Pietro Fiamingo
University of Padua
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Publication
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Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2003
Pietro Fiamingo; U. Tedeschi; Massimiliano Veroux; U. Cillo; A. Brolese; A. Da Rold; C. Madia; G. Zanus; D.F. D'Amico
Background: The authors present their experience in the laparoscopic management of hepatic cysts and polycystic liver disease (PLD). Methods: Between January 1996 and January 2002, 16 patients underwent laparoscopic liver surgery. Indications were solitary giant cysts (n = 10) and PLD (n = 6). Data were collected retrospectively. Results: Laparoscopic fenestration was completed in 15 patients. Median operative time was 80 min. There was no deaths. Complications occurred in four patients: one patient with a solitary liver cyst experienced diarrhea, while a pleural effusion, a bleeding from the trocar-insertion site, and ascites occurred in three patients with PLD. Median follow-up was 34 months. There was one asymptomatic recurrence (11%) in one patient with a solitary cyst. Two patients with PLD had a symptomatic recurrence of a liver cyst. Conclusion: Laparoscopic fenestration could be the preferred treatment of solitary liver cysts and PLD. Adequate selection of patients and type of cystic liver together with a meticulous surgical technique are recommended.
Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2003
Massimiliano Veroux; Umberto Cillo; Alberto Brolese; Pierfrancesco Veroux; Carmelo Madia; Pietro Fiamingo; Giacomo Zanus; A Buffone; Enrico Gringeri; D.F D’Amico
Therapeutic options for blunt hepatic trauma include both non-operative and operative management. We have reviewed our experience of the management of blunt hepatic trauma, from non-operative to liver transplantation. A total of 72 patients with blunt hepatic injury observed at the first surgical unit of Padua in a 3-year period (1998-2000) were analysed; we also included a patient who had a liver transplant in 1993 for severe liver trauma. Twenty-nine patients (39.7%) were treated conservatively, with a 93% success rate; 60.3% were treated surgically. Suture hepatorraphy was the most common procedure performed (52.3%). Advantages of non-operative management in our experience were the reduced need for transfusion (1.1U versus 4.3U) with 92% of patients not needing transfusion, and a reduced stay in the intensive care unit; there was no liver-related mortality. The overall morbidity in surgical patients was 30%, with 16% liver-related complications. Twelve surgical patients (27.2%) died, with a liver-related mortality of 18.2%. A large number of patients may present with an associated endo-abdominal injury, even in low-grade liver trauma, requiring rapid laparotomy. In high-grade hepatic trauma, the evolution toward liver failure is an indication for liver transplantation.
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2004
Pietro Fiamingo; Massimiliano Veroux; Antonio Da Rold; Silvio Guerriero; Stefano Pariset; Antonino Buffone; Umberto Tedeschi
Splenosis, the autotransplantation of splenic tissue, has been designed to preserve organ functions after splenectomy. We present the first case of laparoscopic resection of a pancreatic splenosis, in a patient who had undergone a splenectomy 31 years before, complaining of abdominal pain and diarrhea. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan showed an enhancing hypervascular 3-cm solid mass in the body of the pancreas, mimicking a pancreatic cancer or a neuroendocrine tumor. A diagnostic laparoscopy was planned, and a 3-cm peripancreatic nodule with a long pedicle was visualized, with many nodules close to the tail of the pancreas and in the greater omentum. They were all resected, and the specimens obtained were immediately sent for frozen-section examination, which confirmed the diagnosis of heterotopic splenic tissue. Splenosis should be included in the differential diagnosis of the pancreatic masses in patients with previous splenic surgery. A hypervascular mass on CT scan should be regarded as an adenocarcinoma of the pancreas until proven otherwise. The possibility of a neuroendocrine tumor mandates an octreotide scan and gastrointestinal hormones dosage. In the unlikely event that all tests may produce equivocal results, a diagnostic laparoscopy is mandatory, in order to obtain an accurate histopathologic diagnosis.
