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Featured researches published by M. Dall'Olio.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2011

Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms Using Flow-Diverting Silk Stents (BALT): a Single Centre Experience

M. Leonardi; L. Cirillo; Francesco Toni; M. Dall'Olio; C. Princiotta; A. Stafa; L. Simonetti; R. Agati

The Silk stent (Balt, Montmorency, France) is a retractable device designed to achieve curative reconstruction of the parent artery associated with an intracranial aneurysm. We present our initial experience with the Silk flow-diverting stent in the management and follow-up of 25 patients presenting with intracranial aneurysms. Twenty-five patients (age range, 34–81 years; 24 female) were treated with the Silk flow-diverting device. Aneurysms ranged in size from small (5), large (10) and giant (10) and included wide-necked aneurysms, multiple, nonsaccular, and recurrent intracranial aneurysms. Nine aneurysms were treated for headache, 14 for mass effect. None presented with haemorrhage. All patients were pretreated with dual antiplatelet medications for at least 72 hours before surgery and continued taking both agents for at least three months after treatment. A total of 25 Silk stents were used. Control MR angiography and/or CT angiography was typically performed prior to discharge and at one, three, six and 12 months post treatment. A follow-up digital subtraction angiogram was performed between six and 19 months post treatment. Complete angiographic occlusion or subtotal occlusion was achieved in 15 patients in a time frame from three days to 12 months. Three deaths and one major complication were encountered during the study period. Two patients, all with cavernous giant aneurysms, experienced transient exacerbations of preexisting cranial neuropathies and headache after the Silk treatment. Both were treated with corticosteroids, and symptoms resolved completely within a month. In our experience the Silk stent has proven to be a valuable tool in the endovascular treatment of intracranial giant partially thrombosed aneurysms and aneurysms of the internal carotid artery cavernous segment presenting with mass effect. The time of complete occlusion of the aneurysms and the risk of the bleeding is currently not predictable.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2012

Complications in the Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms with Silk Stents: an Analysis of 30 Consecutive Patients

L. Cirillo; M. Leonardi; M. Dall'Olio; C. Princiotta; A. Stafa; L. Simonetti; Francesco Toni; R. Agati

Flow-diverting stents (Silk and PED) have radically changed the approach to intracranial aneurysm treatment from the use of endosaccular materials to use of an extraaneurysmal endoluminal device. However, much debate surrounds the most appropriate indications for the use of FD stents and the problems raised by several possible complications. We analysed our technical difficulties and the early (less than ten days after treatment) and late complications encountered in 30 aneurysms treated comprising 13 giant lesions, 12 large, five with maximum diameters <10 mm and one blister-like aneurysm. In our experience the primary indications for the use of FD stents can be the symptomatic intracavernous giant aneurysms. Although the extracavernous carotid siphon aneurysms have major risk of bleeding, FD stents are indicated clearly explaining the risks to the patient in case of severe mass effect. There is a very complex assessment for aneurysms of the vertebrobasilar circulation.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2008

Treatment of Carotid Siphon Aneurysms with a Microcell Stent A Case Report

M. Leonardi; M. Dall'Olio; C. Princiotta; L. Simonetti

The treatment of giant, large, multiple or wide-necked carotid siphon aneurysms has always represented a challenge for neurosurgeons and neuroradiologists. Very recently the use of stents with tiny holes has been proposed by two companies: Balt Silk Stent in Europe and Pipeline in America. We have used the Silk stent on a few patients and describe our first case who now has an eleven month follow-up. The carotid siphon presented three converging aneurysms sharing a very large common neck. The Silk stent (Balt Extrusion, Montmorency, France) was deployed through a 4F Balt introducer. The procedure was uneventful and very quick. As soon as the stent was positioned contrast medium stagnation was displayed within the aneurysm. The patients post-operative course was normal and she was discharged three days later in good health.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2011

Staged Treatment of a Blood Blister-Like Aneurysm with Stent-Assisted Coiling Followed by Flow Diverter in-Stent Insertion: A Case Report

C. Princiotta; M. Dall'Olio; Luigi Cirillo; M. Leonardi

Blood blister-like aneurysms (BBLA) are rare lesions sometimes difficult to recognize and in most cases associated with diffuse subarachnoid haemorrhage and severe clinical conditions. BBLA are life-threatening because they tend to enlarge rapidly and to rebleed, and no consensus has so far been reached on the best management strategy. We describe a patient with a BBLA in the right ICA treated successful by a two-stage embolization procedure first with coils and an open cell stent (Neuroform 3) and later by further coil placement and insertion of a flow-diverting stent (Silk).


