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Dive into the research topics where Maria Gemma Parisella is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Gemma Parisella.


Nuclear Medicine Communications | 2006

Nuclear medicine imaging of bone infections.

Napoleone Prandini; Elena Lazzeri; Brunella Rossi; Paola Anna Erba; Maria Gemma Parisella; Alberto Signore

The inflammation and infection of bone include a wide range of processes that can result in a reduction of function or in the complete inability of patients. Apart from the inflammation, infection is sustained by pyogenic microorganisms and results mostly in massive destruction of bones and joints. The treatment of osteomyelitis requires long and expensive medical therapies and, sometimes, surgical resection for debridement of necrotic bone or to consolidate or substitute the compromised bones and joints. Radiographs and bone cultures are the mainstays for the diagnosis but often are useless in the diagnosis of activity or relapse of infection in the lengthy management of these patients. Imaging with radiopharmaceuticals, computed tomography and magnetic resonance are also used to study secondary and chronic infections and their diffusion to soft or deep tissues. The diagnosis is quite easy in acute osteomyelitis of long bones when the structure of bone is still intact. But most cases of osteomyelitis are subacute or chronic at the onset or become chronic during their evolution because of the frequent resistance to antibiotics. In chronic osteomyelitis the structure of bones is altered by fractures, surgical interventions and as a result of bone reabsorption produced by the infection. Metallic implants and prostheses produce artefacts both in computed tomography and magnetic resonance images, and radionuclide studies should be essential in these cases. Vertebral osteomyelitis is a specific entity that can be correctly diagnosed by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging at the onset of symptoms but only with radionuclide imaging is it possible to assess the activity of the disease after surgical stabilization or medical therapy. The lack of comparative studies showing the accuracy of each radiopharmaceutical for the study of bone infection does not allow the best nuclear medicine techniques to be chosen in an evidence-based manner. To this end we performed a meta-analysis of peer reviewed articles published between 1984 and 2004 describing the use of nuclear medicine imaging for the study of the most frequent causes of bone infections, including prosthetic joint, peripheric post-traumatic bone infections, vertebral and sternal infections. Guidelines for the choice of the optimal radiopharmaceuticals to be used in each clinical condition and for different aims is provided.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Thyroid cancer imaging in vivo by targeting the anti-apoptotic molecule galectin-3.

Armando Bartolazzi; Calogero D'Alessandria; Maria Gemma Parisella; Alberto Signore; Fabrizio Del Prete; Luca Lavra; Sten Braesch-Andersen; R. Massari; C. Trotta; A. Soluri; Salvatore Sciacchitano; Francesco Scopinaro

Background The prevalence of thyroid nodules increases with age, average 4–7% for the U.S.A. adult population, but it is much higher (19–67%) when sub-clinical nodules are considered. About 90% of these lesions are benign and a reliable approach to their preoperative characterization is necessary. Unfortunately conventional thyroid scintigraphy does not allow the distinction among benign and malignant thyroid proliferations but it provides only functional information (cold or hot nodules). The expression of the anti-apoptotic molecule galectin-3 is restricted to cancer cells and this feature has potential diagnostic and therapeutic implications. We show here the possibility to obtain thyroid cancer imaging in vivo by targeting galectin-3. Methods The galectin-3 based thyroid immuno-scintigraphy uses as radiotracer a specific 99mTc-radiolabeled mAb. A position-sensitive high-resolution mini-gamma camera was used as imaging capture device. Human galectin-3 positive thyroid cancer xenografts (ARO) and galectin-3 knockout tumors were used as targets in different experiments in vivo. 38 mice with tumor mass of about 1 gm were injected in the tail vein with 100 µCi of 99mTc-labeled mAb to galectin-3 (30 µg protein/in 100 µl saline solution). Tumor images were acquired at 1 hr, 3 hrs, 6 hrs, 9 hrs and 24 hrs post injection by using the mini-gamma camera. Findings Results from different consecutive experiments show an optimal visualization of thyroid cancer xenografts between 6 and 9 hours from injection of the radiotracer. Galectin-3 negative tumors were not detected at all. At 6 hrs post-injection galectin-3 expressing tumors were correctly visualized, while the whole-body activity had essentially cleared. Conclusions These results demonstrate the possibility to distinguish preoperatively benign from malignant thyroid nodules by using a specific galectin-3 radio-immunotargeting. In vivo imaging of thyroid cancer may allow a better selection of patients referred to surgery. The possibility to apply this method for imaging and treatment of other galectin-3 expressing tumors is also discussed.


