69 results on '"M. Burroni"'
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2. ILDS Newsletter No. 27
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Ji-Hye Park, Barbka Repic Lampret, A. Mirkamali, C. Miracco, Paul Emery, Eun-Mi Koh, Jun Lee, C. Berking, J.L. Plaquet, V. Buffard, R. Bono, R. Saraceno, Lluís Puig, T. Ruzicka, Patrizia Pepe, Carlo Crosti, E. Sattler, Caterina Longo, Giovanni Pellacani, S. Chimenti, Concepción Castillo-Gallego, Shigeru Ichioka, J.C. Moreno, Rok Kosem, Carmen García-Calvo, Werner Aberer, Francisco Miguel Camacho Martínez, Jae Hyung Lee, Mette Mogensen, Giuseppe Argenziano, S. Lafaye, Sibel Zehra Aydin, Iris Zalaudek, M. Ruzzetti, Richard J. Wakefield, Robert R. Müllegger, Maruša Debeljak, Antonella Colombo, M. Braun-Falco, G. Argenziano, Elvira Moscarella, Daniela Degen, Aleksej Kansky, Miriam Wittmann, Angelo V. Marzano, Dennis McGonagle, T. Saida, S. Faleri, S. Goldszal, P. Rubegni, Satz Mengensatzproduktion, S. Ingen-Housz-Oro, Lars E. French, T. Maier, Hitomi Sano, A. Lamberti, G. Cevenini, Helena Marzo-Ortega, P. Barbini, Lotte Themstrup, Tadej Battelino, P. Wolkenstein, Gregor B.E. Jemec, M. Burroni, O. Chosidow, D. Centonze, E. Domergue Than Trong, M. Fimiani, B. Roy-Geffroy, Thierry Simonart, Angel López-Ávila, Christina Alette Banzhaf, Druck Reinhardt Druck Basel, N. Nami, Dong-Youn Lee, Francesco Caroli, J.M. Amici, A. Ostojic, J.P. Meningaud, Alice Casari, Rim S. Ishak, Katarina Trebušak Podkrajšek, Enrique Gimeno Carpio, Martin Glatz, Zoe Ash, P. Quaglino, and D. Thuillot
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Dermatology ,business - Published
- 2012
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3. White Matter Lesions in Phenylketonuria: Evaluation with Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
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Teresa Popolizio, Alessandro Bertolino, J.H. Duyn, Ugo Salvolini, M. Burroni, Tommaso Scarabino, and D.R. Weinberger
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Central nervous system ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Phenylalanine ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Hyperintensity ,Epilepsy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,In vivo ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tyrosine ,business - Abstract
Phenylketonuria (PKU) is a congenital metabolic autosomic recessive disease, caused by a deficit in the liver of phenyl-alanine hydroxylase, the enzyme responsible for conversion of phenyl-alanine (PHE) into tyrosine. Reduction of this enzymatic activity is responsible for increased phenyl-alanine in blood and tissues and, above all, in brain. Accumulation of PHE causes neural damage which produces a typical clinical picture with mental retardation, psychiatric symptoms and epilepsy. It is now possible to diagnose this disease early (with neonatal screening), before irreversible clinical symptoms reflecting central nervous system injury appear. Early diagnosis allows timely onset of therapy (the only possible) consisting of a special diet with reduced intake of PHE (integrated with a mix of aminoacids) whose objective is to keep levels of PHE low in the blood (3–6 mg/dl). Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is the elective diagnostic tool to evaluate in vivo the involvement of the brain in PKU. Previous MRI morphological studies in patients with PKU have reported various focal symmetrical lesions in periventricular white matter (especially parieto-occipital) of patients with PKU with PHE blood values higher than 10 mg/dl. These lesions, whose importance is not yet clear, seem to represent a reversible structural alteration of myelin, since they regress if blood PHE decreases. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) can measure in vivo brain metabolites which could help determine the nature of white matter lesions. In particular, changes in NAA (a marker of neuronal integrity) or mI (a potential astrocytic marker) could point to possible neurochemical dysfunction, whereas Cho levels may parallel the degree of the tissue myelination. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate morphologically and biochemically the regional specificity of white matter lesions with structural MRI and with 1H-MRSI. The study included 12 patients with PKU ten to 42 years of age. All patients underwent structural MRI scans while eight of them were also studied with 1H-MRSI. Structural MRI lesions in white matter were analyzed both qualitatively (signal intensity) and quantitatively (location and extension). 