779 results on '"Chiarugi P"'
Search Results
2. FADS1/2 control lipid metabolism and ferroptosis susceptibility in triple-negative breast cancer
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Lorito, Nicla, Subbiani, Angela, Smiriglia, Alfredo, Bacci, Marina, Bonechi, Francesca, Tronci, Laura, Romano, Elisabetta, Corrado, Alessia, Longo, Dario Livio, Iozzo, Marta, Ippolito, Luigi, Comito, Giuseppina, Giannoni, Elisa, Meattini, Icro, Avgustinova, Alexandra, Chiarugi, Paola, Bachi, Angela, and Morandi, Andrea
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- 2024
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3. Strategies to prevent blood loss and reduce transfusion in emergency general surgery, WSES-AAST consensus paper
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Coccolini, Federico, Shander, Aryeh, Ceresoli, Marco, Moore, Ernest, Tian, Brian, Parini, Dario, Sartelli, Massimo, Sakakushev, Boris, Doklestich, Krstina, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Horer, Tal, Shelat, Vishal, Hardcastle, Timothy, Bignami, Elena, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Weber, Dieter, Kryvoruchko, Igor, Leppaniemi, Ari, Tan, Edward, Kessel, Boris, Isik, Arda, Cremonini, Camilla, Forfori, Francesco, Ghiadoni, Lorenzo, Chiarugi, Massimo, Ball, Chad, Ottolino, Pablo, Hecker, Andreas, Mariani, Diego, Melai, Ettore, Malbrain, Manu, Agostini, Vanessa, Podda, Mauro, Picetti, Edoardo, Kluger, Yoram, Rizoli, Sandro, Litvin, Andrey, Maier, Ron, Beka, Solomon Gurmu, De Simone, Belinda, Bala, Miklosh, Perez, Aleix Martinez, Ordonez, Carlos, Bodnaruk, Zenon, Cui, Yunfeng, Calatayud, Augusto Perez, de Angelis, Nicola, Amico, Francesco, Pikoulis, Emmanouil, Damaskos, Dimitris, Coimbra, Raul, Chirica, Mircea, Biffl, Walter L., and Catena, Fausto
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- 2024
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4. Cesena guidelines: WSES consensus statement on laparoscopic-first approach to general surgery emergencies and abdominal trauma.
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Sermonesi, Giacomo, Tian, Brian, Vallicelli, Carlo, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Damaskos, Dimitris, Kelly, Michael, Leppäniemi, Ari, Galante, Joseph, Tan, Edward, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Khokha, Vladimir, Romeo, Oreste, Chirica, Mircea, Pikoulis, Manos, Litvin, Andrey, Shelat, Vishal, Sakakushev, Boris, Wani, Imtiaz, Sall, Ibrahima, Fugazzola, Paola, Cicuttin, Enrico, Toro, Adriana, Amico, Francesco, Mas, Francesca, De Simone, Belinda, Sugrue, Michael, Bonavina, Luigi, Campanelli, Giampiero, Carcoforo, Paolo, Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Coccolini, Federico, Chiarugi, Massimo, Di Carlo, Isidoro, Di Saverio, Salomone, Podda, Mauro, Pisano, Michele, Sartelli, Massimo, Testini, Mario, Fette, Andreas, Rizoli, Sandro, Picetti, Edoardo, Weber, Dieter, Latifi, Rifat, Kluger, Yoram, Balogh, Zsolt, Biffl, Walter, Jeekel, Hans, Civil, Ian, Hecker, Andreas, Ansaloni, Luca, Bravi, Francesca, Agnoletti, Vanni, Beka, Solomon, Moore, Ernest, and Catena, Fausto
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Acute appendicitis ,Acute care surgery ,Acute cholecystitis ,Acute diverticulitis ,Acute pancreatitis ,Acute peritonitis ,Adhesive small bowel obstruction ,Colo–rectal emergencies ,Emergency general surgery ,Guidelines ,Incarcerated/complicated ventral/inguinal hernia ,Laparoscopic approach ,Laparoscopy ,Mesenteric ischemia ,Minimally invasive surgery/approach ,Penetrating/blunt abdominal trauma ,Perforated peptic ulcer ,Recommendations ,Trauma surgery hemodynamic stability ,Humans ,Emergencies ,Retrospective Studies ,Laparoscopy ,Abdomen ,Abdominal Injuries ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Laparoscopy is widely adopted across nearly all surgical subspecialties in the elective setting. Initially finding indication in minor abdominal emergencies, it has gradually become the standard approach in the majority of elective general surgery procedures. Despite many technological advances and increasing acceptance, the laparoscopic approach remains underutilized in emergency general surgery and in abdominal trauma. Emergency laparotomy continues to carry a high morbidity and mortality. In recent years, there has been a growing interest from emergency and trauma surgeons in adopting minimally invasive surgery approaches in the acute surgical setting. The present position paper, supported by the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), aims to provide a review of the literature to reach a consensus on the indications and benefits of a laparoscopic-first approach in patients requiring emergency abdominal surgery for general surgery emergencies or abdominal trauma. METHODS: This position paper was developed according to the WSES methodology. A steering committee performed the literature review and drafted the position paper. An international panel of 54 experts then critically revised the manuscript and discussed it in detail, to develop a consensus on a position statement. RESULTS: A total of 323 studies (systematic review and meta-analysis, randomized clinical trial, retrospective comparative cohort studies, case series) have been selected from an initial pool of 7409 studies. Evidence demonstrates several benefits of the laparoscopic approach in stable patients undergoing emergency abdominal surgery for general surgical emergencies or abdominal trauma. The selection of a stable patient seems to be of paramount importance for a safe adoption of a laparoscopic approach. In hemodynamically stable patients, the laparoscopic approach was found to be safe, feasible and effective as a therapeutic tool or helpful to identify further management steps and needs, resulting in improved outcomes, regardless of conversion. Appropriate patient selection, surgeon experience and rigorous minimally invasive surgical training, remain crucial factors to increase the adoption of laparoscopy in emergency general surgery and abdominal trauma. CONCLUSIONS: The WSES expert panel suggests laparoscopy as the first approach for stable patients undergoing emergency abdominal surgery for general surgery emergencies and abdominal trauma.
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- 2023
5. Trauma Center model application in the University Hospital of Pisa: a single-center comparative study
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Barbieri, Greta, Cipriano, Alessandro, Coccolini, Federico, Pini, Silvia, Dell’Agnello, Diletta, Ranalli, Alessandro, Cremonini, Camilla, Santini, Massimo, Ghiadoni, Lorenzo, and Chiarugi, Massimo
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- 2024
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6. Acute cholecystitis management in high-risk, critically ill, and unfit-for-surgery patients: the Italian Society of Emergency Surgery and Trauma (SICUT) guidelines
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Coccolini, Federico, Cucinotta, Eugenio, Mingoli, Andrea, Zago, Mauro, Altieri, Gaia, Biloslavo, Alan, Caronna, Roberto, Cengeli, Ismail, Cicuttin, Enrico, Cirocchi, Roberto, Cobuccio, Luigi, Costa, Gianluca, Cozza, Valerio, Cremonini, Camilla, Del Vecchio, Giovanni, Dinatale, Giuseppe, Fico, Valeria, Galatioto, Christian, Kuriara, Hayato, Lacavalla, Domenico, La Greca, Antonio, Larghi, Alberto, Mariani, Diego, Mirco, Paolo, Occhionorelli, Savino, Parini, Dario, Polistina, Francesco, Rimbas, Mihai, Sapienza, Paolo, Tartaglia, Dario, Tropeano, Giuseppe, Venezia, Piero, Venezia, Dario Francesco, Zaghi, Claudia, and Chiarugi, Massimo
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- 2024
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7. Adhesive small bowel obstruction: predictive factors of laparoscopic failure
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Morelli, Marta, Strambi, Silvia, Cremonini, Camilla, Musetti, Serena, Tonerini, Michele, Coccolini, Federico, Chiarugi, Massimo, and Tartaglia, Dario
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- 2024
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8. Strategies to prevent blood loss and reduce transfusion in emergency general surgery, WSES-AAST consensus paper
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Federico Coccolini, Aryeh Shander, Marco Ceresoli, Ernest Moore, Brian Tian, Dario Parini, Massimo Sartelli, Boris Sakakushev, Krstina Doklestich, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Tal Horer, Vishal Shelat, Timothy Hardcastle, Elena Bignami, Andrew Kirkpatrick, Dieter Weber, Igor Kryvoruchko, Ari Leppaniemi, Edward Tan, Boris Kessel, Arda Isik, Camilla Cremonini, Francesco Forfori, Lorenzo Ghiadoni, Massimo Chiarugi, Chad Ball, Pablo Ottolino, Andreas Hecker, Diego Mariani, Ettore Melai, Manu Malbrain, Vanessa Agostini, Mauro Podda, Edoardo Picetti, Yoram Kluger, Sandro Rizoli, Andrey Litvin, Ron Maier, Solomon Gurmu Beka, Belinda De Simone, Miklosh Bala, Aleix Martinez Perez, Carlos Ordonez, Zenon Bodnaruk, Yunfeng Cui, Augusto Perez Calatayud, Nicola de Angelis, Francesco Amico, Emmanouil Pikoulis, Dimitris Damaskos, Raul Coimbra, Mircea Chirica, Walter L. Biffl, and Fausto Catena
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Blood management ,Mortality ,Morbidity ,Policy ,Management ,Jehovah’s witnesses ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Emergency general surgeons often provide care to severely ill patients requiring surgical interventions and intensive support. One of the primary drivers of morbidity and mortality is perioperative bleeding. In general, when addressing life threatening haemorrhage, blood transfusion can become an essential part of overall resuscitation. However, under all circumstances, indications for blood transfusion must be accurately evaluated. When patients decline blood transfusions, regardless of the reason, surgeons should aim to provide optimal care and respect and accommodate each patient’s values and target the best outcome possible given the patient’s desires and his/her clinical condition. The aim of this position paper was to perform a review of the existing literature and to provide comprehensive recommendations on organizational, surgical, anaesthetic, and haemostatic strategies that can be used to provide optimal peri-operative blood management, reduce, or avoid blood transfusions and ultimately improve patient outcomes.
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- 2024
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9. ECLAPTE: Effective Closure of LAParoTomy in Emergency-2023 World Society of Emergency Surgery guidelines for the closure of laparotomy in emergency settings.
