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Dive into the research topics where Sergio Vinci is active.

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Featured researches published by Sergio Vinci.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2006

High-Resolution CT Grading of Tibial Stress Reactions in Distance Runners

Michele Gaeta; Fabio Minutoli; Sergio Vinci; Ignazio Salamone; Letterio D'Andrea; Linda Bitto; Ludovico Magaudda; Alfredo Blandino

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was twofold: to determine whether asymptomatic distance runners exhibit cortical tibial abnormalities on CT and to determine the diagnostic accuracy of CT in athletes with medial tibial stress syndrome. MATERIALS AND METHODS A cross-sectional study with high-resolution CT of both tibiae was performed on 41 subjects: 20 asymptomatic distance runners, 11 distance runners with unilateral or bilateral pain due to medial tibial stress syndrome (14 painful tibiae), and 10 volunteers not involved in a sport. The group was composed of 13 women and 28 men, ranging in age from 18 to 26 years. A total of 82 tibiae, 14 painful and 68 painless, were evaluated. On the basis of CT findings, tibiae were classified in three groups, and correlation between CT classification and symptoms was made. RESULTS Among distance runners, the presence of CT abnormalities was found in 14 (100%) of 14 painful tibiae in patients with medial tibial stress syndrome and in 8 (16.6%) of 48 painless tibiae. The difference was statistically significant (p < 0.001, Fishers exact test). Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy of CT in diagnosing medial tibial stress syndrome were 100%, 88.2%, 63.6%, 100%, and 90.2%, respectively. CONCLUSION High-resolution CT has high diagnostic accuracy in depicting medial tibial stress syndrome. Cortical abnormalities can also be seen in some asymptomatic distance runners.


European Radiology | 2004

Magnetic resonance imaging findings of osteoid osteoma of the proximal femur

Michele Gaeta; Fabio Minutoli; Sergio Vinci; Letterio D’Andrea; Alfredo Blandino

Osteoid osteoma (OO) is a benign bone tumor whose main radiological finding is nidus. OO of the proximal femur can also result in non-specific findings such as hip joint effusion, perinidal bone marrow edema and soft tissue mass. Since the nidus may be difficult to identify with MR, these non-specific findings can lead to erroneous diagnosis. Therefore, MR imaging technique should be optimized in order to identify nidus. Since MR imaging has assumed increasing importance in the evaluation of disorders of the hip, radiologists must be aware of the spectrum of findings of OO of the proximal femur. The aim of this pictorial review is to show the MR imaging findings of intra-articular and extra-articular OO of the proximal femur.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2015

MRI Tractography of Corticospinal Tract and Arcuate Fasciculus in High-Grade Gliomas Performed by Constrained Spherical Deconvolution: Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis

Enricomaria Mormina; Marcello Longo; Concetta Alafaci; Francesco Tomasello; Alessandro Calamuneri; Silvia Marino; Michele Gaeta; Sergio Vinci; Francesca Granata

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: MR imaging tractography is increasingly used to perform noninvasive presurgical planning for brain gliomas. Recently, constrained spherical deconvolution tractography was shown to overcome several limitations of commonly used DTI tractography. The purpose of our study was to evaluate WM tract alterations of both the corticospinal tract and arcuate fasciculus in patients with high-grade gliomas, through qualitative and quantitative analysis of probabilistic constrained spherical deconvolution tractography, to perform reliable presurgical planning. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty patients with frontoparietal high-grade gliomas were recruited and evaluated by using a 3T MR imaging scanner with both morphologic and diffusion sequences (60 diffusion directions). We performed probabilistic constrained spherical deconvolution tractography and tract quantification following diffusion tensor parameters: fractional anisotropy; mean diffusivity; linear, planar, and spherical coefficients. RESULTS: In all patients, we obtained tractographic reconstructions of the medial and lateral portions of the corticospinal tract and arcuate fasciculus, both on the glioma-affected and nonaffected sides of the brain. The affected lateral corticospinal tract and the arcuate fasciculus showed decreased fractional anisotropy (z = 2.51, n = 20, P = .006; z = 2.52, n = 20, P = .006) and linear coefficient (z = 2.51, n = 20, P = .006; z = 2.52, n = 20, P = .006) along with increased spherical coefficient (z = −2.51, n = 20, P = .006; z = −2.52, n = 20, P = .006). Mean diffusivity values were increased only in the lateral corticospinal tract (z = −2.53, n = 20, P = .006). CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we demonstrated that probabilistic constrained spherical deconvolution can provide essential qualitative and quantitative information in presurgical planning, which was not otherwise achievable with DTI. These findings can have important implications for the surgical approach and postoperative outcome in patients with glioma.