1H-MRSI metabolites were measured as the ratio of the area under each peak: NAA/Cr, NAA/Cho, Cho/Cr. Analysis of location and extension of the lesion on structural MRI data showed limited involvement of parieto-occipital white matter in three cases (with isointense or vaguely hypointense lesions in T1, and moderately hyperintense lesions in T2); medium involvement in six cases (with fairly hypointense or isointense lesions in T1, fairly or moderately hyperintense lesions in T2); serious involvement in three cases (with isointense or fairly hypointense lesions in T1, and fairly hyperintense lesions in T2). As for 1H-MRSI data, ANOVA showed a significant reduction of NAA/Cho and increase in Cho/Cr in white matter lesions, but no change in NAA/Cr. No correlation was found between clinical parameters and morphological or spectroscopic data. In conclusion, our morphological MRI data confirmed the presence of multiple signal alterations, focal and symmetrical, in deep periventricular white matter (especially posterior), with occasional involvement of subcortical white matter. However, these lesions do not seem to be strongly predictive of clinical outcome. 1H-MRSI data suggest increased Cho levels in white matter lesions. Since Cho is thought to reflect membrane turnover, these data may support the demyelinating nature of lesions, consistent with earlier post mortem studies.
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- 2003
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4. A simulation tool for the analysis of high speed flows
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F. Pistella, G. Bella, M. M. Cerimele, and M. Burroni
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Numerical Analysis ,Curvilinear coordinates ,General Computer Science ,Applied Mathematics ,Numerical analysis ,Control engineering ,Compressible flow ,Field (computer science) ,Theoretical Computer Science ,Euler equations ,symbols.namesake ,Test case ,Modeling and Simulation ,Jacobian matrix and determinant ,Calculus ,Fluid dynamics ,symbols ,Mathematics - Abstract
The availability of an efficient, low-cost numerical simulator is essential in the design of fluid dynamic systems, both to achieve a deep understanding of the flow field and to allow a quick and economical optimization of the technical characteristics of industrial devices. With the aim of developing an adequate simulation tool for the analysis of the fluid dynamical field in general 2d domains, a positive scheme, recently proposed as a simple and yet powerful method for the approximation of conservation laws, is extended in this paper to general curvilinear coordinates. The resulting algorithm is successfully applied to several test cases of increasing complexity.
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- 1999
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5. The pathogenesis of the white matter abnormalities in phenylketonuria. A multimodal 3.0 tesla MRI and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H MRS) study
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T. Scarabino, Michela Tosetti, Claudia Carducci, F. Carnevale, Cristiana Artiola, Vincenzo Leuzzi, M. Burroni, G.M. Giannatempo, Domenico Montanaro, Teresa Popolizio, Flavia Chiarotti, Italo Antonozzi, and V. d’Alesio
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Phenylalanine hydroxylase ,Adolescent ,Phenylketonurias ,Phenylalanine ,Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery ,Severity of Illness Index ,White matter ,Neuroimaging ,Fractional anisotropy ,Genetics ,medicine ,Effective diffusion coefficient ,Humans ,Child ,Genetics (clinical) ,biology ,business.industry ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,biology.protein ,Female ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Objective: To gain insights into the nature and pathogenesis of white matter (WM) abnormalities in PKU. Methods: Thirty-two patients with phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency (21 with early and 11 with late diagnosis and treatment) and 30 healthy controls underwent an integrated clinical, neuroimaging (3.0 T MRI, diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), diffusion tensor imaging (DTI)) and neurochemical (1H MRS) investigation. Results: All patients had white matter abnormalities on T2-weighted (T2W) and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) scans; parietal white was consistently affected, followed by occipital, frontal and temporal white matter. T1-weighted hypointense alterations were also found in 8 of 32 patients. DWI hyperintense areas overlapped with those detected on T2W/FLAIR. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) was reduced and correlated inversely with severity of white matter involvement. Fractional anisotropy index, eigenvalues λmin, λmiddle, λmax obtained from DTI data, and the principal brain metabolites assessed by 1H MRS (except brain phenylalanine (Phe)) were normal. Brain Phe peak was detected in all but two subjects. Brain and blood Phe were strictly associated. Blood Phe at the diagnosis, patient’s age, and concurrent brain Phe independently influence white matter alteration (as expressed by conventional MRI or ADC values). Conclusions: (a) MRI abnormalities in phenylketonuria are the result of a distinctive alteration of white matter suggesting the intracellular accumulation of a hydrophilic metabolite, which leaves unaffected white matter architecture and structure. (b) White matter abnormalities do not seem to reflect the mechanisms involved in the derangement of mental development in PKU. (c) Our data do not support the usefulness of conventional brain MRI examination in the clinical monitoring of phenylketonuria patients.
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- 2007
6. Is the birthdate a risk factor for congenital hypothyroidism? A statistical answer based on personal experience
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M B, Rocchi, C, Perlini, R, Ciatti, and M, Burroni
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Risk Factors ,Congenital Hypothyroidism ,Infant, Newborn ,Humans ,Seasons ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
To verify statistically the hypothesis that birthdate represents a risk factor for Congenital Hypothyroidism, as proposed by some European Authors. Moreover, to verify the existence of seasonal cyclic trends in TSH levels.For the verification of birthdate as a risk factor, we considered retrospectively a data set of all consecutives newborns of Marche Region (Italy) affected by Congenital Hypothyroidism, in the period 1981-1996 (n = 92). For the evaluation of seasonal cyclic trends in TSH, we considered the level of the hormone in all newborns of Marche Region screened in the period 1989-1996. Data were collected from Neonatal Screening Register of Marche Region. All the statistical analyses are based on circular statistics techniques (Rayleigh test, Roger test, estimation of density by kernel method, Mardia test for circular-linear correlation, Maximization of Mean Vector Length).No cyclic trend was pointed out with regard to Congenital Hypothyroidism; neither seasonal rhythms nor other cyclic patterns of TSH levels were evidenced.Neither the hypothesis of birthdate as a risk factor for Congenital Hypothyroi-dism, nor the existence of seasonal variations in TSH hormone releasing were confirmed.
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- 2001
7. Comments on 'A New Algorithm for Border Description of Polarized Light Surface Microscopic Images of Pigmented Skin Lesions
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Luciano Alparone, Fabrizio Argenti, and M. Burroni
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Surface (mathematics) ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,medicine.disease ,Computer Science Applications ,Lesion ,Computer analysis ,Microscopy ,medicine ,Nevus ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,medicine.symptom ,Pigmented skin ,Skin lesion ,business ,Algorithm ,Software - Abstract
In this paper, discrepancies and reference inaccuracies in the paper (Grana , 2003) are pointed out. Specifically, it is demonstrated that the definitions of "lesion gradient" and "skin lesion gradient," widely used in a number of medical papers on computer analysis of pigmented skin lesions, are unambiguous, and that the "new algorithm for border description" described in the subject paper substantially relies on well-established concepts dating back over one decade ago
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- 2006
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8. Area and volume calculation by three-dimensional echography of the eye
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G. Addabbo, Eduardo Motolese, N. Paterra, M Burroni, B D’Aniello, and G Dell’Eva
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Angioma ,Choroidal melanoma ,Reproducibility ,business.industry ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Geology ,Volume (compression) - Abstract
The authors discuss their experience regarding the three-dimensional reconstruction of the echographic image, firstly of an orbital angioma and secondly, of a malignant choroidal melanoma. Of the latter, they calculate the volume and the total external surface. Reference is also made to data regarding reproducibility, the errors of reconstruction methodology and volume calculation. However, it is more reliable than the commonly used echographic procedures.
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- 1993
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9. P218 Computerized image analysis: An outline of clinically atypical cases
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Torello Lotti, M Benci, M Burroni, G Delleva, and Claudio Comacchi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Diseases ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Dermatology ,Radiology ,business ,Image (mathematics) - Published
- 1997
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10. POSTERS IMAGE ANALYSIS OF PIGMENTED LESIONS
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R., Perotti, primary, M., Biagioli, additional, M., Burroni, additional, S., Santini, additional, G., DellʼEva, additional, and L., Andreassi, additional
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- 1994
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11. P216 Computerized analysis of pigmented lesions: Matching with hematoxylin-eosin
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Torello Lotti, M Burroni, G Delleva, M Benci, and Claudio Comacchi
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Matching (statistics) ,Infectious Diseases ,business.industry ,Computerized analysis ,H&E stain ,Medicine ,Dermatology ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Published
- 1997
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12. Computer aided diagnosis of skin pigmented lesions
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M Burroni
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Diseases ,business.industry ,Computer-aided diagnosis ,Medicine ,Dermatology ,Radiology ,business - Published
- 1995
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13. Incidence of classic PKU in Italy estimated from consanguineous marriages and from neonatal
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G. ROMEO, P. MENOZZI, A. FERLINI, L. PROSPERI, R. CERONE, S. SCALISI, C. ROMANO, I. ANTONOZZI, E. RIVA, L. PICENI SERENI, E. ZAMMARCI, G. LENZI, R. SARTORIO, G. ANDRIA, M. CIONI, A. FOIS, M. BURRONI, A. B. BURLINA, and F. CARNEVALE
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congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ataxia ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Consanguinity ,Italian population ,Genetics ,medicine ,Screening programs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Genetics (clinical) ,Mass screening - Abstract
As already described for cystic fibrosis and Friedreich ataxia, the incidence of PKU in Italy has been estimated by determining the increase of consanguineous marriages among 178 couples of PKU parents over the frequencies carefully established for the same marriages in the general Italian population for each of the 95 provinces during a 55-year period. The incidence estimated (between 1/15595 and 1/17815 according to two different formulas) is not very different from the incidence derived from screening programs (almost 1/12000). This indicates that the former method can be applied in Italy to the study of the incidence of other autosomal recessive disorders.
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- 1983
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14. [Neonatal screening for congenital hypothyroidism. Reflections on the methodology based on a statistical analysis of TSH and T4]
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R, Principi, G, Sallese, M, Burroni, and E, Mattioli
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Male ,Thyroxine ,Hypothyroidism ,Congenital Hypothyroidism ,Infant, Newborn ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Thyrotropin ,Female - Published
- 1988
15. [Turner's syndrome in the newborn infant. Description of 3 cases]
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M, Burroni, Q, Catena, G, Franchi, U, Gobbi, F, Perrotta, T, Ricci, B, Valentini, and M, Milani Comparetti
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Funnel Chest ,Ovary ,Infant, Newborn ,Humans ,Infant ,Turner Syndrome ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Female ,Lymphedema ,Ear, External ,Ureter ,Kidney - Published
- 1980
16. [Frontal vertebral cleft in the newborn]
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S, Riggio, M, Burroni, and A, Merli
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Diagnosis, Differential ,Infant, Newborn ,Humans ,Spinal Dysraphism ,Infant, Newborn, Diseases ,Spine - Abstract
In the newborn and foetus in the last months of gestation it is possible to see in lateral radiography of the spine, a longitudinal radiotransparent band which may divide the bone nucleus of the vertebral body into two portions. This front vertebral separation should be considered an expression of a reversible abnormality rather than a malformation to the extent that it almost always concerns a differentiation delay in the vertebral structures. The literature and personal cases show, in fact, that the finding disappears more or less rapidly.
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- 1976
17. Genes for super-intelligence?
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C Cervini, M Burroni, and A M Zampa
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Adolescent ,business.industry ,Intelligence ,Infant ,Computational biology ,Uric Acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Text mining ,chemistry ,Child, Preschool ,Genetics ,Uric acid ,Medicine ,Humans ,business ,Child ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) ,Research Article - Published
- 1982
18. [Joubert syndrome. Clinical contribution]
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M, Burroni, F, Perrotta, and V, Rossolini
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Adult ,Male ,Apnea ,Child, Preschool ,Intellectual Disability ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,Humans ,Infant ,Ataxia ,Female ,Syndrome ,Child - Published
- 1980
19. [2 cases of very rare double 48,XXX, +21 trisomy]
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U, Gobbi, M, Burroni, A, Licci, F, Perrotta, R, Magistrelli, G, Quintini, F, Saccucci, and M, Milani Comparetti
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Sex Chromosomes ,X Chromosome ,Chromosomes, Human, 21-22 and Y ,Humans ,Infant ,Female ,Trisomy - Published
- 1980
20. [Current trends in aorto-coronary bypass]
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A M, Perna, A, Venturini, L, Cammilli, G, Calamai, M, Burroni, and G, Borzoni
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Heart Valve Diseases ,Methods ,Myocardial Infarction ,Humans ,Coronary Disease ,Saphenous Vein ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,Heart Aneurysm ,Coronary Angiography ,Angina Pectoris - Published
