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Dive into the research topics where Sergio Balbi is active.

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Featured researches published by Sergio Balbi.


Human Brain Mapping | 2015

Towards a functional atlas of human white matter

Silvio Sarubbo; Alessandro De Benedictis; Stefano Merler; Emmanuel Mandonnet; Sergio Balbi; Enrico Granieri; Hugues Duffau

Although diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and postmortem dissections improved the knowledge of white matter (WM) anatomy, functional information is lacking. Our aims are: to provide a subcortical atlas of human brain functions; to elucidate the functional roles of different bundles; to provide a probabilistic resection map of WM.


Journal of Anatomy | 2014

Anatomo-functional study of the temporo-parieto-occipital region: dissection, tractographic and brain mapping evidence from a neurosurgical perspective.

Alessandro De Benedictis; Hugues Duffau; Beatrice Paradiso; Enrico Grandi; Sergio Balbi; Enrico Granieri; Enzo Colarusso; Franco Chioffi; Carlo Efisio Marras; Silvio Sarubbo

The temporo‐parieto‐occipital (TPO) junction is a complex brain territory heavily involved in several high‐level neurological functions, such as language, visuo‐spatial recognition, writing, reading, symbol processing, calculation, self‐processing, working memory, musical memory, and face and object recognition. Recent studies indicate that this area is covered by a thick network of white matter (WM) connections, which provide efficient and multimodal integration of information between both local and distant cortical nodes. It is important for neurosurgeons to have good knowledge of the three‐dimensional subcortical organisation of this highly connected region to minimise post‐operative permanent deficits. The aim of this dissection study was to highlight the subcortical functional anatomy from a topographical surgical perspective. Eight human hemispheres (four left, four right) obtained from four human cadavers were dissected according to Klinglers technique. Proceeding latero‐medially, the authors describe the anatomical courses of and the relationships between the main pathways crossing the TPO. The results obtained from dissection were first integrated with diffusion tensor imaging reconstructions and subsequently with functional data obtained from three surgical cases, all resection of infiltrating glial tumours using direct electrical mapping in awake patients. The subcortical limits for performing safe lesionectomies within the TPO region are as follows: within the parietal region, the anterior horizontal part of the superior longitudinal fasciculus and, more deeply, the arcuate fasciculus; dorsally, the vertical projective thalamo‐cortical fibres. For lesions located within the temporal and occipital lobes, the resection should be tailored according to the orientation of the horizontal associative pathways (the inferior fronto‐occipital fascicle, inferior longitudinal fascicle and optic radiation). The relationships between the WM tracts and the ventricle system were also examined. These results indicate that a detailed anatomo‐functional awareness of the WM architecture within the TPO area is mandatory when approaching intrinsic brain lesions to optimise surgical results and to minimise post‐operative morbidity.


Nature Protocols | 2013

Isolation and expansion of human and mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells

Stefania Elena Navone; Giovanni Marfia; Gloria Invernici; Silvia Cristini; Sara Nava; Sergio Balbi; Simone Sangiorgi; Emilio Ciusani; Alessandra Bosutti; Giulio Alessandri; Mark Slevin; Eugenio Parati

Brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMVECs) have an important role in the constitution of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The BBB is involved in the disease processes of a number of neurological disorders in which its permeability increases. Isolation of BMVECs could elucidate the mechanism involved in these processes. This protocol describes how to isolate and expand human and mouse BMVECs. The procedure covers brain-tissue dissociation, digestion and cell selection. Cells are selected on the basis of time-responsive differential adhesiveness to a collagen type I–precoated surface. The protocol also describes immunophenotypic characterization, cord formation and functional assays to confirm that these cells in endothelial proliferation medium (EndoPM) have an endothelial origin. The entire technique requires ∼7 h of active time. Endothelial cell clusters are readily visible after 48 h, and expansion of BMVECs occurs over the course of ∼60 d.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2011

The collagenic architecture of human dura mater

Marina Protasoni; Simone Sangiorgi; Andrea Cividini; Gloria Tiffany Culuvaris; Giustino Tomei; Carlo Dell'Orbo; Mario Raspanti; Sergio Balbi; Marcella Reguzzoni

OBJECT Human dura mater is the most external meningeal sheet surrounding the CNS. It provides an efficient protection to intracranial structures and represents the most important site for CSF turnover. Its intrinsic architecture is made up of fibrous tissue including collagenic and elastic fibers that guarantee the maintenance of its biophysical features. The recent technical advances in the repair of dural defects have allowed for the creation of many synthetic and biological grafts. However, no detailed studies on the 3D microscopic disposition of collagenic fibers in dura mater are available. The authors report on the collagenic 3D architecture of normal dura mater highlighting the orientation, disposition in 3 dimensions, and shape of the collagen fibers with respect to the observed layer. METHODS Thirty-two dura mater specimens were collected during cranial decompressive surgical procedures, fixed in 2.5% Karnovsky solution, and digested in 1 N NaOH solution. After a routine procedure, the specimens were observed using a scanning electron microscope. RESULTS The authors distinguished the following 5 layers in the fibrous dura mater of varying thicknesses, orientation, and structures: bone surface, external median, vascular, internal median, and arachnoid layers. CONCLUSIONS The description of the ultrastructural 3D organization of the different layers of dura mater will give us more information for the creation of synthetic grafts that are as similar as possible to normal dura mater. This description will be also related to the study of the neoplastic invasion.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2013