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Frassini, Simone, Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Fugazzola, Paola, Biffl, Walter, Coccolini, Federico, Damaskos, Dimitrios, Moore, Ernest, Kluger, Yoram, Ceresoli, Marco, Coimbra, Raul, Davies, Justin, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Di Carlo, Isidoro, Hardcastle, Timothy, Isik, Arda, Chiarugi, Massimo, Gurusamy, Kurinchi, Maier, Ronald, Segovia Lohse, Helmut, Jeekel, Hans, Boermeester, Marja, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Inaba, Kenji, Weber, Dieter, Augustin, Goran, Bonavina, Luigi, Velmahos, George, Sartelli, Massimo, Di Saverio, Salomone, Ten Broek, Richard, Granieri, Stefano, Dal Mas, Francesca, Farè, Camilla, Peverada, Jacopo, Zanghì, Simone, Viganò, Jacopo, Tomasoni, Matteo, Dominioni, Tommaso, Cicuttin, Enrico, Hecker, Andreas, Tebala, Giovanni, Galante, Joseph, Wani, Imtiaz, Khokha, Vladimir, Sugrue, Michael, Scalea, Thomas, Tan, Edward, Malangoni, Mark, Pararas, Nikolaos, Podda, Mauro, De Simone, Belinda, Ivatury, Rao, Cui, Yunfeng, Kashuk, Jeffry, Peitzman, Andrew, Kim, Fernando, Pikoulis, Emmanouil, Sganga, Gabriele, Chiara, Osvaldo, Kelly, Michael, Marzi, Ingo, Picetti, Edoardo, Agnoletti, Vanni, DeAngelis, Nicola, Campanelli, Giampiero, de Moya, Marc, Litvin, Andrey, Martínez-Pérez, Aleix, Sall, Ibrahima, Rizoli, Sandro, Tomadze, Gia, Sakakushev, Boris, Stahel, Philip, Civil, Ian, Shelat, Vishal, Costa, David, Chichom-Mefire, Alain, Latifi, Rifat, Chirica, Mircea, Amico, Francesco, Pardhan, Amyn, Seenarain, Vidya, Boyapati, Nikitha, Hatz, Basil, Ackermann, Travis, Abeyasundara, Sandun, Fenton, Linda, Plani, Frank, Sarvepalli, Rohit, Rouhbakhshfar, Omid, Caleo, Pamela, Ho-Ching Yau, Victor, Clement, Kristenne, Christou, Erasmia, Castillo, Ana, Gosal, Preet, Balasubramaniam, Sunder, Hsu, Jeremy, Banphawatanarak, Kamon, and Pisano, Michele
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Abdominal wall incision ,Closure technique ,Emergency ,Incisional hernia ,Laparotomy closure ,Midline incision ,Wound complications ,Wound dehiscence ,Humans ,Laparotomy ,Abdominal Wound Closure Techniques ,Suture Techniques ,Incisional Hernia ,Reoperation - Abstract
Laparotomy incisions provide easy and rapid access to the peritoneal cavity in case of emergency surgery. Incisional hernia (IH) is a late manifestation of the failure of abdominal wall closure and represents frequent complication of any abdominal incision: IHs can cause pain and discomfort to the patients but also clinical serious sequelae like bowel obstruction, incarceration, strangulation, and necessity of reoperation. Previous guidelines and indications in the literature consider elective settings and evidence about laparotomy closure in emergency settings is lacking. This paper aims to present the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) project called ECLAPTE (Effective Closure of LAParoTomy in Emergency): the final manuscript includes guidelines on the closure of emergency laparotomy.
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- 2023
10. Fever management in children and insights into fever of unknown origin: a survey among Italian pediatricians
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Elena Chiappini, Michela Orlandi, Alberto Chiarugi, Antonio Di Mauro, Antonella Insalaco, Gregorio Paolo Milani, Monica Vallini, and Andrea Lo Vecchio
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fever ,fever of unknown origin ,children ,paracetamol ,ibuprofen ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundFever is a common symptom in children, but despite existing guidelines, pediatricians may not fully apply recommendations. Fever of Unknown Origin (FUO) is generally referred to as an unexplained prolonged fever. However, a standardized FUO definition and management is missing.ObjectiveTo collect updated data on the approach to fever and FUO among Italian pediatricians.MethodsA cross-sectional anonymous survey was conducted among a large sample of primary care and hospital pediatricians. The panel group formulated and proposed a practical FUO definition, using a modified Delphi approach. A 75% consensus was required to reach an agreement.ResultsAmong 620 respondents, paracetamol was the first-choice antipyretic for 97.7% of participants, followed by ibuprofen; 38.4% prescribed antipyretics based on a specific body temperature rather than on child's discomfort, while physical methods were almost completely abandoned. Alternate treatment was recommended by 19.8% (123/620) of participants, 16.9% (105/620) would prescribe antipyretics to prevent adverse events following immunization. Regarding FUO diagnosis, 58.3% (362/620) considered as cut-off a body temperature above 38°C; the duration required was one week according to 36.45% (226/620) of participants, two weeks according to 35.32% (219/620). The FUO definition proposed by the expert panel reached 81% of consent. Large agreement was observed on first-level laboratory and instrumental investigations in the diagnostic evaluation of FUO, whereas more discrepancies arose on second and third-level investigations. Compared to what participants reported for the treatment of non-prolonged fever, a significant decrease in the prescription of paracetamol as first-choice drug in children with FUO was observed (80.5%; P
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- 2024
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11. Spread and feasibility of non-operative management (NOM) of traumatic splenic injuries in adults: a national survey
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Visconti, Diego, Parini, Dario, Mariani, Diego, Biloslavo, Alan, Bellio, Gabriele, Ceolin, Martina, Cozza, Valerio, Musetti, Serena, Pivetta, Emanuele, Kurihara, Hayato, Zago, Mauro, Santarelli, Mauro, and Chiarugi, Massimo
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- 2024
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12. FADS1/2 control lipid metabolism and ferroptosis susceptibility in triple-negative breast cancer
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Nicla Lorito, Angela Subbiani, Alfredo Smiriglia, Marina Bacci, Francesca Bonechi, Laura Tronci, Elisabetta Romano, Alessia Corrado, Dario Livio Longo, Marta Iozzo, Luigi Ippolito, Giuseppina Comito, Elisa Giannoni, Icro Meattini, Alexandra Avgustinova, Paola Chiarugi, Angela Bachi, and Andrea Morandi
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Ferroptosis ,Lipid Metabolism ,Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids ,Desaturases ,Lipid Droplets ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) has limited therapeutic options, is highly metastatic and characterized by early recurrence. Lipid metabolism is generally deregulated in TNBC and might reveal vulnerabilities to be targeted or used as biomarkers with clinical value. Ferroptosis is a type of cell death caused by iron-dependent lipid peroxidation which is facilitated by the presence of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). Here we identify fatty acid desaturases 1 and 2 (FADS1/2), which are responsible for PUFA biosynthesis, to be highly expressed in a subset of TNBC with a poorer prognosis. Lipidomic analysis, coupled with functional metabolic assays, showed that FADS1/2 high-expressing TNBC are susceptible to ferroptosis-inducing agents and that targeting FADS1/2 by both genetic interference and pharmacological approach renders those tumors ferroptosis-resistant while unbalancing PUFA/MUFA ratio by the supplementation of exogenous PUFA sensitizes resistant tumors to ferroptosis induction. Last, inhibiting lipid droplet (LD) formation and turnover suppresses the buffering capacity of LD and potentiates iron-dependent cell death. These findings have been validated in vitro and in vivo in mouse- and human-derived clinically relevant models and in a retrospective cohort of TNBC patients.
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- 2024
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13. [Acque Sotterranee - Italian Journal of Groundwater is 40 years old]
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Stefano Chiarugi
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ANIPA ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
[Article in Italian] Rivista Acque Sotterranee compie 40 anni
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- 2024
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14. Acute mesenteric ischemia: updated guidelines of the World Society of Emergency Surgery.
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Bala, Miklosh, Catena, Fausto, Kashuk, Jeffry, De Simone, Belinda, Gomes, Carlos, Weber, Dieter, Sartelli, Massimo, Coccolini, Federico, Kluger, Yoram, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Picetti, Edoardo, Ansaloni, Luca, Augustin, Goran, Biffl, Walter, Ceresoli, Marco, Chiara, Osvaldo, Chiarugi, Massimo, Coimbra, Raul, Cui, Yunfeng, Damaskos, Dimitris, Di Saverio, Salomone, Khokha, Vladimir, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Inaba, Kenji, Leppäniemi, Ari, Litvin, Andrey, Peitzman, Andrew, Shelat, Vishal, Sugrue, Michael, Tolonen, Matti, Rizoli, Sandro, Sall, Ibrahima, Beka, Solomon, Di Carlo, Isidoro, Ten Broek, Richard, Mircea, Chirika, Tebala, Giovanni, Pisano, Michele, van Goor, Harry, Maier, Ronald, Jeekel, Hans, Civil, Ian, Hecker, Andreas, Tan, Edward, Soreide, Kjetil, Lee, Matthew, Wani, Imtiaz, Bonavina, Luigi, Malangoni, Mark, Koike, Kaoru, Velmahos, George, Fraga, Gustavo, Fette, Andreas, deAngelis, Nicola, Balogh, Zsolt, Scalea, Thomas, Sganga, Gabriele, Kelly, Michael, Khan, Jim, Stahel, Philip, Moore, Ernest, and Galante, Joseph
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Bowel ischemia ,Guidelines ,Mesenteric arterial occlusion ,Mesenteric artery stenting ,Mesenteric ischemia ,Recommendations ,World Society of Emergency Surgery ,Humans ,Mesenteric Ischemia ,Mesenteric Vascular Occlusion ,Endovascular Procedures ,Ischemia ,Intestines - Abstract
Acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) is a group of diseases characterized by an interruption of the blood supply to varying portions of the intestine, leading to ischemia and secondary inflammatory changes. If untreated, this process may progress to life-threatening intestinal necrosis. The incidence is low, estimated at 0.09-0.2% of all acute surgical admissions, but increases with age. Although the entity is an uncommon cause of abdominal pain, diligence is required because if untreated, mortality remains in the range of 50%. Early diagnosis and timely surgical intervention are the cornerstones of modern treatment to reduce the high mortality associated with this entity. The advent of endovascular approaches in parallel with modern imaging techniques is evolving and provides new treatment options. Lastly, a focused multidisciplinary approach based on early diagnosis and individualized treatment is essential. Thus, we believe that updated guidelines from World Society of Emergency Surgery are warranted, in order to provide the most recent and practical recommendations for diagnosis and treatment of AMI.
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- 2022
15. Long-Term Treatment Over 52 Weeks with Monthly Fremanezumab in Drug-Resistant Migraine: A Prospective Multicenter Cohort Study
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Caponnetto, Valeria, Russo, Antonio, Silvestro, Marcello, Tessitore, Alessandro, De Icco, Roberto, Vaghi, Gloria, Sances, Grazia, Tassorelli, Cristina, Baraldi, Carlo, Castro, Flavia Lo, Guerzoni, Simona, Prudenzano, Maria Pia, Fallacara, Adriana, Gentile, Martino, Ornello, Raffaele, Onofri, Agnese, Burgalassi, Andrea, Chiarugi, Alberto, De Cesaris, Francesco, Granato, Antonio, Casalena, Alfonsina, De Tommaso, Marina, Mampreso, Edoardo, Merlo, Paola, Coppola, Gianluca, Battistini, Stefania, Rebecchi, Valentina, Rainero, Innocenzo, Sepe, Federica Nicoletta, Dalla Volta, Giorgio, Sacco, Simona, Geppetti, Pierangelo, and Iannone, Luigi Francesco
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- 2023
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16. Complication analysis in acute appendicitis, results from an international multicenter study
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Coccolini, Federico, Licitra, Gabriella, De’Angelis, Nicola, Martinez Perez, Aleix, Cremonini, Camilla, Musetti, Serena, Strambi, Silvia, Zampieri, Fabio, Cengeli, Ismail, Tartaglia, Dario, and Chiarugi, Massimo
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- 2024
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17. Postoperative pain management in non-traumatic emergency general surgery: WSES-GAIS-SIAARTI-AAST guidelines.
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Coccolini, Federico, Corradi, Francesco, Sartelli, Massimo, Coimbra, Raul, Kryvoruchko, Igor, Leppaniemi, Ari, Doklestic, Krstina, Bignami, Elena, Biancofiore, Giandomenico, Bala, Miklosh, Marco, Ceresoli, Damaskos, Dimitris, Biffl, Walt, Fugazzola, Paola, Santonastaso, Domenico, Agnoletti, Vanni, Sbarbaro, Catia, Nacoti, Mirco, Hardcastle, Timothy, Mariani, Diego, De Simone, Belinda, Tolonen, Matti, Ball, Chad, Podda, Mauro, Di Carlo, Isidoro, Di Saverio, Salomone, Navsaria, Pradeep, Bonavina, Luigi, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Soreide, Kjetil, Fraga, Gustavo, Carvalho, Vanessa, Batista, Sergio, Hecker, Andreas, Cucchetti, Alessandro, Ercolani, Giorgio, Tartaglia, Dario, Wani, Imtiaz, Kurihara, Hayato, Tan, Edward, Litvin, Andrey, Melotti, Rita, Sganga, Gabriele, Zoro, Tamara, Isirdi, Alessandro, DeAngelis, Nicola, Weber, Dieter, Hodonou, Adrien, tenBroek, Richard, Parini, Dario, Khan, Jim, Sbrana, Giovanni, Coniglio, Carlo, Giarratano, Antonino, Gratarola, Angelo, Zaghi, Claudia, Romeo, Oreste, Kelly, Michael, Forfori, Francesco, Chiarugi, Massimo, Moore, Ernest, Catena, Fausto, Malbrain, Manu, and Galante, Joseph
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Acute ,Emergency ,Morbidity ,Pain ,Surgery ,Treatment ,Abdomen ,Analgesics ,Anesthesia ,Humans ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Perioperative Care ,United States - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-traumatic emergency general surgery involves a heterogeneous population that may present with several underlying diseases. Timeous emergency surgical treatment should be supplemented with high-quality perioperative care, ideally performed by multidisciplinary teams trained to identify and handle complex postoperative courses. Uncontrolled or poorly controlled acute postoperative pain may result in significant complications. While pain management after elective surgery has been standardized in perioperative pathways, the traditional perioperative treatment of patients undergoing emergency surgery is often a haphazard practice. The present recommended pain management guidelines are for pain management after non-traumatic emergency surgical intervention. It is meant to provide clinicians a list of indications to prescribe the optimal analgesics even in the absence of a multidisciplinary pain team. MATERIAL AND METHODS: An international expert panel discussed the different issues in subsequent rounds. Four international recognized scientific societies: World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), Global Alliance for Infection in Surgery (GAIS), Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia Intensive Care (SIAARTI), and American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST), endorsed the project and approved the final manuscript. CONCLUSION: Dealing with acute postoperative pain in the emergency abdominal surgery setting is complex, requires special attention, and should be multidisciplinary. Several tools are available, and their combination is mandatory whenever is possible. Analgesic approach to the various situations and conditions should be patient based and tailored according to procedure, pathology, age, response, and available expertise. A better understanding of the patho-mechanisms of postoperative pain for short- and long-term outcomes is necessary to improve prophylactic and treatment strategies.
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- 2022
18. The LIFE TRIAD of emergency general surgery.
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Coccolini, Federico, Sartelli, Massimo, Kluger, Yoram, Osipov, Aleksei, Cui, Yunfeng, Beka, Solomon, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Sall, Ibrahima, Moore, Ernest, Biffl, Walter, Litvin, Andrey, Pisano, Michele, Magnone, Stefano, Picetti, Edoardo, de Angelis, Nicola, Stahel, Philip, Ansaloni, Luca, Tan, Edward, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Ceresoli, Marco, Hecker, Andreas, Chiara, Osvaldo, Sganga, Gabriele, Khokha, Vladimir, di Saverio, Salomone, Sakakushev, Boris, Campanelli, Giampiero, Fraga, Gustavo, Wani, Imtiaz, Broek, Richard, Cicuttin, Enrico, Cremonini, Camilla, Tartaglia, Dario, Soreide, Kjetil, de Moya, Marc, Koike, Kaoru, De Simone, Belinda, Balogh, Zsolt, Amico, Francesco, Shelat, Vishal, Pikoulis, Emmanouil, Di Carlo, Isidoro, Bonavina, Luigi, Leppaniemi, Ari, Marzi, Ingo, Ivatury, Rao, Khan, Jim, Maier, Ronald, Hardcastle, Timothy, Isik, Arda, Podda, Mauro, Tolonen, Matti, Rasa, Kemal, Navsaria, Pradeep, Demetrashvili, Zaza, Tarasconi, Antonio, Carcoforo, Paolo, Sibilla, Maria, Baiocchi, Gian, Pararas, Nikolaos, Weber, Dieter, Chiarugi, Massimo, Catena, Fausto, and Galante, Joseph
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Data ,Effectiveness ,Emergency General Surgery ,Formation ,Learning ,Outcomes ,Planning ,Hospitals ,Humans ,Registries ,Surgeons - Abstract
Emergency General Surgery (EGS) was identified as multidisciplinary surgery performed for traumatic and non-traumatic acute conditions during the same admission in the hospital by general emergency surgeons and other specialists. It is the most diffused surgical discipline in the world. To live and grow strong EGS necessitates three fundamental parts: emergency and elective continuous surgical practice, evidence generation through clinical registries and data accrual, and indications and guidelines production: the LIFE TRIAD.
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- 2022
19. Anatomy and Classification of Pelvic Trauma
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Jacopo Giuliani, Riccardo Guelfi, Camilla Cremonini, Dario Tartaglia, Giuseppe Zocco, Massimo Chiarugi, and Federico Coccolini
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Pelvic Fracture ,Blunt Trauma ,Hemodynamic Status ,Bleeding ,Vascular Injuries ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Pelvic fracture is one of the most complex injuries in trauma treatment. Bleeding continues to be one of the primary causes of death from pelvic fracture, and the severity of bleeding is not necessarily correlated with the fracture pattern. The priorities in managing pelvic fractures include controlling bleeding. Historically, classification systems only consider the anatomical fracture pattern, which does not correlate with the outcomes. The World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) classification considers both the pelvic fracture pattern and the hemodynamic condition of the patient. Vascular injuries caused by pelvic fractures are potentially lethal because they often manifest as non-compressible multifocal venous bleeding (80–85% of pelvic bleeding) and less frequently as arterial bleeding (15–20% of pelvic bleeding). The presence of vascular injury and open pelvic fractures are independent factors contributing to mortality. Another fundamental factor in the management of pelvic vascular trauma is time [1]. In this context, the assessment of potentially significant vascular injury and timely hemorrhage control should be the highest priorities in the acute management of these injuries. Classification of pelvic injuries that considers both the fracture pattern and the hemodynamic status of the patient, such as the WSES classification, appears to have greater utility in clinical practice compared to the diffused anatomical classification.
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- 2024
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20. Cesena guidelines: WSES consensus statement on laparoscopic-first approach to general surgery emergencies and abdominal trauma
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Giacomo Sermonesi, Brian W. C. A. Tian, Carlo Vallicelli, Fikri M. Abu‑Zidan, Dimitris Damaskos, Michael Denis Kelly, Ari Leppäniemi, Joseph M. Galante, Edward Tan, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Vladimir Khokha, Oreste Marco Romeo, Mircea Chirica, Manos Pikoulis, Andrey Litvin, Vishal Girishchandra Shelat, Boris Sakakushev, Imtiaz Wani, Ibrahima Sall, Paola Fugazzola, Enrico Cicuttin, Adriana Toro, Francesco Amico, Francesca Dal Mas, Belinda De Simone, Michael Sugrue, Luigi Bonavina, Giampiero Campanelli, Paolo Carcoforo, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Federico Coccolini, Massimo Chiarugi, Isidoro Di Carlo, Salomone Di Saverio, Mauro Podda, Michele Pisano, Massimo Sartelli, Mario Testini, Andreas Fette, Sandro Rizoli, Edoardo Picetti, Dieter Weber, Rifat Latifi, Yoram Kluger, Zsolt Janos Balogh, Walter Biffl, Hans Jeekel, Ian Civil, Andreas Hecker, Luca Ansaloni, Francesca Bravi, Vanni Agnoletti, Solomon Gurmu Beka, Ernest Eugene Moore, and Fausto Catena
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Laparoscopy ,Laparoscopic approach ,Minimally invasive surgery/approach ,Emergency general surgery ,Acute care surgery ,Trauma surgery hemodynamic stability ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Laparoscopy is widely adopted across nearly all surgical subspecialties in the elective setting. Initially finding indication in minor abdominal emergencies, it has gradually become the standard approach in the majority of elective general surgery procedures. Despite many technological advances and increasing acceptance, the laparoscopic approach remains underutilized in emergency general surgery and in abdominal trauma. Emergency laparotomy continues to carry a high morbidity and mortality. In recent years, there has been a growing interest from emergency and trauma surgeons in adopting minimally invasive surgery approaches in the acute surgical setting. The present position paper, supported by the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), aims to provide a review of the literature to reach a consensus on the indications and benefits of a laparoscopic-first approach in patients requiring emergency abdominal surgery for general surgery emergencies or abdominal trauma. Methods This position paper was developed according to the WSES methodology. A steering committee performed the literature review and drafted the position paper. An international panel of 54 experts then critically revised the manuscript and discussed it in detail, to develop a consensus on a position statement. Results A total of 323 studies (systematic review and meta-analysis, randomized clinical trial, retrospective comparative cohort studies, case series) have been selected from an initial pool of 7409 studies. Evidence demonstrates several benefits of the laparoscopic approach in stable patients undergoing emergency abdominal surgery for general surgical emergencies or abdominal trauma. The selection of a stable patient seems to be of paramount importance for a safe adoption of a laparoscopic approach. In hemodynamically stable patients, the laparoscopic approach was found to be safe, feasible and effective as a therapeutic tool or helpful to identify further management steps and needs, resulting in improved outcomes, regardless of conversion. Appropriate patient selection, surgeon experience and rigorous minimally invasive surgical training, remain crucial factors to increase the adoption of laparoscopy in emergency general surgery and abdominal trauma. Conclusions The WSES expert panel suggests laparoscopy as the first approach for stable patients undergoing emergency abdominal surgery for general surgery emergencies and abdominal trauma.
