Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rosanna Capozzi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rosanna Capozzi.


Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2011

Isolated cardiophrenic angle node metastasis from ovarian primary. report of two cases

Mark Ragusa; Jacopo Vannucci; Rosanna Capozzi; Niccolò Daddi; Nicola Avenia; Francesco Puma

Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynaecologic malignancy. It usually spreads out of the abdomen involving thoraco-abdominal organs and serosal surface. This disease is poorly curable and surgery, at early stage, is supposed to achieve the best survival outcome. In systemic dissemination, chemiotherapy is indicated, sometimes with neoadjuvant aim. The most common clinical expressions of advanced ovarian carcinoma are multiple adenopathy, neoplastic pleuritis, peritoneal seeding and distant metastasis, mainly hepatic and pulmonary. Isolated adenopathy of the mediastinum is rare and isolated bilateral have never been described before. We report two cases of isolated bilateral cardiophrenic angle lymphnode metastasis from ovarian carcinoma, without peritoneal and pleural involvement. Both patients were successfully resected through minimally invasive thoracic surgery. About the role of surgery, few data are available but survival seems to be longer after resection thus, more investigation is required to make the indication to surgery more appropriate in advanced cases.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Fluid and electrolyte balance after major thoracic surgery by bioimpedance and endocrine evaluation

Lucio Cagini; Rosanna Capozzi; Valentina Tassi; Claudia Savignani; Giuseppe Quintaliani; Gianpaolo Reboldi; Francesco Puma

OBJECTIVE Weight gain with oedema development is a complication of major surgical procedures with an incidence as high as 40%. Fluid retention is not always clinically evident and it is reported despite fluid-restriction regime. The causes are several and not totally clear. We performed a prospective study to assess the amount of fluid accumulation and redistribution observed after major thoracic surgery. METHODS In 49 patients submitted to lobectomy with systematic lymph node dissection for lung cancer, we measured preoperatively and on the postoperative days 1, 2, 4 and 7, body weight, fluid balance, brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and bioimpedance analysis (BIA)-derived parameters resistance (R) and reactance (X(c)). RESULTS The postoperative course was characterised by significant changes. Mean increase in body weight was 2.7 kg ((1.9-3.4); p<0.001) on postoperative day 2. Most of the patients had a negative basal fluid balance (-244 ml (-520 to -50)), whereas, on postoperative day 2, we observed a positive and significant change (+968 ml (646-1456), p<0.001)). Total body R and X(c) fell on the first day (p<0.001), anticipating the changes in weight and fluid balance. BNP increased on day 1, immediately after surgery, and remained significantly above basal values for the entire observation period (p<0.001), in the absence of clinical signs of heart failure. CONCLUSION The three methods used consistently showed a significant fluid retention over the course of the study. BIA was an easy, reproducible and non-invasive method for the estimation and early detection of fluid retention. Increase in BNP may be related to the systemic reaction to stress and to the decreased pulmonary vascular bed. We found no correlation between fluid retention and length of anaesthesia, sex, age, blood loss and body mass index. The clinical and prognostic implication of weight gain may be relevant to patients health.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2013

Baseline and post-surgery endothelial progenitor cell levels in patients with early-stage non-small-cell lung carcinoma: impact on cancer recurrence and survival

Matteo Pirro; Lucio Cagini; Francesco Paciullo; Roberta Pecoriello; Massimo Raffaele Mannarino; Francesco Bagaglia; Rosanna Capozzi; Francesco Puma; Elmo Mannarino

OBJECTIVES Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) are believed to play a role in promoting abnormal vascularization in neoplastic sites. We measured the number of circulating EPCs in treatment-naïve patients with early non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and healthy controls. The prospective influence of baseline and post-surgery EPC levels on cancer recurrence and survival was investigated. METHODS Circulating EPCs were quantified by FACS analysis in 34 patients with Stage I-II NSCLC and 68 healthy age- and sex-matched controls. Measurement of EPCs was repeated 48 h after thoracic surgery and at the hospital discharge. Cancer recurrence and survival was evaluated after 446 ± 106 days of follow-up (range 182-580 days). RESULTS The base 10 logarithmic [log] number of circulating EPCs was comparable between patients with NSCLC and controls [mean ± standard deviation (SD): 2.3 ± 0.32 vs 2.3 ± 0.26 n/ml, P = 0.776]. In regression analysis, smoking status [standardized coefficient beta (β) = -0.26, 95% confidence interval (CI) for B -0.29/-0.03, P = 0.014] and systolic blood pressure [β = -0.23, 95% CI for B -0.011/-0.001, P = 0.018] were independent predictors of the number of EPCs, irrespective of the NSCLC status. The mean number of EPCs did not change after surgical treatment. However, a post-surgery EPC increase was observed in 44% patients. Patients with a 48 h post-surgery EPC increase had a higher rate of cancer recurrence/death than patients with either stable or decreased post-surgery EPC levels [hazard ratio (HR) 4.4, 95% CI 1.1-17.3; P = 0.032], irrespective of confounders. CONCLUSIONS Circulating EPC levels are comparable between patients with early-stage NSCLC and healthy controls. Overall, surgical cancer resection was not associated with a significant early EPC change. However, an early post-surgery EPC increase is able to predict an increased risk of cancer recurrence and death.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Experience with the autologous pulmonary vein for pulmonary arterioplasty

Francesco Puma; Rosanna Capozzi; Niccolò Daddi; Mark Ragusa; Lucio Cagini; Alessandro Quintili; Jacopo Vannucci

OBJECTIVE Lobectomy with pulmonary artery resection and reconstruction is seldom performed in order to avoid pneumonectomy in selected cases. The aim of this study is to determine how safe and effective the graft reconstruction of the pulmonary artery is, using autologous tissue taken from the pulmonary vein. METHODS Eight patients with diagnosed non-small-cell lung cancer were treated by lobectomy with pulmonary artery reconstruction with curative intent. All patients could have tolerated pneumonectomy. Patch or conduit angioplasty was performed by using a tailored graft, harvested from the autologous pulmonary vein of the resected lobe. Patients were followed up and the clinical records were analyzed retrospectively. Long-term patency of the reconstructed pulmonary artery was investigated by computed tomographic pulmonary angiogram. RESULTS No procedure-related complications and no perioperative mortality were observed. No blood transfusion was required. Follow-up varied from 10 to 64 months. No local recurrences were found next to the angioplasty. Ideal long-term patency of the pulmonary artery was demonstrated in all cases. Two patients are alive with evidence of extrathoracic metastatic disease and four patients are apparently healthy. Two patients died of progressive disease. CONCLUSIONS The use of pulmonary vein tissue as a graft to repair the pulmonary artery is feasible, reproducible, and seems to be oncologically correct. Pulmonary vein tissue can be easily harvested during surgery and offers a high-quality vascular tissue for pulmonary angioplasty.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2016

The role of bronchoscopy in the diagnosis of early lung cancer: a review

Marco Andolfi; Rossella Potenza; Rosanna Capozzi; Valeria Liparulo; Francesco Puma; Kazuhiro Yasufuku

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide with an overall 5-year survival rate of 17% after diagnoses. Indeed many patients tend to have a very poor prognosis, due to being diagnosed at an advanced stage. Conversely patients who are diagnosed at an early stage have a 5-year survival >70%, indicating that early detection of lung cancer is crucial to improve survival. Although flexible bronchoscopy is a relatively non-invasive procedure for patients suspected of having lung cancer, only 29% of carcinoma in situ (CIS) and 69% of microinvasive tumors were detectable using white light bronchoscopy (WLB) alone. As a result, in the past two decades, new bronchoscopic techniques have been developed to increase the yield and diagnostic accuracy, such as autofluorescence bronchoscopy (AFB), narrow band imaging (NBI) and high magnification bronchovideoscopy (HMB). However, due to the low specificity and the limitation to detect only proximal bronchial tree, new probe-based technologies have been introduced: radial endobronchial ultrasound (R-EBUS), optical coherence tomography (OCT), confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) and laser Raman spectroscopy (LRS). To date, although tissue biopsy remains the gold standard for diagnosing malignant/premalignant airway disease and some techniques are still investigational, bronchoscopic technologies can be considered the safest and most accurate tools to evaluate both central and distal airway mucosa.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2016

Cardiac tamponade caused by a migrating sewing needle.

Alessandro Affronti; Isidoro Di Bella; Davide Di Lazzaro; Rosanna Capozzi; Elisa Scarnecchia; Temistocle Ragni

: Penetrating injuries of the heart caused by migrating needles have been rarely described. They usually occur accidentally or are self-inflicted in the setting of an underlying psychiatric disorder. We present an unusual case of cardiac tamponade caused by a sewing needle that migrated to the heart from the chest wall through the lung. The lesions were successfully repaired through a median sternotomy without cardiopulmonary bypass. The pathophysiological mechanism and the pertinent literature are briefly analysed.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2011

Efficacy of tigecycline pleurodesis: a comparative experimental study.

Niccolò Daddi; Jacopo Vannucci; Chiara Maggio; Andrea Giontella; Ilaria Bravi; Fiovo Marziani; Rosanna Capozzi; Mark Ragusa; Antonello Bufalari; Francesco Puma


Il Giornale di chirurgia | 2008

Terapia chirurgica dei tumori neuroendocrini ben differenziati del polmone

Niccolò Daddi; Moira Urbani; A. Semeraro; Rosanna Capozzi; G. Scarpelli; Nicola Avenia; Francesco Puma; Piero Ferolla; Rodolfo Ribacchi; Giuliano Daddi


Dysphagia | 2018

Is Myotomy Plus Diverticulopexy Suitable for Symptomatic Zenker’s Diverticula?

Jacopo Vannucci; Alberto Matricardi; Elisa Scarnecchia; Rosanna Capozzi; Valeria Liparulo; Stefano Santoprete; Lucio Cagini; Francesco Puma


Mediastinum | 2017

AB041. PS02.05: Predictive value of 18FDG-PET/CT on preoperative management of thymic tumours

Valentina Tassi; Silvia Ceccarelli; Rosanna Capozzi; Valeria Liparulo; Niccolò Daddi; Alessio Gili; Salvatore Messina; Silvio Sivolella; Francesco Puma

Collaboration


Dive into the Rosanna Capozzi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge