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Dive into the research topics where Roberto Fiori is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberto Fiori.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2007

Nucleoplasty in the Treatment of Lumbar Diskogenic Back Pain: One Year Follow-Up

Salvatore Masala; Francesco Massari; Sebastiano Fabiano; Antonio Ursone; Roberto Fiori; Francesco Saverio Pastore; Giovanni Simonetti

PurposeThe spine is an important source of pain and disability, affecting two thirds of adults at some time in their lives. Treatment in these patients is mainly conservative medical management, based on medication, physical therapy, behavioral management, and psychotherapy, surgery being limited to elective cases with neurologic deficits. This study was carried out to evaluate the efficacy of percutaneous nucleoplasty in patients affected by painful diskal protrusions and contained herniations.MethodsFrom February 2004 to October 2005, 72 patients (48 men, 24 women; mean age 48 years) affected by lumbar disk herniation were treated with nucleoplasty coblation. All patients were evaluated clinically and with radiography and MRI in order to confirm the presence of lumbalgic and/or sciatalgic pain, in the absence of major neurologic deficit and with lack of response after 6 weeks of conservative management.ResultsAverage preprocedural pain level for all patients was 8.2 (on a visual analog scale of 1 to 10), while the average pain level at 12 months follow-up was 4.1. At the 1 year evaluation, 79% of patients demonstrated a statistically significant improvement in numeric pain scores (p < 0.01): 17% (12 patients) were completely satisfied with complete resolution of symptoms, and 62% (43 patients) obtained a good result.ConclusionOur data indicate that nucleoplasty coblation is a promising treatment option for patients with symptomatic disk protrusion and herniation who present with lumbalgic and/or sciatalgic pain, have failed conservative therapies, and are not considered candidates for open surgery.


Journal of Chemotherapy | 2004

Vertebroplasty and Kyphoplasty in the Treatment of Malignant Vertebral Fractures.

Salvatore Masala; P. Lunardi; Roberto Fiori; Francesco Massari; Antonio Ursone; G. Simonetti

Summary The purpose of this retrospective study was to assess the effectiveness and safety of Percutaneous Vertebroplasty and Kyphoplasty, in the treatment of pain deriving from neoplastic vertebral compression fractures (VCF). We treated 33 oncologic patients with these new techniques (2 pts with aggressive haemangiomas, 8 pts with myelomas and 23 pts with metastases) suffering from severe motion pain in the back, notwithstanding conservative treatment with medication and corset therapy, in the absence of neurological signs. In 3 selected patients we associated radiofrequency heat ablation with vertebroplasty in the treatment of metastases. The aim is to destroy tumor tissue and to thrombose the paravertebral and intravertebral venous plexus before stabilizing the vertebra.


Eating and Weight Disorders-studies on Anorexia Bulimia and Obesity | 2006

Amenorrhea after weight recover in anorexia nervosa: Role of body composition and endocrine abnormalities

Fabrizio Jacoangeli; Salvatore Masala; F. Staar Mezzasalma; Roberto Fiori; A. Martinetti; B. Novi; S. Pierangeli; G. Marchetti; G. Simonetti; M. R. Bollea

Hypothalamic amenorrhea in anorexia nervosa often precedes weight loss and may persist after re-feeding and restoration of a stable normal weight. Aim: To assess the rate of persistent amenorrhea in anorexia nervosa (AN) after re-feeding and the relations of this condition with body composition changes and other endocrine parameters. Methods: A cohort of 250 female outpatients was studied to assess persistent amenorrhea prevalence after stable weight recovery. Among these, we selected 20 AN female patients (age 16.5–35), 10 with amenorrhea (group 1) and 10 with normal menses (group 2). We collected data such as age, age at menarche, age at onset of AN, actual body mass index (BMI) and at onset of AN, duration of disease. Physical activity has been evaluated as minute per day. The following data were obtained: prolactin, growth hormone, estradiol, luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, thyroid stimulating hormone, free triiodothyronine, free thyroxine, free urinary cortisol, serum calcium and phosphates, urinary calcium, phosphaturia and alkaline phosphatase. Body composition was assessed with a dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA). Results: Thirty-five patients (14%) over a cohort of 250 where still amenorrhoic after stable weight recovery. No significance was found in the evaluation of blood biochemical tests of the 2 groups. Free urinary cortisol was significantly higher in amenorrhoic patients (58.14±0.4 vs 15.91±9.5), p=0.02. The analysis of body composition has shown a per-centage of fat of 22.23±5.32% in group 1 and of 26.03%±9.1% in group 2, respectively, showing no significant differences. Amenorrhoic patients carried on doing a significantly heavier physical activity than eumenorrhoic patients. Conclusions: An adequate body composition and a well represented fat mass are certainly a necessary but not sufficient condition for the return of the menstrual cycle. Such menstrual cycle recovery would probably need other conditions at present being studied and evaluated to occur, such as secretory patterns of leptin and its correlations with adrenal function.


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2013

Accuracy of small-intestine contrast ultrasonography, compared with computed tomography enteroclysis, in characterizing lesions in patients with Crohn's disease.

E Calabrese; F. Zorzi; S. Onali; Elisa Stasi; Roberto Fiori; Simonetta Prencipe; Antonino Bella; C. Petruzziello; G. Condino; E. Lolli; Giovanni Simonetti; L. Biancone; Francesco Pallone

BACKGROUND & AIMS Small-intestine contrast ultrasonography (SICUS) is a radiation-free technique that can detect intestinal damage in patients with Crohns disease (CD). We evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of SICUS in determining the site, extent, and complications of CD, compared with computed tomography (CT) enteroclysis as the standard. METHODS We performed a retrospective analysis of data from 59 patients with CD evaluated by SICUS and CT enteroclysis 3 months apart, between January 2007 and April 2012. We evaluated disease site (based on bowel wall thickness), extent of lesions, and presence of complications (stenosis, prestenotic dilation, abscess, or fistulas) using CT enteroclysis as the standard. Sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy were calculated. We determined the correlations in maximum wall thickness and disease extent in the small bowel between results from SICUS and CT enteroclysis. RESULTS SICUS identified the site of small bowel CD with 98% sensitivity, 67% specificity, and 95% diagnostic accuracy; it identified the site of colon CD with 83% sensitivity, 97.5% specificity, and 93% diagnostic accuracy. Results from SICUS and CT enteroclysis correlated in determination of bowel wall thickness (rho, 0.79) and disease extent (rho, 0.89; P < .0001 for both). SICUS detected ileal stenosis with 95.5% sensitivity, 80% specificity, and 91.5% diagnostic accuracy, and prestenotic dilation with 87% sensitivity, 67% specificity, and 75% diagnostic accuracy. SICUS detected abscesses with 78% sensitivity, 100% specificity, and 97% diagnostic accuracy, and fistulas with 78.5% sensitivity, 95.5% specificity, and 91.5% diagnostic accuracy. CONCLUSIONS SICUS identified lesions and complications in patients with CD with high levels of sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy compared with CT enteroclysis. SICUS might be used as an imaging tool as part of a focused diagnostic examination of patients with CD.


Seminars in Interventional Radiology | 2010

Diagnostic and Therapeutic Joint Injections

Salvatore Masala; Roberto Fiori; Dario Alberto Bartolucci; Matteo Mammucari; Giorgios Angelopoulos; Francesco Massari; Giovanni Simonetti

Joint injection is a useful tool in the diagnosis of intra-articular pathology that may improve diagnostic performance of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Historically, conventional arthrography under fluoroscopy was the first method to be used to image indirectly the intra-articular soft tissues, but with the advent of CT, CT arthrography offered better soft tissue depiction. The development of conventional MR allowed even better visualization of soft tissues, and in the early 1990s, MR arthrography surpassed CT arthrography in popularity. Joint injections may also be performed for therapeutic reasons with different drugs, such as corticosteroids, anesthetics, or hyaluronic acid, which have been shown to provide pain relief in various circumstances. In this article, the technical principles for joint injection of the shoulder, knee, elbow, hip, ankle, and wrist, used for therapeutic or diagnostic reasons, are discussed. Indications, expected benefits, and risks are also analyzed.


BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2013

Single-row vs. double-row arthroscopic rotator cuff repair: clinical and 3 Tesla MR arthrography results

Cosimo Tudisco; Salvatore Bisicchia; Eugenio Savarese; Roberto Fiori; Dario Alberto Bartolucci; Salvatore Masala; Giovanni Simonetti

