giuseppe Merla

BackgroundHuman gliomas are a heterogeneous group of primary malignant brain tumors whose molecular pathogenesis is not yet solved. In this regard, a major research effort has been directed at identifying novel specific glioma-associated genes. Here, we investigated the effect of TRIM8 gene in glioma.MethodsTRIM8 transcriptional level was profiled in our own glioma cases collection by qPCR and confirmed in the independent TCGA glioma cohort. The association between TRIM8 expression and Overall Survival and Progression-free Survival in TCGA cohort was determined by using uni-multivariable Cox regression analysis. The effect of TRIM8 on patient glioma cell proliferation was evaluated by performing MTT and clonogenic assays. The mechanisms causing the reduction of TRIM8 expression were explored by using qPCR and in vitro assays.ResultsWe showed that TRIM8 expression correlates with unfavorable clinical outcome in glioma patients. We found that a restored TRIM8 expression induced a significant reduction of clonogenic potential in U87MG and patient’s glioblastoma cells. Finally we provide experimental evidences showing that miR-17 directly targets the 3′ UTR of TRIM8 and post-transcriptionally represses the expression of TRIM8.ConclusionsOur study provides evidences that TRIM8 may participate in the carcinogenesis and progression of glioma and that the transcriptional repression of TRIM8 might have potential value for predicting poor prognosis in glioma patients.


Acta Radiologica | 2015

Lung transthoracic ultrasound elastography imaging and guided biopsies of subpleural cancer: a preliminary report:

Marco Sperandeo; Francesca M. Trovato; Lucia Dimitri; Daniela Catalano; Anna Simeone; Giuseppe Fabio Martines; Angela Pamela Piscitelli; Guglielmo M. Trovato

Background Despite the usefulness of elastography in assessing the stiffness/elasticity of tissues, and its proven diagnostic accuracy in thyroid, breast, and prostate cancers, among others, it is not yet applied in transthoracic ultrasound (TUS) scans to investigate lung nodules. Purpose To investigate the potential clinical utility of TUS elastography in diagnosing lung cancer proven by fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). Material and Methods TUS elastography was performed in 95 consecutive patients (71 men, 24 women; age, 62.84 ± 7.37 years) with lesions suspected of involving the chest wall or the pleura detected on chest X-ray or computed tomography (CT). Patients with pleural effusions were not enrolled, but were further evaluated by pleural fluid cytology. Patients were excluded from the study if a diagnosis had already been made based on sputum cytology and/or bronchoscopic histology (making TUS biopsy unnecessary) or if their lung lesions could not be visualized under standard US. Under FNAB, 34 consolidations were ascribed to pneumonia and 65 to cancer. Under TUS, tissue stiffness, detected using a convex multifrequency 2–8-mHz probe and a MyLab™Twice – ElaXto, was scored from 1 (greatest elasticity) to 5 (no elasticity). Subpleural solid masses (2–5 cm) were initially detected by TUS and subsequently assessed by FNAB. Results Histological diagnoses were: small cell lung cancer (4/61), adenocarcinoma (29/61), squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) (12/61), large cell lung carcinoma (12/61), and lymphomas (4/61). Patients’ age and mass sizes (3.06 ± 0.88 cm) were not significantly associated with any histological type. A significant lower elasticity of SCC (4.67 ± 0.492) was observed versus other types of lung cancer (P < 0.005), and versus pneumonia (2.35 ± 0.48). Conclusion Since only squamous cell lung carcinoma displays the feature of significantly reduced elasticity, and since no clear-cut diagnostic key is yet available, the clinical usefulness of TUS elastography is currently limited with a view to characterizing tumors. Nevertheless, it does enable good non-invasive imaging of lung nodules, providing information on their stiffness, and can improve the accuracy and yield of FNAB.