Cancer Biotherapy and Radiopharmaceuticals | 2004

99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC in the management of medullary thyroid carcinoma

Maria Gemma Parisella; Calogero D'Alessandria; Bieke van de Bossche; Marco Chianelli; Giuseppe Ronga; Enrico Papini; Renata Mikolajczak; Claudio Letizia; Giorgio De Toma; Augusto Veneziani; Francesco Scopinaro; Alberto Signore

An early diagnosis of distant metastases or local recurrences of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) can be achieved by several conventional radiological modalities (e.g., ultrasonography, computed tomography [CT], and magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] as well as by radioisotopic procedures, such as positron emission tomography (PET), scintigraphy with different types of radiopharmaceuticals, and radiolabeled receptor-ligands in particular. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical utility of 99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC, a new octreotide derivative, to detect recurrences of disease or distant metastases in MTC. Images obtained of 5 patients with high levels of serum calcitonin were compared to findings obtained with other diagnostic procedures: 111In-octreotide, 99mTc-DMSA-V, 18F-flouro-D-deoxyglucose-PET, and CT/MRI. 99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC was positive in all patients and showed 15 areas of pathological uptake in the cervical and mediastinal regions. 111In-octreotide was positive in 3 of 3 patients and showed 4 areas, compared to 8 of 99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC. 99mTc-V-DMSA was positive in 3 of 4 patients but showed 6 pathological areas, compared to 13 of 99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC. 18F-FDG-PET was positive in 5 of 5 patients but showed only 11 areas, compared to 15 of 99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC. The CT scan was positive in only 2 patients. In conclusion, 99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC detected more sites of pathological uptake than other modalities, showed better imaging properties than 111In-octreotide, and might be the radiopharmaceutical of choice for providing a rationale for radioisotopic therapy.


Diabetes-metabolism Research and Reviews | 2008

Pancreatic scintigraphy with 99mTc-interleukin-2 at diagnosis of type 1 diabetes and after 1 year of nicotinamide therapy

M. Chianelli; Maria Gemma Parisella; Natalia Visalli; Stephen J. Mather; Calogero D'Alessandria; Paolo Pozzilli; Alberto Signore

To evaluate the clinical utility of pancreatic scintigraphy with 99mTc‐interleukin‐2 to identify Type 1 diabetic patients with pancreatic inflammation at diagnosis.


Surgeon-journal of The Royal Colleges of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Ireland | 2015

High-resolution, handheld camera use for occult breast lesion localization plus sentinel node biopsy (SNOLL): A single-institution experience with 186 patients

A. Lombardi; Giuseppe Nigri; Francesco Scopinaro; S. Maggi; Mauro Mattei; Adriana Bonifacino; Maria Gemma Parisella; A. Soluri; C. Amanti

BACKGROUND Sentinel node and occult lesion localization (SNOLL) calls for a combination of two specific procedures: intraoperative detection of sentinel lymph node (SLN) via gamma probe and radioguided occult lesion localization (ROLL). This applies to nonpalpable invasive breast cancer or high-grade in situ carcinoma. As opposed to standard techniques, todays handheld gamma cameras enable intraoperative scintigraphic images. METHODS A cohort (N = 186) of consecutive patients with breast cancer was subjected to radioguided conservative surgery (quadrantectomy and SLN biopsy), using a standard gamma probe and a high-resolution handheld camera. Intraoperative SLN frozen section was also performed. RESULTS Neoplastic lesions were removed in 99.4% of all patients, and SLN biopsy was achieved in 99%. Of the 137 patients with invasive cancer, SLN metastasis was confirmed in 21. In 12% of patients, a second operation was required for close or tumor-positive surgical margins. DISCUSSION This combination of procedures represents an improvement in the surgical management of occult breast carcinomas and is the method of choice for accurate tumor localization and SLN biopsy. Handheld cameras have the potential to become highly useful intraoperative aids.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2007

Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy using (99m)Tc-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC in patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma

Rafał Czepczyński; Maria Gemma Parisella; Jerzy Kosowicz; Renata Mikolajczak; Katarzyna Ziemnicka; Maria Gryczyńska; Jerzy Sowiński; Alberto Signore


Quarterly Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2012

Clinical indications to the use of Tc-99m-EDDA/HYNIC-TOC to detect somatostatin receptor-positive neuroendocrine tumors

Maria Gemma Parisella; Marco Chianelli; Calogero D'Alessandria; Valerio Todino; Renata Mikolajczak; E. Papini; Rudi Dierckx; Francesco Scopinaro; Alberto Signore


Quarterly Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2003

The developing role of peptide radiopharmaceuticals in the study of chronic inflammation: new techniques for novel therapeutic options.

Marco Chianelli; Maria Gemma Parisella; Calogero D'Alessandria; F. Corsetti; Francesco Scopinaro; Alberto Signore


Archive | 2008

Medicina nucleare in oncologia

Francesco Scopinaro; Maria Gemma Parisella


Archive | 2008

PET con 18F-FDG in oncologia

Maria Gemma Parisella; Francesco Scopinaro

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Alberto Signore

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marco Chianelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Stephen J. Mather

Queen Mary University of London

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Paolo Pozzilli

Queen Mary University of London

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A. Soluri

National Research Council

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M. Chianelli

University Medical Center Groningen

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Rudi Dierckx

University Medical Center Groningen

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A. Annovazzi

Sapienza University of Rome

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A. Lombardi

Sapienza University of Rome

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