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- 2023
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21. Acute diverticulitis in immunocompromised patients: evidence from an international multicenter observational registry (Web-based International Register of Emergency Surgery and Trauma, Wires-T)
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Tartaglia, Dario, Cremonini, Camilla, Annunziata, Elena, Catena, Fausto, Sartelli, Massimo, Kirkpatrick, Andrew W., Musetti, Serena, Strambi, Silvia, Chiarugi, Massimo, and Coccolini, Federico
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- 2023
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22. Validation of the Italian version of the Cluster Headache Impact Questionnaire (CHIQ)
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Onofri, Agnese, Iannone, Luigi Francesco, Granato, Antonio, Garascia, Gabriele, Bartole, Luca, Manganotti, Paolo, Vollono, Catello, Romozzi, Marina, Sottani, Costanza, Calabresi, Paolo, Tassorelli, Cristina, Sances, Grazia, Allena, Marta, De Icco, Roberto, De Cesaris, Francesco, Burgalassi, Andrea, Chiarugi, Alberto, Baraldi, Carlo, Guerzoni, Simona, Prudenzano, Maria Pia, Fallacara, Adriana, Albanese, Maria, Rainero, Innocenzo, Coppola, Gianluca, Casalena, Alfonsina, Mampreso, Edoardo, Pistoia, Francesca, Sarchielli, Paola, Morson, Marisa, Sacco, Simona, Geppetti, Pierangelo, and Ornello, Raffaele
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- 2023
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23. WSES/GAIS/WSIS/SIS-E/AAST global clinical pathways for patients with skin and soft tissue infections.
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Sartelli, Massimo, Coccolini, Federico, Kluger, Yoram, Agastra, Ervis, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Abbas, Ashraf, Ansaloni, Luca, Adesunkanmi, Abdulrashid, Augustin, Goran, Bala, Miklosh, Baraket, Oussama, Biffl, Walter, Ceresoli, Marco, Cerutti, Elisabetta, Chiara, Osvaldo, Cicuttin, Enrico, Chiarugi, Massimo, Coimbra, Raul, Corsi, Daniela, Cortese, Francesco, Cui, Yunfeng, Damaskos, Dimitris, deAngelis, Nicola, Delibegovic, Samir, Demetrashvili, Zaza, De Simone, Belinda, de Jonge, Stijn, Di Bella, Stefano, Di Saverio, Salomone, Duane, Therese, Fugazzola, Paola, Ghnnam, Wagih, Gkiokas, George, Gomes, Carlos, Griffiths, Ewen, Hardcastle, Timothy, Hecker, Andreas, Herzog, Torsten, Karamarkovic, Aleksandar, Khokha, Vladimir, Kim, Peter, Kim, Jae, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Kong, Victor, Koshy, Renol, Inaba, Kenji, Isik, Arda, Ivatury, Rao, Labricciosa, Francesco, Lee, Yeong, Leppäniemi, Ari, Litvin, Andrey, Luppi, Davide, Maier, Ronald, Marinis, Athanasios, Marwah, Sanjay, Mesina, Cristian, Moore, Ernest, Moore, Frederick, Negoi, Ionut, Olaoye, Iyiade, Ordoñez, Carlos, Ouadii, Mouaqit, Peitzman, Andrew, Perrone, Gennaro, Pintar, Tadeja, Pipitone, Giuseppe, Podda, Mauro, Raşa, Kemal, Ribeiro, Julival, Rodrigues, Gabriel, Rubio-Perez, Ines, Sall, Ibrahima, Sato, Norio, Sawyer, Robert, Shelat, Vishal, Sugrue, Michael, Tarasconi, Antonio, Tolonen, Matti, Viaggi, Bruno, Celotti, Andrea, Casella, Claudio, Pagani, Leonardo, Dhingra, Sameer, Baiocchi, Gian, Catena, Fausto, and Galante, Joseph
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Necrotizing infections ,Necrotizing soft-tissue infections ,Skin and soft-tissue infections ,Critical Pathways ,Humans ,Soft Tissue Infections ,United States - Abstract
Skin and soft-tissue infections (SSTIs) encompass a variety of pathological conditions that involve the skin and underlying subcutaneous tissue, fascia, or muscle, ranging from simple superficial infections to severe necrotizing infections.Together, the World Society of Emergency Surgery, the Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery, the Surgical Infection Society-Europe, The World Surgical Infection Society, and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma have jointly completed an international multi-society document to promote global standards of care in SSTIs guiding clinicians by describing reasonable approaches to the management of SSTIs.An extensive non-systematic review was conducted using the PubMed and MEDLINE databases, limited to the English language. The resulting evidence was shared by an international task force with different clinical backgrounds.
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- 2022
24. Colorectal neoplastic emergencies in immunocompromised patients: preliminary result from the Web-based International Register of Emergency Surgery and Trauma (WIRES-T trial)
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Coccolini, Federico, Mazzoni, Alessio, Cremonini, Camilla, Cobuccio, Luigi, Pucciarelli, Marsia, Vetere, Guglielmo, Borelli, Beatrice, Strambi, Silvia, Musetti, Serena, Miccoli, Mario, Cremolini, Chiara, Tartaglia, Dario, and Chiarugi, Massimo
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- 2023
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25. Laparoscopic versus open repair of perforated peptic ulcers: analysis of outcomes and identification of predictive factors of conversion
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Tartaglia, Dario, Strambi, Silvia, Coccolini, Federico, Mazzoni, Alessio, Miccoli, Mario, Cremonini, Camilla, Cicuttin, Enrico, and Chiarugi, Massimo
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- 2023
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26. 2023 WSES guidelines for the prevention, detection, and management of iatrogenic urinary tract injuries (IUTIs) during emergency digestive surgery
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Nicola de’Angelis, Carlo Alberto Schena, Francesco Marchegiani, Elisa Reitano, Belinda De Simone, Geoffrey Yuet Mun Wong, Aleix Martínez-Pérez, Fikri M. Abu-Zidan, Vanni Agnoletti, Filippo Aisoni, Michele Ammendola, Luca Ansaloni, Miklosh Bala, Walter Biffl, Graziano Ceccarelli, Marco Ceresoli, Osvaldo Chiara, Massimo Chiarugi, Stefania Cimbanassi, Federico Coccolini, Raul Coimbra, Salomone Di Saverio, Michele Diana, Marco Dioguardi Burgio, Gustavo Fraga, Paschalis Gavriilidis, Angela Gurrado, Riccardo Inchingolo, Alexandre Ingels, Rao Ivatury, Jeffry L. Kashuk, Jim Khan, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Fernando J. Kim, Yoram Kluger, Zaher Lakkis, Ari Leppäniemi, Ronald V. Maier, Riccardo Memeo, Ernest E. Moore, Carlos A. Ordoñez, Andrew B. Peitzman, Gianluca Pellino, Edoardo Picetti, Manos Pikoulis, Michele Pisano, Mauro Podda, Oreste Romeo, Fausto Rosa, Edward Tan, Richard P. Ten Broek, Mario Testini, Brian Anthony Tian Wei Cheng, Dieter Weber, Emilio Sacco, Massimo Sartelli, Alfredo Tonsi, Fabrizio Dal Moro, and Fausto Catena
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Iatrogenic urinary tract injury ,Ureteral injury ,Bladder injury ,Urinary injury prevention ,Urinary injury diagnosis ,Urinary injury management ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Iatrogenic urinary tract injury (IUTI) is a severe complication of emergency digestive surgery. It can lead to increased postoperative morbidity and mortality and have a long-term impact on the quality of life. The reported incidence of IUTIs varies greatly among the studies, ranging from 0.3 to 1.5%. Given the high volume of emergency digestive surgery performed worldwide, there is a need for well-defined and effective strategies to prevent and manage IUTIs. Currently, there is a lack of consensus regarding the prevention, detection, and management of IUTIs in the emergency setting. The present guidelines, promoted by the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), were developed following a systematic review of the literature and an international expert panel discussion. The primary aim of these WSES guidelines is to provide evidence-based recommendations to support clinicians and surgeons in the prevention, detection, and management of IUTIs during emergency digestive surgery. The following key aspects were considered: (1) effectiveness of preventive interventions for IUTIs during emergency digestive surgery; (2) intra-operative detection of IUTIs and appropriate management strategies; (3) postoperative detection of IUTIs and appropriate management strategies and timing; and (4) effectiveness of antibiotic therapy (including type and duration) in case of IUTIs.
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- 2023
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27. ECLAPTE: Effective Closure of LAParoTomy in Emergency—2023 World Society of Emergency Surgery guidelines for the closure of laparotomy in emergency settings
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Simone Frassini, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Paola Fugazzola, Walter L. Biffl, Federico Coccolini, Dimitrios Damaskos, Ernest E. Moore, Yoram Kluger, Marco Ceresoli, Raul Coimbra, Justin Davies, Andrew Kirkpatrick, Isidoro Di Carlo, Timothy C. Hardcastle, Arda Isik, Massimo Chiarugi, Kurinchi Gurusamy, Ronald V. Maier, Helmut A. Segovia Lohse, Hans Jeekel, Marja A. Boermeester, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Kenji Inaba, Dieter G. Weber, Goran Augustin, Luigi Bonavina, George Velmahos, Massimo Sartelli, Salomone Di Saverio, Richard P. G. Ten Broek, Stefano Granieri, Francesca Dal Mas, Camilla Nikita Farè, Jacopo Peverada, Simone Zanghì, Jacopo Viganò, Matteo Tomasoni, Tommaso Dominioni, Enrico Cicuttin, Andreas Hecker, Giovanni D. Tebala, Joseph M. Galante, Imtiaz Wani, Vladimir Khokha, Michael Sugrue, Thomas M. Scalea, Edward Tan, Mark A. Malangoni, Nikolaos Pararas, Mauro Podda, Belinda De Simone, Rao Ivatury, Yunfeng Cui, Jeffry Kashuk, Andrew Peitzman, Fernando Kim, Emmanouil Pikoulis, Gabriele Sganga, Osvaldo Chiara, Michael D. Kelly, Ingo Marzi, Edoardo Picetti, Vanni Agnoletti, Nicola De’Angelis, Giampiero Campanelli, Marc de Moya, Andrey Litvin, Aleix Martínez-Pérez, Ibrahima Sall, Sandro Rizoli, Gia Tomadze, Boris Sakakushev, Philip F. Stahel, Ian Civil, Vishal Shelat, David Costa, Alain Chichom-Mefire, Rifat Latifi, Mircea Chirica, Francesco Amico, Amyn Pardhan, Vidya Seenarain, Nikitha Boyapati, Basil Hatz, Travis Ackermann, Sandun Abeyasundara, Linda Fenton, Frank Plani, Rohit Sarvepalli, Omid Rouhbakhshfar, Pamela Caleo, Victor Ho-Ching Yau, Kristenne Clement, Erasmia Christou, Ana María González Castillo, Preet K. S. Gosal, Sunder Balasubramaniam, Jeremy Hsu, Kamon Banphawatanarak, Michele Pisano, Toro Adriana, Altomare Michele, Stefano P. B. Cioffi, Andrea Spota, Fausto Catena, and Luca Ansaloni
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Laparotomy closure ,Midline incision ,Emergency ,Abdominal wall incision ,Closure technique ,Incisional hernia ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Laparotomy incisions provide easy and rapid access to the peritoneal cavity in case of emergency surgery. Incisional hernia (IH) is a late manifestation of the failure of abdominal wall closure and represents frequent complication of any abdominal incision: IHs can cause pain and discomfort to the patients but also clinical serious sequelae like bowel obstruction, incarceration, strangulation, and necessity of reoperation. Previous guidelines and indications in the literature consider elective settings and evidence about laparotomy closure in emergency settings is lacking. This paper aims to present the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) project called ECLAPTE (Effective Closure of LAParoTomy in Emergency): the final manuscript includes guidelines on the closure of emergency laparotomy.
