Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michelangelo Bruno Casali is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michelangelo Bruno Casali.


Annals of Occupational Hygiene | 2015

Asbestos Lung Burden in Necroscopic Samples from the General Population of Milan, Italy

Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Michele Carugno; Andrea Cattaneo; Dario Consonni; Carolina Mensi; Umberto Genovese; Domenico Cavallo; Anna Somigliana; Angela Cecilia Pesatori

The present study analysed the asbestos lung burden in necroscopic samples from 55 subjects free from asbestos-related diseases, collected between 2009 and 2011 in Milan, Italy. Multiple lung samples were analysed by light microscopy (asbestos bodies, AB) and EDXA-scanning electron microscopy (asbestos fibres and other inorganic fibres). Asbestos fibres were detected in 35 (63.6%) subjects, with a higher frequency for amphiboles than for chrysotile. Commercial (CA) and non-commercial amphiboles (NCA) were found in roughly similar frequencies. The estimated median value was 0.11 million fibres per gram of dry lung tissue (mf g(-1)) for all asbestos, 0.09 mf g(-1) for amphiboles. In 44 (80.0%) subjects no chrysotile fibres were detected. A negative relationship between asbestos mass-weighted fibre count and year of birth (and a corresponding positive increase with age) was observed for amphiboles [-4.15%, 95% confidence interval (CI) = -5.89 to -2.37], talc (-2.12%, 95% CI = -3.94 to -0.28), and Ti-rich fibres (-3.10%, 95% CI = -5.54 to -0.60), but not for chrysotile (-2.84%, 95% CI = -7.69 to 2.27). Residential district, birthplace, and smoking habit did not affect the lung burden of asbestos or inorganic fibres. Females showed higher burden only for amphiboles (0.12 versus 0.03 mf g(-1) in males, P = 0.07) and talc fibres (0.14 versus 0 mf g(-1) in males, P = 0.03). Chrysotile fibres were shorter and thinner than amphibole fibres and NCA fibres were thicker than CA ones. The AB prevalence was 16.4% (nine subjects) with concentrations ranging from 10 to 110 AB g(-1) dry, well below the 1000 AB g(-1) threshold for establishing occupational exposure. No AB were found in subjects younger than 30 years. Our study demonstrated detectable levels of asbestos fibres in a sample taken from the general population. The significant increase with age confirmed that amphibole fibres are the most representative of cumulative exposure.


Medicine Science and The Law | 2014

Lethal pulmonary thromboembolism: An autopsy-based study on a rare but legally relevant event

Francesca Mobilia; Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Maurizio Gallieni; Umberto Genovese

Context: Pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) is the severe end stage of many different diseases producing prolonged patient immobilization or a hypercoagulative state. Lethal PTE is also one of the most frequent topics for suspected medical malpractice, especially when dealing with patients originally affected by non-critical illnesses and suddenly killed by a non-prevented embolic event. The crucial forensic question about a lethal PTE is the following one: was this lethal PTE an unpreventable complication or was it a consequence of real medical malpractice? Materials and methods: The authors analyzed the 1999–2009 autopsy archive of the Institute of Forensic Medicine of Milan University and selected all the cases where PTE was the cause of death. For every selected case, the authors also collected all the available demographic and clinical data. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS V.16.00. Results: In the period 1999–2009, 129 (1.25%) cases out of a total of 10,288 autopsies were diagnosed as having suffered lethal PTE. The male to female ratio was 1:2 (34.1% versus 65.9%). The mean age at death was 67 ± 18 years. In 41% of cases the death occurred outside of the hospital and in the absence of any medical support; in 36.5% of cases it occurred during the territorial paramedical support or during the very first evaluation in the emergency; and in the remaining 22.5% of cases it occurred during a period of hospitalization. In 33.4% of the selected cases, a typical preliminary event was positively identified: a pure major trauma (18.6%); a trauma followed by a major surgery (7%); a major non post-traumatic surgery (7%); and a non-surgical delivery. Symptoms suggesting PTE were detected in 46 cases (35.7%). Nine cases underwent a judicial autopsy in the same original hypothesis of a medical malpractice for incorrect prophylaxis in acutely bed-restricted patients. Conclusions: Post-surgical PTE cannot be automatically labeled a consequence of medical malpractice. The combination of correct prophylaxis, careful diagnostic monitoring of the high-risk patient and the correct therapy surely reduces the occurrence of lethal PTE, but it does not completely erase such an insidious pathology. In the hypothesis of a causative medical malpractice, only careful analysis by an experienced forensic pathologist can make a reliable distinction between an unpreventable complication and real medical malpractice.