BackgroundArthroscopic rotator cuff repair has become popular in the last few years because it avoids large skin incisions and deltoid detachment and dysfunction. Earlier arthroscopic single-row (SR) repair methods achieved only partial restoration of the original footprint of the tendons of the rotator cuff, while double-row (DR) repair methods presented many biomechanical advantages and higher rates of tendon-to-bone healing. However, DR repair failed to demonstrate better clinical results than SR repair in clinical trials. MR imaging at 3 Tesla, especially with intra-articular contrast medium (MRA), showed a better diagnostic performance than 1.5 Tesla in the musculoskeletal setting. The objective of this study was to retrospectively evaluate the clinical and 3 Tesla MRA results in two groups of patients operated on for a medium-sized full-thickness rotator cuff tear with two different techniques.MethodsThe first group consisted of 20 patients operated on with the SR technique; the second group consisted of 20 patients operated on with the DR technique. All patients were evaluated at a minimum of 3 years after surgery. The primary end point was the re-tear rate at 3 Tesla MRA. The secondary end points were the Constant-Murley Scale (CMS), the Simple Shoulder Test (SST) scores, surgical time and implant expense.ResultsThe mean follow-up was 40 months in the SR group and 38.9 months in the DR group. The mean postoperative CMS was 70 in the SR group and 68 in the DR group. The mean SST score was 9.4 in the SR group and 10.1 in the DR group. The re-tear rate was 60% in the SR group and 25% in the DR group. Leakage of the contrast medium was observed in all patients.ConclusionsTo the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on 3 Tesla MRA in the evaluation of two different techniques of rotator cuff repair. DR repair resulted in a statistically significant lower re-tear rate, with longer surgical time and higher implant expense, despite no difference in clinical outcomes. We think that leakage of the contrast medium is due to an incomplete tendon-to-bone sealing, which is not a re-tear. This phenomenon could have important medicolegal implications.Level of evidence III. Treatment study: Case–control study.


Tumori | 2004

PERCUTANEOUS KYPHOPLASTY: INDICATIONS AND TECHNIQUE IN THE TREATMENT OF VERTEBRAL FRACTURES FROM MYELOMA

Salvatore Masala; Roberto Fiori; Francesco Massari; Maria Cantonetti; Massimiliano Postorino; Giovanni Simonetti

Aims and background The purpose of our research was to assess the effectiveness and safety of percutaneous kyphoplasty, the new method of treatment for pain deriving from vertebral compression fractures due to myeloma. Methods We treated 3 patients with pain refractory to conventional medical therapy (analgesics, bed-rest, bracing with orthopedic devices for more than 4 weeks), localized in the lumbar area, painful to the touch and in the absence of neurological signs. Results The method demonstrated a swift pain relief associated with an evident augmentation in the resistance and restoration of the vertebral bodys physiological shape. Polymethylmethacrylate leaks were not observed in the epidural or foraminal area, nor were complications such as pulmonary embolism for involvement of the venous plexus or related to phenomenon of infections due to the procedure, or toxicity due to the polymethylmethacrylate. Conclusions Kyphoplasty was found to be an effective alternative, simple and safe in the treatment of vertebral collapse consequent to multiple myeloma. The same injection of polymethylmethacrylate can be done before the radiotherapy treatment, thereby synergizing its delayed analgesic action to pain, or after the failure or in the case of local recurrence.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2012

Small intestine contrast ultrasonography vs computed tomography enteroclysis for assessing ileal Crohn's disease

S. Onali; E Calabrese; C. Petruzziello; F. Zorzi; G. Sica; Roberto Fiori; M. Ascolani; E. Lolli; G. Condino; Giampiero Palmieri; Giovanni Simonetti; Francesco Pallone; L. Biancone

AIM To compare computed tomography enteroclysis (CTE) vs small intestine contrast ultrasonography (SICUS) for assessing small bowel lesions in Crohns disease (CD), when using surgical pathology as gold standard. METHODS From January 2007 to July 2008, 15 eligible patients undergoing elective resection of the distal ileum and coecum (or right colon) were prospectively enrolled. All patients were under follow-up. The study population included 6 males and 9 females, with a median age of 44 years (range: 18-80 years). INCLUSION CRITERIA (1) certain diagnosis of small bowel requiring elective ileo-colonic resection; (2) age between 18-80 years; (3) elective surgery in our Surgical Unit; and (4) written informed consent. SICUS and CTE were performed ≤ 3 mo before surgery, followed by surgical pathology. The following small bowel lesions were blindly reported by one sonologist, radiologist, surgeon and histolopathologist: disease site, extent, strictures, abscesses, fistulae, small bowel dilation. Comparison between findings at SICUS, CTE, surgical specimens and histological examination was made by assessing the specificity, sensitivity and accuracy of each technique, when using surgical findings as gold standard. RESULTS Among the 15 patients enrolled, CTE was not feasible in 2 patients, due to urgent surgery in one patients and to low compliance in the second patient, refusing to perform CTE due to the discomfort related to the naso-jejunal tube. The analysis for comparing CTE vs SICUS findings was therefore performed in 13 out of the 15 CD patients enrolled. Differently from CTE, SICUS was feasible in all the 15 patients enrolled. No complications were observed when using SICUS or CTE. Surgical pathology findings in the tested population included: small bowel stricture in 13 patients, small bowel dilation above ileal stricture in 10 patients, abdominal abscesses in 2 patients, enteric fistulae in 5 patients, lymphnodes enlargement (> 1 cm) in 7 patients and mesenteric enlargement in 9 patients. In order to compare findings by using SICUS, CTE, histology and surgery, characteristics of the small bowel lesions observed in CD each patient were blindly reported in the same form by one gastroenterologist-sonologist, radiologist, surgeon and anatomopathologist. At surgery, lesions related to CD were detected in the distal ileum in all 13 patients, also visualized by both SICUS and CTE in all 13 patients. Ileal lesions > 10 cm length were detected at surgery in all the 13 CD patients, confirmed by SICUS and CTE in the same 12 out of the 13 patients. When using surgical findings as a gold standard, SICUS and CTE showed the exactly same sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for detecting the presence of small bowel fistulae (accuracy 77% for both) and abscesses (accuracy 85% for both). In the tested CD population, SICUS and CTE were also quite comparable in terms of accuracy for detecting the presence of small bowel strictures (92% vs 100%), small bowel fistulae (77% for both) and small bowel dilation (85% vs 82%). CONCLUSION In our study population, CTE and the non-invasive and radiation-free SICUS showed a comparable high accuracy for assessing small bowel lesions in CD.