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- 2023
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28. Source control in emergency general surgery: WSES, GAIS, SIS-E, SIS-A guidelines
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Federico Coccolini, Massimo Sartelli, Robert Sawyer, Kemal Rasa, Bruno Viaggi, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Kjetil Soreide, Timothy Hardcastle, Deepak Gupta, Cino Bendinelli, Marco Ceresoli, Vishal G. Shelat, Richard ten Broek, Gian Luca Baiocchi, Ernest E. Moore, Ibrahima Sall, Mauro Podda, Luigi Bonavina, Igor A. Kryvoruchko, Philip Stahel, Kenji Inaba, Philippe Montravers, Boris Sakakushev, Gabriele Sganga, Paolo Ballestracci, Manu L. N. G. Malbrain, Jean-Louis Vincent, Manos Pikoulis, Solomon Gurmu Beka, Krstina Doklestic, Massimo Chiarugi, Marco Falcone, Elena Bignami, Viktor Reva, Zaza Demetrashvili, Salomone Di Saverio, Matti Tolonen, Pradeep Navsaria, Miklosh Bala, Zsolt Balogh, Andrey Litvin, Andreas Hecker, Imtiaz Wani, Andreas Fette, Belinda De Simone, Rao Ivatury, Edoardo Picetti, Vladimir Khokha, Edward Tan, Chad Ball, Carlo Tascini, Yunfeng Cui, Raul Coimbra, Michael Kelly, Costanza Martino, Vanni Agnoletti, Marja A. Boermeester, Nicola De’Angelis, Mircea Chirica, Walt L. Biffl, Luca Ansaloni, Yoram Kluger, Fausto Catena, and Andrew W. Kirkpatrick
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Source control ,Emergency ,Infections ,Abdominal ,Surgery ,Trauma ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Intra-abdominal infections (IAI) are among the most common global healthcare challenges and they are usually precipitated by disruption to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Their successful management typically requires intensive resource utilization, and despite the best therapies, morbidity and mortality remain high. One of the main issues required to appropriately treat IAI that differs from the other etiologies of sepsis is the frequent requirement to provide physical source control. Fortunately, dramatic advances have been made in this aspect of treatment. Historically, source control was left to surgeons only. With new technologies non-surgical less invasive interventional procedures have been introduced. Alternatively, in addition to formal surgery open abdomen techniques have long been proposed as aiding source control in severe intra-abdominal sepsis. It is ironic that while a lack or even delay regarding source control clearly associates with death, it is a concept that remains poorly described. For example, no conclusive definition of source control technique or even adequacy has been universally accepted. Practically, source control involves a complex definition encompassing several factors including the causative event, source of infection bacteria, local bacterial flora, patient condition, and his/her eventual comorbidities. With greater understanding of the systemic pathobiology of sepsis and the profound implications of the human microbiome, adequate source control is no longer only a surgical issue but one that requires a multidisciplinary, multimodality approach. Thus, while any breach in the GI tract must be controlled, source control should also attempt to control the generation and propagation of the systemic biomediators and dysbiotic influences on the microbiome that perpetuate multi-system organ failure and death. Given these increased complexities, the present paper represents the current opinions and recommendations for future research of the World Society of Emergency Surgery, of the Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery of Surgical Infection Society Europe and Surgical Infection Society America regarding the concepts and operational adequacy of source control in intra-abdominal infections.
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- 2023
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29. Rimegepant as an acute treatment in a refractory migraine patient non-responder to two anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies and triptans: Case report and pharmacological considerations
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Andrea Burgalassi, Giulia Vigani, Alberto Boccalini, Francesco De Cesaris, Guido Mannaioni, Alberto Chiarugi, Pierangelo Geppetti, and Luigi Francesco Iannone
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background: Small molecule receptor antagonists (gepants), or monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) have recently become available for migraine prophylaxis and/or acute treatment. Considering their shared mechanisms of action, if the failure to an anti-CGRP(R) mAbs preclude the effectiveness of gepants or vice versa is still unknown. Herein, we report the first case of a patient with refractory migraine responsive to the acute use of rimegepant that previously failed two different anti-CGRP(R) mAbs and with no response to other acute treatments. Finally, we performed a literature review on the use of gepants in patients that failed other anti-CGRP and/or triptans. Case: A 56-year-old female with a long history of chronic migraine without aura, fulfilling the EHF definition for a diagnosis of refractory migraine. Overall, the patient treated five not-consecutive migraine attacks. All of them were treated according to the predefined criteria. The mean (±SD) NRS before rimegepant assumption was 7.8 ± 0.9, all attacks cause at least severe impairment at onset, and no rescue medications were used. Pain free at 2 hours was achieved in three out of five attacks (60.0%), with no recurrence of migraine in the following 24 hours. The patient reported also a sustained benefit the day after the drug assumption. The response pain free was achieved after a mean time of 13.3 ± 4.5 minutes considering only attacks successfully treated (three out of five attacks). No adverse events were reported. Conclusions: In conclusion, rimegepant for acute treatment may be a viable option in patients with partial or no response to triptans that failed preventive treatments targeting the CGRP pathway, regardless to ligand or receptor. The failure of anti-CGRP(R) mAbs does not necessarily preclude the use of gepants (acute and/or preventive), but further studies are urgently needed to provide evidence on the efficacy of these treatments in managing drug-resistant migraine and to identify novel treatments for patients.
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- 2024
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30. The mitochondriogenic but not the immunosuppressant effects of mTOR inhibitors prompt neuroprotection and delay disease evolution in a mouse model of progressive multiple sclerosis
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Daniela Buonvicino, Sara Pratesi, Giuseppe Ranieri, Alessandra Pistolesi, Daniele Guasti, and Alberto Chiarugi
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Progressive EAE ,Dexamethasone ,Fingolimod ,Rapamycin ,Mitochondria ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Introduction: Purportedly, the progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) occurs when neurodegenerative processes due to derangement of axonal bioenergetics take over the autoimmune response. However, a clear picture of the causative interrelationship between autoimmunity and axonal mitochondrial dysfunction in progressive MS (PMS) pathogenesis waits to be provided. Methods: In the present study, by adopting the NOD mouse model of PMS, we compared the pharmacological effects of the immunosuppressants dexamethasone and fingolimod with those of mTOR inhibitors rapamycin and everolimus that, in addition to immunosuppression, also regulate mitochondrial functioning. Female Non-Obese Diabetic (NOD) mice were immunized with MOG35–55 and treated with drugs to evaluate functional, immune and mitochondrial parameters during disease evolution. Results: We found that dexamethasone and fingolimod did not affect the pattern of progression as well as survival. Conversely, mTOR inhibitors rapamycin and everolimus delayed disease progression and robustly extended survival of immunized mice. The same effects were obtained when treatment was delayed by 30 days after immunization. Remarkably, dexamethasone and fingolimod prompted the same degree of immunosuppression of rapamycin within both spleen and spinal cord of mice. However, only rapamycin prompted mitochondriogenesis by increasing mitochondrial content, and expression of several mitochondrial respiratory complex subunits, thereby preventing mtDNA reduction in the spinal cords of immunized mice. These pharmacodynamic effects were not reproduced in healthy NOD mice, suggesting a disease context-dependent pharmacodynamic effect. Discussion: Data corroborate the key role of mitochondriogenesis to treatment of MS progression, and for the first time disclose the translational potential of mTOR inhibitors in PMS therapy.
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- 2024
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31. Correction: ECLAPTE: Effective Closure of LAParoTomy in Emergency—2023 World Society of Emergency Surgery guidelines for the closure of laparotomy in emergency settings
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Frassini, Simone, Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Fugazzola, Paola, Biffl, Walter L., Coccolini, Federico, Damaskos, Dimitrios, Moore, Ernest E., Kluger, Yoram, Ceresoli, Marco, Coimbra, Raul, Davies, Justin, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Di Carlo, Isidoro, Hardcastle, Timothy C., Isik, Arda, Chiarugi, Massimo, Gurusamy, Kurinchi, Maier, Ronald V., Segovia Lohse, Helmut A., Jeekel, Hans, Boermeester, Marja A., Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Inaba, Kenji, Weber, Dieter G., Augustin, Goran, Bonavina, Luigi, Velmahos, George, Sartelli, Massimo, Di Saverio, Salomone, Ten Broek, Richard P. G., Granieri, Stefano, Dal Mas, Francesca, Farè, Camilla Nikita, Peverada, Jacopo, Zanghì, Simone, Viganò, Jacopo, Tomasoni, Matteo, Dominioni, Tommaso, Cicuttin, Enrico, Hecker, Andreas, Tebala, Giovanni D., Galante, Joseph M., Wani, Imtiaz, Khokha, Vladimir, Sugrue, Michael, Scalea, Thomas M., Tan, Edward, Malangoni, Mark A., Pararas, Nikolaos, Podda, Mauro, De Simone, Belinda, Ivatury, Rao, Cui, Yunfeng, Kashuk, Jeffry, Peitzman, Andrew, Kim, Fernando, Pikoulis, Emmanouil, Sganga, Gabriele, Chiara, Osvaldo, Kelly, Michael D., Marzi, Ingo, Picetti, Edoardo, Agnoletti, Vanni, De’Angelis, Nicola, Campanelli, Giampiero, de Moya, Marc, Litvin, Andrey, Martínez-Pérez, Aleix, Sall, Ibrahima, Rizoli, Sandro, Tomadze, Gia, Sakakushev, Boris, Stahel, Philip F., Civil, Ian, Shelat, Vishal, Costa, David, Chichom-Mefire, Alain, Latifi, Rifat, Chirica, Mircea, Amico, Francesco, Pardhan, Amyn, Seenarain, Vidya, Boyapati, Nikitha, Hatz, Basil, Ackermann, Travis, Abeyasundara, Sandun, Fenton, Linda, Plani, Frank, Sarvepalli, Rohit, Rouhbakhshfar, Omid, Caleo, Pamela, Ho-Ching Yau, Victor, Clement, Kristenne, Christou, Erasmia, Castillo, Ana María González, Gosal, Preet K. S., Balasubramaniam, Sunder, Hsu, Jeremy, Banphawatanarak, Kamon, Pisano, Michele, Toro, Adriana, Michele, Altomare, Cioffi, Stefano P. B., Spota, Andrea, Catena, Fausto, and Ansaloni, Luca
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- 2023
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32. 2023 WSES guidelines for the prevention, detection, and management of iatrogenic urinary tract injuries (IUTIs) during emergency digestive surgery
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de’Angelis, Nicola, Schena, Carlo Alberto, Marchegiani, Francesco, Reitano, Elisa, De Simone, Belinda, Wong, Geoffrey Yuet Mun, Martínez-Pérez, Aleix, Abu-Zidan, Fikri M., Agnoletti, Vanni, Aisoni, Filippo, Ammendola, Michele, Ansaloni, Luca, Bala, Miklosh, Biffl, Walter, Ceccarelli, Graziano, Ceresoli, Marco, Chiara, Osvaldo, Chiarugi, Massimo, Cimbanassi, Stefania, Coccolini, Federico, Coimbra, Raul, Di Saverio, Salomone, Diana, Michele, Dioguardi Burgio, Marco, Fraga, Gustavo, Gavriilidis, Paschalis, Gurrado, Angela, Inchingolo, Riccardo, Ingels, Alexandre, Ivatury, Rao, Kashuk, Jeffry L., Khan, Jim, Kirkpatrick, Andrew W., Kim, Fernando J., Kluger, Yoram, Lakkis, Zaher, Leppäniemi, Ari, Maier, Ronald V., Memeo, Riccardo, Moore, Ernest E., Ordoñez, Carlos A., Peitzman, Andrew B., Pellino, Gianluca, Picetti, Edoardo, Pikoulis, Manos, Pisano, Michele, Podda, Mauro, Romeo, Oreste, Rosa, Fausto, Tan, Edward, Ten Broek, Richard P., Testini, Mario, Tian Wei Cheng, Brian Anthony, Weber, Dieter, Sacco, Emilio, Sartelli, Massimo, Tonsi, Alfredo, Dal Moro, Fabrizio, and Catena, Fausto
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- 2023
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33. Source control in emergency general surgery: WSES, GAIS, SIS-E, SIS-A guidelines
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Coccolini, Federico, Sartelli, Massimo, Sawyer, Robert, Rasa, Kemal, Viaggi, Bruno, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Soreide, Kjetil, Hardcastle, Timothy, Gupta, Deepak, Bendinelli, Cino, Ceresoli, Marco, Shelat, Vishal G., Broek, Richard ten, Baiocchi, Gian Luca, Moore, Ernest E., Sall, Ibrahima, Podda, Mauro, Bonavina, Luigi, Kryvoruchko, Igor A., Stahel, Philip, Inaba, Kenji, Montravers, Philippe, Sakakushev, Boris, Sganga, Gabriele, Ballestracci, Paolo, Malbrain, Manu L. N. G., Vincent, Jean-Louis, Pikoulis, Manos, Beka, Solomon Gurmu, Doklestic, Krstina, Chiarugi, Massimo, Falcone, Marco, Bignami, Elena, Reva, Viktor, Demetrashvili, Zaza, Di Saverio, Salomone, Tolonen, Matti, Navsaria, Pradeep, Bala, Miklosh, Balogh, Zsolt, Litvin, Andrey, Hecker, Andreas, Wani, Imtiaz, Fette, Andreas, De Simone, Belinda, Ivatury, Rao, Picetti, Edoardo, Khokha, Vladimir, Tan, Edward, Ball, Chad, Tascini, Carlo, Cui, Yunfeng, Coimbra, Raul, Kelly, Michael, Martino, Costanza, Agnoletti, Vanni, Boermeester, Marja A., De’Angelis, Nicola, Chirica, Mircea, Biffl, Walt L., Ansaloni, Luca, Kluger, Yoram, Catena, Fausto, and Kirkpatrick, Andrew W.
