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Dive into the research topics where Maria Luisa Fiorella is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Luisa Fiorella.


International Journal of Immunopathology and Pharmacology | 2008

Non-Allergic Rhinitis with Eosinophils and Mast Cells Constitutes a New Severe Nasal Disorder

Matteo Gelardi; A. Maselli Del Giudice; Maria Luisa Fiorella; R. Fiorella; C. Russo; P. Soleti; M. Di Gioacchino; G. Ciprandi

Three main types of inflammatory Non-Allergic Rhinitis (NAR) have been defined: NAR infiltrated by eosinophils (NARES), by mast cells (NARMA), and by neutrophils (NARNE). A new particular type has been characterized with current infiltration by eosinophils and mast cells (NARESMA). The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical and functional characteristics in patients with NARES, NARMA, NARNE, and NARESMA and to define the latter. One hundred and seventy-six NAR patients were prospectively and consecutively evaluated:52 patients with NARES, 38 with NARMA, 36 with NARNE, and 50 with NARESMA. Clinical features, Quality of Life (QoL), and rhinomanometry were evaluated in all of them. QoL was significantly different in the 4 groups. NARESMA patients had the worst QoL. Nasal function and QoL in NARESMA patients were significantly correlated. Significant associations were shown with both nasal polyps and asthma in NARESMA patients. This study provides the first evidence that NARESMA constitutes a new type of NAR and is a particularly severe disorder.


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2012

Allergic and non-allergic rhinitis in swimmers: clinical and cytological aspects

Matteo Gelardi; Maria Teresa Ventura; Fiorella R; Maria Luisa Fiorella; Cosimo Russo; Teresa Candreva; Antonella Carretta; Giovanni Passalacqua

Background Rhinitis, either allergic or non-allergic, is frequent in athletes, particularly in swimmers. In this latter case, exposure to chlorine in swimming pools seems to play a relevant role, since it can exacerbate a pre-existing allergic rhinitis (AR) or produce a non-specific irritation. The aim of this study was to detail the clinical and cytological characteristics of rhinitis in swimmers, and to assess the possible role of chlorine-induced symptoms. Methods Elite swimmers with rhinitis symptoms underwent a complete diagnostic work-up, including allergy testing, nasal cytology and anterior rhinomanometry. Those evaluations were repeated after 1 month of use of a nasal clip during swimming. A matched group of asymptomatic swimmers was also studied. A total of 74 swimmers (54 symptomatic and 20 controls), with an age range of 9–21 years, were studied. In the control group, only mild and non-specific findings were observed, and only two had a positive skin test. Results In the symptomatic group, 24 (44%) had AR, and 19 (35%) had a predominant neutrophilic inflammation. The use of a nose clip reduced cellular infiltration and nasal resistances only in the subjects with neutrophilic rhinitis, whereas a clinical improvement was seen also in AR. Conclusion A neutrophilic rhinitis occurs in a large proportion of swimmers. This seems to be irritative in its nature and can be prevented by avoiding the direct contact with chlorinated water.


American Journal of Rhinology & Allergy | 2009

When allergic rhinitis is not only allergic.

Matteo Gelardi; Cosimo Russo; Maria Luisa Fiorella; Fiorella R; Giorgio Walter Canonica; Giovanni Passalacqua

Background In clinical practice it can be observed that some patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis (AR) continue to have symptoms even when the exposure to allergens is expected to be low or absent. We studied the clinical and cytological characteristics of these atypical forms of (AR) in a large population of patients. Methods Consecutive patients with symptoms of rhinitis and with positive skin test to pollens only were interviewed for the duration of symptoms, correlation with sensitization pattern, and presence of reactivity to nonspecific stimuli. All underwent rhinoscopy and nasal scraping for cytology. Results Five hundred nineteen patients with AR were studied. Of these 519 patients 60 (11.5%) had an atypical or mixed form of rhinitis, with symptoms independent of the exposure and also elicited by nonspecific stimuli. These patients clearly differed from typical forms, especially for the nasal inflammation. They had a greater number of eosinophils and mast cells out of season (p < 0.05). Moreover, these atypical forms had, more frequently, asthma and eosinophilic polyps. Conclusion In ∼12% of patients with AR, other mechanisms of inflammation seem to intervene. Nasal cytology can be helpful in discriminating these atypical forms.


World Allergy Organization Journal | 2012

411 The Classification of Allergic Rhinitis and Its Cytological Correlate.

Matteo Gelardi; Cristoforo Incorvaia; Giovanni Passalacqua; Maria Luisa Fiorella; Franco Frati

Background The ARIA document introduced a new classification of allergic rhinitis, based on its duration and severity, which is graded on the basis of the impact of AR on daily activities and quality of life. Nasal cytology is a simple and reliable diagnostic tool to identify the presence and type of inflammation in rhinitis. Thus, we assessed severity of AR by nasal cytology on the basis of the ARIA classification. Methods Patients suffering from AR caused by grass pollen only, and healthy subjects were studied. The severity of rhinitis was defined according to ARIA. All subjects underwent nasal cytology, using a Rhino-probe. Scrapings were air-dryied and stained by May-Grunwald-Giemsa. Differential cell count was expressed as % of the total leukocytes. Unpaired t test was used for comparisons. Results Sixty-two grass-allergic patients (34 men, mean age 35.2 years) and 18 healthy subjects (10 men, mean age 32) were studied. 67.8% of patients had intermittent AR (33.9% mild and 33.9% moderate-severe) and 32.2% had persistent AR (14.5% mild and 17.7% moderate-severe). The patients with moderate-severe AR had significantly more mast cells and lymphocytes than those with mild AR, with a relatively smaller number of neutrophils and eosinophils. Mast cells and/or lymphocytes could be detected in only 3/30 patients with mild rhinitis, and in 19/32 patients with moderate/severe rhinitis. No difference in cell counts was found when comparing intermittent and persistent AR. Conclusions Moderate/severe allergic rhinitis displays a cytological inflammatory pattern different from mild rhinitis.


American Journal of Rhinology | 2003

Nasal cytology: description of a hyperchromatic supranuclear stria as a possible marker for the anatomical and functional integrity of the ciliated cell.

Matteo Gelardi; Pasquale Cassano; Michele Cassano; Maria Luisa Fiorella

Background The aim of this study was to describe a particular intracellular hyperchromatic formation located over the nucleus of normal nasal ciliated cells. This finding, never described in literature, very rarely occurs in pathological conditions. Methods A nasal cytological test and mucociliary transport test were performed in a group of 24 subjects with rhinologic diseases and in a control group of 10 healthy subjects. Results The “hyperchromatic supranuclear stria” (SNS) was observed in a high percentage of normal cells (90.3%); SNS was present in very few pathological subjects (in only 6.26% of pathologic cells). Conclusion We interpreted SNS as a specific marker for the anatomic and functional integrity of the ciliated cell. Therefore, the absence of SNS is considered an abnormal finding in the nasal mucosa and therefore could be useful as a “prognostic sign” of the disorders themselves and as an indication of the “therapeutic efficacy” of pharmacologic treatments, both topical and systemic.


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2006

Nasal Resistance and Allergic Inflammation Depend on Allergen Type

Matteo Gelardi; Alessandro Maselli Del Giudice; Teresa Candreva; Maria Luisa Fiorella; Michaela Allen; Catherine Klersy; Gian Luigi Marseglia; Giorgio Ciprandi

Background: Allergic rhinitis is characterized by inflammatory cell infiltrate and increased nasal airflow resistance. Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between sensitization type, inflammatory cell pattern, and nasal airflow resistance in a group of rhinitics with monosensitization. Methods: Seventy-seven subjects (40 males and 37 females, with a mean age of 33 ± 4.4 years) suffering from allergic rhinitis were studied. Skin prick test, nasal cytology and electronic rhinomanometry were assessed in all subjects. Results: The number of subjects monosensitized to house dust mites was 23, to grasses 20, to cypress 17, to Parietaria 11, and to olive tree 6. Significant differences were observed between each type of allergen sensitization concerning both the nasal airflow resistance (p = 0.002) and the nasal cytology pattern: eosinophils (p = 0.004), degranulated eosinophils (p = 0.002), mast cells (p = 0.006) and degranulated mast cells (p = 0.008). Furthermore, goblet cells were higher in house dust mite-sensitized subjects compared with the pollen-sensitized group (p = 0.018), in which a prevalence of eosinophils, degranulated eosinophils, mast cells and degranulated mast cells was observed (p = 0.049, p < 0.001, p = 0.022 and p = 0.007, respectively). Nasal resistances were higher in the pollen group (p = 0.001). Conclusions: This study provides evidence that inflammatory cell pattern and nasal resistance depend on the type of allergen sensitization.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2011

Nasal cytology: the “infectious spot”, an expression of a morphological-chromatic biofilm

Matteo Gelardi; Giovanni Passalacqua; Maria Luisa Fiorella; A. Mosca; Nicola Quaranta

The purpose of this study was to describe some “morphological-chromatic” patterns (i.e. spots of cyan colour) identified during the study of nasal cytology in patients with both bacterial and fungal infectious rhinological disorders. These peculiar aspects strongly suggest the presence of a microscopic biofilm. We retrospectively examined 1,410 nasal cytology specimens from subjects who underwent clinical-instrumental investigations (history, ENT visit, nasal endoscopy and nasal cytology) from January to August 2010. The control samples were represented by 30 subjects not suffering from infectious rhinological diseases. The presence of particular spots of “cyan” was found in colour in 107/1,410 rhinocytograms (7.6%), within which bacterial colonies and/or fungal spores were found. We called these coloured spot formations “infectious spots” (IS). The positivity to periodic acid Schiff (PAS) staining confirmed the polysaccharide nature of the coloured spots and allowed us to relate them to biofilms. This study demonstrates, for the first time, that nasal cytology performed by optical microscope can play an important role in detecting biofilms.