Neurosurgical Focus | 2013

Integration of functional neuroimaging in CyberKnife radiosurgery: feasibility and dosimetric results

Alfredo Conti; Antonio Pontoriero; Giuseppe Ricciardi; Francesca Granata; Sergio Vinci; Filippo Flavio Angileri; Stefano Pergolizzi; Concetta Alafaci; Vincenzo Rizzo; Angelo Quartarone; Antonino Germanò; Roberto Foroni; Costantino De Renzis; Francesco Tomasello

OBJECT The integration of state-of-the-art neuroimaging into treatment planning may increase the therapeutic potential of stereotactic radiosurgery. Functional neuroimaging, including functional MRI, navigated brain stimulation, and diffusion tensor imaging-based tractography, may guide the orientation of radiation beams to decrease the dose to critical cortical and subcortical areas. The authors describe their method of integrating functional neuroimaging technology into radiosurgical treatment planning using the CyberKnife radiosurgery system. METHODS The records of all patients who had undergone radiosurgery for brain lesions at the CyberKnife Center of the University of Messina, Italy, between July 2010 and July 2012 were analyzed. Among patients with brain lesions in critical areas, treatment planning with the integration of functional neuroimaging was performed in 25 patients. Morphological and functional imaging data sets were coregistered using the Multiplan dedicated treatment planning system. Treatment planning was initially based on morphological data; radiation dose distribution was then corrected in relation to the functionally relevant cortical and subcortical areas. The change in radiation dose distribution was then calculated. RESULTS The data sets could be easily and reliably integrated into the Cyberknife treatment planning. Using an inverse planning algorithm, the authors achieved an average 17% reduction in the radiation dose to functional areas. Further gain in terms of dose sparing compromised other important treatment parameters, including target coverage, conformality index, and number of monitor units. No neurological deficit due to radiation was recorded at the short-term follow-up. CONCLUSIONS Radiosurgery treatments rely on the quality of neuroimaging. The integration of functional data allows a reduction in radiation doses to functional organs at risk, including critical cortical areas, subcortical tracts, and vascular structures. The relative simplicity of integrating functional neuroimaging into radiosurgery warrants further research to implement, standardize, and identify the limits of this procedure.


Clinical Neuroradiology-klinische Neuroradiologie | 2014

Necrosis Score, Surgical Time, and Transfused Blood Volume in Patients Treated with Preoperative Embolization of Intracranial Meningiomas. Analysis of a Single-Centre Experience and a Review of Literature

A. Nania; Francesca Granata; Sergio Vinci; Antonio Pitrone; Valeria Barresi; Rosa Morabito; N. Settineri; Francesco Tomasello; Concetta Alafaci; Marcello Longo

PurposeSeveral authors have demonstrated that preoperative embolization of meningiomas reduces blood loss during surgery. However, preoperative embolization is still under debate. Aim of this study is the retrospective evaluation of necrosis score, surgical time, and transfused blood volume, on patients affected by intracranial meningiomas treated with preoperative embolization before surgery, compared with a control group treated only with surgery.MethodTwenty-eight patients with meningiomas were subjected to a preoperative embolization with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA). These patients were divided into two groups: group 1, patients with preoperative embolization performed at least 7 days before surgery; and group 2, patients with preoperative embolization performed less than 7 days before surgery. A statistical evaluation was made by comparing necrosis score, surgical time, and transfused blood volume of these groups. Then, we compared these parameters also with group 3, which included patients with surgically treated meningioma who did not undergo preoperative embolization.ResultsSurgery time and transfused blood volume were significantly lower in patients who had been embolized at least 7 days before definitive surgery. Furthermore, large confluent areas of necrosis were significantly more frequent in patients with a larger time span between embolization and surgery.ConclusionPreoperative embolization with PVA in patients with intracranial meningiomas is safe and effective, as it reduces the volume of transfused blood during surgical operation. However, patients should undergo surgery at least 7 days after embolization, as a shorter time interval has been correlated with a longer surgical time and a higher transfused blood volume.


Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 2001

MR white lung sign: incidence and significance in pulmonary consolidations.