- 1973
21. Guanti bianchi technique for resection of selected pituitary adenomas.
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Villalonga JF, Burroni M, Fabozzi GL, Solari D, Campero A, Cappabianca P, and Cavallo LM
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Introduction: Since the introduction of the endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) to skull base, the nasal phase has been a true challenge as it represents the moment of definition of the corridor, thus defining the instruments maneuverability at tumor removal phase. The longstanding cooperation between ENT and neurosurgeons have provided the possibility of creating adequate corridor with maximal respect toward nasal structures and mucosa. This sparked the idea of entering the sella as thieves, so we named "Guanti Bianchi" technique a lesser invasive variation of the approach for the removal of selected pituitary adenoma., Research Question: The purpose of this study is to present the preliminary results of "Guanti Bianchi" technique., Material and Methods: Data from 17 patients undergoing "Guanti Bianchi" technique (out of 235 standard EEA) at our center, were retrospectively analysed. ASK Nasal-12, a quality-of-life instrument developed specifically to assess patient perception of nasal morbidity, was administered pre- and postoperatively., Results: 10 (59%) patients were men and 7 (41%) women. The mean age was 67.7 (range 35-88). The average duration of the surgical procedure was 71.17 minutes (range 45-100). GTR was achieved in all patients, no postoperative complications were observed. Baseline ASK Nasal-12 was near normal in all patients, 3/17 (17,6%) experienced transitory very mild symptoms without any worsening at 3 and 6 months., Discussion and Conclusions: This minimally invasive technique does not require turbinectomy or carving of the nasoseptal flap, it alters the nasal mucosa as little as necessary, and it is quick and easy to perform., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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22. Endoscopic transorbital eyelid approach for the removal of an extraconal cavernous venous malformation: Case report.
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Fabozzi GL, d'Avella E, Burroni M, Romano A, Cavallo LM, and Solari D
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Cavernous venous malformations (CVMs) are one of the most common benign primary orbital lesions in adults and the second most frequent cause of unilateral proptosis. Extraconal location is extremely rare, representing a favorable condition as compared to intraconal, as lesions at this level often adhere to orbital muscles and optic nerve. Herein, we report the case of a 50-year-old patient, who came to our attention because of progressive painless right axial proptosis. Magnetic resonance images were consistent with an extraconal CVM, occupying the superior temporal compartment of the orbit. Successful removal of the lesion was achieved through an endoscopic transorbital eyelid approach. The present case confirms the safety and efficacy of the endoscopic transorbital eyelid approach., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (© 2022 Fabozzi, d'Avella, Burroni, Romano, Cavallo and Solari.)
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- 2022
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23. Meaning in life and demoralization: a mental-health reading perspective of suicidality in the time of COVID-19.
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Costanza A, Di Marco S, Burroni M, Corasaniti F, Santinon P, Prelati M, Chytas V, Cedraschi C, and Ambrosetti J
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- Humans, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders etiology, COVID-19, Demoralization, Suicide psychology, Value of Life, Suicide Prevention
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Consequences on mental health have been reported in general population, vulnerable individuals, psychiatric patients, and healthcare professionals. It is urgently necessary to study mental health issues in order to set priorities for public health policies and implement effective interventions. Suicidality is one of the most extreme outcomes of a mental health crisis. It is currently too early to know what the effect of COVID-19 will be on suicidality. However, authoritative commentary papers alert that most of the factors precipitating suicide are, and probably will be for a long time, present at several individual existence levels. A number of prevention measures and research considerations have been drawn up. A point of the latter, recommended by the International COVID-10 Suicide Prevention Research Collaboration, states that "the COVID-19 suicide research response should be truly multidisciplinary. This will foster research that addresses the different aspects and layers of risk and resilience.It will also foster research that informs prevention efforts by taking a range of perspectives" (Niederkrotenthaler et al., 2020). In this light, we would like to propose a reading perspective of suicidality that takes into account Meaning in Life (MiL) and demoralization. Both of the constructs were studied in heterogeneous populations with extreme life situations having led to a fracture between a "before" and an "after", and play a role in affecting suicidality, respectively as resilience and risk factors. In clinical practice, during these unprecedent times, we wish that this more inclusive approach could: 1) contribute to prevention, by delineating more individualized suicidal risk profiles in persons conventionally non-considered at risk but here exposed to an extremely uncommon experience, 2) enrich supportive/psychotherapeutic interventions, by broadening the panel of means to some aspects constitutive of the existential condition of a person who is brutally confronted with something unexpected, incomprehensible and, in some ways, still unpredictable.