Pediatric Allergy and Immunology | 2007

Cytology in the diagnosis of rhinosinusitis

Matteo Gelardi; Maria Luisa Fiorella; Gualtiero Leo; Cristoforo Incorvaia

Nasal cytology is a diagnostic tool currently used in rhinology, with the aim of assessing cell changes in the nasal epithelium exposed to irritant or inflammatory agents. Its rationale is based on the knowledge that nasal mucosa of healthy individuals is constituted by four cytotypes (ciliata, mucipara, striata, and basalis) and does not show other cells except, rarely, neutrophils and, very rarely, bacteria. In this view, the detection of a given cell type different from these is a sign of possible pathology. The advantage and the diffusion of nasal cytology were increased by a number of factors such as the easiness of performance, the non‐invasiveness allowing repetition (which is often needed in the efficacy monitoring of medical or surgical treatment of nasal diseases), and the low cost. This makes nasal cytology particularly feasible for application in children. The cytological feature characterizing infectious inflammation is the presence of abundant bacteria, which may be found in extracellular tissue and also inside neutrophils as a result of phagocytosis. In such clinical condition it is important to monitor the disease with cytological controls to verify the significant decrease, or the disappearance of inflammatory cells, which indicates the resolution of the pathology.


Inflammation and Allergy - Drug Targets | 2011

The Clinical Stage of Allergic Rhinitis is Correlated to Inflammation as Detected by Nasal Cytology

Matteo Gelardi; Cristoforo Incorvaia; Maria Luisa Fiorella; Paolo Petrone; Nicola Quaranta; Cosimo Russo; Paola Puccinelli; Ilaria Dell'Albani; Gian Galeazzo Riario-Sforza; Eleonora Cattaneo; Gianni Passalacqua; Franco Frati

Allergic rhinitis (AR) is the most common allergic disease. The Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma (ARIA) guidelines classify AR according to its duration and severity and suggest recommended treatments, but there is evidence that these guidelines are insufficiently followed. Considering the validity of histopathological data, physicians are more likely to be persuaded by such information on AR. Thus, we attempted to define the severity of AR by nasal cytology on the basis of the ARIA classification. We examined 64 patients with AR caused by sensitization to grass pollen. We clinically defined AR according to the ARIA classification and performed nasal cytology by Rhino-probe sampling, staining and reading by optical microscopic observation. Clinically, 22 (34.4%), 21 (32.8%), 10 (15.6%), and 11 (17.2%) patients had mild intermittent, moderate-to-severe intermittent, mild persistent, and moderate-to-severe persistent AR, respectively. Nasal cytology detected neutrophils in 49 patients, eosinophils in 41 patients, mast cells in 21 patients, and lymphocytes or plasma cells in 28 patients. The patients with moderate-to-severe AR had significantly more mast cells and lymphocytes/ plasma cells than those with mild AR. Our findings demonstrate that the ARIA classification of AR severity is associated with different cell counts in nasal cytology; especially, moderate-to-severe AR shows significantly increased counts of mast cells and lymphocyte or plasma cells. The ease of performing nasal cytology ensures is feasibility as an office AR diagnostic procedure for primary care physicians, able to indicate when anti-inflammatory treatments, such as intranasal corticosteroids and subcutaneous or sublingual allergen immunotherapy, are needed.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2012

Nasal ciliary motility: a new tool in estimating the time of death

Maria Carolina Romanelli; Matteo Gelardi; Maria Luisa Fiorella; Lucia Tattoli; Giancarlo Di Vella; Biagio Solarino

Determination of time since death is one of the most difficult and crucial issue in forensic medicine. Apart from body cooling, which is commonly used in the early postmortem interval (PMI), supravital reactions are the most interesting postmortem changes for time of death estimation. Nasal ciliary motility has been occasionally observed in postmortem period although no studies have focused on this phenomenon for forensic purposes. We aimed to evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of ciliary motility as a potential tool in estimating the time of death. Specimens of ciliated epithelium from 100 consecutive cadavers were obtained by scraping the nasal mucosa at three different postmortem intervals. The samples were then smeared on a slide, and an in vitro evaluation of ciliary movement was analyzed by phase-contrast microscopy. A postmortem nasal ciliary motility was observed, and a statistically significant relationship between decreasing ciliary movements and increasing postmortem interval was detected even in presence of putrefactive changes of nasal ultrastructure integrity. Some peculiar causes of death seem to influence ciliary motility in the early PMI, while no significant correlations with sex or age were observed. According to the results of this study, postmortem evaluation of nasal ciliary motility may be a bona fide and a feasible option for estimating the time of death.

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