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- 2023
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34. Paracetamol and ibuprofen combination for the management of acute mild-to-moderate pain in children: expert consensus using the Nominal Group Technique (NGT)
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Parri, Niccolò, Silvagni, Davide, Chiarugi, Alberto, Cortis, Elisabetta, D’Avino, Antonio, Lanari, Marcello, Marchisio, Paola Giovanna, Vezzoli, Cesare, Zampogna, Stefania, and Staiano, Annamaria
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- 2023
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35. The unrestricted global effort to complete the COOL trial
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Kirkpatrick, Andrew W., Coccolini, Federico, Tolonen, Matti, Minor, Samuel, Catena, Fausto, Gois, Jr., Emanuel, Doig, Christopher J., Hill, Michael D., Ansaloni, Luca, Chiarugi, Massimo, Tartaglia, Dario, Ioannidis, Orestis, Sugrue, Michael, Colak, Elif, Hameed, S. Morad, Lampela, Hanna, Agnoletti, Vanni, McKee, Jessica L., Garraway, Naisan, Sartelli, Massimo, Ball, Chad G., Parry, Neil G., Voght, Kelly, Julien, Lisa, Kroeker, Jenna, Roberts, Derek J., Faris, Peter, Tiruta, Corina, Moore, Ernest E., Ammons, Lee Anne, Anestiadou, Elissavet, Bendinelli, Cino, Bouliaris, Konstantinos, Carroll, Rosemarry, Ceresoli, Marco, Favi, Francesco, Gurrado, Angela, Rezende-Neto, Joao, Isik, Arda, Cremonini, Camilla, Strambi, Silivia, Koukoulis, Georgios, Testini, Mario, Trpcic, Sandy, Pasculli, Alessandro, Picariello, Erika, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Adeyeye, Ademola, Augustin, Goran, Alconchel, Felipe, Altinel, Yuksel, Hernandez Amin, Luz Adriana, Aranda-Narváez, José Manuel, Baraket, Oussama, Biffl, Walter L., Baiocchi, Gian Luca, Bonavina, Luigi, Brisinda, Giuseppe, Cardinali, Luca, Celotti, Andrea, Chaouch, Mohamed, Chiarello, Maria, Costa, Gianluca, de’Angelis, Nicola, De Manzini, Nicolo, Delibegovic, Samir, Di Saverio, Salomone, De Simone, Belinda, Dubuisson, Vincent, Fransvea, Pietro, Garulli, Gianluca, Giordano, Alessio, Gomes, Carlos, Hayati, Firdaus, Huang, Jinjian, Ibrahim, Aini Fahriza, Huei, Tan Jih, Jailani, Ruhi Fadzlyana, Khan, Mansoor, Luna, Alfonso Palmieri, Malbrain, Manu L. N. G., Marwah, Sanjay, McBeth, Paul, Mihailescu, Andrei, Morello, Alessia, Mulita, Francesk, Murzi, Valentina, Mohammad, Ahmad Tarmizi, Parmar, Simran, Pak, Ajay, Wong, Michael Pak-Kai, Pantalone, Desire, Podda, Mauro, Puccioni, Caterina, Rasa, Kemal, Ren, Jianan, Roscio, Francesco, Gonzalez-Sanchez, Antonio, Sganga, Gabriele, Scheiterle, Maximilian, Slavchev, Mihail, Smirnov, Dmitry, Tosi, Lorenzo, Trivedi, Anand, Vega, Jaime Andres Gonzalez, Waledziak, Maciej, Xenaki, Sofia, Winter, Desmond, Wu, Xiuwen, Zakaria, Andee Dzulkarnean, and Zakaria, Zaidi
- Published
- 2023
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36. Inhibition of MMPs supports amoeboid angiogenesis hampering VEGF-targeted therapies via MLC and ERK 1/2 signaling
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Chillà, Anastasia, Anceschi, Cecilia, Frediani, Elena, Scavone, Francesca, Del Rosso, Tommaso, Pelagio, Giuseppe, Tufaro, Antonio, De Palma, Giuseppe, Del Rosso, Mario, Fibbi, Gabriella, Chiarugi, Paola, Laurenzana, Anna, and Margheri, Francesca
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. WSES/GAIS/SIS-E/WSIS/AAST global clinical pathways for patients with intra-abdominal infections.
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Sartelli, Massimo, Coccolini, Federico, Kluger, Yoram, Agastra, Ervis, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Abbas, Ashraf, Ansaloni, Luca, Adesunkanmi, Abdulrashid, Atanasov, Boyko, Augustin, Goran, Bala, Miklosh, Baraket, Oussama, Baral, Suman, Biffl, Walter, Boermeester, Marja, Ceresoli, Marco, Cerutti, Elisabetta, Chiara, Osvaldo, Cicuttin, Enrico, Chiarugi, Massimo, Coimbra, Raul, Colak, Elif, Corsi, Daniela, Cortese, Francesco, Cui, Yunfeng, Damaskos, Dimitris, De Angelis, Nicola, Delibegovic, Samir, Demetrashvili, Zaza, De Simone, Belinda, de Jonge, Stijn, Dhingra, Sameer, Di Bella, Stefano, Di Marzo, Francesco, Di Saverio, Salomone, Dogjani, Agron, Duane, Therese, Enani, Mushira, Fugazzola, Paola, Gachabayov, Mahir, Ghnnam, Wagih, Gkiokas, George, Gomes, Carlos, Griffiths, Ewen, Hardcastle, Timothy, Hecker, Andreas, Herzog, Torsten, Kabir, Syed, Karamarkovic, Aleksandar, Khokha, Vladimir, Kim, Peter, Kim, Jae, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Kong, Victor, Koshy, Renol, Kryvoruchko, Igor, Inaba, Kenji, Isik, Arda, Iskandar, Katia, Ivatury, Rao, Labricciosa, Francesco, Lee, Yeong, Leppäniemi, Ari, Litvin, Andrey, Luppi, Davide, Machain, Gustavo, Maier, Ronald, Marinis, Athanasios, Marmorale, Cristina, Marwah, Sanjay, Mesina, Cristian, Moore, Ernest, Moore, Frederick, Negoi, Ionut, Olaoye, Iyiade, Ordoñez, Carlos, Ouadii, Mouaqit, Peitzman, Andrew, Perrone, Gennaro, Pikoulis, Manos, Pintar, Tadeja, Pipitone, Giuseppe, Podda, Mauro, Raşa, Kemal, Ribeiro, Julival, Rodrigues, Gabriel, Rubio-Perez, Ines, Sall, Ibrahima, Sato, Norio, Sawyer, Robert, Segovia Lohse, Helmut, Sganga, Gabriele, Shelat, Vishal, Stephens, Ian, Sugrue, Michael, Tarasconi, Antonio, Tochie, Joel, Tolonen, Matti, Tomadze, Gia, and Ulrych, Jan
- Subjects
Intra-abdominal infections ,Peritonitis ,Sepsis ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Critical Pathways ,Humans ,Intraabdominal Infections ,Treatment Outcome - Abstract
Intra-abdominal infections (IAIs) are common surgical emergencies and have been reported as major contributors to non-trauma deaths in hospitals worldwide. The cornerstones of effective treatment of IAIs include early recognition, adequate source control, appropriate antimicrobial therapy, and prompt physiologic stabilization using a critical care environment, combined with an optimal surgical approach. Together, the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), the Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery (GAIS), the Surgical Infection Society-Europe (SIS-E), the World Surgical Infection Society (WSIS), and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) have jointly completed an international multi-society document in order to facilitate clinical management of patients with IAIs worldwide building evidence-based clinical pathways for the most common IAIs. An extensive non-systematic review was conducted using the PubMed and MEDLINE databases, limited to the English language. The resulting information was shared by an international task force from 46 countries with different clinical backgrounds. The aim of the document is to promote global standards of care in IAIs providing guidance to clinicians by describing reasonable approaches to the management of IAIs.