Michele Gaeta; Fabio Minutoli; Giorgio Ascenti; Sergio Vinci; Silvio Mazziotti; Alfredo Blandino

Purpose The presence of a pulmonary consolidation with a signal intensity comparable with that of the static fluid on heavily T2-weighted MR images has been named the “MR white lung sign.” This sign has been described in mucinous bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC). Our purpose was to establish the frequency and significance of this sign in pulmonary consolidations of varied causes. Method In this prospective study, 83 patients with pulmonary consolidation underwent MR examination between January and December 1999. Segmental or lobar consolidations were due to pneumonia without central obstruction (n = 22), pneumonitis with central obstruction (n = 21), cicatricial atelectasis (n = 8), passive atelectasis (n = 10), radiation pneumonitis (n = 8), mucinous BAC (n = 5), infarction (n = 3), bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (n = 3), nonmucinous BAC (n = 2), and lymphoma (n = 1). The MR white lung sign was considered present when the signal intensity of a pulmonary consolidation was comparable with that of the static fluid on heavily T2-weighted images obtained with MR hydrography sequences. Interobserver agreement, sensitivity, and specificity of the white lung sign in diagnosing mucinous BAC were calculated. Results The MR white lung sign was present in 7 (8%) of 83 consolidations, including 5 (100%) of 5 cases of mucinous BAC and 2 (10%) of 21 cases of obstructive pneumonitis. The frequency of the white lung sign was 100% in mucinous BAC and 2.6% in consolidations due to other causes. The difference was statistically significant (p < 0.05). Conclusion The white lung sign is an uncommon finding in pulmonary consolidations evaluated with heavily T2-weighted sequences. However, the sign is characteristic of mucinous BAC and adds specificity to the radiologic diagnosis.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008

Diagnostic imaging in athletes with chronic lower leg pain.

Michele Gaeta; Fabio Minutoli; Silvio Mazziotti; Carmela Visalli; Sergio Vinci; Felice Gaeta; Alfredo Blandino

OBJECTIVE Our purpose is to describe the imaging features in athletes with chronic lower leg pain, emphasizing the role of MRI and CT, which are the diagnostic tools with the highest sensitivity and specificity in the differential diagnosis of lower leg pain. Moreover, a diagnostic algorithm in patients with chronic lower leg pain is proposed. CONCLUSION Plain radiography has a low sensitivity but may reveal tibial stress fractures, bone tumors, and soft-tissue calcification. CT and MRI may be useful to better evaluate the abnormalities shown by plain radiography.


European Radiology | 2002

Migrating transient bone marrow edema syndrome of the knee: MRI findings in a new case

Michele Gaeta; Silvio Mazziotti; Fabio Minutoli; Sergio Vinci; Alfredo Blandino

Abstract. We report a case of transient bone marrow edema syndrome migrating within two different compartments of the same knee. This unusual pattern of migration of the marrow edema, which has been previously described only in three cases of transient osteoporosis, may raise the suspicion of an aggressive disease. Radiologists should be aware of this phenomenon in order to avoid an aggressive management of this self-limiting disease.


European Radiology | 2001

Ossifying lipoma of the parapharyngeal space: CT and MRI findings

Fabio Minutoli; Silvio Mazziotti; Michele Gaeta; Sergio Vinci; Marcello Mastroeni; Alfredo Blandino

Abstract. Ossifying lipomas independent of bone tissue are very rare. A literature review revealed that only few cases of ossifying lipoma independent of bone tissue have been reported. None of the cases have been reported in the international radiology literature. In addition, there are no reports concerning the MRI features of this entity. We describe CT and MRI findings in a case of ossifying lipoma of the parapharyngeal space.


Journal of Thoracic Imaging | 2000

Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Bronchioloalveolar Carcinoma

Michele Gaeta; Alfredo Blandino; Emanuele Scribano; Sergio Vinci; Fabio Minutoli; Stefano Pergolizzi

The purpose of this study is to describe the magnetic resonance (MR) features of bronchioloalveolar carcinoma. MR examinations of 18 patients with proven bronchioloalveolar carcinoma were reviewed. Detection at computed tomography (CT) and pathologic confirmation were the entry criteria. Nine patients had a solitary nodule, three patients a lobar consolidation, and six patients had diffuse disease. For each patient, both breath-hold T2-weighted fast spin-echo, and breath-hold T1-weighted gradient-echo images, before and after injection of gadolinium, were available. Nine patients with pulmonary consolidation or diffuse disease had also heavily T2-weighted MR imaging (Haste or TSE 240; Siemens, Erlangen, Germany). MR imaging showed pulmonary abnormalities in 17 of 18 patients. Unenhanced T1-weighted and T2-weighted images depicted tumor in 16 of 18 patients. Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images showed tumor in 17 of 18 patients. In no case did MR imaging depict abnormalities corresponding to the ground-glass opacities seen on CT scans. In three patients with mucinous bronchioloalveolar carcinoma, heavily T2-weighted images showed lesions isointense with respect to static fluid of the human body. In conclusion, the ability of MR imaging in detecting small nodules and ground-glass opacities is limited. However, heavily T2-weighted sequences are able to show the presence of mucin. This is useful information because mucinous bronchioloalveolar carcinoma carries a poor prognosis.

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