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Dive into the research topics where Michelangelo Gangemi is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelangelo Gangemi.


Neurosurgery | 2008

Application of neuroendoscopy to intraventricular lesions.

P. Cappabianca; Giuseppe Cinalli; Michelangelo Gangemi; Andrea Brunori; Luigi Maria Cavallo; E. de Divitiis; Philippe Decq; Alberto Delitala; F. Di Rocco; John G. Frazee; Umberto Godano; André Grotenhuis; Pierluigi Longatti; Carmelo Mascari; T. Nishihara; Shizuo Oi; Harold L. Rekate; Henry W. S. Schroeder; Mark M. Souweidane; Pietro Spennato; G. Tamburrini; Charles Teo; Benjamin C. Warf; Samuel Tau Zymberg

We present an overview of the history, development, technological advancements, current application, and future trends of cranial endoscopy. Neuroendoscopy provides a safe and effective management modality for the treatment of a variety of intracranial disorders, either tumoral or non-tumoral, congenital, developmental, and degenerative, and its knowledge, indications, and limits are fundamental for the armamentarium of the modern neurosurgeon.


Neurosurgery | 2005

Endoscopic third ventriculostomy in idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus.

Michelangelo Gangemi; Francesco Maiuri; Simona Buonamassa; Giuseppe Colella; Enrico de Divitiis

OBJECTIVE:To define the role and indications for an endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) in patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (INPH). A series of 25 patients treated by endoscopic technique was analyzed, and the results were compared with those of 14 studies reporting patients treated by shunting. METHODS:Twenty-five patients with INPH were treated by ETV from January 1994 through December 2000. All were younger than 75 years of age, had a preoperative clinical history of 1 year or less, had prevalence of gait disturbance with scarce or mild dementia, had marked ventricular enlargement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and had intracranial pressure values ranging from 8 to 12 mm Hg. All were studied by a phase-contrast MRI flow study 1 month after ETV. The 14 reviewed series of patients treated by shunting (all published after 1980) each include more than 25 patients, for a total of 777 patients. RESULTS:The overall rate of neurological improvement after ETV in our series was 72% (including two patients reoperated on because of absence of flow in the MRI scan); this percentage is slightly higher than that found in the 14 series of shunted patients (66%). Gait disturbance showed a high rate of improvement when compared with other symptoms, both in our ETV study and in other shunting series. Postoperative complications occurred only in one patient (4%) with an intracerebral frontal hemorrhage and in 37.9% of patients from the series including shunted patients. CONCLUSION:In patients with INPH showing short duration of symptoms, prevalence of gait disturbance, and slight mental impairment, ETV provides similar results to those of shunting. We suggest performing ETV in these patients and reserving shunting only for those who do not improve after ETV, despite the presence of cerebrospinal fluid flow through the ventriculostomy on MRI flow studies. The good results after ETV in our series indirectly confirm that the cerebrospinal fluid absorption is good or at least sufficient in selected patients with INPH.


Neurosurgery | 2008

Endoscopic third ventriculostomy in idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus: An Italian multicenter study

Michelangelo Gangemi; Francesco Maiuri; Michele Naddeo; Umberto Godano; Carmelo Mascari; Giovanni Broggi; Paolo Ferroli

OBJECTIVES The aim of the report is to define the indications and results of endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) in idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus and to discuss the physiopathological mechanism of this procedure. METHODS The cases of 110 patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus who underwent ETV in four Italian neurosurgical centers were retrospectively reviewed. The postoperative outcome was correlated with patient age, length of clinical history, preoperative clinical score, symptoms of clinical onset, type of hydrocephalus, and intraoperative findings. RESULTS The follow-up period ranged from 2 to 12 years (average, 6.5 yr). The outcome evaluation was made 2 years after the procedure. Postoperative clinical improvement occurred in 76 (69.1%) of 110 patients. There was no correlation between success rate and patient age or type of ventricular enlargement (normal or enlarged fourth ventricle). Conversely, the rate of neurological improvement was higher in patients with shorter clinical history, better preoperative neurological score, and clinical onset with gait disturbances. Moreover, the intraoperative finding of the sudden reappearance of normal cerebral pulsations and significant downward and upward movements of the third ventricular floor after ETV was also correlated with a good outcome. CONCLUSION ETV results in a relatively high rate of clinical improvement and a low complication rate in patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus. Therefore, it may be easily performed with the same approach used for intracranial pressure monitoring with low morbidity. However, our data must be confirmed by additional studies.