- Published
- 2021
38. Escaping from, moving towards, following a path, squeezing through: lots of opportunities for moving cells
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Chiarugi Paola
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Medicine ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Published
- 2010
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39. Rac and Rho GTPases in cancer cell motility control
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Parri Matteo and Chiarugi Paola
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Medicine ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Abstract Rho GTPases represent a family of small GTP-binding proteins involved in cell cytoskeleton organization, migration, transcription, and proliferation. A common theme of these processes is a dynamic reorganization of actin cytoskeleton which has now emerged as a major switch control mainly carried out by Rho and Rac GTPase subfamilies, playing an acknowledged role in adaptation of cell motility to the microenvironment. Cells exhibit three distinct modes of migration when invading the 3 D environment. Collective motility leads to movement of cohorts of cells which maintain the adherens junctions and move by photolytic degradation of matrix barriers. Single cell mesenchymal-type movement is characterized by an elongated cellular shape and again requires extracellular proteolysis and integrin engagement. In addition it depends on Rac1-mediated cell polarization and lamellipodia formation. Conversely, in amoeboid movement cells have a rounded morphology, the movement is independent from proteases but requires high Rho GTPase to drive elevated levels of actomyosin contractility. These two modes of cell movement are interconvertible and several moving cells, including tumor cells, show an high degree of plasticity in motility styles shifting ad hoc between mesenchymal or amoeboid movements. This review will focus on the role of Rac and Rho small GTPases in cell motility and in the complex relationship driving the reciprocal control between Rac and Rho granting for the opportunistic motile behaviour of aggressive cancer cells. In addition we analyse the role of these GTPases in cancer progression and metastatic dissemination.
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- 2010
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- View/download PDF
40. The unrestricted global effort to complete the COOL trial
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Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Federico Coccolini, Matti Tolonen, Samuel Minor, Fausto Catena, Emanuel Gois, Christopher J. Doig, Michael D. Hill, Luca Ansaloni, Massimo Chiarugi, Dario Tartaglia, Orestis Ioannidis, Michael Sugrue, Elif Colak, S. Morad Hameed, Hanna Lampela, Vanni Agnoletti, Jessica L. McKee, Naisan Garraway, Massimo Sartelli, Chad G. Ball, Neil G. Parry, Kelly Voght, Lisa Julien, Jenna Kroeker, Derek J. Roberts, Peter Faris, Corina Tiruta, Ernest E. Moore, Lee Anne Ammons, Elissavet Anestiadou, Cino Bendinelli, Konstantinos Bouliaris, Rosemarry Carroll, Marco Ceresoli, Francesco Favi, Angela Gurrado, Joao Rezende-Neto, Arda Isik, Camilla Cremonini, Silivia Strambi, Georgios Koukoulis, Mario Testini, Sandy Trpcic, Alessandro Pasculli, Erika Picariello, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Ademola Adeyeye, Goran Augustin, Felipe Alconchel, Yuksel Altinel, Luz Adriana Hernandez Amin, José Manuel Aranda-Narváez, Oussama Baraket, Walter L. Biffl, Gian Luca Baiocchi, Luigi Bonavina, Giuseppe Brisinda, Luca Cardinali, Andrea Celotti, Mohamed Chaouch, Maria Chiarello, Gianluca Costa, Nicola de’Angelis, Nicolo De Manzini, Samir Delibegovic, Salomone Di Saverio, Belinda De Simone, Vincent Dubuisson, Pietro Fransvea, Gianluca Garulli, Alessio Giordano, Carlos Gomes, Firdaus Hayati, Jinjian Huang, Aini Fahriza Ibrahim, Tan Jih Huei, Ruhi Fadzlyana Jailani, Mansoor Khan, Alfonso Palmieri Luna, Manu L. N. G. Malbrain, Sanjay Marwah, Paul McBeth, Andrei Mihailescu, Alessia Morello, Francesk Mulita, Valentina Murzi, Ahmad Tarmizi Mohammad, Simran Parmar, Ajay Pak, Michael Pak-Kai Wong, Desire Pantalone, Mauro Podda, Caterina Puccioni, Kemal Rasa, Jianan Ren, Francesco Roscio, Antonio Gonzalez-Sanchez, Gabriele Sganga, Maximilian Scheiterle, Mihail Slavchev, Dmitry Smirnov, Lorenzo Tosi, Anand Trivedi, Jaime Andres Gonzalez Vega, Maciej Waledziak, Sofia Xenaki, Desmond Winter, Xiuwen Wu, Andee Dzulkarnean Zakaria, and Zaidi Zakaria
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Intraperitoneal sepsis ,Septic shock ,Peritonitis ,Open abdomen ,Multiple organ dysfunction ,Laparotomy ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Severe complicated intra-abdominal sepsis (SCIAS) has an increasing incidence with mortality rates over 80% in some settings. Mortality typically results from disruption of the gastrointestinal tract, progressive and self-perpetuating bio-mediator generation, systemic inflammation, and multiple organ failure. A further therapeutic option may be open abdomen (OA) management with negative peritoneal pressure therapy (NPPT) to remove inflammatory ascites and attenuate the systemic damage from SCIAS, although there are definite risks of leaving the abdomen open whenever it might possibly be closed. This potential therapeutic paradigm is the rationale being assessed in the Closed Or Open after Laparotomy (COOL trial) ( https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03163095 ). Initially, the COOL trial received Industry sponsorship; however, this funding mandated the use of a specific trademarked and expensive NPPT device in half of the patients allocated to the intervention (open) arm. In August 2022, the 3 M/Acelity Corporation without consultation but within the terms of the contract canceled the financial support of the trial. Although creating financial difficulty, there is now no restriction on specific NPPT devices and removing a cost-prohibitive intervention creates an opportunity to expand the COOL trial to a truly global basis. This document describes the evolution of the COOL trial, with a focus on future opportunities for global growth of the study. Methods The COOL trial is the largest prospective randomized controlled trial examining the random allocation of SCIAS patients intra-operatively to either formal closure of the fascia or the use of the OA with an application of an NPPT dressing. Patients are eligible if they have free uncontained intraperitoneal contamination and physiologic derangements exemplified by septic shock OR severely adverse predicted clinical outcomes. The primary outcome is intended to definitively inform global practice by conclusively evaluating 90-day survival. Initial recruitment has been lower than hoped but satisfactory, and the COOL steering committee and trial investigators intend with increased global support to continue enrollment until recruitment ensures a definitive answer. Discussion OA is mandated in many cases of SCIAS such as the risk of abdominal compartment syndrome associated with closure, or a planned second look as for example part of “damage control”; however, improved source control (locally and systemically) is the most uncertain indication for an OA. The COOL trial seeks to expand potential sites and proceed with the evaluation of NPPT agnostic to device, to properly examine the hypothesis that this treatment attenuates systemic damage and improves survival. This approach will not affect internal validity and should improve the external validity of any observed results of the intervention. Trial registration: National Institutes of Health ( https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03163095 ).
- Published
- 2023
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41. Switching OnabotulinumtoxinA to Monoclonal Anti-CGRP Antibodies in Drug-Resistant Chronic Migraine
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Iannone, Luigi Francesco, Fattori, Davide, Marangoni, Martina, Benemei, Silvia, Chiarugi, Alberto, Geppetti, Pierangelo, and De Cesaris, Francesco
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Patients with an Open Abdomen in Asian, American and European Continents: A Comparative Analysis from the International Register of Open Abdomen (IROA)
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Sibilla, Maria Grazia, Cremonini, Camilla, Portinari, Mattia, Carcoforo, Paolo, Tartaglia, Dario, Cicuttin, Enrico, Musetti, Serena, Strambi, Silvia, Sartelli, Massimo, Radica, Margherita Koleva, Catena, Fausto, Chiarugi, Massimo, and Coccolini, Federico
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Liver trauma: WSES 2020 guidelines.
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Coccolini, Federico, Coimbra, Raul, Ordonez, Carlos, Kluger, Yoram, Vega, Felipe, Moore, Ernest, Biffl, Walt, Peitzman, Andrew, Horer, Tal, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Sartelli, Massimo, Fraga, Gustavo, Cicuttin, Enrico, Ansaloni, Luca, Parra, Michael, Millán, Mauricio, DeAngelis, Nicola, Inaba, Kenji, Velmahos, George, Maier, Ron, Khokha, Vladimir, Sakakushev, Boris, Augustin, Goran, di Saverio, Salomone, Pikoulis, Emanuil, Chirica, Mircea, Reva, Viktor, Leppaniemi, Ari, Manchev, Vassil, Chiarugi, Massimo, Damaskos, Dimitrios, Weber, Dieter, Parry, Neil, Demetrashvili, Zaza, Civil, Ian, Napolitano, Lena, Corbella, Davide, and Catena, Fausto
- Subjects
Adult ,Classification ,Guidelines ,Hemorrhage ,Intensive care ,Interventional ,Liver trauma ,Minor ,Moderate ,Non-operative management ,Operative management ,Pediatric ,Radiology ,Severe ,Surgery ,Abdominal Injuries ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Hemodynamics ,Humans ,Injury Severity Score ,Liver ,Patient Care Management - Abstract
Liver injuries represent one of the most frequent life-threatening injuries in trauma patients. In determining the optimal management strategy, the anatomic injury, the hemodynamic status, and the associated injuries should be taken into consideration. Liver trauma approach may require non-operative or operative management with the intent to restore the homeostasis and the normal physiology. The management of liver trauma should be multidisciplinary including trauma surgeons, interventional radiologists, and emergency and ICU physicians. The aim of this paper is to present the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) liver trauma management guidelines.
