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Dive into the research topics where Vittorio Sciarretta is active.

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Featured researches published by Vittorio Sciarretta.


Neuroendocrinology | 2006

The endoscopic versus the traditional approach in pituitary surgery.

Giorgio Frank; Ernesto Pasquini; Giovanni Farneti; Diego Mazzatenta; Vittorio Sciarretta; Vincenzo Grasso; Marco Faustini Fustini

The transsphenoidal route is the most widely used technique for pituitary adenoma surgery due to its rapidity, good tolerance, effectiveness and low complication rate. These are the parameters we utilized in comparing endoscopic with microscopic transsphenoidal surgery. We reviewed the medical records of 418 patients affected by pituitary adenomas who underwent endoscopic transsphenoidal surgery between May 1998 and December 2004, and in this paper, we present the results of 381 patients who fulfilled the follow-up criteria after a minimum period of 15 months. Our experience confirms the previous data on the rapidity and satisfactory tolerance of the endoscopic procedure. We also confirm the low complication rate, specifying that complications characteristic of the approaching phase were certainly reduced; instead, complications characteristic of tumor removal still remained similar to those reported in the microsurgical literature. The results were comparable with those of the best microsurgical series regarding endosellar lesions, but tumor removal was notably superior when dealing with tumors having an extrasellar extension. The improvement may be explained by the excellent vision of the deep surgical fields due to the endoscope and by the extreme flexibility of the surgical trajectory, mainly due to the absence of the divaricator, giving access to the ramifications of the tumor, otherwise difficult to reach.


Neurosurgery | 2006

The endoscopic extended transsphenoidal approach for craniopharyngiomas

Giorgio Frank; Ernesto Pasquini; Francesco Doglietto; Diego Mazzatenta; Vittorio Sciarretta; Giovanni Farneti; Fabio Calbucci

OBJECTIVE: The endoscope has recently been applied to the supradiaphragmatic transsphenoidal approach, but only case reports dealing with different pathological features have been described. The authors present their experience with this technique in 10 patients with craniopharyngiomas. METHODS: A pure endoscopic endonasal technique was used. From November 1998 through May 2005, four males and six females with a craniopharyngioma, either purely supradiaphragmatic (six patients) or with a significant suprasellar component (four patients), were treated. The tumors had a mean diameter of 2.9 cm (range, 1–4 cm); four patients had a major prechiasmatic component and six had a retrochiasmatic one. RESULTS: Seven total, one subtotal, and two partial resections were obtained. Vision symptoms improved significantly in six out of eight patients. Endocrine function did not improve after surgery, and diabetes insipidus was the most frequent deficit, although it was transient in five out of eight patients. Cerebrospinal fluid leak was the most frequent complication and required reoperation in two patients. Postoperative obesity occurred in two patients. No recurrence has yet been documented in the total resection group. The mean follow-up period is 37 months (range, 3–75 mo). CONCLUSION: The endoscopic technique allows results comparable with the best microscopic series. We think that this technique increases the safety of the procedure because of improved vision. Further studies are required to better define the exact location of the tumor with respect to the arachnoidal plane, the extra-arachnoidal craniopharyngioma being the most suitable for a radical removal using a transsphenoidal supradiaphragmatic approach.


Neurosurgery | 2006

The Endoscopic Transnasal Transsphenoidal Approach for the Treatment of Cranial Base Chordomas and Chondrosarcomas

Giorgio Frank; Vittorio Sciarretta; Fabio Calbucci; Giovanni Farneti; Diego Mazzatenta; Ernesto Pasquini

OBJECTIVE: We report our experience with endoscopic transsphenoidal or extended endoscopic transsphenoidal approaches for the treatment of cranial base lesions such as clival chordomas and chondrosarcomas. METHODS: Between May 1998 and April 2004, 11 patients (four were recurrences because they previously had been treated with surgery and/or radiotherapy) underwent transnasal transsphenoidal endoscopic surgery for cranial base chordomas and chondrosarcomas at the Neurosurgical Department of Bellaria Hospital in Bologna. The transsphenoidal endoscopic approach and the ethmoid-pterygo-sphenoidal endoscopic approach were used to accomplish resection of the lesions involving the clivus and extending up to the parasellar region and to the petrous apex, or within the cavernous sinus. RESULTS: Patient follow-up periods ranged from 15 to 69 months (mean, 27 mo). Three patients died of chordoma progression at 20, 14, and 10 months, respectively, after endoscopic treatment. One patient experienced two recurrences; the first was treated using a new endoscopic approach, whereas the second, 1 year later, was treated by means of a far lateral approach. Four patients underwent postoperative proton beam radiotherapy, whereas one underwent a conventional megavoltage x-radiation therapy. However, postoperative radiotherapy was not administered in the two patients treated for cranial base chondrosarcoma. CONCLUSION: The flexibility of this new technique with respect to the classical microscopic transsphenoidal approach permits us to widen the horizon of surgical management of aggressive cranial base tumors such as clival chordomas and chondrosarcomas.


Neurosurgery | 2005

Transsphenoidal endoscopic approach in the treatment of Rathke's cleft cyst.

Giorgio Frank; Vittorio Sciarretta; Diego Mazzatenta; Giovanni Farneti; Giovanni Carlo Modugno; Ernesto Pasquini

OBJECTIVE:In this study, the usefulness of the transsphenoidal endoscopic approach in the treatment of a Rathke’s cleft cyst is reported. METHODS:Between June 1998 and December 2002, 22 patients affected by sellar-suprasellar Rathke’s cleft cysts were treated using a transsphenoidal endoscopic approach. Fourteen patients experienced pituitary dysfunction (64%), five experienced visual impairment (23%), and three reported headaches (14%). RESULTS:The patient follow-up ranged from 8 to 60 months (mean, 33 mo). Pituitary function was restored only in the four patients with hyperprolactinemia, whereas visual impairment and headache improved in all patients. However, when present before surgery, hypopituitarism was unaffected by surgery. Two patients experienced permanent diabetes insipidus (one of them before surgery). Only one recurrence was observed in a 13-year-old girl at 12 months after surgery, and it was treated using a new transsphenoidal endoscopic approach. CONCLUSION:The transsphenoidal endoscopic approach represents a straightforward and mini-invasive approach for the drainage and biopsy of a Rathke’s cleft cyst.


American Journal of Rhinology | 2002

Endoscopic endonasal approach for the treatment of benign schwannoma of the sinonasal tract and pterygopalatine fossa.

Ernesto Pasquini; Vittorio Sciarretta; Giovanni Farneti; Antonio Ippolito; Diego Mazzatenta; Giorgio Frank

Schwannomas are tumors that rarely involve the sinonasal tract or the pterygopalatine fossa. Three cases of benign schwannomas originating in the nasal cavity, the nasal-ethmoid, and the pterygopalatine fossa are reported. Surgical treatment is considered the treatment of choice to achieve long-term success. In this study, the effectiveness of the endoscopic endonasal approach is outlined for the diagnosis and treatment of these benign tumors.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2004

Endoscopic treatment of benign tumors of the nose and paranasal sinuses.

Ernesto Pasquini; Vittorio Sciarretta; Giorgio Frank; Cosetta Cantaroni; Giovanni Carlo Modugno; Diego Mazzatenta; Giovanni Farneti

OBJECTIVE: The endoscopic approach can be successfully employed for the treatment of benign tumors such as fibroosseus and vascular lesions, pleomorphic adenomas, gliomas, and schwannomas. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Nineteen patients diagnosed with benign tumors of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses and treated using an endoscopic approach were retrospectively reviewed. The endoscopic approach was used exclusively in 15 cases and was associated with an external approach in 4 cases (due to an intracranial extension of the tumor in 3 patients and its location at the level of the anterior wall of the frontal sinus in the last case). RESULTS: The resection of the lesions was radical in 18 patients and subtotal in 1 case. The mean follow-up was 27 months and only 1 recurrence (5%) was observed in the juvenile angiofibroma group 20 months postoperatively. CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: In selected cases, endoscopic surgery can be considered an effective treatment for the resection of benign tumors involving the sinonasal tract.


International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology | 2003

Endoscopic treatment of congenital choanal atresia

Ernesto Pasquini; Vittorio Sciarretta; Domenico Saggese; Cosetta Cantaroni; Giovanni Macrı̀; Giovanni Farneti

This report outlines the effectiveness of the transnasal endoscopic approach for the treatment of congenital choanal atresia. Fourteen patients with age between 5 days and 15 years were treated using this approach by means of 0 and 30 degrees 4 or 2.7 mm telescopes: three cases were bilateral while 11 were unilateral. The time of stenting ranged from 3 to 6 days (mean 4 days) in the three newborn patients and between 1 and 2 weeks (mean 1 week) in the other nine patients. In the last two cases, stenting was not carried out. The overall follow-up period ranged from 2 to 64 months (mean 31 months). Only one restenosis was observed in this series 2 months after surgery. This restenosis was successfully treated by endoscopic revision. The authors believe that a correct repositioning of mucosal flaps after the resection of the atretic plate is of paramount importance in avoiding restenosis of the neochoana and in reducing the time and/or the use of stenting.