Surgical Neurology | 1987

Cerebral edema associated with meningiomas.

Francesco Maiuri; Michelangelo Gangemi; S. Cirillo; Luigi Delehaye; Biagio Gallicchio; Michele Carandente; Arcangelo Giamundo

Fifty patients with intracranial meningiomas have been retrospectively examined, and the cerebral edema on computed tomography scan has been correlated with the clinical evolution, size, location, and histological features of the tumor. The degree of brain edema was found to be related to the clinical evolution and the size of the tumor, whereas the histological features were less significant. These results are discussed after reviewing the data of five other series in the literature of this subject. A correlation between the tumor steroid receptors and edema is suggested.


Neurosurgical Focus | 2011

Neuroendoscopic biopsy of ventricular tumors: A multicentric experience

Piero Andrea Oppido; Alessandro Fiorindi; Lucia Benvenuti; Fabio Cattani; Saverio Cipri; Michelangelo Gangemi; Umberto Godano; Pierluigi Longatti; Carmelo Mascari; Enzo Morace; Luigino Tosatto

OBJECT Although neuroendoscopic biopsy is routinely performed, the safety and validity of this procedure has been studied only in small numbers of patients in single-center reports. The Section of Neuroendoscopy of the Italian Neurosurgical Society invited some of its members to review their own experience, gathering a sufficient number of cases for a wide analysis. METHODS Retrospective data were collected by 7 centers routinely performing neuroendoscopic biopsies over a period of 10 years. Sixty patients with newly diagnosed intraventricular and paraventricular tumors were included. No patient harboring a colloid cyst was included. Data regarding clinical presentation, neuroimaging findings, operative techniques, pathological diagnosis, postoperative complications, and subsequent therapy were analyzed. RESULTS In all patients, a neuroendoscopic tumor biopsy was performed. In 38 patients (64%), obstructive hydrocephalus was present. In addition to the tumor biopsy, 32 patients (53%) underwent endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV), and 7 (12%) underwent septum pellucidotomy. Only 2 patients required a ventriculoperitoneal shunt shortly after the endoscopy procedure because ETV was not feasible. The major complication due to the endoscopy procedure was ventricular hemorrhage noted on the postoperative images in 8 cases (13%). Only 2 patients were symptomatic and required medical therapy. Infection occurred in only 1 case, and the other complications were all reversible. In no case did clinically significant sequelae affect the patients outcome. Tumor types ranged across the spectrum and included glioma (low- and high-grade [27%]), pure germinoma (15%), pineal parenchymal tumor (12%), primary neuroectodermal tumor (4%), lymphoma (9%), metastasis (4%), craniopharyngioma (6%), and other tumor types (13%). In 10% of patients, the pathological findings were inconclusive. According to diagnosis, specific therapy was performed in 35% of patients: 17% underwent microsurgical removal, and 18% underwent chemotherapy or radiotherapy. CONCLUSIONS This is one of the largest series confirming the safety and validity of the neuroendoscopic biopsy procedure. Complications were relatively low (about 13%), and they were all reversible. Neuroendoscopic biopsy provided meaningful pathological data in 90% of patients, making subsequent tumor therapy feasible. Cerebrospinal fluid pathways can be restored by ETV or septum pellucidotomy (65%) to control intracranial hypertension. In light of the results obtained, a neuroendoscopic biopsy should be considered a possible alternative to the stereotactic biopsy in the diagnosis and treatment of ventricular or paraventricular tumors. Furthermore, it could be the only surgical procedure necessary for the treatment of selected tumors.


Neurosurgery | 1989

Intracranial Plasma Cell Granuloma

Michelangelo Gangemi; Francesco Maiuri; Arcangelo Giamundo; P. Donati; A. De Chiara

An exceptional case of intracranial plasma cell granuloma, located in the right frontoparietal convexity in a 16-year-old boy is reported. Reports of these rare inflammatory lesions locate them primarily in the lungs and in other regions of the body, and only exceptionally in the nervous system; indeed, only three intracranial cases and one other arising from the spinal meninges have been reported. The computed tomographic and surgical aspects suggested a falx meningioma in our case. The pathological diagnosis differentiating these from other intracranial lesions with a plasma cell component, including meningioma with plasma cell infiltration and plasmacytoma, is discussed.


Neurosurgery | 1989

Cerebral cavernous angiomas in the first year of life.