Forensic Science International | 2014

The medical malpractice in Milan-Italy. A retrospective survey on 14 years of judicial autopsies

Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Francesca Mobilia; Sara Del Sordo; Alberto Blandino; Umberto Genovese

The medical malpractice is a rising and central topic for the forensic pathologist and forensic autopsies are a mandatory step in the judicial evaluation of the suspected medical malpractice. Reliable national and international registers about the medical malpractice are still missing and nowadays the necroscopic archives are therefore one of the best sources of data about such a complex phenomenon. We analyzed the archive of the Institute of Forensic Medicine of the Milan University from 1996 to 2009 and selected 317 lethal cases of suspected medical malpractice. The mean age of our cases was 60±18 years for males and 58±19 years for the females. In 70% of such cases the patient death occurred in a hospital setting. The first 24h of hospitalization turned out to be the hottest period for deaths followed by malpractice claims. The surgical branches were obviously the most involved, with abdominal surgery, orthopedics, neurosurgery and gynecology as the main contributors. Just 12% of the total amount of cases came from all the internistic branches put together. Non-hospital malpractice was typically caused by misdiagnosed myocardial infarctions and aortic ruptures. A full forensic report was present in 71 cases (all belonging to the 2007-2009 period): in 69% of cases the judicial autopsy revealed as a sufficient tool for diagnosing the cause of death; medical malpractice was confirmed in only 17% of the whole cases and a causal link between the ascertained malpractice and the patient death was recognized in only 12.7% cases.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2017

The Adult Male Rape Victim: Forensic Description of a Series of 57 Cases

Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Elisa Palazzo; Alberto Blandino; Alessio Battistini; Francesca Motta; Alessandra Kustermann; Cristina Cattaneo

Abstract A retrospective analysis on 57 adult male victims of sexual violence has been performed. Age, nationality and anamnesis of the victims, location of the assault, type of violence, number and identity of the assailants, presence of physical injuries, lapse of time between the assault and the request of medical assistance, and toxicological and semen detection tests were analyzed. Victims were mostly in the 31- to 40-year age group. Ten victims referred themselves as either active homosexuals or bisexuals. Forced oral and/or anal penetration was registered in 86.8% of cases, mostly performed by a single assailant. Anogenital injuries were recorded in 61.4% of cases, whereas extragenital injuries in 35.1%: abrasions and perianal reddening were the most frequent acute anogenital marks, whereas the head and lower limbs were the body parts most commonly affected by blunt trauma. No clinically severe injuries were found. Anal and perianal swabs for semen detection tested positive in less than 20% cases, whereas oral swabs always tested negative. When performed, nearly 50% of cases tested positive in drug tests, above all for psychoactive substances. No definite forensic diagnosis in terms of confirmation of rape was possible on the basis of type and topography of injuries.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2015

How Reliable are Parenchymal Tissues for the Evaluation of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning? A Pilot Study

Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Luca Sironi; Marina Caligara; Alberto Blandino; Silvia Circelli; Davide Schiavi; Cristina Cattaneo

Dealing with burnt bodies, the forensic pathologist must first of all answer the question whether the victim was alive at the moment of the fire. This study aims at clarifying whether some human solid tissues may be reliably used for the forensic diagnosis of Co poisoning on burnt bodies providing no collectable blood during the autopsy. From 34 selected cases, both cardiac blood and parenchymal samples were collected to perform CO‐oxymeter, spectrophotometry, and gas chromatography tests: blood CO estimations (blood COHb% and blood[CO]) and parenchymal[CO] values have been compared with special focus on R values. The solid tissues having the best correlations with blood CO amount turned out to be the lung (R 0.84), the liver (R 0.83), the kidney (R 0.79), and the spleen (R 0.92).


Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology | 2018

Alleged malpractice in orthopaedics. Analysis of a series of medmal insurance claims

Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Alberto Blandino; S. Del Sordo; G. Vignali; S. Novello; G. Travaini; M. Berlusconi; Umberto Genovese