Early-stage microvascular alterations of a new model of controlled cortical traumatic brain injury: 3D morphological analysis using scanning electron microscopy and corrosion casting

Simone Sangiorgi; Alessandro De Benedictis; Marina Protasoni; A. Manelli; Marcella Reguzzoni; Andrea Cividini; Carlo Dell'Orbo; Giustino Tomei; Sergio Balbi

OBJECT This study was performed to study the microvascular changes that occur during the first 12 hours after traumatic brain injury (TBI) using the corrosion casting technique. METHODS The authors performed a qualitative and quantitative morphological study of the changes in cerebral vessels at acute (3 hours) and subacute (12 hours) stages after experimental TBI. They used a model of controlled cortical impact (CCI) injury induced by a recently developed electromagnetic device (impactor), focusing their observations mainly on the microvascular alterations responsible for the formation and maintenance of tissue edema and consequent brain swelling during the first hours after TBI. They used corrosion casting, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), light microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to obtain a morphological qualitative map with both 2D and 3D details. RESULTS Scanning electron microscopy analysis of vascular casts documented in 3 dimensions the typical injuries occurring after a TBI: subdural, subarachnoid, and intraparenchymal hemorrhages, along with alterations of the morphological characteristics and architecture of both medium-sized and capillary vessels, including ectasia of pial vessels, sphincter constrictions at the origin of the perforating vessels, focal swelling of perforating vessels, widening of intercellular junctions, and some indirect evidence of structural impairment of endothelial cells. All of these vascular alterations were confirmed in 2D analyses using light microscopy and TEM. CONCLUSIONS The corrosion casting-SEM technique applied to a CCI experimental model proved to be a reliable method for studying the pathophysiology of the vascular alterations occurring at acute and subacute stages after CCI injury. It was also possible to obtain topographical localization of the vascular and cellular events that usually lead to hyperemia, edema, and brain swelling. Moreover, by applying informatic software to anatomical images it was possible to perform quantification and statistical analysis of the observed events.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Glial brain tumor detection by using symmetry analysis

Elisabetta Binaghi; Sergio Balbi; Alessandro De Benedictis; Emanuele Monti; Renzo Minotto

In this work a fully automatic algorithm to detect brain tumors by using symmetry analysis is proposed. In recent years a great effort of the research in field of medical imaging was focused on brain tumors segmentation. The quantitative analysis of MRI brain tumor allows to obtain useful key indicators of disease progression. The complex problem of segmenting tumor in MRI can be successfully addressed by considering modular and multi-step approaches mimicking the human visual inspection process. The tumor detection is often an essential preliminary phase to solvethe segmentation problem successfully. In visual analysis of the MRI, the first step of the experts cognitive process, is the detection of an anomaly respect the normal tissue, whatever its nature. An healthy brain has a strong sagittal symmetry, that is weakened by the presence of tumor. The comparison between the healthy and ill hemisphere, considering that tumors are generally not symmetrically placed in both hemispheres, was used to detect the anomaly. A clustering method based on energy minimization through Graph-Cut is applied on the volume computed as a difference between the left hemisphere and the right hemisphere mirrored across the symmetry plane. Differential analysis involves the loss the knowledge of the tumor side. Through an histogram analysis the ill hemisphere is recognized. Many experiments are performed to assess the performance of the detection strategy on MRI volumes in presence of tumors varied in terms of shapes positions and intensity levels. The experiments showed good results also in complex situations.


Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2013

Lhermitte-duclos disease: A case report

Andrea Giorgianni; Carlo Pellegrino; Alessandro De Benedictis; Anna Mercuri; Fabio Baruzzi; Renzo Minotto; Antonio Tabano; Sergio Balbi

Lhermitte-Duclos disease is a rare pathologic condition consisting of a dysplastic gangliocytoma of the cerebellum. Its association with phacomatosis and an autosomal dominant neoplastic syndrome, Cowdens syndrome is also known. Modern neuroimaging contributes to a correct diagnosis and pre- and postoperative evaluation. Here we describe the morphologic and metabolic aspects of the disease as shown by conventional MRI, diffusion imaging and spectroscopy in a 31-year-old woman. In addition, the specific neuroradiologic characteristics are presented and discussed in the light of the main pathologic and clinical features, such as hypertrophy of the cerebellar folia associated with white matter atrophy.


Vascular Cell | 2013

Human and mouse brain-derived endothelial cells require high levels of growth factors medium for their isolation, in vitro maintenance and survival

Stefania Elena Navone; Giovanni Marfia; Sara Nava; Gloria Invernici; Silvia Cristini; Sergio Balbi; Simone Sangiorgi; Emilio Ciusani; Alessandra Bosutti; Giulio Alessandri; Mark Slevin; Eugenio Parati

BackgroundBrain microvascular endothelial cells (BMVECs) constitute the primary limitation for passage of ions and molecules from the blood into the brain through the blood brain barrier. Numerous multi-step procedures for isolating and culturing BMVECs have been described. However, each one demonstrates major limitations in purity of culture and/or low proliferation rate. Our goal was to study the efficiency of our pending patent medium, Endothelial Proliferation Medium (EndoPM), on the isolation and purification of human and murine BMVECs.MethodsBMVECs, cultured in EndoPM were compared to those cultured in a commercial medium EBM. Cultures were characterized by flow cytometric analysis, lineage differentiation, the ability to form tube-like structure, immunofluorescence, molecular analyses and also in an in vivo model assay. Moreover permeability was assayed by monitoring the passage of Dextran-FITC through a tight monolayer of BMVECs grown to confluence in Boyden chambers. One way Anova two-tailed test was utilized for all statistical analyses.ResultsThe properties of ECs in human and murine BMVECs is confirmed by the expression of endothelial markers (CD31, CD105, CD146, Tie-2 and vWF), of representative proangiogenic genes (ICAM1, VCAM1 and integrin ITGAV), of considerable tube-forming ability, with low-density lipoprotein uptake, eNOS and GLUT-1 expression. Furthermore cells are able to express markers of the junctional architecture as VE-cadherin, β-catenin and Claudin-5 and greatly reduce dextran permeability as barrier functional test. Moreover BMVECs spontaneously organize in vascular-like structures and maintain the expression of endothelial markers in an in vivo xenograft model assay. The significant effect of EndoPM is confirmed by the study of proliferation index, survival index and the behaviour of BMVECs and fibroblasts in co-culture conditions.ConclusionHerein we describe a simple and reproducible method for the isolation and expansion of human and mouse BMVECs, based on a newly formulated medium (EndoPM) with optimized concentration of growth factors (EGF, FGF-2 and Bovine Brain Extract-BBE). This procedure should facilitate the isolation and expansion of human and mouse BMVECs with extended lifetime, good viability and purity. This approach may provide an effective strategy to aid phenotypical and functional studies of brain vessels under physiological and pathological conditions.


Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society | 2015

Infrequent Hemorrhagic Complications Following Surgical Drainage of Chronic Subdural Hematomas

Angelo Rusconi; Simone Sangiorgi; Lidia Bifone; Sergio Balbi

Chronic subdural hematomas mainly occur amongst elderly people and usually develop after minor head injuries. In younger patients, subdural collections may be related to hypertension, coagulopathies, vascular abnormalities, and substance abuse. Different techniques can be used for the surgical treatment of symptomatic chronic subdural hematomas : single or double burr-hole evacuation, with or without subdural drainage, twist-drill craniostomies and classical craniotomies. Failure of the brain to re-expand, pneumocephalus, incomplete evacuation, and recurrence of the fluid collection are common complications following these procedures. Acute subdural hematomas may also occur. Rarely reported hemorrhagic complications include subarachnoid, intracerebral, intraventricular, and remote cerebellar hemorrhages. The causes of such uncommon complications are difficult to explain and remain poorly understood. Overdrainage and intracranial hypotension, rapid brain decompression and shift of the intracranial contents, cerebrospinal fluid loss, vascular dysregulation and impairment of venous outflow are the main mechanisms discussed in the literature. In this article we report three cases of different post-operative intracranial bleeding and review the related literature.


international conference on image analysis and processing | 2015

Fully Automatic Brain Tumor Segmentation by Using Competitive EM and Graph Cut

Sergio Balbi; Elisabetta Binaghi

Manual MRI brain tumor segmentation is a difficult and time con- suming task which makes computer support highly desirable. This paper presents a hybrid brain tumor segmentation strategy characterized by the allied use of Graph Cut segmentation method and Competitive Expectation Maximi- zation (CEM) algorithm. Experimental results were obtained by processing in- house collected data and public data from benchmark data sets. To see if the proposed method can be considered an alternative to contemporary methods, the results obtained were compared with those obtained by authors who under- took the Multi-modal Brain Tumor Segmentation challenge. The results ob- tained prove that the method is competitive with recently proposed approaches.

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Renzo Minotto

Ospedale di Circolo e Fondazione Macchi

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Emilio Ciusani

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Eugenio Parati

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Giovanni Marfia

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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