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Dive into the research topics where Patrizia Gandolfo is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrizia Gandolfo.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1995

Binge eating in massively obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery

Gian Franco Adami; Patrizia Gandolfo; Beatrice Bauer; Nicola Scopinaro

Data on the prevalence of binge eating in a series of 92 massively obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery are presented. A semistructured clinical interview demonstrated that 63 individuals had problems with binge eating, 43 of these reporting episodes of binge eating more than twice a week and then meeting the diagnostic criteria for binge eating disorder. By comparison with their nonbinge eating counterparts, binge eaters demonstrated higher body weight, greater weight fluctuation due to reducing diets in their past lifetime, higher Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire Disinhibition and Hunger score, and an overall higher psychopathology as assessed by the Eating Disorder Inventory. The great prevalence of binge eating in these patients could be accounted for by the high body weight, by the characteristics of the patients, or by the context in which the eating behavior assessment was carried out.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2007

Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Regional Myocardial Uptake in Patients Without Heart Disease Under Fasting Conditions on Repeated Whole-Body 18F-FDG PET/CT

Eugenio Inglese; Lucia Leva; Roberta Matheoud; Gianmauro Sacchetti; Chiara Secco; Patrizia Gandolfo; Marco Brambilla; Gianmario Sambuceti

Imaging of cardiac 18F-FDG uptake is used in the diagnostic evaluation of residual viable myocardium. Although, originally, hibernating myocardium was identified by a mismatch between perfusion defect and relatively preserved 18F-FDG uptake, at present several studies propose that 18F-FDG distribution can also be used alone for this purpose. Nevertheless, even severe myocardial 18F-FDG uptake defects are frequently observed in cancer patients without any cardiac disease. The aim of this study was to retrospectively analyze global and regional 18F-FDG cardiac images of 49 consecutive cancer patients free of cardiac diseases who submitted to 3 PET scans under fasting conditions. Methods: Images were acquired with a high-resolution PET/CT scanner. Three-dimensional regions of interest were drawn on the fused PET/CT images to measure the maximal standardized uptake value of the left ventricular myocardium (SUVMyo) as well as the average SUV of the left ventricular blood (SUVLV) and of the liver (SUVLiver). Analysis of regional myocardial 18F-FDG uptake was performed on a subsample of 26 patients by an automatic recognition of endocardial and epicardial borders and subdividing the left ventricle in 20 segments. Regional 18F-FDG distribution was defined as the percentage of SUVMyo in each region. Results: SUVMyo as well as SUVLV and SUVLiver did not change on average throughout the studies. This stability was not caused by a persistent pattern of myocardial 18-FDG distribution. Rather, it was associated with important variations in both directions over time. Regional 18F-FDG distribution was largely heterogeneous in all 3 studies, with a variation coefficient in each patient of 18% ± 7%, 18% ± 5%, and 17% ± 5%, respectively. An 18F-FDG uptake of <50% occurred in 78, 102, and 69 of 468 segments, although it disappeared in 55% of instances at subsequent examinations. Regional temporal variability was also marked: The absolute value of the difference in percent uptake was 10.1% ± 7.3% from test 1 to test 2, 8.0% ± 7.0% from test 1 to test 3, and 9.2% ± 6.9% from test 2 to test 3. Overall from one test to another, uptake increased or decreased by >10% in 76 and in 116 of 468 segments, respectively. Conclusion: The large spatial and temporal heterogeneity of the myocardial metabolic pattern, in cancer patients free of any disease, suggests a word of caution on the use of 18F-FDG alone as a diagnostic tool for myocardial viability.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1994

Eating disorder inventory in the assessment of psychosocial status in the obese patients prior to and at long term following biliopancreatic diversion for obesity

Gian Franco Adami; Patrizia Gandolfo; Adelia Campostano; Beatrice Bauer; Florio Cocchi; Nicola Scopinaro

Psychological traits of obese patients, assessed with the Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI), were compared to those of subjects in the long-term following biliopancreatic diversion for obesity (BPD), when body weight has been steadily normal for over 1 year and any preoccupation with dieting and weight has been completely abandoned. The overall results suggest that the stable body weight normalization on a completely free diet does confer considerable psychological benefit on obese individuals. On the basis of the EDI results, post-BPD subjects were divided into weight-preoccupied and not-weight-preoccupied individuals. In the not-weight-preoccupied subjects, the psychosocial status and emotional rectivity were closely similar to those observed in lean control persons, whereas the few weight-preoccupied subjects, in spite of completely normal body weight, showed residual body dissatisfaction and personality traits very similar to those of eating-disordered patients.


Obesity Surgery | 1991

Orally-administered Serum Ranitidine Concentration after Biliopancreatic Diversion for Obesity

Gian Franco Adami; Patrizia Gandolfo; Mauro Esposito; Nicola Scopinaro

Stomal ulcer occurs in about 5% of patients after biliopancreatic diversion (BPD). Seven females were given 150 or 300 mg of ranitidine orally. Blood samples found a pharmacologically effective concentration from 0.5 to 8 h after both doses. Intestinal absorption of ranitidine is maintained after BPD.


Surgery Today | 1993

The use of bioelectrical impedance analysis for monitoring body composition changes during nutritional support

Gian Franco Adami; Giuseppe M Marinari; Patrizia Gandolfo; Florio Cocchi; Daniele Friedman; Nicola Scopinaro

Body composition was measuredwith bioelectric impedance analysis (BIA) in 30 patients with protein malnutrition following biliopancreatic diversion. Determinations were carried out prior to, during, and at the completion of intravenous nutritional support when the nutritional parameters had completely reverted to normal. Before treatment, body weight (BW), lean body mass (LBM), and body fat (BF) values were similar to those of controls, whereas the total body sodium/total body potassium (TBNa/TBK) and extracellular mass/body cell mass (ECM/BCM) ratios were considerably higher. During the support, no changes in BW, LBM, and BF were demonstrated, although a sharp decrease of TBNa/TBK and ECM/BCM was observed, thus demostrating improved LBM composition. At the end of parenteral feeding, the BW, LBM, and BF values were similar to those observed before the support, while a further decrease in TBNa/TBK and ECM/BCM demonstrated a recovery towards normal of body composition. The full correspondence between clinical and BIA findings therefore suggests that this method may be valuable for monitoring body composition changes during nutritional support.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2010

Optimization of flow reserve measurement using SPECT technology to evaluate the determinants of coronary microvascular dysfunction in diabetes

Cecilia Marini; Gianpaolo Bezante; Patrizia Gandolfo; Elisa Modonesi; Silvia Morbelli; Angelo DePascale; Daniela Rollando; Davide Maggi; Manuela Albertelli; Riccardo Armonino; Manrico Balbi; Claudio Brunelli; Renzo Cordera; Gianmario Sambuceti

PurposeThe aim of this study was to validate a new method to measure regional myocardial perfusion reserve (MPR) with technetium-labelled tracers in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2).MethodsA total of 40 consecutive DM2 patients without history of coronary artery disease (CAD) and 7 control subjects were recruited. Dipyridamole myocardial blood flow index (MBF) was assessed by measuring first transit counts in the pulmonary artery and myocardial count rate from gated SPECT images using 99mTc-labelled tracers. The corresponding MBF index was estimated 2 h later according to the same procedure. Regional myocardial perfusion reserve (MPR) was defined as the ratio between dipyridamole and baseline MBF using a 17-segment left ventricular (LV) model. Coronary flow reserve (CFR) was estimated by transthoracic contrast echo Doppler monitoring of flow velocity in the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) during the same session.ResultsEstimated MPR was higher in control subjects than in patients (3.36 ± 0.66 vs 1.91 ± 0.61, respectively, p < 0.01). In patients, LAD CFR and LAD MPR were 2.01 ± 0.78 vs 1.93 ± 0.63, respectively (p = ns). The agreement between the two techniques was documented by their close correlation (r = 0.92, p < 0.001) and confirmed by the Bland-Altman analysis. Reversible perfusion defects occurred in 13 patients (32%) who showed similar MPR values as the remaining 27 (2.10 ± 0.71 vs 1.83 ± 0.71, respectively, p = ns). Finally, MPR was closely correlated with age (r = −0.50, p < 0.01) and time elapsed from the diagnosis of DM2 (r = −0.51, p < 0.01).ConclusionLV regional MPR can be accurately estimated with the broadly available single photon technology. Application of this method to DM2 patients documents the presence of a microvascular dysfunction homogeneously distributed throughout the LV walls and most frequently not associated with reversible perfusion defects.


