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Dive into the research topics where Saverio Fusilli is active.

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Featured researches published by Saverio Fusilli.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2003

Bone mineral density in acromegaly: the effect of gender, disease activity and gonadal status

Alfredo Scillitani; Claudia Battista; Iacopo Chiodini; Vincenzo Carnevale; Saverio Fusilli; Enrica Ciccarelli; Massimo Terzolo; Giuseppe Oppizzi; Maura Arosio; Maurizio Gasperi; Giorgio Arnaldi; Annamaria Colao; Roberto Baldelli; Maria Rosaria Ghiggi; D. Gaia; Carolina Di Somma; Vincenzo Trischitta; A. Liuzzi

objective Data on bone mineral density (BMD) in acromegaly are conflicting as most previous studies collectively evaluated eugonadal and hypogonadal patients of both sexes, with or without active disease. We have evaluated BMD in 152 acromegalic patients of both sexes with varying disease activity and gonadal status.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 1997

Skeletal involvement in female acromegalic subjects : The effects of growth hormone excess in amenorrheal and menstruating patients

Alfredo Scillitani; Iacopo Chiodini; Vincenzo Carnevale; Giuseppe Maria Giannatempo; Vincenzo Frusciante; Massimo Villella; Mauro Pileri; Giuseppe Guglielmi; Anna Di Giorgio; Sergio Modoni; Saverio Fusilli; Alfredo Di Cerbo; A. Liuzzi

Bone involvement is a common clinical feature in acromegalic patients, though previous studies gave divergent results possibly because of the different gonadal status of the patients studied. To study the influence of estrogen milieu in these patients, we evaluated 23 acromegalic patients with active disease, subdivided into two groups: menstruating and amenorrheal patients, comparable for duration and activity of disease. Forty‐two matched women served as controls. Skeletal involvement was studied by measuring: (a) the main biomarkers of bone turnover: serum alkaline phosphatase total activity (AP), bone GLA protein (BGP), serum carboxy‐terminal propeptide of type I collagen (PICP), serum type I cross‐linked N‐telopeptide (ICTP), and urinary pyridinoline and deoxypyridinoline corrected for creatinine (Pyr/Cr, D‐Pyr/Cr) and urinary calcium/creatinine ratio (Ca/Cr); (b) bone mineral density (BMD), as measured by quantitative computed tomography both at lumbar spine and distal radius, and by dual X‐ray absorptiometry both at lumbar spine and at three femoral sites (Wards triangle, femoral neck, and great trochanter). AP, BGP, ICTP, Pyr/Cr, D‐Pyr/Cr were significantly higher in patients than in controls, independent of the menstrual pattern. Higher PICP levels were found in the whole group and in menstruating acromegalics when compared with control women; no difference was found in amenorrheal patients, who in turn showed higher urinary Ca/Cr values. When patients were considered all together, BMD at spine, femoral neck, and trochanter was higher than in controls. In contrast, when the gonadal status was taking into account and, menstruating and amenorrheal subjects were considered separately, BMD at spine, but not in other sites, was significantly higher in menstruating patients than in controls. In contrast, no difference of BMD values at any site was observed between amenorrheal patients and controls. The mean BMD Z scores allowed us to detect an unequal involvement of different skeletal sites. Our results show that bone turnover is increased in acromegalic women and suggest that GH anabolic effect on bone is more evident in the presence of estrogens and that different skeletal sites may be affected differently by hormone excess.


Allergologia Et Immunopathologia | 2012

A role for measurement of nasal IgE antibodies in diagnosis of Alternaria-induced rhinitis in children.

N. Fuiano; Saverio Fusilli; C. Incorvaia

BACKGROUND Rhinitis is a very common disease, frequently caused by sensitisation to inhalant allergens. Negative results from skin prick tests (SPT) and in vitro IgE tests generally lead to a diagnosis of non-allergic rhinitis. However, it is possible, as indicated by studies addressed with dust mites or pollens that the production of specific IgE occurs exclusively at nasal level. METHODS We measured specific nasal IgE in children suffering from rhinitis in the periods when Alternaria spores were present in the air. All subjects underwent SPT with a standard panel of aeroallergens (Stallergenes, Milan, Italy) and, in the same session, to nasal IgE test (NT). Nasal provocation test (NPT) with Alternaria was used as reference. RESULTS Fifty-six subjects were included in the study. Of them, 20 (37.5%) were positive to SPT and 45 (80.3%) were positive to NT. In particular, 11 subjects (19.6%) had a positive SPT and a negative NT; 36 (64.3%) had a negative SPT and a positive NT; and 9 (16.1%) were positive to both tests. Positivity of NT and NPT was observed in 36 patients (69.6%), while positivity of SPT and NPT was observed in 15 patients (26.8%). This difference was highly significant (p<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that sensitisation to Alternaria is frequently expressed by exclusive production of specific IgE in the nasal mucosa. Thus, measuring nasal IgE in children with rhinitis and negative SPT during the period of presence of Alternaria spores seems helpful to avoid a mistaken diagnosis of non-allergic rhinitis.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1996