Michelangelo Gangemi; Pieluigi Longatti; Francesco Maiuri; Giuseppe Cinalli; Alessandro Carteri

Two rare cases of cerebral cavernous angiomas in two infants, 9 and 6 months old, respectively, are reported and the other 11 cases in the literature concerning patients in the first year of life are reviewed. Cavernous angiomas of the brain occur rarely in the first year of life and present with seizures and head enlargement. On computed tomographic scan they typically appear as large, hyperdense, unenhanced masses, with large cysts and must be differentiated from tumors more common in infants, such as teratomas, ependymomas, and mixed tumors. Total removal is often possible, even with large lesions, because of the small amount of bleeding and the well-defined limits of the mass.


British Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

Suprasellar arachnoid cysts: endoscopy versus microsurgical cyst excision and shunting

Michelangelo Gangemi; G. Colella; F. Magro; Francesco Maiuri

The aim of this study is to define the indications to endoscopy versus other surgical procedures in the management of suprasellar arachnoid cysts from a personal series and an extensive literature review. Five symptomatic patients (two children and three adults) with suprasellar arachnoid cysts were treated by endoscopic fenestration in our neurosurgical unit. The endoscopic procedure consisted of ventricle-cyst-cisternostomy in three cases and ventricle-cystostomy in two. Four patients were cured after the endoscopic procedure alone, whereas another with rhinoliquorrhoea later required a craniotomy. The literature review includes 102 patients treated by endoscopic fenestration and 74 treated by other procedures, including microsurgical cyst resection through craniotomy (38 cases), shunt of the cyst (21 cases) and percutaneous ventricle-cystostomy (15 cases). Among the reviewed cases, the rate of cure or improvement was 90% (92 among 102 cases including ours) after endoscopy and 81% (60 among 74 cases) after other surgical procedures. The results of this study suggest that endoscopic ventricle-cyst cisternostomy is the best treatment for suprasellar arachnoid cysts, because it is less invasive, provides the best results and avoids shunt dependency in most cases.


Surgical Neurology | 1999

Endoscopic surgery for monoventricular hydrocephalus

Michelangelo Gangemi; Francesco Maiuri; Pierarturo Donati; F Signorelli; D Basile

BACKGROUND Monoventricular hydrocephalus is usually treated with extrathecal shunting. However, today endoscopic fenestration of the septum pellucidum seems to be a very useful and less invasive technique. METHODS Five patients with monoventricular hydrocephalus have been treated with neuroendoscopic techniques. In three cases with an excluded lateral ventricle due to contralateral shunt overdrainage, the normal-sized ventricle was first cannulated and fenestration of the septum pellucidum from the normal to the enlarged lateral ventricle was performed. RESULTS Complete remission of intracranial hypertension symptoms and decrease in size of the enlarged ventricle were observed in all five patients. CONCLUSIONS Endoscopic fenestration of the septum pellucidum is the technique of choice for treating monoventricular hydrocephalus. We advise first cannulating the normal lateral ventricle and then performing a septostomy from it to the enlarged ventricle. This approach allows one to easily recognize the protruding septum pellucidum and perform fenestration without difficulty using a direct trajectory. In exceptional cases of choroid plexus cyst obstructing one foramen of Monro, fenestration of the cyst wall is sufficient.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 1997

Symptomatic subependymomas of the lateral ventricles. Report of eight cases

Francesco Maiuri; Michelangelo Gangemi; Francesco Signorelli; Marialaura Del Basso De Caro

Subependymomas are rare, slow-growing, benign intraventricular tumors, which often are asymptomatic and are discovered incidentally. The review of the literature shows more than 100 symptomatic cases, less than half located in the lateral ventricles. Here we report 8 cases of symptomatic subependymomas of the lateral ventricles, studied by CT and/or MR and treated by direct surgical approach. The suspicion of a subependymoma should arise when a patient older than 10-15 years with long clinical history presents an intraventricular tumor isodense on CT and isointense in T1 and hyperintense in T2 on MR, with scarce or discrete contrast enhancement. Surgical treatment is indicated in symptomatic subependymomas of the lateral ventricles and usually allows complete tumor removal. The prognosis is usually good, also without postoperative irradiation.

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Francesco Maiuri

University of Naples Federico II

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Giuseppe Colella

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Luigi Maria Cavallo

University of Naples Federico II

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Biagio Gallicchio

University of Naples Federico II

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Giuseppe Corriero

University of Naples Federico II

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Arcangelo Giamundo

University of Naples Federico II

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Arturo Gambardella

University of Naples Federico II

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Enrico de Divitiis

University of Naples Federico II

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