Radiologia Medica | 2009

Future directions in percutaneous vertebroplasty

Salvatore Masala; Francesco Massari; Roberto Fiori; Matteo Mammucari; Dario Alberto Bartolucci; G. Simonetti

The first percutaneous vertebroplasty, used to treat a painful cervical haemangioma, was performed by a French team in 1984 and reported in the literature in 1987. This technique has rapidly become the standard of care for treatment of medically refractory painful vertebral compression fractures. Vertebral fractures usually become evident because of pain of varying intensity that reduces the patient’s quality of life, producing functional limitations, depression, disability, height loss, spinal instability and kyphotic deformity associated with impaired lung capacity. Many diseases may underlie vertebral compression fractures, such as osteoporosis, trauma, neoplasms and haemangioma. Vertebroplasty, as derived from our experience and a review of the literature data, has more than 70%–90% effectiveness for short-term pain reduction and return to activity. The aim of this paper was to describe the state of the art of this spinal interventional radiology procedure and to examine the future directions of percutaneous vertebroplasty.RiassuntoLa prima vertebroplastica percutanea è stata condotta da un gruppo francese nel 1984, e riportata in letteratura nel 1987, per il trattamento di un emangioma doloroso cervicale. Questa tecnica è rapidamente diventata di riferimento nella gestione di fratture vertebrali compressive dolorose non trattabili conservativamente. Le fratture vertebrali vengono generalmente diagnosticate in relazione alla marcata algia, di vario grado, lamentata dal paziente, che determina riduzione della qualitá della vita, limitazione funzionale, depressione, disabilitá, riduzione in altezza, instabilitá spinale e deformitá cifotica associata a compromissione respiratoria. Tra le molteplici cause alla base delle fratture vertebrali si riconoscono l’osteoporosi, i traumi, le neoplasie e gli emangiomi. La vertebroplastica, in relazione a quanto derivato dalla nostra esperienza e dai dati presenti in letteratura, presenta una efficacia di oltre il 70%–90% nella riduzione del dolore a breve termine con pronta ripresa delle attivitá quotidiane. Lo scopo di questo lavoro è descrivere lo stato dell’arte di questa procedura di radiologia interventistica spinale e di esaminare le future direzioni della vertebroplastica percutanea.


The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds | 2003

Imaging the Ankle and Foot and Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Salvatore Masala; Roberto Fiori; A. Marinetti; Luigi Uccioli; Laura Giurato; G. Simonetti

Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging has improved the possibility of evaluating musculoskeletal structures thus gaining an important role in the diagnosis and treatment of foot and ankle pathologies. In this review, the normal and pathological images of the ankle and foot obtained using MR techniques are presented and discussed. The high soft-tissue contrast resolution and the multiplanar sections of MRI allow the imaging of contiguous tissues where small contrast differences exist, such as ligamentous and tendinous injuries or impingement syndromes. The spatial resolution with high sensitivity for bone signal changes offers an early detection of osseous abnormalities such as stress fractures or osteonecrosis. Here it is specified possibilities and limitations of MRI in the diabetic foot: this technique is superior to nuclear medicine and computed tomography (CT), however it is unable to distinguish between neuro arthropathy and infection.

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Dive into the Roberto Fiori's collaboration.

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Salvatore Masala

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Giovanni Simonetti

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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G. Simonetti

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Mario Raguso

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Eros Calabria

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Francesco Pallone

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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L. Biancone

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Alessandro Cuzzolino

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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