BackgroundMedical malpractice is an important topic worldwide, and orthopedics is a clinical branch that is considered to be at a high risk for claims. The analysis of a series of medmal insurance claims allows forensic pathologists, clinicians, and insurance companies to probe the risk of a specific clinical branch for medical malpractice claims and highlights areas where care may be improved. We investigated the main features of a major Italian insurance broker’s archive in order to identify recurrent pitfalls in this field.Materials and methodsA retrospective study was carried out on orthopedics claims. The archive covered claims from 2002 to 2013 that targeted 1980 orthopedists.Results635 claims were found and analyzed with a focus on the clinical activity invocked in the claim, the presence of alleged team malpractice, the clinical outcome of the case, and the final forensic decision regarding the claim. 299 orthopedists had at least one malpractice claim made against them during the available period; 146 orthopedists were subject to more than one malpractice claim. Most of the claims regarded perioperative and operative cases, usually originating from civil litigation. The anatomical sites most commonly involved were the hip or knees, and sciatic nerve lesions were the main contributor.ConclusionsOrthopedics is a medical specialty with a high risk for malpractice claims. In our study, medical malpractice was observed in nearly 50% of the cases—typically in surgery-linked cases resulting in permanent impairment of the patient. Death from orthopedics malpractice seemed to be rare.Level of EvidenceIV.


Critical Care Medicine | 2018

Responsible Precision Medicine in Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: The Challenge of Searching for Biomarker-Driven Earlier Diagnosis, Effective Treatment, and Stratified Outcomes*

Giuseppe A. Marraro; Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Umberto Genovese

172 www.ccmjournal.org January 2018 • Volume 46 • Number 1 supported on mechanical ventilation. Pediatr Crit Care Med 2006; 7:107–114 12. Meyburg J, Dill ML, Traube C, et al: Patterns of postoperative delirium in children. Pediatr Crit Care Med 2017; 18:128–133 13. Patel AK, Bell MJ, Traube C: Delirium in pediatric critical care. Pediatr Clin North Am 2017; 64:1117–1132 14. Kudchadkar SR: Benzodiazepines and delirium in the young and old: Truth be told or still not sold? Crit Care Med 2017; 45:1562–1564 15. Smith HAB, Gangopadhyay M, Goben CM, et al: Delirium and benzodiazepines associated with prolonged ICU stay in critically ill infants and young children. Crit Care Med 2017; 45:1427–1435 16. Jevtovic-Todorovic V: Anesthetics and cognitive impairments in developing children: What is our responsibility? JAMA Pediatrics 2017 Oct 2. [Epub ahead of print] 17. Penk JS, Lefaiver CA, Brady CM, et al: Intermittent Versus Continuous and Intermittent Medications for Pain and Sedation After Pediatric Cardiothoracic Surgery; A Randomized Controlled Trial. Crit Care Med 2018; 46:123–129 18. Chrysostomou C, Di Filippo S, Manrique AM, et al: Use of dexmedetomidine in children after cardiac and thoracic surgery. Pediatr Crit Care Med 2006; 7:126–131 19. Chrysostomou C, Sanchez De Toledo J, Avolio T, et al: Dexmedetomidine use in a pediatric cardiac intensive care unit: Can we use it in infants after cardiac surgery? Pediatr Crit Care Med 2009; 10:654–660 20. Hosokawa K, Shime N, Kato Y, et al: Dexmedetomidine sedation in children after cardiac surgery. Pediatr Crit Care Med 2010; 11:39–43 21. Hayes J, Dowling JJ, Peliowski A, et al: Patient-controlled analgesia plus background opioid infusion for postoperative pain in children: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials. Anesth Analg 2016; 123:991–1003 22. Chanques G, Conseil M, Roger C, et al; SOS-Ventilation study investigators: Immediate interruption of sedation compared with usual sedation care in critically ill postoperative patients (SOS-Ventilation): A randomised, parallel-group clinical trial. Lancet Respir Med 2017; 5:795–805


Journal of Global Health | 2017

A new paradigm on health care accountability to improve the quality of the system: Four parameters to achieve individual and collective accountability

Umberto Genovese; Sara Del Sordo; Gabriella Pravettoni; Igor M. Akulin; Riccardo Zoja; Michelangelo Bruno Casali

So, the growing demand among patients for increasingly high quality treatments, the obligation to reduce adverse events in health care, the need for transparency in health care systems, and the current economic situation compound the difficulties in improving health care delivery. The debate on these issues now transcends national borders and single organisational, political and jurisprudential systems. Also, the problem of escalation of litigation in health care is applicable to all physicians regardless of age, geographical origin, and specialisation and it should be solved.


Forensic Science International | 2012

Forensic Grading of Myocarditis: An Experimental Contribution to the Distinction Between Lethal Myocarditis and Incidental Myocarditis

Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Antonella Lazzaro; Guendalina Gentile; Alberto Blandino; Enzo Ronchi; Riccardo Zoja


Critical Care Medicine | 2018

Responsible Precision Medicine in Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Giuseppe A. Marraro; Michelangelo Bruno Casali; Umberto Genovese

Collaboration


Dive into the Michelangelo Bruno Casali's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alessandra Kustermann

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge