Sara Leonini
University of Siena
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Featured researches published by Sara Leonini.
Interventional Neuroradiology | 2016
Daniele Giuseppe Romano; Samuele Cioni; Sara Leonini; Paola Gennari; Ignazio Maria Vallone; A Zandonella; A Puliti; R Tassi; A Casasco; G Martini; Sandra Bracco
Background For intracranial large vessel occlusion in acute ischemic stroke (AIS), a high degree of revascularization in the minimal amount of time predicts good outcomes. Recently, different studies have shown that the direct aspiration first pass technique (ADAPT technique) for AIS obtains high recanalization rates, fast interventions and low costs when it works as first attempt. This study retrospectively describes revascularization efficacy, duration of procedure, intra and post-procedural complications, early and after 90-days clinical outcome in a group of patients who underwent ADAPT as the primary endovascular approach, eventually followed by stent retriever thrombectomy, for recanalization of large vessels in the anterior circulation. Materials and methods We analyzed clinical and procedural data of patients treated from April 2014 to August 2015. Recanalization was assessed according to the Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score. Clinical outcome was evaluated at discharge and after 3 months (modified Rankin Scale, mRS). Results Overall, 71 patients (mean age of 69.7 years) were treated. Sites of occlusion were anterior circulation (including seven tandem extracranial-intracranial occlusions). In 39 patients i.v. rtPA was attempted. Recanalization of the target vessel was obtained in 87.3% of cases whereas direct aspiration alone was successful in 46/71cases (64.8%) with an average puncture-to-revascularization time of 43.1 minutes. Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage occurred in 7.8% and embolization to new territories in 5.6%. In total, 38 patients (53.5%) had a good outcome at 90 days follow-up. Conclusions In our series, the manual thromboaspiration technique has been shown as fast and safe, with good rates of vessel revascularization in 87.3% of patients and neurological outcome <3 mRS in 53.5% of patients.
Orbit | 2015
Sandra Bracco; Carlo Venturi; Sara Leonini; Daniele Giuseppe Romano; Samuele Cioni; Ignazio Maria Vallone; Paola Gennari; Paolo Galluzzi; Theodora Hadjistilianou; Sonia De Francesco; Daria Guglielmucci; Francesca Tarantino; Eugenio Bertelli
ABSTRACT Purpose: Angiography is a powerful tool to identify intraorbital arteries. However, the incidence by which these vessels can be identified is unknown. Our purpose was to determine such incidence and which angiographic approach is best for the identification of each artery. Methods: A retrospective study of 353 angiographic procedures (via ophthalmic artery and/or external carotid artery) carried out on 79 children affected by intraocular retinoblastoma was made to investigate the arterial anatomy in 87 orbits. For each intraorbital artery two parameters were calculated: the angiographic incidence, as the percentage of times a given artery was identified, and the visibility index, as the ratio between the angiographic incidence and the true anatomic incidence. Results: All collaterals of the ophthalmic artery could be spotted. Most of them were identified with a high angiographic incidence; some of them were less easily identified because too thin or because frequently shielded. The visibility index paralleled the angiographic incidence of most arteries. However, the lacrimal and meningolacrimal arteries had a higher visibility index suggesting that their identification was more frequent than the angiographic incidence alone could suggest. Statistical analysis demonstrated that the lacrimal artery and some muscular branches had higher chances to be identified if the angiography of the ophthalmic artery was accompanied by the study of the external carotid system. Conclusion: This work provides an objective measure of how powerful angiography is to identify intraorbital arteries as well as useful references for professionals who need to operate in the orbit.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2014
L. Monti; E. Menci; Pietro Piu; Sara Leonini; U. Arrigucci; M. Bellini; A. Zandonella; Paolo Galluzzi; Alfredo Casasco
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The autonomic nervous system maintains constant cerebral venous blood outflow in changing positions. Alterations in cerebral autoregulation can be revealed by postural changes at quantitative color Doppler sonography. The aim of this study was to reach an optimal cutoff value of the difference between the cerebral venous blood outflow in the supine and seated positions that can discriminate healthy controls from patients with multiple sclerosis and those with other neurologic diseases and to evaluate its specificity, sensitivity, and diagnostic accuracy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: One hundred fifteen subjects (54 with MS, 31 healthy controls, 30 with other neurologic diseases) underwent a blinded quantitative color Doppler sonography evaluation of cerebral venous blood outflow in the supine and sitting positions. An optimal difference value between the supine and sitting positions of the cerebral venous blood outflow cutoff value was sought. RESULTS: The difference value between supine and sitting positions of the cerebral venous blood outflow was ≤ 503.24 in 38/54 (70.37%) patients with MS, 9/31 (29.03%) healthy controls, and 13/30 (43.33%) subjects with other neurological diseases. A difference value between supine and sitting positions of the cerebral venous blood outflow at a 503.24 cutoff reached a sensitivity at 70.37%, a 70.96% specificity, a 80.85% positive predictive value, and a 57.89% negative predictive value; the quantitative color Doppler sonography parameters yielded significant differences. The difference value between supine and sitting positions of cerebral venous blood outflow ≤ 503.24 assessed the significant difference between MS versus other neurological diseases. CONCLUSIONS: Alteration of cerebral venous blood outflow discriminated MS versus other neurologic diseases and MS versus healthy controls. The difference value between supine and sitting positions of cerebral venous blood outflow ≤ 503.24 was statistically associated with MS.
Journal of Neuroimaging | 2011
Alfonso Cerase; Sara Leonini; Matteo Bellini; Giuseppe Chianese; Carlo Venturi
Effects of methadone misuse have been rarely described. The purpose of this case report is to increase the knowledge of methadone‐related leukoencephalopathy.
Neurological Sciences | 2011
Carmine Franco Muccio; Sara Leonini; Gennaro Esposito; Alfonso Cerase
The purpose of this case report is to increase the knowledge about magnetic resonance spectrum of pyogenic abscesses of the brain. A 74-year-old woman presented with a left frontal lobe cystic mass, developed in the site of post-traumatic contusions after surgical evacuation of a subdural hematoma. MR imaging showed an ipsilateral mass lesion with a thin, regular rim of T1 high-intensity signal, T2 low-intensity signal, and gadolinium-enhancement. Diffusion-weighted imaging with measure of apparent diffusion coefficient value showed inhomogenous diffusion restriction in the lesion core. Perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) demonstrated high relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) in both the lesion wall and perilesional area, with a maximal rCBV ratio (rCBV of the lesion/rCBV of the normal contralateral white matter) of 5.65 and 0.58, respectively. As a result, surgery and pathology showed a pyogenic abscess. Cultures grew were Providencia stuartii species. In conclusion, a pyogenic brain abscess from P. stuartii may show high rCBV at PWI, thus mimicking a necrotic tumour.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2016
Eugenio Bertelli; Sara Leonini; Daniela Galimberti; S. Moretti; R. Tinturini; Theodora Hadjistilianou; S De Francesco; Daniele Giuseppe Romano; Ignazio Maria Vallone; Samuele Cioni; Paola Gennari; Paolo Galluzzi; Irene Grazzini; S. Rossi; Sandra Bracco
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Intra-arterial chemotherapy for retinoblastoma is not always a straightforward procedure, and it may require an adaptable approach. This study illustrates strategies used when the ophthalmic artery is difficult to catheterize or not visible, and it ascertains the effectiveness and safety of these strategies. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective study was performed on a series of 108 eyes affected by intraocular retinoblastoma and selected for intra-arterial chemotherapy (follow-up range, 6–82 months). We recognized 3 different patterns of drug delivery: a fixed pattern through the ophthalmic artery, a fixed pattern through branches of the external carotid artery, and a variable pattern through either the ophthalmic or the external carotid artery. RESULTS: We performed 448 sessions of intra-arterial chemotherapy, 83.70% of them through the ophthalmic artery and 16.29% via the external carotid artery. In 24.52% of eyes, the procedure was performed at least once through branches of the external carotid artery. In 73 eyes, the pattern of drug delivery was fixed through the ophthalmic artery; for 9 eyes, it was fixed through branches of the external carotid artery; and for 17 eyes, the pattern was variable. Statistical analysis did not show any significant difference in the clinical outcome of the eyes (remission versus enucleation) treated with different patterns of drug delivery. Adverse events could not be correlated with any particular pattern. CONCLUSIONS: Alternative routes of intra-arterial chemotherapy for intraocular retinoblastoma appear in the short term as effective and safe as the traditional drug infusion through the ophthalmic artery.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Lucia Monti; Donatella Donati; Elisabetta Menci; Samuele Cioni; Matteo Bellini; Irene Grazzini; Sara Leonini; Paolo Galluzzi; Sauro Severi; Luca Burroni; Alfredo Casasco; Lucia Morbidelli; Emiliano Santarnecchi; Pietro Piu
Literature has suggested that changes in brain flow circulation occur in patients with multiple sclerosis. In this study, digital subtraction angiography (DSA) was used to measure the absolute CCT value in MS patients and to correlate its value to age at disease onset and duration, and to expand disability status scale (EDSS). DSA assessment was performed on eighty MS patients and on a control group of forty-four age-matched patients. CCT in MS and control groups was calculated by analyzing the angiographic images. Lesion and brain volumes were calculated in a representative group of MS patients. Statistical correlations among CCT and disease duration, age at disease onset, lesion load, brain volumes and EDSS were considered. A significant difference between CCT in MS patients (mean = 4.9s; sd = 1.27s) and control group (mean = 2.8s; sd = 0.51s) was demonstrated. No significant statistical correlation was found between CCT and the other parameters in all MS patients. Significantly increased CCT value in MS patients suggests the presence of microvascular dysfunctions, which do not depend on clinical and MRI findings. Hemodynamic changes may not be exclusively the result of a late chronic inflammatory process.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2015
M. Bellini; Daniele Giuseppe Romano; Sara Leonini; Irene Grazzini; C. Tabano; M. Ferrara; Pietro Piu; L. Monti; Alfonso Cerase
Eighty lumbar and 9 cervical spine herniations were treated with percutaneous intradiskal injection of gelified ethanol under fluoroscopy with 36 injections made simultaneously for 2 disk herniations. Post treatment symptom improvement was reported by 85% of patients with lumbarand 83% of those with cervical disk herniations. BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Chemonucleolysis represents a minimally invasive percutaneous technique characterized by an intradiskal injection of materials under fluoroscopic or CT guidance. Recently, a substance based on radiopaque gelified ethanol has been introduced. The purpose of this study was to describe the indications, procedure, safety, and efficacy of radiopaque gelified ethanol in the percutaneous treatment of cervical and lumbar disk herniations. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between September 2010 and August 2013, 80 patients (32 women and 48 men; age range, 18–75 years) were treated for 107 lumbar disk herniations (L2–L3, n = 1; L3–L4, n = 15; L4–L5, n = 53; and L5–S1, n = 38) and 9 cervical disk herniations (C4–C5, n = 2; C5–C6, n = 2; C6–C7, n = 3; and C7–D1, n = 2) by percutaneous intradiskal injection of radiopaque gelified ethanol under fluoroscopic guidance. Thirty-six patients underwent a simultaneous treatment of 2 disk herniations. Patient symptoms were resistant to conservative therapy, with little or no pain relief after 4–6 weeks of physical therapy and drugs. All patients were evaluated by the Visual Analog Scale and the Oswestry Disability Index. RESULTS: Sixty-two of 73 (85%) patients with lumbar disk herniations and 6/7 (83%) patients with cervical disk herniations obtained significant symptom improvement, with a Visual Analog Scale reduction of at least 4 points and an Oswestry Disability Index reduction of at least 40%. Leakage of radiopaque gelified ethanol in the surrounding tissues occurred in 19 patients, however without any clinical side effects. CONCLUSIONS: In our experience, percutaneous intradiskal injection of radiopaque gelified ethanol is safe and effective in reducing the period of recovery from disabling symptoms.
Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2013
Sandra Bracco; Rossana Tassi; Paola Gennari; Irene Grazzini; Sara Leonini; Paolo D'Andrea; Giuseppe Martini; Alfonso Cerase
A 74-year-old man was admitted to the Emergency Room of our institution with worsening dysarthria, left-side weakness and hypoesthesia (NIHSS score: 5) since his awakening at 7:30 a.m. The evening before, he had gone to sleep at 10:30 p.m. Brain computed tomography (CT) and cervicocranial CT angiography showed low density attenuation of the right caudate nucleus head and lenticular nucleus and sub-total occlusion of ipsilateral middle cerebral artery (MCA) pre-bi/trifurcation Ml segment. Brain CT perfusion showed an ischemic core in the right striatal region, surrounded by a wide region of ischemic penumbra. Although the onset of symptoms, defined as “time last-seen well”, was 14 hours before presentation, the following worsening of neurological conditions (NIHSS score: 12) and the evidence of cerebral blood flow / cerebral blood volume mismatch at CT perfusion led us to propose neuroendovascular treatment on the basis of an off-label use. Neuroendovascular treatment by Penumbra system was achieved and the right MCA was only partially recanalized. The patient was discharged with NIHSS score of 12. At six months, modified Rankin scale score was 3. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first Italian case report describing a patient who underwent successful neuroendovascular treatment for a “wake-up stroke” without clinical worsening nor major complications and an acceptable clinical outcome. This was possible thanks to an extension of the therapeutic window guided by CT perfusion.
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 2011
Alfonso Cerase; Sara Leonini; Rossella Franceschini; Salvatore Grosso; Carlo Venturi
Our purpose was to increase the knowledge about subcortical low-intensity images on long repetition time by describing brain magnetic resonance images of a young boy after his first spontaneous seizure. Evident in the epileptogenic area were transient images of reversible subcortical low intensity on long-repetition time, T2*-weighted, and b = 0 s/mm2 diffusion, isointense signal on b = 1000 s/mm2 diffusion, and restricted diffusion. Most likely, mechanism was axonal flow disruption with iron accumulation and free radicals production induced during seizure.