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Dive into the research topics where Pierluigi Longatti is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierluigi Longatti.


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.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2007

Malignant progression in pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma: Personal experience and review of the literature

Elisabetta Marton; Alberto Feletti; Enrico Orvieto; Pierluigi Longatti

Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA) is a rare primary low-grade astrocytic tumor, recently classified as a neuroglial tumor. It generally occurs in children and young adults and shows benign behaviour (WHO II), although an anaplastic variant and malignant potential have been described. Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytomas with malignant transformation have been reported in three out of eight patients operated on for this type of tumor in our department in the last 15 years. The three patients were two adult women and a child, the primary tumors were located in the cortex of the right temporal lobe, and treatment consisted of complete surgical resection. Histological examination revealed simple PXA in two patients and a PXA with anaplastic foci in the other. Mean recurrence time was 5.7 years, with the original xanthoastrocytoma evolving to glioblastoma in two cases and anaplastic astrocytoma in the third. All three patients underwent a second operation, followed by adjuvant therapies. Two died from tumor progression and one from brain edema after intracerebral haemorrhage. A review of the available PXA literature dating back to 1979 revealed 16 cases of primary anaplastic astrocytoma and 21 cases of PXA with malignant transformation. Our experience adds three more cases of malignant transformations, outlining once again the potential malignancy of pleomorphic xanthoastrocytomas and the fact that prognosis in these cases is the same as for primary anaplastic astrocytoma and glioblastoma. Analysis of glioneuronal markers, Ki67 and p53 in all pleomorphic xanthoastrocytomas did not prove to be a discriminating factor to identify a subgroup of xanthoastrocytomas prone to malignancy. Accordingly, these tumors demand close long-term clinical and radiological follow-up.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2007

Activation of endogenous neural stem cells in the adult human brain following subarachnoid hemorrhage

D Sgubin; E Aztiria; Alessandro Perin; Pierluigi Longatti; G. Leanza

In the adult human brain, the presence of neural stem cells has been documented in the subgranular layer of the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus and in the subventricular zone of the lateral ventricles. Neurogenesis has also been reported in rodent models of ischemic stroke, traumatic brain injury, epileptic seizures, and intracerebral or subarachnoid hemorrhage. However, only sparse information is available about the occurrence of neurogenesis in the human brain under similar pathological conditions. In the present report, we describe neural progenitor cell proliferation in the brain of patients suffering from subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) resulting from ruptured aneurysm. Ten cerebral samples from both SAH and control patients obtained, respectively, during aneurysm clipping and deep brain tumor removal were analyzed by reverse transcription followed by polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) and/or immunohistochemistry (IHC). In tissue specimens from SAH patients, RT‐PCR and IHC revealed the expression of a variety of markers consistent with CNS progenitor cells, including nestin, vimentin, SOX‐2, and Musashi1 and ‐2. In the same specimens, double immunohistochemistry followed by confocal analysis revealed that Musashi2 consistently colocalized with the proliferation marker Ki67. By contrast, no such gene or protein expression profiles were detected in any of the control specimens. Thus, activation of neural progenitor cell proliferation may occur in adult human brain following subarachnoid hemorrhage, possibly contributing to the promotion of spontaneous recovery, in this pathological condition.


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.


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 2006

Aquaporin(s) expression in choroid plexus tumours

Pierluigi Longatti; Luca Basaldella; Enrico Orvieto; Angelo Paolo Dei Tos; Andrea Martinuzzi

Objective: It was the aim of this study to investigate the pattern of aquaporin 1 (AQP1) expression in normal and neoplastic choroid plexus, with specific reference to the association with communicating hydrocephalus or liquoral cysts. Second, to infer a new view on the cerebrospinal fluid plexus production and on the etiology of the cysts and communicating hydrocephalus occasionally associated with choroid plexus papillomas. Materials and Methods: Nineteen paraffin-embedded specimens, 10 of normal choroid plexus and 9 of choroid plexus tumours, were immunostained with a monoclonal antibody raised against the intracellular C-terminal AQP1 epitope. Results were analysed in terms of intensity and intracellular distribution of immunostaining and in terms of number of stained cells; they were considered in light of the clinical association with hydrocephalus or liquoral cysts. Results: AQP1 was heavily expressed in the apical side of the choroid epithelium in normal plexus specimens. Choroid plexus papillomas showed a very heterogeneous pattern of AQP1 expression. Immunostaining was absent in the case of choroid plexus carcinoma. Very strong to strong and diffuse AQP1 expression in large to very large papillomas was associated with liquoral cysts or communicating hydrocephalus. Conclusions: AQP1 expression characterizes normal choroid plexus and plexus papillomas. Intensity and diffusion of AQP1 expression together with the size of the tumour mass are somewhat predictive of communicating hydrocephalus or liquoral cyst, lesions possibly caused by a disturbance of cerebrospinal fluid homeostasis.