Cytological vs microhistological diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma : Comparative accuracies in the same fine-needle biopsy specimen

Eugenio Caturelli; Michele Bisceglia; Saverio Fusilli; Mm Squillante; Marina Castelvetere; Domenico Angelo Siena

There is still debate over the relative merits of cytology and histology in diagnosing hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic livers. Previous comparisons of the diagnostic accuracies of these two methods may have been biased by sampling errors due to multiple punctures. We compared the diagnostic accuracies of cytology and microhistology using tissue and cells from the same point in liver nodules subsequently proved to be hepatocellular carcinoma. A single ultrasound-guided liver-nodule biopsy was obtained with a 20- to 21-G cutting needle from 131 cirrhotic patients. The solid portion of samples was used for microhistology; the remainder was subjected to smear cytology. The results of each type of examination were expressed as true positive, nonspecific malignancy, false negative, or inadequate for diagnosis. No false-positive diagnoses were made in 13 benign lesions. In 118 HCC nodules (particularly those <30 mm in diameter), cytology provided a significantly higher percentage of correct diagnoses (85.6%) that was only slightly inferior to that based on results of both studies (89.8%). The single-biopsy technique generally provides adequate tissue for histology and cytology specimens with a high cellularity. It reduces both the cost and the risks of fine-needle biopsy diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2008

Clinical and Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging Follow-up After Percutaneous Closure of Patent Foramen Ovale in Patients With Cryptogenic Stroke

Carlo Vigna; Vincenzo Inchingolo; Giuseppe Maria Giannatempo; Michele Antonio Pacilli; Pietro Di Viesti; Saverio Fusilli; Cesare Amico; Tiberio Santoro; Pompeo Lanna; Raffaele Fanelli; Pasquale Simone; Francesco Loperfido

Patent foramen ovale (PFO) closure is reported to result in fewer episodes of clinically manifest recurrent cerebral ischemia than medical treatment. We evaluated by means of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) whether silent cerebral ischemic episodes are also decreased by PFO closure. Seventy-one patients with PFO were selected for percutaneous closure of PFO at our center. All had PFO with large right-to-left shunt documented by transcranial Doppler ultrasound and transesophageal echocardiography, > or =1 previous stroke or transient ischemic attack with MRI documentation at the index event, and no alternative cause for cerebral ischemia. MRI studies were performed in all patients 24 hours before the procedure and at 1-year follow-up (or before in the case of a suspected new neurologic event). Eight patients (11%) had >1 clinical event before the procedure. Comparing the 2 MRI studies before the procedure, silent ischemic lesions were observed in 14 other patients (20%). Thus, considering clinical and silent events together, >1 event was present at baseline in 22 patients (31%). After PFO closure (follow-up 16 +/- 7 months), 1 recurrent neurologic event occurred (1%, p = 0.02 vs preprocedural clinical events); however, urgent brain MRI results were negative. Moreover, only 1 patient showed 1 new silent lesion at brain MRI at follow-up (1%, p <0.001 vs preprocedural silent brain lesions). Considering clinical and silent events, relapses occurred in 2 patients only (p <0.001 vs before procedure). Recurrent events were limited to those with incomplete PFO closure at postprocedural transcranial Doppler ultrasound (p = 0.02). In conclusion, percutaneous PFO closure results in few clinical or silent events after 1-year follow-up, especially when complete PFO closure is successfully accomplished.


Pathology Research and Practice | 2001

A new hypothesis on the pathogenesis of intestinal pseudo-obstruction by intestinal neuronal dysplasia (IND)

Cesare Bosman; Rita Devito; Saverio Fusilli; Renata Boldrini

Using morphometry and image analysis, we investigated 17 patients showing intestinal pseudo-obstruction secondary to intestinal neuronal dysplasia (IND) and 20 controls. In addition to an increase in the number and size of the ganglia and the ganglionic cells, we also noted a significant increase in NO synthase-containing ganglionic cells. We found that this enzyme, responsible for the synthesis of nitrous oxide caused by oxidation of L-argynine aminoacid, is a neurotransmitter able to induce smooth muscle relaxation by activating cyclic AMP. If the increase in NO synthase-producing ganglionic cells is responsible for the increase in nitrous oxide production, one can hypothesize that an overproduction of nitrous oxide plays a role in the pathogenesis of intestinal pseudo-obstruction secondary to neuronal dysplasia. As NO synthase can be blocked, as was demonstrated by giving L-methil-arginine or N-G-nitro-L-argynine, it might be possible to treat intestinal pseudo-obstruction caused by intestinal neuronal dysplasia at the pharmacological level.


Acta Haematologica | 1996

Oncocytic nonsecretory multiple myeloma : A clinicopathologic study of a case and review of the literature

Cesare Bosman; Saverio Fusilli; Michele Bisceglia; Pellegrino Musto; Alessandro Corsi

We report on a morphologic variant of multiple myeloma, identified in a 39-year-old man, with osteolytic lesions in two ribs and three lumbar vertebrae. Serum electrophoresis was normal and immunofixation of serum and urine was negative. Histologic examination of a resected rib revealed a homogeneous population of neoplastic plasma cells with granular and eosinophilic cytoplasm. Immunohistochemical stains showed monoclonality for lambda light chain and negativity for all heavy chains. At the ultrastructural level, the cytoplasm of the neoplastic plasma cells was almost totally occupied by round and elongated mitochondria, pushing the rough endoplasmic reticulum to the periphery. To the best of our knowledge, only two similar cases have been reported in the literature so far. The usefulness of obtaining a clinicopathologic correlation for the behaviour of this extremely rare variant of multiple myeloma is discussed.


Osteoporosis International | 2002

Global skeletal uptake of 99mTc-methylene diphosphonate (GSU) in patients affected by endocrine diseases: Comparison with biochemical markers of bone turnover

Alfredo Scillitani; Franca Dicembrino; Iacopo Chiodini; Salvatore Minisola; Saverio Fusilli; A. Di Giorgio; M. Garrubba; Leonardo D'Aloiso; Vincenzo Frusciante; Massimo Torlontano; Sergio Modoni; Vincenzo Trischitta; Vincenzo Carnevale

Abstract: This study aimed to clinically validate the global skeletal uptake (GSU) of 99mTc-methylene diphosphonate (99mTc-MDP), and to compare it with a marker of bone formation (i.e. serum osteocalcin or OC) and an index of bone resorption (i.e. urinary deoxypyridinoline or U-DPD) in different endocrine disorders affecting the skeleton. We studied 29 female patients with thyrotoxicosis (TT), 27 with primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT), 16 with acromegaly (AC), 15 with Cushing’s syndrome (CS), and altogether 110 healthy women matched for age, BMI and menstrual status. In all subjects total body digital scan images (TBDS) were acquired at 5 min and at 4 h after the administration of 99mTc-MDP; the whole body retention (WBR) of the tracer was measured by counting two identical sets of rectangular ROIs, and GSU was subsequently calculated by drawing an irregular ROI on 4 h TBDS images. Serum OC was assessed by IRMA and urinary DPD by fluorometric detection after reverse phase high pressure chromatography. In TT patients GSU (40.0 ± 5.1 vs 36.5 ± 4.8%), OC (19.1 ± 11.8 vs 7.1 ± 2.9 mg/l) and U-DPD (62.4 ± 42.7 vs 19.5 ± 5.3 pmol/pmol) were significantly (p<0.01) higher than in controls. PHPT patients showed GSU (47.2 ± 6.6 vs 37.8 ± 5.3%), OC (38.6 ± 40.9 vs 8.2 ± 2.5 mg/l), and U-DPD (55.0 ± 51.3 vs 21.9 ± 6.1 pmol/pmol) values significantly (p<0.001) higher than controls. In CS patients, GSU (39.6 ± 6.4 vs 32.7 ± 3.5%; p<0.01) and U-DPD (22.8 ± 8.4 vs 16.5 ± 2.7 pmol/pmol; p<0.05) were higher, whereas OC (3.6 ± 2.4 vs 5.2 ± 1.9 mg/l; p<0,05) was lower than in controls. In AC patients, GSU (34.9 ± 5.3 vs 35.2 ± 3.4%) did not differ significantly from controls, whereas OC (16.8 ± 8.8 vs 6.9 ± 2.9 mg/l; p<0.001) and U-DPD (30.9 ± 13.6 vs 21.0 ± 5.7 pmol/pmol; p<0.01) were higher. Stepwise multivariate linear regression analysis was performed with disease activity, creatinine clearance, age, and years since menopause as predictor variables and GSU or OC or U-DPD as dependent variables. The significant partial regression coefficients (r) were: in TT, free triiodothyronine (fT3) with GSU (r = 0.37; p<0.005), Ln OC (r = 0.30; p = NS), Ln U-DPD (r = 0.76; p<0.0001), respectively; in PHPT, PTH with GSU (r = 0.74; p<0.001), Ln OC (r = 0.50; p<0.05), Ln U-DPD (r = 0.64; p<0.001); in CS Ln urinary free cortisol with OC (r = −0.68; p<0.001) and U-DPD (r = 0.66; p<0.05). Our data suggest that GSU could represent a valuable clinical tool for evaluating bone turnover rate in PHPT, CS, TT but not in AC. The behavior of GSU and OC and U-DPD is non-uniform in disorders characterized by a marked uncoupling between bone formation and resorption.


Tumori | 1998

Interobserver Reproducibility in Diagnosis of Breast Lesions. A Panel in Puglia (Italy)

Carmela Giardina; Rosanna Clemente; Saverio Fusilli; Simonetta Bianchi; Angelo Paradiso

Background Given the incidence of breast cancer, histologic agreement is necessary to select the proper treatment. Methods & study design Twelve pathologists working in Puglia (Italy) independently evaluated a set of 88 slides of breast lesions. The set included 31 cases which presented difficulties at the moment of first diagnosis (problem cases) and 57 cases without problems (routine cases). Each pathologist was requested to classify lesions according to four categories: A, benign; B, atypical proliferation; C, in situ carcinoma; D, invasive carcinoma. For each case, the definite diagnosis was considered that provided by most of the pathologists (prevalent diagnosis). For the evaluation of degree of agreement, kappa statistics were utilized. Results Among routine cases, agreement was observed in 68.4% of cases (38/57) and in 29% of problem cases (9/31). The pair-wise comparison between all participating pathologists showed a good overall agreement, (kappa mean, 0.66; range, 0.57-0.76). The agreement of each pathologist with the prevalent diagnosis was high for invasive (mean kappa, 0.88) and benign lesions (mean kappa, 0.83) followed by in situ carcinoma (mean kappa, 0.64). The lowest value observed was for atypical lesions (mean kappa, 0.25). Conclusions The results showed a good overall degree of diagnostic concordance among participating pathologists, all working in the Italian region of Puglia. The findings emerging from the study are comparable to those of other studies performed with selected pathologists specifically specialized in breast pathology. Moreover, the study confirmed the diagnostic difficulties for borderline lesions and the necessity of further investigation for sclerosing lesions with discordant diagnoses.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2000

Neuroadrenergic activation and response to dobutamine in congestive heart failure secondary to idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy

Carlo Vigna; Saverio Fusilli; Rosaria Natali; Aldo Russo; Vincenzo De Rito; Giovanni Pio Siena; Nicola Cianfrone; Antonella Lombardo; Raffaele Fanelli; Francesco Loperfido

Detection of contractile reserve is important in heart failure patients. To determine if detection of contractile reserve is influenced by neuroadrenergic activation, we examined the relation between dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) findings and plasma norepinephrine levels (NE) at rest in 35 patients with nonischemic left ventricular (LV) dysfunction (New York Heart Association class >III in all; LV ejection fraction 0.27 +/- 0.5). Changes in global wall motion score (WMS), and separately in WMS of hypokinetic segments and akinetic segments, were analyzed. A patient was considered to be responsive to dobutamine if the change in global WMS was >/=4. Twenty-three patients were responsive and 12 were not responsive to dobutamine. Plasma NE and baseline heart rate were significantly higher in nonresponsive patients (p <0.001). Changes in global WMS and in hypokinetic segment WMS were inversely related to either plasma NE (r -0.68 and -0.67, respectively) or baseline heart rate (r -0.60 and -0.66, respectively). The change in akinetic segment WMS was related to plasma NE only (r -0.50). Changes in WMS were not related to age, diastolic and systolic LV volume, baseline global WMS, or number of akinetic segments at baseline. Plasma NE >602 pg/ml predicted a blunted or absent contractile reserve at DSE (sensitivity 92%; specificity 87%). Neuroadrenergic activation may influence contractile reserve found at DSE in patients with heart failure due to nonischemic LV dysfunction.

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Dive into the Saverio Fusilli's collaboration.

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Eugenio Caturelli

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Mm Squillante

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Alfredo Scillitani

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Carlo Vigna

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Domenico Angelo Siena

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Vincenzo Carnevale

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Francesco Loperfido

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Iacopo Chiodini

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Michele Bisceglia

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Sergio Modoni

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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