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Dive into the research topics where Maurizio Iengo is active.

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Featured researches published by Maurizio Iengo.


International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology | 2014

Impact of intranasal sodium hyaluronate on the short‐term quality of life of patients undergoing functional endoscopic sinus surgery for chronic rhinosinusitis

Elena Cantone; Giovanni Castagna; Stefania Sicignano; Immacolata Ferranti; Felice Rega; Vittoria Di Rubbo; Maurizio Iengo

Functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) has become the treatment of choice for patients with medically resistant chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) and nasal polyps. Despite the consolidated use of different treatments, the postoperative period is often very painful and uncomfortable, especially during the first month. Although evidence on the effectiveness of sodium hyaluronate (SH) on postoperative care following FESS is available, data on the quality of life (QoL) from the patients’ perspective are still lacking. This study aimed to evaluate for the first time the effectiveness of nasal douche with SH in reducing patients’ discomfort during the first month following FESS.


Gastroenterology | 2013

Effect of Carbonation on Brain Processing of Sweet Stimuli in Humans

Francesco Di Salle; Elena Cantone; Maria Savarese; Adriana Aragri; Anna Prinster; Emanuele Nicolai; Giovanni Sarnelli; Maurizio Iengo; Maxime Buyckx; Rosario Cuomo

Little is known about how CO2 affects neural processing of taste. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate the effects of carbonation on brain processing of sweet stimuli, which has relevance to studies of food selection and satiety. The presence of carbonation produced an overall decrease in the neural processing of sweetness-related signals, especially from sucrose. CO2 reduced the neural processing of sucrose more than that of artificial sweeteners. These findings might be relevant to dietary interventions that include noncaloric beverages, whereas the combination of CO2 and sucrose might increase consumption of sucrose.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Diffusion Weighted MR Imaging of Primary and Recurrent Middle Ear Cholesteatoma: An Assessment by Readers with Different Expertise

Andrea Elefante; Michele Cavaliere; Carmela Russo; G. Caliendo; Mariano Marseglia; D. Cicala; D. Piccolo; A. Di Lullo; L. Brunetti; A. Palma; Maurizio Iengo; Arturo Brunetti

Introduction and Purpose. Diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) has been proven to be valuable in the diagnosis of middle ear cholesteatoma. The aims of our study were to evaluate the advantage of multi-shot turbo spin echo (MSh TSE) DWI compared to single-shot echo-planar (SSh EPI) DWI for the diagnosis of cholesteatoma. Material and Methods. Thirty-two patients with clinical suspicion of unilateral cholesteatoma underwent preoperative MRI (1.5T) with SSh EPI and MSh TSE. Images were separately analyzed by 4 readers with different expertise to confirm the presence of cholesteatoma. Sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy, and positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) were assessed for each observer and interrater agreement was assessed using kappa statistics. Diagnosis was obtained at surgery. Results. Overall MSh TSE showed higher diagnostic accuracy and lower negative predictive value (NPV) compared to conventional SSh EPI. Interreader agreement between the observers revealed the superiority of MSh TSE compared to SSh EPI. Interrater agreement among all the four observers was higher by using MSh TSE compared to SSh EPI. Conclusion. Our findings suggest that MSh TSE DWI has higher sensitivity for detection of cholesteatoma and lower probability of misdiagnosis. MSh TSE DWI is useful in guiding less experienced observers to the diagnosis.


Operations Research Letters | 2012

Stapedotomy: functional results with different diameter prostheses.

Michele Cavaliere; Ricciardiello F; Massimo Mesolella; Maurizio Iengo

Developments in surgical technique and, more importantly, the use of increasingly sophisticated biocompatible prostheses have meant that good results can be achieved for otosclerosis sufferers in terms of restored hearing and very little postsurgical discomfort. We set out to assess whether the diameter of the prostheses used for stapedotomy (platinum piston/polytetrafluoroethylene, i.e. Teflon) has any effect on surgical outcome. Two groups of otosclerotic patients were selected, and these underwent stapedotomy surgery during the second phase of the disease. A piston-Teflon type prosthesis was used, 5.50 mm in terms of length but of different diameters (group A: 0.4 mm; group B: 0.6 mm). All the patients underwent the same pure-tone audiometry test before surgery, and then at 1 week and 1 month after surgery, to assess function. We compared air conduction after surgery with bone conduction before surgery. The data collected was analysed using the χ2 (p < 0.05) test. This analysis showed that the results obtained with a 0.4-mm prosthesis or a 0.6-mm prosthesis are almost identical. There was no statistically significant difference in terms of hearing results when comparing either average tonal threshold or when analysing audiometric data frequency by frequency. It can be concluded, therefore, that in stapedotomy surgery, functional recovery is not affected by the diameter of the prosthesis used. A smaller diameter prosthesis is, however, the one of choice when the facial nerve is prominent or the oval window particularly narrow.


Folia Phoniatrica Et Logopaedica | 2012

Qualitative and Quantitative Measurement of the Singing Voice

U. Cesari; Maurizio Iengo; P. Apisa

Objective: The aim of the study was to clarify the mechanisms underlying the singing voice. Patients and Methods: Forty-eight professional opera singers underwent flexible and rigid endoscopy, spectrographic analysis and perceptual evaluation. Results: The data provided by voice analysis were not as clear and relevant to the aim of our study as those commonly obtained for speech evaluation. Laryngoscopy with rigid and flexible fiber optics and the singing power ratio (SPR) measurement provided more applicable data. Indeed, the former allowed us to assess laryngeal position, the glottic pattern and vocal tract modifications during the actual singing performance. The latter, already recommended by other authors as a reliable vocal emission index, also yielded more relevant information in comparison with the assessment of voice quality. Specifically, SPR provided data directly correlated to both the years of singing activity and the vocal category of each singer (the higher the singing pitch, the wider the vocal extension). More importantly, the data fully reflected the subjective assessment of each phoniatrician. Conclusions: We suggest that the SPR indices can be used as the electroacoustic equivalent of the subjective judgment of vocal focus.


American Journal of Rhinology & Allergy | 2016

Effect of sodium hyaluronate added to topical corticosteroids in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis.

Elena Cantone; Maurizio Iengo

Background Available medical treatments for chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) with nasal polyposis (CRSwNP) comprise systemic and topical therapies. Although topical corticosteroids are effective in the treatment of CRS, they are not completely devoid of adverse effects. Thus, care has to be taken when long-term treatments are prescribed. There is recent evidence that sodium hyaluronate (SH), the major component of many extracellular matrices, promotes tissue healing, including activation and moderation of the inflammatory responses, cell proliferation, migration, and angiogenesis. Objective The aim of the study was to evaluate clinical outcomes and quality of life in two groups of patients with CRSwNP treated with topical corticosteroids alone or in combination with 9 mg of high-molecular-weight SH. Methods The impact of treatments was determined by using nasal endoscopy and validated quality of life questionnaires (Short Form-36, 22-item Sino-Nasal Outcome Test, visual analog scale [VAS]). Eighty subjects who had CRS with grade IV nasal polyposis: 40 diagnosed with allergic rhinitis (AR) and 40 with non-allergic-eosinophilic rhinitis (NARES) based on skin-prick test and nasal cytology results, were divided in two groups. Group I comprised 40 subjects (20 AR and 20 NARES), who received mometasone furoate plus SH; group II comprised 40 subjects (20 AR and 20 NARES), who received mometasone furoate plus saline solution alone. All the patients were followed up for 3 months. Results At baseline, no statistically significant differences were observed between the groups and the VAS score showed a moderate-to-severe degree of disease. After treatments, Lund and Kennedy, Short Form-36, 22-item Sino-Nasal Outcome Test, and VAS scores were statistically significant in both groups but slightly in favor of the group I and in the subjects with allergic CRSwNP. Conclusion Analysis of our data indicated that an SH supplement to standard corticosteroid seems to play an important role in improving the severity of symptoms, the endoscopic appearance, and discomfort associated with CRSwNP. This effect seems to be strongest in patients with allergic CRSwNP.


Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 2005

Clinical and prognostic aspects of laryngeal clear cell carcinoma.