Pituitary | 2004

Symptomatic Rathke's Cleft Cysts: A Radiological, Surgical and Pathological Review

Domenico Billeci; Elisabetta Marton; Massimo Tripodi; Enrico Orvieto; Pierluigi Longatti

Rathkes cleft cyst is a non neoplastic lesion remnant of the Rathkes poutch. Symptomatic cysts must be surgically treated. There are no specific neuroradiological features for this lesion. We present a series of 14 symptomatic Rathkes cleft cysts treated with transphenoidal endoscopic technique, and we correlate the MRI intensity images with the intraoperative findings, the pathological analysis, the growth pattern and the recurrence tendency, to understand wether there is a better way to recognize these lesions, especially the asyntomatic ones, that, despite other neoplastic cysts, colud only be observed with a MRI follow up.


Neurosurgery | 2009

Primary obstruction of the fourth ventricle outlets: neuroendoscopic approach and anatomic description.

Pierluigi Longatti; Alessandro Fiorindi; Andrea Martinuzzi; Alberto Feletti

OBJECTIVEPrimary obstruction of the foramina of Magendie and Luschka is an uncommon and still unclear cause of noncommunicating hydrocephalus. The aim of this work is the description, for the first time, of the inner aspect of these velar obstructions of the fourth ventricle outlets and the demonstration of the efficacy of neuroendoscopic treatment. METHODSOf 240 hydrocephalic patients treated in our institution with endoscopic third ventriculostomy, a subgroup of 10 cases with closure of the fourth ventricular outlets without associated Chiari malformation and syringomyelia was selected. In all of these cases, a transaqueductal endoscopic navigation of the fourth ventricle was performed, and the obstructed outlets were inspected. All of the clinical data and, in particular, the videotape records of endoscopic operations, as well as the cine-magnetic resonance imaging scans, were reviewed to evaluate their patency status. RESULTSVarious degrees of stenosis were found endoscopically: restriction of the Magendie contour with thick and opaque membrane, transparent spider web-like membrane, and dense membrane with fissures acting as valves. Endoscopic third ventriculostomy was effective in almost all patients, although we noticed an unforeseen high incidence of closure of the stoma. The restored normal cerebrospinal fluid flux after ventriculocisternostomy and magendieplasty was demonstrated by comparative study of cerebrospinal fluid flow measurements by cine-magnetic resonance imaging. CONCLUSIONThis report demonstrates the effectiveness of neuroendoscopic third ventriculostomy as well as magendiestomy in cases of tetraventricular hydrocephalus attributable to primary obstruction of the outlets of the fourth ventricle and, for the first time, presents direct images of various types of outlet obstructive pathology.


Childs Nervous System | 1991

Autologous hemodonation in the corrective surgery of craniostenosis

Pierluigi Longatti; F Paccagnella; S Agostini; A Nieri; Alessandro Carteri

Homologous transfusions are mandatory in most surgical procedures for correcting craniofacial malformations in infancy. A program of preoperative and intraoperative auto-hemodonation was developed and carried out in eleven infants. Although homologous transfusion could have been avoided in only 7 patients, we think that further experiences and minor corrections of our program may improve these results.


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 2004

Choroid plexus and aquaporin-1 : A novel explanation of cerebrospinal fluid production

Pierluigi Longatti; Luca Basaldella; Enrico Orvieto; Alessandro Fiorindi; Alessandro Carteri

Aquaporins are selective water channel proteins that play a central role in the homeostasis of human body water. The choroid plexus (CP) is considered to be the main cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-producing structure. In this study, six specimens of normal human CP obtained during surgery were analyzed by immunohistochemistry techniques for aquaporin-1 (AQP1) expression and distribution. Intense, uniformly distributed AQP1 immunostaining was observable in the apical but not the basolateral side of cuboid cells of the CP. Moreover, this polarized expression of AQP1 was weakly detectable in the endothelial cells of choroid microvessels and, with a different pattern, in the cells lining the tubules shaped into crypts. Selective AQP1 expression on the surface of the normal human CP might explain the role of CSF production by this complex structure.


Journal of Pineal Research | 2007

Ventricular cerebrospinal fluid melatonin concentrations investigated with an endoscopic technique

Pierluigi Longatti; Alessandro Perin; V. Rizzo; Stefano Comai; Pietro Giusti; Carlo Virgilio Luigi Costa

Abstract:  The role of melatonin in humans still remains unclear. Uncertainties persist about its effects on neurophysiology regarding its levels in human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), as the bulk of knowledge on this subject mainly derives from studies conducted on animals. In this study, CSF was micro‐sampled with a simple, new method from each cerebral ventricle of patients undergoing neuroendoscopy for hydrocephalus. Our purpose was to measure CSF melatonin levels and determine possible differences in its concentration among various significant areas in the cerebral ventricles (e.g. pineal recess, pituitary recess, lateral ventricle, fourth ventricle) and lumbar cistern. From 2002 to 2004, 10 hydrocephalic patients were operated on using a neuroendoscopic technique. The CSF specimens were investigated for melatonin concentrations (free plus protein‐bound) after deproteinization; the measurement technique was high‐performance liquid chromatography. The preliminary data obtained with this endoscopic micro‐sampling technique (applied to humans for the first time) suggest that melatonin is more concentrated within the ventricles and its highest concentration is found in the third ventricle (IIIv), although the difference detected between the CSF of the IIIv and that of the pineal recess was not significant.

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Michelangelo Gangemi

University of Naples Federico II

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