American Journal of Rhinology | 2006

Endoscopic sinus surgery for the treatment of vascular tumors.

Vittorio Sciarretta; Ernesto Pasquini; Giovanni Farneti; Giorgio Frank; Diego Mazzatenta; Fabio Calbucci

Background This study points out the effectiveness of the endoscopic approach for the treatment of vascular lesions such as angiofibroma, hemangioma, and hemangiopericytoma involving the nose and paranasal sinuses. Methods We performed a retrospective study at an academic tertiary referral center. Thirteen patients, diagnosed with vascular tumors of the nose and paranasal sinuses were treated endoscopically between February 1996 and July 2003. All patients underwent endonasal endoscopic surgery. Preoperative angiography with embolization was performed in all but two cases. Results The follow-up of this series varied from 6 to 75 months (mean, 23 months); only one recurrence (8%) was observed in the juvenile angiofibroma group encountered 20 months postoperatively. This recurrence was again treated endoscopically. The average intraoperative blood loss for the removal of the juvenile angiofibroma group was 300 mL and it was 100 mL for the other vascular tumors. Conclusion Endoscopic treatment alone is an effective approach for the removal of selected cases of vascular tumors. Even in the presence of a lesion with limited intracranial extension, the tumor still may be amenable to an endoscopic approach alone. On the contrary, this is not true if the intracranial extension receives feeding vessels from the internal carotid arterial system.


Neurosurgery | 2009

Intradural clival chordoma and ecchordosis physaliphora: a challenging differential diagnosis: case report.

Riccardo Ciarpaglini; Ernesto Pasquini; Diego Mazzatenta; Andrea Ambrosini-Spaltro; Vittorio Sciarretta; Giorgio Frank

OBJECTIVEPurely intradural clival chordomas are rare neoplasms, and only a few cases have been reported. The reported cases present features similar to ecchordosis physaliphora, which is a notochordal remnant. We describe these 2 entities and their differential diagnoses, clinical courses, and management. This is the first reported case to be treated using a neuroendoscopic technique. CLINICAL PRESENTATIONA 60-year-old man presenting with memory loss underwent magnetic resonance imaging, which revealed an intradural retroclival mass without bone involvement. INTERVENTIONThe patient underwent an endoscopic transsphenoidal-transclival procedure with subtotal removal of the tumor. Histological findings confirmed the diagnosis of a chordoma. CONCLUSIONEven if some parameters exist for a differential diagnosis, ecchordosis physaliphora and intradural chordoma may represent different aspects of the spectrum of the same pathology. Intradural clival chordomas have a better prognosis with respect to classic chordomas. Therefore, in subtotal removal such as that performed in our case, postoperative radiation therapy should be performed only if a regrowth of the remnant is seen during neuroradiological follow-up.


American Journal of Rhinology | 2006

Endoscopic treatment of benign tumors of the nose and paranasal sinuses: a report of 33 cases.

Vittorio Sciarretta; Ernesto Pasquini; Giorgio Frank; Giovanni Carlo Modugno; Cosetta Cantaroni; Diego Mazzatenta; Giovanni Farneti

Background The endoscopic approach can be used successfully for the treatment of benign tumors such as fibroosseous and vascular lesions, pleomorphic adenoma, glioma, meningioma, and schwannoma. Methods Thirty-three patients diagnosed with benign tumors of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses and treated using an endoscopic approach were reviewed retrospectively. The endoscopic approach was simple in 28 cases and associated with an external approach in 5 cases (because of an intracranial extension of the tumor in four patients and its location at the level of the anterior wall of the frontal sinus in the last case). Results The resection of the lesions was complete in 32 patients and subtotal in one case. The mean follow-up was 28 months and only two recurrences (6%) were observed in the juvenile angiofibroma group and in the case of the fibrous dysplasia associated to aneurysmal bone cyst, respectively, 20 and 24 months postoperatively. Conclusion In selected cases, endoscopic surgery can be considered an effective treatment for the resection of benign tumors involving the sinonasal tract.

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