European Journal of Radiology | 2017

The role of ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration biopsy in musculoskeletal diseases

Marco Sperandeo; Francesca M. Trovato; Nadia Melillo; Lucia Dimitri; Giuseppe Musumeci; Giuseppe Guglielmi

Ultrasonography (US) is a readily available non-invasive tool useful for the detection of musculoskeletal and soft tissue masses. Although X-Ray is often the first imaging study for evaluating both bone and soft tissue lesions, and magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography are mandatory in lesions staging, US is increasingly used for the early assessment of musculoskeletal and soft-tissue masses and for guiding procedures and biopsies. Surgical biopsy or fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) is needed to ascertain the nature of any lesion. FNAB is a low cost technique, safer and less traumatic than an open surgical biopsy. Significant complications are rare, mostly related to the site of biopsy. Knowledge of indications, limitations, anatomical and pathological access, adequate technical expertise in US imaging and in intervention skills are the critical factors of the appropriate and safe use of FNAB. By now, the role of FNAB in musculoskeletal diseases is controversial and there is still a heated debate in the scientific community.


Thorax | 2017

Contrast-enhanced ultrasound does not discriminate between community acquired pneumonia and lung cancer

Marco Sperandeo; Gaetano Rea; Maria Arcangela Grimaldi; Francesca M. Trovato; Lucia Dimitri; Vincenzo Carnevale

We investigated if contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) may differentiate community acquired pneumonia (CAP) from lung cancer (LC). Among 1374 patients admitted in a 5-year period for lung opacities, 728 (329 CAP and 399 LC) were investigated by CEUS, comparing the time of appearance, disappearance, duration and pattern of distribution of contrast enhancement (CE). The patients with CAP and LC did not differ in terms of age, time of CE appearance, disappearance and duration or CE distribution. Our data show that the timing and pattern of CE detected by chest CEUS does not distinguish between CAP and LC and overly optimistic beliefs on this matter should be abandoned.


The Eurasian Journal of Medicine | 2018

Left Supraclavicular Swelling: Sclerosing Perineurioma

Antonio Tancredi; Paolo Graziano; Lucia Dimitri; Elvira Impagnatiello; Marco Taurchini

A sclerosing perineurioma presents as a single asymptomatic papule or nodule located on the hands of adult patients; approximately 60 cases have been reported in medical literature since 1997. Histologically, it originates from the perineural cells of the peripheral nerves and presents epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) positivity and S100 protein negativity. Here, we present the case of a 58-year-old male admitted to our surgery unit complaining of left supraclavicular swelling of 1-cm in size, having no significant past medical history. A lymph node neck tumor was suspected, and the patient underwent surgery under local anesthesia in outpatient care. The intraoperative finding was a whitish mass, wooden-fibrous in consistency, strictly adhering to the skin and apparently fixed to the deep planes. Upon histological examination, a sclerosing perineurioma was diagnosed: neoplastic cells were immunoreactive for CD34, CD99, and EMA, and negative for S100 protein, smooth-muscle actin, pancytokeratin (AE1-AE3), CD31, neurofilaments, and beta-catenin. According to the benign biological tumor behavior, radical resection was considered an adequate treatment. Our case presents as peculiarity the unusual non-acral location (first reported as supraclavicular swelling) and the rare immunopositivity for CD34 and CD99.


Annals of Thoracic Medicine | 2018

Safety and accuracy of transthoracic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy

Elisabettamaria Frongillo; Maria Giulia Tinti; Lucia Dimitri; Marco Sperandeo

It is advisable the use of a dedicated probe, that is, with a central hole through which the needle set is introduced.[4] This is still the most suitable and reliable approach for these purposes because the needle is visible in real time during the biopsy. Transducers with “parallel” needle guidance allow only oblique access, with the needle angulated versus the US beam, causing some uncertainty of localization.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A MiRNA Signature for Defining Aggressive Phenotype and Prognosis in Gliomas

Raffaela Barbano; Orazio Palumbo; Barbara Pasculli; Marco Galasso; Stefano Volinia; Vincenzo D'Angelo; Nadia Icolaro; Michelina Coco; Lucia Dimitri; Paolo Graziano; Massimiliano Copetti; Vanna Maria Valori; Evaristo Maiello; Massimo Carella; Vito Michele Fazio; Paola Parrella

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Marco Sperandeo

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Massimiliano Copetti

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Anna Simeone

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Giuseppe Sperandeo

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Vincenzo Carnevale

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Antonio Varriale

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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