W. Di Nardo
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
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Featured researches published by W. Di Nardo.
Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2009
W. Di Nardo; Paola Cattani; T. Lopizzo; Italo Cantore; Maria Raffaella Marchese; S. Marchetti; Alessandro Scorpecci; Sara Giannantonio; C. Parrilla; Francesca Cianfrone; Giovanni Fadda; Gaetano Paludetti
Background:The cause of about 30% of bilateral sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is still unknown. A viral etiology is among the most frequently proposed ones and the supposed diagnosis is only based upon few clinical and laboratory data. The detection of viral presence within a damaged compartment may represent a way to supply interesting data for confirmation of viral etiology and to explain pathogenic mechanisms. Objectives:The aim of our study was to identify the possible presence of pathogenic viruses in the inner ear extracellular compartment in patients with bilateral severe sensorineural deafness of unknown etiology who underwent cochlear implant surgery. Methods: 4 patients, aged from 2 to 7 years and affected by SNHL underwent cochlear implantation surgery and, at the same time, endolabyrinthine fluid sampling. The samples were subsequently sent for viral nucleic acid extraction and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) treatment: multiplex PCR and realtime-PCR were used. In each endolabyrinthine fluid sample, cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), varicella-zoster virus (VZV), herpes simplex virus type 1 and 2 (HSV-1, HSV-2) and enterovirus genomes were searched for. Results: One patient was positive for intracochlear CMV, as confirmed by another base-pair segment PCR. EBV, VZV, HSV and enterovirus were detected in none of the 4 patients. Conclusions: Our finding of CMV genome within the cochlea of a deaf patient without any evidence of acute and prenatal CMV infection suggests its possible role in postnatal inner ear injury through reactivation of latent virus within the cochlea. This hypothesis could also be considered valid for some patients with anti-CMV-IgG-positive serology and absence of endolabyrinthine viral genome since viruses can be in an inactive state at the time of fluid collection. PCR has proved to be a very useful tool in order to investigate infectious causes of deafness even for more than one virus type at a time and in a limited quantity of sample, such as the small volume of endolabyrinthine liquid collected from children during cochlear implant surgery.
European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 2001
W. Di Nardo; Annarita Fetoni; Susanna Buldrini; Stefano Di Girolamo
Abstract Very little information has been published on the clinical outcome of auditory brainstem implants (ABI). The present paper evaluates results obtained in a patient affected by a bilateral acoustic neuroma in type II neurofibromatosis who received an implant during removal of the residual tumor. One year later surgical revision of the ABI was necessary because no auditory sensation was obtained after ABI activation. Twelve months after the surgical revision, 12 electrodes out of 15 evoked auditory sensation. The results of rehabilitation were compared with those obtained in a group of eight postlingually deaf patients with cochlear implants (CI). Twelve months postoperatively the CI patients identified 97.7 ± 5.1% of bisyllabic words in a closed set while the ABI patient identified 86%. CI patients recognized 87.1 ± 11.3% of sentences and 81.3 ± 14.8% of words with contextual cues while the ABI patient recognized 75% and 65% respectively. Speech recognition improved more slowly in the ABI patient than in the CI patients and his scores for open-set words and sentences without lip reading and contextual cues were poorer. Although the results obtained in the ABI patient were not as good as those obtained in the CI patients, the ABI patient said his quality of life was improved.
Virtual Reality | 1999
S. Di Girolamo; W. Di Nardo; Pasqualina Maria Picciotti; Gaetano Paludetti; F Ottaviani; Ornella Chiavola
Previous experiences on vestibular compensation showed that multisensorial stimulations affect postural unbalance recovery. Virtual Environment (VE) exposure seems very useful in vestibular rehabilitation, since the experience gained during VE exposure is transferable to the real world. The rearrangement of the hierarchy of the postural cues was evaluated in 105 patients affected by visual, labyrinthic and somatosensory pathology in normal conditions and during sensorial deprivation. They were divided into five groups according to pathology and compared to 50 normal controls. Our data show that VE exposure is a reliable method to identify the deficient subsystem and the level of substitution. Moreover, Virtual Reality (VR) would accelerate the compensation of an acute loss of labyrinthine function, related to adaptive modifications of the vestibulo-ocular and vestibulo-spinal reflexes, overstimulating the residual labyrinthine function. The residual labyrinthine function is poor in chronic bilateral vestibular deficit and VE exposure should provide sensory substitution or sensory motor reorganisation, thereby modulating the external spatial reference and promoting the reorganisation of the multiple sensory input. The potential for VE exposure perspectives seems very promising when dealing with the vestibular system where there is a continuous rearrangement of different sensorial informations as a result of environmental and age-related changes.
Acta Otorhinolaryngologica Italica | 2012
Gaetano Paludetti; Guido Conti; W. Di Nardo; E. De Corso; Rolando Rolesi; Pasqualina Maria Picciotti; Anna Rita Fetoni
European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 2014
W. Di Nardo; R. Anzivino; Sara Giannantonio; Lorenzo Schinaia; Gaetano Paludetti
Journal of Vestibular Research-equilibrium & Orientation | 1999
S. Di Girolamo; W. Di Nardo; Antonella Cosenza; F Ottaviani; Anna Dickmann; Gustavo Savino
Nuklearmedizin-nuclear Medicine | 1996
G. De Rossi; Gaetano Paludetti; W. Di Nardo; M. L. Calcagnil; D. Di Giuda; G. Almadori; Jacopo Galli
Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 2010
W. Di Nardo; Alessandro Scorpecci; Sara Giannantonio; Francesca Cianfrone; C. Parrilla; Gaetano Paludetti
Acta Otorhinolaryngologica Italica | 2015
W. Di Nardo; Lorenzo Schinaia; Roberta Anzivino; E. De Corso; A. Ciacciarelli; Gaetano Paludetti
Acta Otorhinolaryngologica Italica | 2005
Pasqualina Maria Picciotti; Se Agostino; W. Di Nardo; Emanuele Scarano