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2012

A Minimally Invasive Treatment for Lumbar Disc Herniation: DiscoGel® Chemonucleolysis in Patients Unresponsive to Chemonucleolysis with Oxygen-Ozone:

S. Stagni; F. De Santis; L. Cirillo; M. Dall'Olio; C. Princiotta; L. Simonetti; A. Stafa; M. Leonardi

A multitude of therapies is available to treat disc herniation, ranging from conservative methods (medication and physical therapy) to minimally invasive (percutaneous) treatments and surgery. O2-O3 chemonucleolysis (O2-O3 therapy) is one of the minimally invasive treatments with the best cost/benefit ratio and lowest complication rate. Another substance recently made available exploiting the chemical properties of pure ethanol is DiscoGel®, a radiopaque gelified ethanol more viscous than absolute alcohol 8,9. The present study aimed to assess the therapeutic outcome of DiscoGel® chemonucleolysis in patients with lumbar disc herniation unresponsive to O2-O3 therapy. Thirty-two patients aged between 20 and 79 years were treated by DiscoGel® chemonucleolysis between December 2008 and January 2010. The treatment was successful (improvement in pain) in 24 out of 32 patients. DiscoGel® is safe and easy to handle and there were no complications related to product diffusivity outside the treatment site. The therapeutic success rate of DiscoGel® chemonucleolysis in patients unresponsive to O2-O3 therapy was satisfactory. Among other methods used to treat lumbar disc herniation, DiscoGel® chemonucleolysis can be deemed an intermediate procedure bridging conservative medical treatments and surgery.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2007

Intracranial Stenting in the Treatment of Wide-Necked Aneurysms

M. Leonardi; M. Dall'Olio; P. Cenni; L. Raffi; L. Simonetti

We positioned the following self-expanding stents certified for intracranial application: 16 Neuroform (Boston Scientific), three INX (Medtronic), one Leo (Balt). 6F calibre femoral introducers and guiding catheters were used for stent placement changing to 5F calibre introducers and guiding catheters (Envoy, Cordis) for the Neuroform 2 and 3 stents. All procedures were carried out under general anaesthesia and heparinization. Our pharmacological protocol consisted of adjunctive treatment with anti-aggregants during the interventional procedure and for the following six months, without premedication. From November 2000 to August 2006 we treated 28 patients (27 F/1M) with giant wide-necked aneurysms and one dissecting basilar artery aneurysm requiring the placement of 29 stents. We successfully positioned 20 stents: 11 stents combined with coils (8 immediate; 3 late) with complete exclusion of the aneurysm from the circulation in seven cases and subtotal exclusion in four; nine stents not followed by embolization with complete exclusion of the aneurysm from the circulation in six cases and subtotal exclusion in three. Stenting was not possible in nine cases due to extreme vessel tortuosity and the poor flexibility of release systems for the first stents. No late stent occlusion or subarachnoid haemorrhage were encountered after treatment.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2008

Carotid Stenting without Angioplasty and without Protection: The Advantages of a Less Invasive Procedure.

M. Leonardi; M. Dall'Olio; L. Raffi; P. Cenni; L. Simonetti; R. Marasco; F. Giagnorio

Endovascular stenting is a consolidated alternative to thrombendarterectomy in the treatment of extracranial carotid artery atheromasic stenosis. The most common complication of stenting is a distal embolism causing clinically silent or symptomatic cerebral ischaemia. To prevent this complication distal embolism protection devices are often used but their effectiveness remains unsettled. In addition, there is some evidence that distal embolism may actually be triggered by the protection systems due to clot formation at their distal surface or in the intimal lesions these systems cause. Another rarer complication is hyperperfusion syndrome arising during both stenting and thrombendarterectomy but more common in endovascular procedures. To avoid these complications the Neuroradiology Service at Bellaria Hospital (Bologna Local Health Trust) has devised a mini-invasive carotid stenting technique that does not require either distal embolism protection or angioplasty. The technique uses only the radial force exerted by the self-expanding stent to widen the atherosclerotic stenosis slowly and gradually. The goal of treatment has also changed from a prompt restoration of the atheromasic vessels original calibre to slow transformation of the hemodynamic significance of the stenosis. The techniques success lies mainly in selecting the stenosis to treat using CT angiography to analyse plaque morphology and structure. We used the technique to treat 83 stenotic lesions in 75 patients. The study aims to describe and discuss our experience.


