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Dive into the research topics where Roberta Gobbi is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberta Gobbi.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2008

Subciliary versus swinging eyelid approach to the orbital floor

Giacomo De Riu; Silvio Mario Meloni; Roberta Gobbi; Damiano Soma; A. Baj; Antonio Tullio

In this retrospective study, the authors compare the outcomes of two different approaches to the orbital floor: the classic subciliary versus the transconjunctival plus lateral canthotomy (swinging eyelid). Forty-five patients who underwent orbital surgery (47 approaches) for different indications (orbital fractures, correction of Graves exophthalmos, tumours of the internal orbit and correction of enophthalmos in secondary trauma) were placed in two groups, depending on the approach. The long-term effects of the incisions, the outcome of the approach and the complications were recorded and compared. The minimum follow-up for inclusion in the study was 1 year. Twenty-three orbits underwent subciliary incision, and 24 underwent swinging eyelid. No ectropion or entropion was seen in any patient. For the swinging eyelid approach, complications included three cases (12.5%) of canthal malposition; for the subciliary approach, five cases (21.14%) of lagophthalmos and 10 visible scars were observed. Our findings show the advantages of the swinging eyelid: better aesthetic results, the same or greater exposure of the orbital floor and the caudal part of the lateral and medial walls, shorter surgical time (sutureless) and a less extended scar. Although in our experience this approach is preferable in orbital surgery, some indications for the subciliary still remain.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2013

Cheek mucosa: A versatile donor site of myomucosal flaps. Technical and functional considerations

Olindo Massarelli; A. Baj; Roberta Gobbi; Damiano Soma; S.P. Marelli; Giacomo De Riu; Antonio Tullio; Aldo Bruno Giannì

Reconstruction of moderate‐sized mucosal defects of the oral cavity/oropharynx represents a surgical challenge. The most widely used reconstructive techniques are skin grafts, local or regional pedicled flaps, and free flaps, but they do not provide mucosal sensitivity, mobility, volume, or texture similar to that of native tissue. The cheek myomucosal flaps seem to provide “ideal reconstruction” because they carry a thin, mobile, well‐vascularized, and sensitive tissue, like those excised or lost. The purpose of this retrospective analysis was to evaluate the indications for the advantages and disadvantages of 6 types of buccinator myomucosal flaps which are possible to raise from the cheek mucosa.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2008

Three-dimensional primary reconstruction of anterior mouth floor and ventral tongue using the ‘trilobed’ buccinator myomucosal island flap

Olindo Massarelli; Roberta Gobbi; Maria Teresa Raho; Antonio Tullio

Three-dimensional reconstruction of the anterior mouth floor and ventral tongue after ablative surgery can be achieved using several techniques. The ideal reconstruction should be accomplished with the same or similar type of tissue, and cheek axial myomucosal flaps based on the branches of facial or internal maxillary arteries seem ideal for this purpose. From March 2005 to May 2007, 23 patients underwent cheek axial myomucosal flap reconstruction after oral cancer surgical ablation. Thanks to their thinness and pliability, these flaps were frequently shaped to obtain an accurate reconstruction. According to Whetzels hypothesis, an intraoral flap designed to include the axial vessel of one area can safely carry the mucosa of a neighbouring vascular area. The authors describe a large buccinator myomucosal island flap based on the branches of the facial artery and formed in a trilobed shape in order to capture the adjacent buccal mucosal angiosome from the internal maxillary artery. The flap provided the correct anatomical oral reconstruction for the anterior mouth floor and ventral tongue. The function of the tongue, oral intake and mastication were not impaired. The trilobed buccinator myomucosal island flap is a suitable option for the three-dimensional reconstruction of the anterior mouth floor and ventral tongue.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2008

Delayed Iliac Abscess as An Unusual Complication of an Iliac Bone Graft in an Orthognathic Case

G. De Riu; S.M. Meloni; Maria Teresa Raho; Roberta Gobbi; Antonio Tullio

The reconstruction of large maxillofacial defects generally requires harvesting bone from extra-oral sites. The main source of autogenous bone is the iliac crest. This donor site is used to obtain bone for augmentation in orthopaedic surgery, neurosurgery, and oral and maxillofacial surgery, where the main indications are secondary and tertiary osteoplasty in patients with cleft-lip and palate, reconstruction of bony defects after operations for tumours, and augmentation of severe atrophy of the alveolar crest in preprosthetic surgery. A review of the literature on complications following bone harvesting from the anterior iliac crest reveals persistent pain, nerve injury, haemorrhage, limping, persistent gait abnormalities, conspicuous scarring, bone contour alteration, infection, fracture, meralgia paraesthetica, peritonitis, and herniation. The authors report an unusual complication: a huge iliac abscess that appeared 4 years after bimaxillary surgery involving iliac bone grafts.


Microsurgery | 2013

Facial artery myomucosal free flap for cheek mucosa reconstruction: A case report

Olindo Massarelli; Roberta Gobbi; Andrea Biglio; Antonio Tullio

Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the buccal mucosa is an aggressive form of oral cancer. It tends to spread to adjacent tissues and often metastasizes to occult cervical node. There are multiple techniques for cheek reconstruction after tumor removal, including temporalis myocutaneous and temporoparietal fascial pedicled flaps and a forearm free flap. In this report, a case of a 76‐year‐old man with SCC of the left cheek mucosa and extending to the posterolateral superior alveolar ridge is presented. The patient underwent radical excision of the tumor, omolateral modified radical neck dissection (MRND‐III), and contralateral selective neck dissection (levels I–III). Reconstruction was performed with a facial artery myomucosal free flap. The flap was transplanted successfully, and there were no donor or recipient site complications. This technique is a good reconstructive option because of its adherence to the plastic surgery principle of “replacing like with like” and its minimal donor‐site morbidity.


European Journal of Plastic Surgery | 2017

Evaluation of discriminative sensibility recovery in patients with buccinator myomucosal flap oral cavity reconstructions

Luigi Angelo Vaira; Olindo Massarelli; Roberta Gobbi; Damiano Soma; Giovanni Dell’Aversana Orabona; Pasquale Piombino; Giacomo De Riu

BackgroundSensitive restoration is the primary aim of oral reconstructive surgery. Discriminative sensibility is an important index of innervation density of a tissue. Instruments normally used to assess this type of skin sensibility are bulky and difficult to introduce in the oral cavity, even in healthy patients with a normal mouth opening. This study was intended to evaluate the recovery of static and dynamic two-point discrimination sensitivity of the reconstructed areas of the oral cavity.MethodsSurgical staples, calibrated in predetermined width (from 1 to 30 mm) and introduced in the oral cavity with a Mayo needle holder, were used to evaluate two-point discrimination recovery in 57 patients who underwent reconstructive surgery with buccinator myomucosal flaps. Tests were conducted both on the reconstructive flap and on the non-operated contralateral side. The latter also included the non-operated cheek.ResultsAll of the considered flaps showed a recovery of tactile sensitivity. The overall average discriminative threshold value assessed on this sample was 9.11 ± 2.46 mm for the static and 6.56 ± 2.46 mm for the dynamic.ConclusionsThe use of surgical staples allows easy assessment of tactile sensitivity in all oral cavity areas, even in operated patients who often present lockjaw or microstomia. In our series, buccinator myomucosal flaps demonstrate a much greater recovery of the sensation compared to results found in the literature on fasciocutaneous free flaps, even those reinnervated.Level of Evidence: Level III, prognostic study


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2014

Chimeric lateral supramalleolar artery perforator fibula free flap in the reconstruction of composite head and neck defects.

Olindo Massarelli; Roberta Gobbi; Andrea Biglio; Damiano Soma; Antonio Tullio

Summary: The authors evaluate the use of an osteomyocutaneous fibula free flap, combined in a chimeric fashion, with a lateral supramalleolar flap, in 10 patients with composite head and neck defects. All reconstructions were performed successfully. With the exception of one patient who died after disease recurrence, all patients were decannulated and resumed an oral diet. Speech intelligibility was good in seven of 10 patients. Dental implants were used in two of 10 patients, with a total of 10 fixtures placed successfully. The donor site healed without complications in all except one case, where necrosis of the skin graft occurred with fungal infection. The chimeric lateral supramalleolar artery perforator fibula free flap may be a valid option for maximizing the quality of life in patients with composite oromandibular defects. CLINICAL QUESTION/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic, IV.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2008

O.218 The cheek: donor site with many reconstructive alternatives

Olindo Massarelli; A. Baj; D. Ali-Youssef; Roberta Gobbi; M.T. Raho; Aldo Bruno Giannì; E.A. Tullio

Three-dimensional reconstruction of medium-size defects of oral cavity after oncologic ablative surgery or traumatic lesions, is a difficult aim. Since the ‘ideal reconstruction’ should be accomplished with same or similar kind of tissue, we think that cheek myo-mucosal flaps based on the branches of facial or internal maxillary arteries can better provide for this purpose.


Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2017

Rational and simplified nomenclature for buccinator myomucosal flaps

Olindo Massarelli; Luigi Angelo Vaira; Andrea Biglio; Roberta Gobbi; Pasquale Piombino; Giacomo De Riu

BackgroundReconstruction of moderate-sized mucosal defects of the oral cavity or oropharynx represents a surgical challenge. Buccinator myomucosal flaps seem to provide “ideal reconstruction” of oral/oropharyngeal defects because they carry a thin, mobile, well-vascularized, and sensitive tissue, like that excised or lost. Nevertheless, these flaps are not immediately popular because of confusion surrounding the complex terminology used to name them.MethodsAfter a retrospective study on our experience and a literature review, the authors propose a new rational and simplified nomenclature for the classification of buccinator myomucosal flaps, which clarifies the source vessel, the composition of the flap, and the type of transfer.ResultsAccording to this nomenclature, six types of buccinator myomucosal flaps are described.ConclusionsThis proposed nomenclature may bring a consensus on the classification of buccinator myomucosal flaps and can help their spread.


Case reports in pathology | 2016

Perivascular Epithelioid Cell Tumour with Intraorbital Location: Report of a Case and Review of the Literature.

Idania Lubo; Ileana Fermín; Olindo Massarelli; Roberta Gobbi; Paolo Cossu Rocca

The Perivascular Epithelioid Cell tumours (PEComas) are rare mesenchymal neoplasms recognized as entity by the World Health Organization. The tumour cells have an uncertain origin and are characterized by distinctive histological and immunohistochemical features. We report a case of PEComa occurring as intraorbital lesion in a 47-year-old man. We found only two other cases described in the literature and we considered all three cases together in order of histology, immunohistochemistry, and clinical outcome. We found a strict histological overlapping and quite similar immunohistological results. All three cases showed a favourable clinical course probably related to small size of tumours (<5 cm), low mitotic rate (<2 mitoses in 50 HPF), and absence of necrosis.

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A. Baj

University of Milan

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G. De Riu

University of Sassari

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