Maria Raffaella Marchese
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
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Featured researches published by Maria Raffaella Marchese.
Surgery | 2009
Celestino Pio Lombardi; Marco Raffaelli; Carmela De Crea; Lucia D'Alatri; Daria Maccora; Maria Raffaella Marchese; Gaetano Paludetti; Rocco Domenico Alfonso Bellantone
BACKGROUND Voice and swallowing symptoms are frequently reported early after thyroidectomy even in the absence of laryngeal nerves injury. We evaluated the short-term and long-term outcomes of these functional alterations. METHODS Consenting patients undergoing total thyroidectomy (TT) were enrolled. Videolaryngostroboscopy (VSL), acoustic voice analysis (AVA), and maximum phonation time (MPT) were performed pre-operatively, 3 months postoperatively, and >1 year postoperatively. Subjective evaluation of voice (Voice Impairment Score=VIS) and swallowing (Swallowing Impairment Score=SIS) were obtained pre-operatively, as well as 1 week, 1 month, 3 months, and >1 year postoperatively. RESULTS The long-term evaluation was completed in 110 patients. The percentage of patients with symptoms 1 week after operation was significantly higher than preoperatively, whereas it was significantly lower at long-term evaluation. VIS was significantly worse than pre-operatively, 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months after surgery, but it was similar to pre-operative >1 year after TT. SIS was significantly worse 1 week after thyroidectomy but not 1 month and 3 months after thyroidectomy, and it was significantly lower than the pre-operative >1 year after TT. CONCLUSION Vocal and swallowing symptoms are frequent after TT. In the absence of laryngeal nerve injury, after an initial impairment, late after operation, patients experienced subjective amelioration of their voice and swallowing performances, which may be related to the resolution of compressive symptoms.
Strahlentherapie Und Onkologie | 2010
N. Dinapoli; Claudio Parrilla; Jacopo Galli; Rosa Autorino; Francesco Miccichè; Francesco Bussu; M. Balducci; Lucia D'Alatri; Maria Raffaella Marchese; Mario Rigante; Giuseppe Di Lella; Luca Liberati; Giovanni Almadori; Gaetano Paludetti; Vincenzo Valentini
AbstractBackground and Purpose:To compare oncological outcome and voice quality among a uniform and well-defined subset of patients with T1 glottic carcinoma.Patients and Methods:Patients, affected by laryngeal glottic carcinoma, treated by laser CO2 surgery or radiotherapy, have been analyzed. Overall survival and disease-free survival were calculated. In order to verify differences in functional outcomes and voice quality, all patients were interviewed during their last follow-up visit during 2009 using the VHI (Voice Handicap Index) questionnaire. The data were analyzed using the MedCalc software.Results:A total of 143 patients were analyzed: 73 underwent surgery and 70 underwent radiotherapy. No statistically significant differences were found between the two groups in terms of overall survival and disease-free survival; dividing patients into stages T1a and T1b also made no difference. In order to evaluate the differences in outcomes for surgery and radiotherapy, patients were interviewed using the VHI questionnaire. Better scores for each category in the VHI were found for patients receiving radiotherapy compared to surgery (physical: p = 0.0023; functional: p < 0.0001; environmental: p < 0.001). The median VHI score for radiotherapy patients was 4, while for surgical patients it was 18 (p < 0.0001).Conclusion:This study confirms the well-known knowledge that results from radiotherapy and surgery in early glottic cancer treatment are equivalent. Furthermore, the role of patient preference in the treatment modality choice and the value of a multidisciplinary approach for a detailed and multi-oriented discussion with the patient are outlined.ZusammenfassungHintergrund und Zielsetzung:Es sollen das onkologische Ergebnis und die Sprachqualität in einer homogenen und gut definierten Gruppe von Patienten mit T1-Stimmbandkarzinomen verglichen werden.Patienten und Methoden:Patienten mit einem Glottiskarzinom, die sich einer CO2-Laser-Operation oder einer Radiotherapie unterzogen hatten, wurden analysiert. Das Gesamtüberleben und die krankheitsfreie Zeit wurden errechnet. Um Unterschiede im funktionellen Ergebnis und bezüglich der Sprachqualität zu quantifizieren, wurden alle Patienten während der letzten Nachsorge im Jahre 2009 dazu angehalten den VHI-(Voice Handicap Index-)Fragebogen auszufüllen. Diese Daten wurden mittels der MedCalc-Software bearbeitet.Ergebnisse:Insgesamt wurden 143 Patienten untersucht: 73 wurden operiert und 70 erhielten eine Strahelentherapie. Es konnte kein statistisch signifikanter Unterschied zwischen den zwei Gruppen bezüglich der Gesamtüberlebenszeit und der krankheitsfreien Zeit festgestellt werden; dies gelang auch nicht, wenn die Gruppen in Stadium T1a und T1b getrennt betrachtet wurden. Um die Unteschiede zwischen Operation und Radiotherapie zu evaluieren, wurde der VHI-Fragebogen verwendet. Es ließ sich zeigen, dass in jeder Kategorie des VHI-Fragebogens die Patienten, die strahlentherapiert wurden, bessere Ergebnisse erzielten als jene, die operiert wurden („physikalisch“: p = 0,0023; „funktionell“: p < 0,0001). Der durchschnittliche VHI-Score für strahlentherapierte Patienten ist 4, im Gegensatz zu 18 für operierte Patienten (p < 0,0001).Zusammenfassung:Diese Studie bestätigt die Erkenntnis, dass Radiotherapie und Operation beim Stimmbandkarzinom im frühen Stadium zu äquivalenten Ergebnissen führen. Weiterhin wird die Bedeutung des Patientenwunsches im Hinblick auf die Therapieoptionen und die Bedeutung eines multidiszplinären Therapieansatzes belegt.
Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 2007
E. De Corso; Maria Raffaella Marchese; Bruno Sergi; Mario Rigante; Gaetano Paludetti
The aim of this study was to evaluate the hearing results of ossiculoplasty in canal wall down tympanoplasty in one stage middle-ear cholesteatoma surgery. We carried out a retrospective review of a consecutive series of 142 cases which had undergone type two or three canal wall down tympanoplasty with ossicular reconstruction, between January 1995 and December 2002, due to chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma.Pre-operative audiometric testing revealed a mean air conduction pure tone average (PTA) of 50.97 dB and a mean bone conduction PTA of 22.14 dB. The mean post-operative result for air conduction PTA was 37.62 and for bone conduction PTA was 23.37 dB. The mean pre- and post-operative air-bone gaps (ABGs) were 28.83 and 13.94 dB, respectively, with a gain of 14.89 dB. Almost 62.67 per cent of patients closed their ABGs to within 20 dB. Our functional results are comparable with those of other authors. In the present study, we show that hearing improvement is possible following cholesteatoma surgery with canal wall down tympanoplasty and ossicular chain reconstruction.
Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2007
Maria Raffaella Marchese; Francesca Cianfrone; Giulio Cesare Passali; Gaetano Paludetti
Objective: To evaluate the functional results obtained after stapedotomy in patients affected by otosclerosis, according to the prosthesis diameter. Patients and Methods: A retrospective case review was performed. Two hundred and twelve consecutive ears in 132 patients affected by otosclerosis were operated on. All patients underwent primary small-fenestra stapedotomy. In 112 of the 212 stapedotomies (52.83%) the 0.6-mm piston (group A) and in 100 of the 212 stapedotomies (47.16%) the 0.4-mm piston (group B) were employed. Results: After surgery, the difference between the two groups in the air conduction improvement (21.04 dB group A vs. 11.14 dB group B) reached statistical significance (p < 0.05). In group A, the postoperative air conduction pure-tone average improvement obtained at 0.5, 1, and 2 kHz was statistically greater as compared with group B (p < 0.05). In group A the postoperative bone conduction pure-tone average decreased by 5.19 dB, whereas in group B it increased by 2.95 dB (p > 0.05). The incidence of ears with a postoperative bone conduction worsening >10 dB (sensorineural hearing loss) was lower in group B than in group A: 5 of 100 ears (5%) versus 9 of112 ears (8.03%) (p > 0.05). The postoperative air-bone gap was smaller in group A than in group B for all frequencies, but the difference can be considered significant at 1 and 2 kHz. The air-bone gap improvement in group A if compared with group B was statistically greater at 0.5, 1, and 2 kHz (p < 0.05). Conclusions: Our study suggests that an increase in piston diameter gives better results, especially at lower frequencies. The functional results obtained after stapedotomy confirm the advantageous effect of a larger piston diameter on hearing of the speech frequencies and support the opinion of a better clinical effect.
