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Dive into the research topics where Stefano Binaghi is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefano Binaghi.


Retina-the Journal of Retinal and Vitreous Diseases | 2011

Occurrence Of Sectoral Choroidal Occlusive Vasculopathy And Retinal Arteriolar Embolization After Superselective Ophthalmic Artery Chemotherapy For Advanced Intraocular Retinoblastoma

Francis L. Munier; Maja Beck-Popovic; Aubin Balmer; Marie-Claire Gaillard; Etienne Bovey; Stefano Binaghi

Background: Superselective ophthalmic artery chemotherapy (SOAC) has recently been proposed as an alternative to intravenous chemoreduction for advanced intraocular retinoblastoma. Preliminary results appear promising in terms of tumor control and eye conservation, but little is known regarding ocular toxicity and visual prognosis. In this study, we report on the vascular adverse effects observed in our initial cohort of 13 patients. Methods: The charts of 13 consecutive patients with retinoblastoma who received a total of 30 injections (up to 3 injections of a single agent per patient at 3-week interval) of melphalan (0.35 mg/kg) in the ophthalmic artery between November 2008 and June 2010 were retrospectively reviewed. RetCam fundus photography and fluorescein angiography were performed at presentation and before each injection. Vision was assessed at the latest visit. Results: Enucleation and external beam radiotherapy could be avoided in all cases but one, with a mean follow-up of 7 months. Sectoral choroidal occlusive vasculopathy leading to chorioretinal atrophy was observed temporally in 2 eyes (15%) 3 weeks to 6 weeks after the beginning of SOAC and retinal arteriolar emboli in 1 eye 2 weeks after injection. There was no stroke or other clinically significant systemic side effects except a perioperative transient spasm of the internal carotid artery in one patient. Vision ranged between 20/1600 and 20/32 depending on the status of the macula. Conclusion: Superselective ophthalmic artery chemotherapy was effective in all patients with no stroke or other systemic vascular complications. Unlike intravenous chemoreduction, SOAC is associated with potentially sight-threatening adverse effects, such as severe chorioretinal atrophy secondary to subacute choroidal occlusive vasculopathy or central retinal artery embolism, not to mention the risk of ophthalmic artery obstruction, which was not observed in this series. Further analysis of the risks and benefits of SOAC will define its role within the therapeutic arsenal. Meanwhile, we suggest that SOAC should be given in one eye only and restricted to advanced cases of retinoblastoma, as an alternative to enucleation and/or external beam radiotherapy.


European Neurology | 2001

Three-dimensional computed tomography angiography and magnetic resonance angiography of carotid bifurcation stenosis.

Stefano Binaghi; Philippe Maeder; Antoine Uske; Jean-Yves Meuwly; Gerald Devuyst; Reto Meuli

Purpose: To evaluate the role of computed tomography angiography (CTA) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) in the quantification of atherosclerotic stenosis of carotid artery bifurcation in comparison with digital substraction angiography (DSA) and Doppler sonography (DS). Materials and Methods: Twenty-five patients with atherosclerotic disease of the carotid arteries with proven stenosis by DSA, had spiral CTA, MRA using two- and three-dimensional time-of-flight gradient echo techniques, and DS using Doppler flow signal recording (total 47 carotid artery bifurcations). The degree of stenosis was measured according to the North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial criteria: total occlusion (100%), severe (70–99%), moderate (30–69%) and mild (0–29%). The degree of stenosis measured by CTA, MRA and DS was compared to DSA, used as the gold standard. Results: Ninety-seven percent of MRA measures were equivalent to DSA, and 3% were underestimated; 96% of CTA measures were equivalent to DSA, and 4% were underestimated; 77% of DS measures were equivalent to DSA, 21% were overestimated and 2% were underestimated. Conclusions: CTA and MRA are equally accurate methods in quantifying the degree of carotid bifurcation stenosis.


Survey of Ophthalmology | 2015

The potential of 3T high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging for diagnosis, staging, and follow-up of retinoblastoma

Marcus C. de Jong; Pim de Graaf; Hervé Brisse; Paolo Galluzzi; Sophia Göricke; Annette C. Moll; Francis L. Munier; Maja Beck Popovic; Alexandre Moulin; Stefano Binaghi; Jonas A. Castelijns; Philippe Maeder

We demonstrate the value of high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in diagnosing, staging, and follow-up of retinoblastoma during eye-saving treatment. We have included informative retinoblastoma cases scanned on a 3T MRI system from a retrospective retinoblastoma cohort from 2009 through 2013. We show that high-resolution MRI has the potential to detect small intraocular seeds, hemorrhage, and metastatic risk factors not visible with fundoscopy (e.g., optic nerve invasion and choroidal invasion), and treatment response. Unfortunately, however, the diagnostic accuracy of high-resolution MRI is not perfect, especially for subtle intraocular seeds or minimal postlaminar optic nerve invasion. The most important application of MRI is the detection of metastatic risk factors, as these cannot be found by fundoscopy and ultrasound.