Interventional Neuroradiology | 2014

Oxygen-Ozone Therapy for Herniated Lumbar Disc in Patients with Subacute Partial Motor Weakness Due to Nerve Root Compression

M. Dall'Olio; C. Princiotta; Luigi Cirillo; Caterina Budai; Fabio de Santis; Stefano Bartolini; Elena Serchi; M. Leonardi

Intradiscal oxygen-ozone (O2-O3) chemonucleolysis is a well-known effective treatment for pain caused by protruding disc disease and nerve root compression due to bulging or herniated disc. The most widely used therapeutic combination is intradiscal injection of an O2-O3 mixture (chemonucleolysis), followed by periradicular injection of O2-O3, steroid and local anaesthetic to enhance the anti-inflammatory and analgesic effect. The treatment is designed to resolve pain and is administered to patients without motor weakness, whereas patients with acute paralysis caused by nerve root compression undergo surgery 24–48h after the onset of neurological deficit. This paper reports on the efficacy of O2-O3 chemonucleolysis associated with anti-inflammatory foraminal injection in 13 patients with low back pain and cruralgia, low back pain and sciatica and subacute partial motor weakness caused by nerve root compression unresponsive to medical treatment. All patients were managed in conjunction with our colleagues in the Neurosurgery Unit of Bellaria Hospital and the IRCCS Institute of Neurological Sciences, Bologna. The outcomes obtained are promising: 100% patients had a resolution of motor weakness, while 84.6% had complete pain relief. Our results demonstrate that O2-O3 therapy can be considered a valid treatment option for this category of patients.


Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2014

Flat Panel Angiography Images in the Post-Operative Follow-Up of Surgically Clipped Intracranial Aneurysms

Caterina Budai; Luigi Cirillo; Francesco Patruno; M. Dall'Olio; C. Princiotta; M. Leonardi

Cerebral aneurysms must be monitored for varying periods after surgical and/or endovascular treatment and the duration of follow-up will depend on the type of therapy and the immediate post-operative outcome. Surgical clipping for intracranial aneurysms is a valid treatment but the metal clips generate artefacts so that follow-up monitoring still relies on catheter angiography. This study reports our preliminary experience with volumetric angiography using a Philips Allura Xper FD biplane system in the post-operative monitoring of aneurysm residues or major vascular changes following the surgical clipping of intracranial aneurysms. Volumetric angiography yields not only volume-rendered (VR) images, but a volume CT can also be reconstructed at high spatial and contrast resolution from a single acquisition, significantly enhancing the techniques diagnostic power. Between August 2012 and April 2013, we studied 19 patients with a total of 26 aneurysms treated by surgical clipping alone or in combination with endovascular treatment. All patients underwent standard post-operative angiographic follow-up including a rotational volumetric acquisition. Follow-up monitoring disclosed eight aneurysm residues whose assessment was optimal after surgical clipping both in patients with one metal clip and in those with two or more clips. In addition, small residues (1.3 mm) could be monitored together with any change in the calibre or course of vessels located adjacent to the clips. In conclusion, flat panel volume CT is much more reliable than the old 3D acquisitions that yielded only VR images. This is particularly true in patients with small aneurysm residues or lesions with multiple metal clips.


Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2013

Revascularized giant aneurysm of the anterior communicating artery after surgery and embolization, occluded by placement of a Leo+Baby intracranial stent. A case report.

M. Dall'Olio; Fabio Calbucci; A. Fioravanti; C. Bortolotti; L. Cirillo; C. Princiotta; M. Leonardi

Balt (Montmorency, France) recently manufactured the Leo+Baby dedicated intracranial stent for arteries with a calibre between 1.5 and 3.10 mm. We describe a patient with a partially thrombosed giant sacciform aneurysm of the anterior communicating artery treated without success by surgery and coil embolization subsequently occluded by placement of a Leo+Baby stent (Balt, Montmorency, France). A 56-year-old man presented with a giant aneurysm in the anterior communicating artery region. Following successive surgical intervention and embolization procedures the patient was referred to us with a revascularized aneurysm measuring 15×9×8 cm. To stabilize the endovascular occlusion a combined treatment was scheduled with coil embolization and stent deployment after dual antiplatelet therapy started five days before the interventional procedure. Treatment was undertaken two weeks later under general anaesthesia and total heparinization. A microcatheter was inserted into the aneurysmal sac and four metal coils were released for a total of 61cm obtaining almost complete occlusion of the aneurysm from the circulation. A Leo+Baby stent (2.5×18 mm) was subsequently deployed across the aneurysm neck. At follow-up angiography two months later the aneurysm appeared substantially excluded from the arterial circulation except for a small portion in the neck. Six months later, four months after suspending antiplatelet therapy, follow-up angiography disclosed the complete exclusion of the aneurysm from the circulation. Deployment of the new ministent through the same microcatheter used to release the coils made the interventional procedure simpler and faster.

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L. Cirillo

University of Naples Federico II

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A. Stafa

University of Bologna

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