Journal of Voice | 2012
Lucia D’Alatri; Francesco Bussu; Emanuele Scarano; Gaetano Paludetti; Maria Raffaella Marchese
OBJECTIVE To investigate the relationships between objective measures and the results of subjective assessment of voice quality and speech intelligibility in patients submitted to total laryngectomy and tracheoesophageal (TE) puncture. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective. MATERIALS Twenty patients implanted with voice prosthesis were studied. After surgery, the entire sample performed speech rehabilitation. The assessment protocol included maximum phonation time (MPT), number of syllables per deep breath, acoustic analysis of the sustained vowel /a/ and of a bisyllabic word, perceptual evaluation (pleasantness and intelligibility%), and self-assessment. RESULTS The correlation between pleasantness and intelligibility% was statistically significant. Both the latter were significantly correlated with the acoustic signal type, the number of formant peaks, and the F2-F1 difference. The intelligibility% and number of formant peaks were significantly correlated with the MPT and number of syllables per deep breath. Moreover, significant correlations were found between the number of formant peaks and both intelligibility% and pleasantness. The higher the number of syllables per deep breath and the longer the MPT, significantly higher was the number of formant peaks and the intelligibility%. The study failed to show significant correlation between patients self-assessment of voice quality and both pleasantness and communication effectiveness. CONCLUSION The multidimensional assessment seems to be a reliable tool to evaluate the TE functional outcome. Particularly, the results showed that both pleasantness and intelligibility of TE speech are correlated to the availability of expired air and the function of the vocal tract.
Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2009
Maria Raffaella Marchese; Guido Conti; Francesca Cianfrone; Alessandro Scorpecci; Anna Rita Fetoni; Gaetano Paludetti
Objective: To analyze and compare the preoperative factors that potentially influence the outcome of stapedotomy in our study group. Materials and Methods: 161 cases were enrolled. Clinical variables considered to influence functional results – air conduction (AC) and bone conduction (BC) pure-tone average (PTA), air-bone gaps (ABG), sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL), ABG gain and ΔSNHL – were gender, age, case type (unilateral vs. bilateral), ear side (right vs. left), pregnancy, vascular disease and family history of otosclerosis. The audiometric variables were preoperative AC- and BC-PTA, SNHL and ABG. Results: Univariate logistic regression analysis showed that the probability of obtaining a ≥10 dB gain is significantly affected by the following factors: age <50 years, AC-PTA ≥50 dB and preoperative ABG ≥30 dB. All the other factors included into the registration (gender, familiarity, side, bilateral vs. unilateral, pregnancy, vascular diseases and preoperative BC-PTA) were not found to significantly affect postoperative gain (p > 0.05). Nevertheless, multivariate logistic regression analysis maintained a statistically significant correlation only between gain ≥10 dB and both preoperative ABG ≥30 dB and age <50 years. Conclusions: The accurate knowledge of predictive factors is a valuable tool that permits the surgeon to plan surgery with a better case selection as well as assisting in counseling the patient with regard to the likelihood of success of the procedure.
Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2009
W. Di Nardo; Paola Cattani; T. Lopizzo; Italo Cantore; Maria Raffaella Marchese; S. Marchetti; Alessandro Scorpecci; Sara Giannantonio; C. Parrilla; Francesca Cianfrone; Giovanni Fadda; Gaetano Paludetti
Background:The cause of about 30% of bilateral sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is still unknown. A viral etiology is among the most frequently proposed ones and the supposed diagnosis is only based upon few clinical and laboratory data. The detection of viral presence within a damaged compartment may represent a way to supply interesting data for confirmation of viral etiology and to explain pathogenic mechanisms. Objectives:The aim of our study was to identify the possible presence of pathogenic viruses in the inner ear extracellular compartment in patients with bilateral severe sensorineural deafness of unknown etiology who underwent cochlear implant surgery. Methods: 4 patients, aged from 2 to 7 years and affected by SNHL underwent cochlear implantation surgery and, at the same time, endolabyrinthine fluid sampling. The samples were subsequently sent for viral nucleic acid extraction and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) treatment: multiplex PCR and realtime-PCR were used. In each endolabyrinthine fluid sample, cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), varicella-zoster virus (VZV), herpes simplex virus type 1 and 2 (HSV-1, HSV-2) and enterovirus genomes were searched for. Results: One patient was positive for intracochlear CMV, as confirmed by another base-pair segment PCR. EBV, VZV, HSV and enterovirus were detected in none of the 4 patients. Conclusions: Our finding of CMV genome within the cochlea of a deaf patient without any evidence of acute and prenatal CMV infection suggests its possible role in postnatal inner ear injury through reactivation of latent virus within the cochlea. This hypothesis could also be considered valid for some patients with anti-CMV-IgG-positive serology and absence of endolabyrinthine viral genome since viruses can be in an inactive state at the time of fluid collection. PCR has proved to be a very useful tool in order to investigate infectious causes of deafness even for more than one virus type at a time and in a limited quantity of sample, such as the small volume of endolabyrinthine liquid collected from children during cochlear implant surgery.