European Surgical Research | 1996

Body Composition and Energy Expenditure in Obese Patients prior to and following Biliopancreatic Diversion for Obesity

Gianfranco Adami; Adelia Campostano; Patrizia Gandolfo; Giuseppe M Marinari; D. Bessarione; Nicola Scopinaro

Body composition and resting energy expenditure (REE) were assessed in 69 obese patients prior to and 1 year following biliopancreatic diversion (BPD). Fat-free mass (FFM) and body fat sizes were very similar to those of nonoperated subjects closely matched for body weight and FFM size. In the BPD subjects, the REE data were high, thus excluding a dilatation of non-energy-consuming extracellular spaces and suggesting an increase in the ratio between the organs and the less metabolically active muscle mass within the FFM.


Obesity Surgery | 1993

Resting Energy Expenditure in Long-Term Postobese Subjects after Weight Normalization by Dieting or Biliopancreatic Diversion

Gian Franco Adami; Adelia Campostano; Domenico Bessarione; Patrizia Gandolfo; Giuseppe M Marinari; Giovanni Lamedica; Nicola Scopinaro

Resting energy expenditure (REE) was measured by indirect calorimetry in three groups of subjects closely matched for body weight (BW) and body composition. Five subjects had reduced from 103 kg (129-90) to normal BW by dieting. Fourteen subjects had normalized their weight (preop 120 kg, from 168 to 100) following biliopancreatic diversion (BPD). All subjects in both groups had essentially maintained a stable weight for at least 2 years before the study. Ten healthy volunteers who had never been obese served as controls. No differences in REE were observed between post-BPD and control subjects, while lower (p < 0.05) values of REE were found in post-diet subjects. A long-lasting reduction of REE, in spite of a normal body composition, might partly account for the very poor long-term results of conventional dietary treatment. The unreduced REE following BPD may contribute, along with the permanent intestinal malabsorption, to the excellent long-term weight maintenance caused by this surgical procedure.


Appetite | 1995

Binge eating following biliopancreatic diversion for obesity

Gian Franco Adami; Patrizia Gandolfo; Florio Cocchi; Beatrice Bauer; Anna Rita Petti; Nicola Scopinaro

The prevalence of binge eating disorder (BED) was assessed in 68 massively obese patients prior to and following biliopancreatic diversion (BPD) for obesity. The eating behavior and the psychological traits were evaluated by the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire and the Eating Disorder Inventory. Since after BPD the body weight regulation is substantially dependent on intestinal absorption, the individuals operated on have to be considered as absolutely free eaters. In this population, 30 patients were affected by BED and in 24 of them binge eating disappeared spontaneously following BPD, highlighting the main role of preoccupation with food, diet and overweight in causing or in maintaining BED.


Obesity Surgery | 1996

Preoperative Eating Behavior and Weight-loss Following Gastric Banding for Obesity

Gian Franco Adami; Patrizia Gandolfo; Anna Meneghelli; Gianetta E; Giovanni Camerini; Nicola Scopinaro

Background and Methods: The relationships between cognitive restraint and the tendency to disinhibition, as assessed by the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire (TFEQ), and the weight loss at 1 year following gastric banding were evaluated. Results: A significant predictability of the TFEQ Disinhibition score on the postoperative weight reduction was observed, while the amount of weight lost was negatively related to the preoperative TFEQ Cognitive Restraint score. Conclusion: It must then be hypothesized that the operated subjects feel a strong aversive stimulus and then they are led to reduce their food consumption only when they lose control and tend to overeat. The discomfort due to proximal gastric pouch distension facilitates the development of food aversion and then both the decrease of food intake and a change in eating behavior. The subjects must therefore be encouraged to adopt an eating style that cannot allow them to avoid such a feeling.

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Eugenio Inglese

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Gianmauro Sacchetti

University of Eastern Piedmont

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