Domenico Testa; Vieri Galli; Gaetano De Rosa; Renata Iovine; Stefania Staibano; Pasquale Somma; Chiara Mignogna; Maurizio Iengo

Clear cell carcinoma (CCC) of the larynx is a rare pathological finding; only eight cases are described in the literature. It occurs in older adults and shows a predilection for men. We report the ninth observation of laryngeal CCC in the literature. We reviewed the literature and correlated the prognosis of the tumour according to its site of onset and treatment. The literature review showed that this neoplasm is highly aggressive, with a high recurrence rate and short mean survival time; the treatment of choice is surgery, and chemo- or radiotherapy are used mainly for the treatment of recurrences.


Laryngoscope | 2015

Olfactory performance after crenotherapy in chronic rhinosinusitis in the elderly.

Elena Cantone; Nunzia Maione; Vittoria Di Rubbo; Fabrizio Esposito; Maurizio Iengo

To evaluate the effectiveness of crenotherapy on the olfactory performance of elderly patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS).


Operations Research Letters | 2014

Diffusion-Weighted Intensity Magnetic Resonance in the Preoperative Diagnosis of Cholesteatoma

Michele Cavaliere; Antonella Miriam Di Lullo; Antonia Caruso; Giandomenico Caliendo; Andrea Elefante; Arturo Brunetti; Maurizio Iengo

We have analyzed the preoperative diagnosis of cholesteatoma through the use of diffusion-weighted intensity magnetic resonance (DWI-MR) in 16 consecutive patients suffering from chronic otitis media with clinical and radiological (by computed tomography) suspicion of cholesteatoma. In particular, we compared the radiological data with intraoperative ones, verifying the correspondence (in terms of sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and diagnostic accuracy) between what is reported by DWI-MR and what is actually detectable at the time of surgery. Furthermore, we identified the most reliable DWI-MR sequence [single-shot (SSh) echo planar imaging (EPI) vs. multi-shot turbo spin-echo not-EPI] to detect cholesteatoma and reduce the time for examination. The obtained data on computed tomography scans revealed low diagnostic accuracy (56%); DWI-MR, instead, showed higher values, especially using not-EPI sequences (93.75 vs. 68.75% obtained by SSh-EPI sequences).


Oncology Letters | 2014

Treatment of c-kit positive adenoid cystic carcinoma of the tongue: A case report

Massimo Mesolella; Amalia Luce; Anna Marino; Michele Caraglia; Filippo Ricciardiello; Maurizio Iengo

Adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) or ‘cylindroma’ is a malignant tumor that often occurs in the areas of the head and neck, affecting the secretory glands and the major and minor salivary glands. The present study describes a case of a patient who presented with a posterior tongue lesion. The case is of a 71-year-old female with an asymptomatic volume growth of the posterior left tongue perceived 8 months prior, and neoplastic cells positive for c-kit. A computed tomography of the head and neck showed asymmetry of the base of the tongue, which was enlarged in the left portion. A physical examination revealed a nodule on the posterior left tongue of ~3 cm in diameter, while the cervical lymph node chain had a normal size and consistency. Surgical exeresis of the tongue lesion and cervical lymph node dissection were performed. Subsequent to surgical removal of the cancer cells and adjuvant radiotherapy, the patient showed excellent health, although the follow-up remains in progress. ACC, one of the most biologically destructive tumors of the head and neck, is locally aggressive and gives rise to distant metastases. The tongue is the place of origin in 3.4–17.1% of cases. The treatment for ACC consists of primary surgical resection with adjuvant radiotherapy. To prevent the risk for distant metastasis, it is necessary to remove the first echelon nodes and monitor the patient with a long-term follow-up.

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Dive into the Maurizio Iengo's collaboration.

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Elena Cantone

University of Naples Federico II

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Massimo Mesolella

University of Naples Federico II

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Michele Cavaliere

University of Naples Federico II

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Antonella Miriam Di Lullo

University of Naples Federico II

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Filippo Ricciardiello

University of Naples Federico II

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Andrea Elefante

University of Naples Federico II

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Stefania Sicignano

University of Naples Federico II

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Arturo Brunetti

University of Naples Federico II

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Brigida Iorio

University of Naples Federico II

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Domenico Testa

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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