Auris Nasus Larynx | 2010
Maria Raffaella Marchese; Carmelo La Greca; Guido Conti; Gaetano Paludetti
Meningeal carcinomatosis (MC) is an uncommon form of metastasis of solid tumors. In the absence of clinical meningeal or parenchymal involvements, the sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) as the starting symptom of MC is very infrequent. We report the history of two patients affected by MC who presented first with progressive SNHL. In both cases the early magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) finding mimicked bilateral masses in the cerebellopontine angle (CPA). Only the histopathologic result and surgical biopsy in cases 1 and 2, respectively, identified masses secondary to occult malignancy. However the available investigations could not discover the primary site of metastatic carcinoma. Despite the poor prognosis, because of the rarity and severity of MC we consider important to make known our experience in order to consider metastatic tumors in the differential diagnosis for sudden SNHL.
Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 2007
Maria Raffaella Marchese; Gaetano Paludetti; E. De Corso; Francesca Cianfrone
The aim of our study was to evaluate the functional results of stapes surgery and to compare the effectiveness of small fenestra stapedotomy with that of total stapedectomy in improving hearing in patients affected by otosclerosis. Three hundred and fifty-seven consecutive ears, in 265 patients affected by otosclerosis, underwent surgery. All cases underwent either primary small fenestra stapedotomy (group A, 196/357, 54.91 per cent) or stapedectomy (group B, 161/357, 45.09 per cent). After surgery, 256/357 (71.71 per cent) cases showed a 0-20 dB gap. There were no significant differences in hearing results between the two groups at either early or late post-operative assessment. The mean post-operative pure tone average and air-bone gap results were slightly greater for group B than for group A, at both early and late post-operative assessments, but these differences were not statistically significant. Therefore, in group A, the mean pure tone average at 4 kHz significantly improved, from 56.60 to 47.66 dB at early post-operative assessment and to 52.98 dB at late post-operative assessment. Our study suggests that the technique of microtomy of the oval window is able to improve hearing results especially at high frequencies.
Acta Otorhinolaryngologica Italica | 2015
De Corso E; Giovanni Bastanza; Della Marca G; Grippaudo C; Rizzotto G; Maria Raffaella Marchese; Antonella Fiorita; Bruno Sergi; Meucci D; Di Nardo W; Gaetano Paludetti; Emanuele Scarano
SUMMARY Nowadays oral appliance therapy is recognised as an effective therapy for many patients with primary snoring and mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), as well as those with more severe OSA who cannot tolerate positive airway pressure (PAP) therapies. For this reason, it is important to focus on objective criteria to indicate which subjects may benefit from treatment with a mandibular advancement device (MAD). Various anthropometric and polysomnographic predictors have been described in the literature, whereas there are still controversies about the role of drug-induced sleep endoscopy (DISE) and advancement bimanual manoeuvre as predictor factors of treatment outcome by oral device. Herein, we report our experience in treatment of mild moderate OSA by oral appliance selected by DISE. We performed a single institution, longitudinal prospective evaluation of a consecutive group of mild moderate patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome who underwent DISE. During sleep endoscopy, gentle manoeuvre of mandibular advancement less than 5 mm was performed. In 30 of 65 patients (46.2%) we obtained an unsuccessful improvement of airway patency whereas in 35 of 65 patients (53.8%) the improvement was successful and patients were considered suitable for oral device application. Because 7 of 35 patients were excluded due to conditions interfering with oral appliance therapy, we finally treated 28 patients. After 3 months of treatment, we observed a significant improvement in the Epworth medium index [(7.35 ± 2.8 versus 4.1 ± 2.2 (p < 0.05)], in mean AHI [(21.4 ± 6 events per hour versus 8.85 ± 6.9 (p < 0.05)] and in mean ODI [(18.6 ± 8 events per hour to 7 ± 5.8 (p < 0.05)]. We observed that the apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) improved by up to 50% from baseline in 71.4% of patients selected after DISE for MAD therapy. In the current study, mandibular advancement splint therapy was successfully prescribed on the basis not only of severity of disease, as determined by the subjects initial AHI, but also by DISE findings combined with results of gentle mandibular advancement manoeuvre allowing direct view of the effects of mandibular protrusion on breathing spaces in obstruction sites, and showing good optimisation of selection of patients for oral device treatment.