Neurology India | 2011

Intraarterial nimodipine for the treatment of symptomatic vasospasm after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: A preliminary study

A. R. Dehdashti; Stefano Binaghi; Antoine Uske; Luca Regli

OBJECTIVE Despite dramatic advances in all medical era, cerebral vasospasm is still the major complication in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). The purpose of this study was to assess the influence of intraarterial (IA) nimodipine in the treatment of symptomatic vasospasm and in preventing neurological disabilities. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed 10 patients of SAH who received IA nimodipine in 15 procedures. The decision to perform angiography and endovascular treatment was based on the neurological examination, brain computed tomography (CT) and CT-angiography. The procedure reports, anesthesia records, neurological examination before and after the procedure, brain imaging and short- and long-term outcome were studied. RESULTS The average dose of nimodipine was 2 mg. The median change in mean arterial pressure at 10 min was -10 mmHg. No significant change of heart rate was observed at 10 min. There was radiological improvement in 80% of the procedures. Neurological improvement was noted after eight out of 12 procedures when nimodipine was used as the sole treatment and after 10 out of 15, overall. Six patients clinically improved after the treatment and had good outcome. In one patient, an embolus caused fatal anterior and middle cerebral arteries infarction. There was no other neurological deficit or radiological abnormality due to the nimodipine treatment itself. CONCLUSION Low-dose IA nimodipine is a valid adjunct for the endovascular treatment of cerebral vasospasm. Beneficial effects are achieved in some patients, prompting a prospective control study.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2012

Risk factor impact on blood flow velocities and clinical outcomes of stented cervical and intracranial stenoses: preliminary observations

Tiago Moreira; Patrik Michel; Stefano Binaghi; Lorenz Hirt

OBJECTIVES The role of angioplasty/stenting procedures, neurointerventionist experience, vascular risk factors, medical treatment and blood flow velocities were analysed to identify possible causes of intra-stent restenosis (ISR) following stenting of cervical and/or intracranial arteries, assuming progressive atherosclerosis to be the shared mechanism in both territories. Patients. 26 cerebrovascular patients subjected to stenting of severe (≥85%) symptomatic or asymptomatic carotid stenoses or moderate-to-severe (≥50%) intracranial or vertebral stenoses were included. METHODS Clinical, radiological and ultrasonographic follow-up data were analysed retrospectively. RESULTS Overall, stenting of the internal carotid artery (ICA) induced significant reductions in peak systolic velocities at 2 years (96±31 cm/s vs. 358.2±24.9 cm/s at baseline). The procedure-related ischemic complications rate was 7.4% (one hemispheric stroke and one TIA). The rate of ISR≤50% was 8% in the ICA at 2 years; was 50% in the common carotid artery (CCA) at 1 year, with concomitant distal ICA stenosis in 75% of CCA stenting, but all ISR were asymptomatic. Patients with ISR of the ICA were significantly younger (56.8±4.5 vs. 71.3±3.6 years, P=0.042) and had significantly more risk factors (5.5±0.9 vs. 3±0.3, P=0.012). No ISR≥70% was detected. CONCLUSIONS ISR is relatively infrequent and, when present, it is mild and asymptomatic. Restenosis is more frequent in younger patients and those with several risk factors, and it may also be related to stenting of previous carotid endarterectomy.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2013

Dispersion and ‘salted pretzel sign’ from thrombolysis of a spontaneous calcified embolus in an acute stroke

Markus Gschwind; Stefano Binaghi; Anastasia Zekeridou; Patrik Michel

Emboli are one of the main causes of cerebral ischaemia and acute stroke. Calcified emboli are much less frequent, and most of the few reported cases occurred secondary to manipulation (aortic valve disease and cardiac catheterisation).1 Cases of spontaneous calcified emboli from the carotid artery, without previous manipulation, are very rare.2 While intravenous thrombolysis is the standard …


Neurology: Clinical Practice | 2016

Stenting as a treatment for exercise-induced intracranial hypertension from bilateral jugular vein obstruction

Patrik Michel; Anne Angelillo-Scherrer; Philippe Maeder; Stefano Binaghi; Ivo A Meyer; Pamela N Correia

Secondary pseudotumor cerebri syndrome (SPCS) is defined as intracranial hypertension caused by factors other than an underlying infectious, malignant, or macroscopic structural brain lesion.1 We report a case of exercise-induced SPCS due to decompensation of borderline venous return following bilateral jugular vein (JV) obstruction treated with jugular stenting based on pathophysiological reasoning.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2003

Multislice computerized tomography angiography in the evaluation of intracranial aneurysms: a comparison with intraarterial digital subtraction angiography.

Max Wintermark; Antoine Uske; Marc Chalaron; Luca Regli; Philippe Maeder; Reto Meuli; Pierre Schnyder; Stefano Binaghi


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2006

Comparison of multislice computerized tomography angiography and digital subtraction angiography in the postoperative evaluation of patients with clipped aneurysms

Amir R. Dehdashti; Stefano Binaghi; Antoine Uske; Luca Regli


BMC Neurology | 2011

Cerebral aneurysm exclusion by CT angiography based on subarachnoid hemorrhage pattern: a retrospective study

Marc Kelliny; Philippe Maeder; Stefano Binaghi; Marc Levivier; Luca Regli; Reto Meuli

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Reto Meuli

University of Lausanne

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