Surgical Laparoscopy Endoscopy & Percutaneous Techniques | 2004
Pietro Fiamingo; Massimiliano Veroux; Umberto Cillo; Stefano M.M. Basso; Antonio Buffone; Davide D'Amico
Biliary cystadenoma is a very rare hepatic neoplasm, accounting for fewer than 5% of cystic neoplasms of the liver; regardless of the various diagnostic modalities, such a lesion may be difficult to distinguish preoperatively from a cystadenocarcinoma. Although a diagnosis of cystadenoma during open hepatic surgery demands a complete surgical resection, there are few reports describing the correct approach to such lesions after a laparoscopic approach. This article presents the first case series of incidental cystadenoma after laparoscopic surgery for hepatic cystic lesions. One patient with a polycystic liver disease treated with a laparoscopic enucleation of the larger cyst declined the reintervention after the diagnosis of cystadenoma; she had no recurrence at follow-up. One patient with a large simple hepatic cyst laparoscopically enucleated had no recurrence at the 18-month follow-up. In one patient, there was a high suspicion of recurrence of cystadenoma after the laparoscopic fenestration of a large cyst, but a histopathological specimen obtained after the open surgical resection could not confirm any signs of cystadenoma. The incidental finding of biliary cystadenoma after laparoscopic fenestration of a cystic hepatic lesion requires an open hepatic resection. When a complete laparoscopic enucleation of the cyst may be assured, a strict clinical, biochemical, and radiologic follow-up could be considered as the definitive treatment, demanding the surgical intervention only in case of recurrence or high suspicion for malignancy.
Acta Chirurgica Belgica | 2004
Veroux M; Imerio Angriman; Cesare Ruffolo; Pietro Fiamingo; Caglià P; Carmelo Madia; Cannizzaro Ma; Davide D'Amico
Abstract Psoas abscess is a rare complication of Crohn’s disease. Methods and materials: We evaluated the incidence of psoas abscess on 312 patients with Crohn’s disease, seen at our institution between 1992-2001. Results: We encountered three cases of psoas abscess (0.9%). One patient was managed with ileocolic resection and immediate anastomosis, while in two patients a percutaneous drainage was first performed and then, after 12 days of total parenteral nutrition, a resection of the diseased bowel with immediate reconstruction was carried out. Conclusions: A correction of the nutritional deficiencies is mandatory. Percutaneous computed-tomography guided drainage of the abscess with intestinal resection with immediate anastomosis, performed after a parenteral hyperalimentation, should be the method of choice in the management of such patients.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2005
Massimiliano Veroux; Pietro Fiamingo; Umberto Cillo; U. Tedeschi; Alberto Brolese; P. Veroux; Stefano M.M. Basso; A. Buffone; Davide F. D’Amico
BackgroundThis study aimed to evaluate the incidence of cystadenoma diagnosis in a series of laparoscopic treatments for nonparasitic liver cysts, as well as its management.MethodsFrom 1996 to 2004, 26 patients with a nonparasitic cyst of the liver were selected for laparoscopic liver surgery. Solitary nonparasitic liver cysts were, whenever feasible, completely enucleated.ResultsIn four patients, the histopathologic examination showed a cystadenoma. Three patients with 13, 9, and 12-cm cysts, respectively, had undergone complete enucleation of the lesion, with no evidence of recurrence in the follow-up visit. One patient with multicystic liver experienced a recurrence and required an open hepatic resection.ConclusionsWhen a complete laparoscopic enucleation of the cyst can be ensured, a strict follow-up assessment should be considered as the definitive treatment, with surgical intervention demanded only in the case of recurrence or high suspicion for malignancy.
Surgery Today | 2005
Pietro Fiamingo; Massimiliano Veroux; Enrico Gringeri; Roberto Mencarelli; Pierfrancesco Veroux; Carmelo Madia; Davide D'Amico
The differential diagnosis of cystic neoformations in the pancreas is challenging. We report a case of a true solitary cyst of the pancreas in a 26-year old woman. Abdominal magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography showed a unilocular neoformation in the head of the pancreas, without obstruction of Wirsungs duct. We excised the cyst and performed Roux-en-Y loop pancreaticojejunostomy, but the patient suffered recurrent acute pancreatitis from Wirsungs duct stenosis. Thus, a new Roux-en-Y loop pancreaticojejunostomy was successfully done 6 months later. Histologically, the cyst was lined by cuboidal epithelium, immunohistochemically positive to anti-carbohydrate antigen 19-9 antibodies. To our knowledge, only 11 cases of solitary true cyst of the pancreas in adults have been reported, so the characteristics of this unusual entity are not well known. We propose a scheme for the differential diagnosis of cystic neoformations of the pancreas, starting from the histopathological definition of a true solitary cyst.
World Journal of Surgery | 2007
Giovanni Zaninotto; Giuseppe Portale; Mario Costantini; Pietro Fiamingo; Sabrina Rampado; Emanuela Guirroli; Loredana Nicoletti; Ermanno Ancona
Chirurgia italiana | 2004
Da Rold Ar; Guerriero S; Pietro Fiamingo; Pariset S; Massimiliano Veroux; Pilon F; Tosato S; Ruffolo C; Tedeschi U
Transplantation Proceedings | 2004
Massimiliano Veroux; C Puliatti; Pietro Fiamingo; D Cappello; M Macarone; D Puliatti; D Vizcarra; M Gagliano; Pierfrancesco Veroux
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Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
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