- Published
- 2020
44. Paracetamol and ibuprofen combination for the management of acute mild-to-moderate pain in children: expert consensus using the Nominal Group Technique (NGT)
- Author
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Niccolò Parri, Davide Silvagni, Alberto Chiarugi, Elisabetta Cortis, Antonio D’Avino, Marcello Lanari, Paola Giovanna Marchisio, Cesare Vezzoli, Stefania Zampogna, and Annamaria Staiano
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Ibuprofen ,Paracetamol ,Fixed-dose ,Pediatric ,Children ,Acute pain ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Abstract Background Acute pain is a common symptom in children of all ages, and is associated with a variety of conditions. Despite the availability of guidelines, pain often remains underestimated and undertreated. Paracetamol and ibuprofen are the most commonly used drugs for analgesia in Pediatrics. Multimodal pain management by using a combination of paracetamol and ibuprofen results in greater analgesia. Methods An investigation using the Nominal Group Technique was carried out between May and August 2022. Two open (non-anonymous) questionnaires were consecutively sent to a Board of ten clinicians to understand their opinions on the use of the oral paracetamol and ibuprofen association. Answers were examined in a final meeting where conclusions were drawn. Results The board achieved a final consensus on a better analgesic power of paracetamol and ibuprofen in fixed-dose combination as compared to monotherapy, without compromising safety. Strong consensus was reached on the opinion that the fixed-dose combination of paracetamol and ibuprofen may be a useful option in case of inefficacy of one or other drug as monotherapy, especially in case of headaches, odontalgia, earache, and musculoskeletal pain. The use of the fixed combination may be also considered suitable for postoperative pain management. Conclusions The use of the fixed-dose combination may represent advantage in terms of efficacy and safety, allowing a better control of the dose of both paracetamol and ibuprofen as monotherapy, thus minimizing the risk of incorrect dosage. However, the limited evidence available highlights the need for future well designed studies to better define the advantages of this formulation in the various therapeutic areas.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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45. Inhibition of MMPs supports amoeboid angiogenesis hampering VEGF-targeted therapies via MLC and ERK 1/2 signaling
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Anastasia Chillà, Cecilia Anceschi, Elena Frediani, Francesca Scavone, Tommaso Del Rosso, Giuseppe Pelagio, Antonio Tufaro, Giuseppe De Palma, Mario Del Rosso, Gabriella Fibbi, Paola Chiarugi, Anna Laurenzana, and Francesca Margheri
- Subjects
Angiogenesis ,Protease inhibitors ,Amoeboid migration ,VEGF ,Endothelial cells ,ECFCs ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background In the past decades studies on anti-tumoral drugs inhibiting matrix metalloproteinase (MMPs) were disappointing. Recently, we demonstrated that mature endothelial cells (ECs) and endothelial colony forming cells (ECFCs) can switch between invasion modes to cope with challenging environments, performing the “amoeboid angiogenesis” in the absence of proteases activity. Methods We first set out to investigate by ELISA if the inhibitors of the main protease family involved in angiogenesis were differently expressed during breast cancer progression. We used Marimastat, a broad-spectrum MMP inhibitor, as a means of inducing amoeboid characteristics and studied VEGF role in amoeboid angiogenesis. Thus, we performed invasion and capillary morphogenesis assay, morphological, cell signaling and in vivo mouse studies. Results Our data showed that TIMP1, TIMP2, alpha2-antiplasmin, PAI-1 and cystatin increase in breast cancer serum of patients with primary cancer and lymph node positive compared to healthy women. In vitro results revealed that the most high-powered protease inhibitors able to induce amoeboid invasion of ECFCs were TIMP1, 2 and 3. Surprisingly, Marimastat promotes ECFC invasion and tubular formation in vitro and in vivo, inducing amoeboid characteristics. We observed that the combination of Marimastat plus VEGF doesn’t boost neither cell invasion nor vessel formation capacity. Moreover, inhibition of VEGF activity with Bevacizumab in the presence of Marimastat confirmed that amoeboid angiogenesis is independent from the stimulus of the main vascular growth factor, VEGF. Conclusions We underline the importance to consider the amoeboid mechanism of endothelial and cancer cell invasion, probably responsible for the failure of synthetic metalloproteinase inhibitors as cancer therapy and tumor resistance to VEGF-targeted therapies, to set-up new drugs to be used in cancer therapy.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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46. Acute mesenteric ischemia: updated guidelines of the World Society of Emergency Surgery
- Author
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Miklosh Bala, Fausto Catena, Jeffry Kashuk, Belinda De Simone, Carlos Augusto Gomes, Dieter Weber, Massimo Sartelli, Federico Coccolini, Yoram Kluger, Fikri M. Abu-Zidan, Edoardo Picetti, Luca Ansaloni, Goran Augustin, Walter L. Biffl, Marco Ceresoli, Osvaldo Chiara, Massimo Chiarugi, Raul Coimbra, Yunfeng Cui, Dimitris Damaskos, Salomone Di Saverio, Joseph M. Galante, Vladimir Khokha, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Kenji Inaba, Ari Leppäniemi, Andrey Litvin, Andrew B. Peitzman, Vishal G. Shelat, Michael Sugrue, Matti Tolonen, Sandro Rizoli, Ibrahima Sall, Solomon G. Beka, Isidoro Di Carlo, Richard Ten Broek, Chirika Mircea, Giovanni Tebala, Michele Pisano, Harry van Goor, Ronald V. Maier, Hans Jeekel, Ian Civil, Andreas Hecker, Edward Tan, Kjetil Soreide, Matthew J. Lee, Imtiaz Wani, Luigi Bonavina, Mark A. Malangoni, Kaoru Koike, George C. Velmahos, Gustavo P. Fraga, Andreas Fette, Nicola de’Angelis, Zsolt J. Balogh, Thomas M. Scalea, Gabriele Sganga, Michael D. Kelly, Jim Khan, Philip F. Stahel, and Ernest E. Moore
- Subjects
Mesenteric ischemia ,Mesenteric arterial occlusion ,Mesenteric artery stenting ,Bowel ischemia ,Guidelines ,Recommendations ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) is a group of diseases characterized by an interruption of the blood supply to varying portions of the intestine, leading to ischemia and secondary inflammatory changes. If untreated, this process may progress to life-threatening intestinal necrosis. The incidence is low, estimated at 0.09–0.2% of all acute surgical admissions, but increases with age. Although the entity is an uncommon cause of abdominal pain, diligence is required because if untreated, mortality remains in the range of 50%. Early diagnosis and timely surgical intervention are the cornerstones of modern treatment to reduce the high mortality associated with this entity. The advent of endovascular approaches in parallel with modern imaging techniques is evolving and provides new treatment options. Lastly, a focused multidisciplinary approach based on early diagnosis and individualized treatment is essential. Thus, we believe that updated guidelines from World Society of Emergency Surgery are warranted, in order to provide the most recent and practical recommendations for diagnosis and treatment of AMI.
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- 2022
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47. Taste Masking of Dexketoprofen Trometamol Orally Disintegrating Granules by High-Shear Coating with Glyceryl Distearate
- Author
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Ilaria Chiarugi, Diletta Biagi, Paolo Nencioni, Francesca Maestrelli, Maurizio Valleri, and Paola Angela Mura
- Subjects
high-shear coating ,taste masking ,orally disintegrating granules ,glyceryl distearate ,hot-melt coating ,design of experiments ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
Orally disintegrating granules (ODGs) are a pharmaceutical form commonly used for the administration of NSAIDs because of their easy assumption and fast dispersion. The development of ODGs is not easy for drugs like dexketoprofen trometamol (DXKT), which have a bitter and burning taste. In this work, high-shear coating (HSC) was used as an innovative technique for DKXT taste masking. This study focused on coating DXKT granules using the HSC technique with a low-melting lipid excipient, glyceryl distearate (GDS). The HSC technique allowed for the coating to be developed through the thermal rise resulting from the friction generated by the granules movement inside the equipment, causing the coating excipient to soften. The design of the experiment was used to find the best experimental coating conditions in order to gain effective taste masking by suitably reducing the amount of drug released in the oral cavity. The influence of the granule dimensions was also investigated. Coating effectiveness was evaluated using a simulated saliva dissolution test. It was found that low impeller speed (300 rpm) and a 20% coating excipient were effective in suitably reducing the drug dissolution rate and then in taste masking. The coated granules were characterized for their morphology and solid-state properties by SEM, BET, XRPD, DSC, and NIR analyses. A human taste panel test confirmed the masking of DXKT taste in the selected batch granules.
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
48. Correction: ECLAPTE: Effective Closure of LAParoTomy in Emergency—2023 World Society of Emergency Surgery guidelines for the closure of laparotomy in emergency settings
- Author
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Simone Frassini, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Paola Fugazzola, Walter L. Biffl, Federico Coccolini, Dimitrios Damaskos, Ernest E. Moore, Yoram Kluger, Marco Ceresoli, Raul Coimbra, Justin Davies, Andrew Kirkpatrick, Isidoro Di Carlo, Timothy C. Hardcastle, Arda Isik, Massimo Chiarugi, Kurinchi Gurusamy, Ronald V. Maier, Helmut A. Segovia Lohse, Hans Jeekel, Marja A. Boermeester, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Kenji Inaba, Dieter G. Weber, Goran Augustin, Luigi Bonavina, George Velmahos, Massimo Sartelli, Salomone Di Saverio, Richard P. G. Ten Broek, Stefano Granieri, Francesca Dal Mas, Camilla Nikita Farè, Jacopo Peverada, Simone Zanghì, Jacopo Viganò, Matteo Tomasoni, Tommaso Dominioni, Enrico Cicuttin, Andreas Hecker, Giovanni D. Tebala, Joseph M. Galante, Imtiaz Wani, Vladimir Khokha, Michael Sugrue, Thomas M. Scalea, Edward Tan, Mark A. Malangoni, Nikolaos Pararas, Mauro Podda, Belinda De Simone, Rao Ivatury, Yunfeng Cui, Jeffry Kashuk, Andrew Peitzman, Fernando Kim, Emmanouil Pikoulis, Gabriele Sganga, Osvaldo Chiara, Michael D. Kelly, Ingo Marzi, Edoardo Picetti, Vanni Agnoletti, Nicola De’Angelis, Giampiero Campanelli, Marc de Moya, Andrey Litvin, Aleix Martínez-Pérez, Ibrahima Sall, Sandro Rizoli, Gia Tomadze, Boris Sakakushev, Philip F. Stahel, Ian Civil, Vishal Shelat, David Costa, Alain Chichom-Mefire, Rifat Latifi, Mircea Chirica, Francesco Amico, Amyn Pardhan, Vidya Seenarain, Nikitha Boyapati, Basil Hatz, Travis Ackermann, Sandun Abeyasundara, Linda Fenton, Frank Plani, Rohit Sarvepalli, Omid Rouhbakhshfar, Pamela Caleo, Victor Ho-Ching Yau, Kristenne Clement, Erasmia Christou, Ana María González Castillo, Preet K. S. Gosal, Sunder Balasubramaniam, Jeremy Hsu, Kamon Banphawatanarak, Michele Pisano, Adriana Toro, Altomare Michele, Stefano P. B. Cioffi, Andrea Spota, Fausto Catena, and Luca Ansaloni
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Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Published
- 2023
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49. Positive peritoneal swab in SARS-CoV-2 patients undergoing abdominal emergency surgery: effect or cause?
- Author
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Tartaglia, Dario, Barberis, Andrea, Coccolini, Federico, Pistello, Mauro, Rutigliani, Mariangela, and Chiarugi, Massimo
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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50. Kidney and uro-trauma: WSES-AAST guidelines.
- Author
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Coccolini, Federico, Moore, Ernest, Kluger, Yoram, Biffl, Walter, Leppaniemi, Ari, Matsumura, Yosuke, Kim, Fernando, Peitzman, Andrew, Fraga, Gustavo, Sartelli, Massimo, Ansaloni, Luca, Augustin, Goran, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Wani, Imitiaz, Weber, Dieter, Pikoulis, Emmanouil, Larrea, Martha, Arvieux, Catherine, Manchev, Vassil, Reva, Viktor, Coimbra, Raul, Khokha, Vladimir, Mefire, Alain, Ordonez, Carlos, Chiarugi, Massimo, Machado, Fernando, Sakakushev, Boris, Matsumoto, Junichi, Maier, Ron, di Carlo, Isidoro, and Catena, Fausto
- Subjects
Adult ,Bladder ,Classification ,Conservative ,Embolization ,Endovascular trauma management ,Flow chart ,Guidelines ,Kidney ,Non-operative ,Operative ,Pediatric ,Stenting ,Surgery ,Trauma ,Ureter ,Urethra ,Urogenital ,Urological ,Acute Kidney Injury ,General Surgery ,Guidelines as Topic ,Hemodynamics ,Humans ,Injury Severity Score ,Kidney ,Triage ,Urinary Tract - Abstract
Renal and urogenital injuries occur in approximately 10-20% of abdominal trauma in adults and children. Optimal management should take into consideration the anatomic injury, the hemodynamic status, and the associated injuries. The management of urogenital trauma aims to restore homeostasis and normal physiology especially in pediatric patients where non-operative management is considered the gold standard. As with all traumatic conditions, the management of urogenital trauma should be multidisciplinary including urologists, interventional radiologists, and trauma surgeons, as well as emergency and ICU physicians. The aim of this paper is to present the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) kidney and urogenital trauma management guidelines.
- Published
- 2019
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