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- 2020
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24. Computer-assisted melanoma diagnosis: a new integrated system.
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Rubegni P, Feci L, Nami N, Burroni M, Taddeucci P, Miracco C, Munezero Butorano MA, Fimiani M, and Cevenini G
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Dermatology methods, Dermoscopy methods, Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted methods, Melanoma diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
In dermatology, attempts at synergy between man and machine have mainly been made to improve melanoma diagnosis. The aim of the present study was to test an 'integrated digital dermoscopy analysis' (i-DDA) system with a series of melanocytic lesions that were benign and malignant in nature, and to evaluate its discriminating power with respect to histological diagnosis. In a retrospective study we used an i-DDA system to evaluate a series of 856 excised, clinically atypical pigmented skin lesions (584 benign and 272 malignant). The system evaluated 48 parameters to be studied as possible discriminant variables, grouped into four categories (geometries, colours, textures and islands of colour) integrated with three personal metadata items (sex, age and site of lesion) and presence/absence of three dermoscopic patterns (regression structures, blue-white veil and polymorphic vascular structures). Stepwise multivariate logistic regression of i-DDA data selected nine variables with the highest possible discriminant power. At the end of the stepwise procedure the percentage of cases correctly classified by i-DDA was 89.2% (100% sensitivity and 40.8% specificity). The limitations of the study included those associated with a retrospective design and the 'a priori' exclusion of nonmelanocytic skin lesions. By incorporating numerical digital features with personal data and some dermoscopic patterns into the learning process, the proposed i-DDA improved the performance of assisted melanoma diagnosis, with the advantage that our results can be objectively repeated in any other clinical setting.
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- 2015
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25. Interventional three-year longitudinal study of melanocytic naevus development in pre-school children in Dresden, Saxony.
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Wollina U, Helm C, Bennewitz A, Koch R, Schaff K, and Burroni M
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- Child Day Care Centers, Child, Preschool, Dermoscopy, Germany, Health Behavior, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Longitudinal Studies, Prospective Studies, Skin Pigmentation, Health Education, Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced pathology, Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced prevention & control, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Nevus, Pigmented prevention & control, Parents education, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Skin Neoplasms prevention & control
- Abstract
Acquired melanocytic naevi (MN) are considered a risk factor for melanoma. Exposure to ultraviolet light (UV) is the major environmental factor for MN. UV protection is most critical in pre-school children. This 3-year interventional longitudinal study examined 395 3-year-old children attending daycare centres (DCC) in Dresden, Germany. Photo-skin type, eye and hair colour were recorded. DCC were randomly assigned to a control group and a behavioural intervention group. All children had a regular naevus check-up, including digital objective analysis with Dell'Eva-Burroni Dermoscopy Melanoma Image Processing Software (DB-MIPS) technology. Parents of children in the intervention group received additional guidance for sun-protection. The mean total MN counts of both groups at the start of the study period were 7.19 ± 4.55 (intervention) and 6.84 ± 4.63 (control), respectively. There was a significant increase in MN counts for both groups (mean 12.5 and 13.8). Subgroup analysis for skin type, eye colour, and hair colour did not demonstrate a significant influence on MN counts. The DB-MIPS integrated classifier revealed no risky lesions while analysing their patterns. Intervention did not reduce the number of newly acquired MN. MN counts in pre-school children were approximately 5 times higher than expected from previous large studies in Germany. This is the first study in pre-school children using objective digital image analysis of pigmented lesions. No atypical lesions were observed. New approaches to UV protection in pre-school children are now required.
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- 2014
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26. A simple scoring system for the diagnosis of palmo-plantar pigmented skin lesions by digital dermoscopy analysis.
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Rubegni P, Cevenini G, Nami N, Argenziano G, Saida T, Burroni M, Quaglino P, Bono R, Hofmann-Wellenhof R, and Fimiani M
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pigmentation Disorders classification, Dermoscopy methods, Foot, Hand, Pigmentation Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Many research groups have recently developed equipments and statistical methods enabling pattern classification of pigmented skin lesions. To differentiate between benign and malignant ones, the mathematical extraction of digital patterns together with the use of appropriate statistical approaches is a challenging task., Objective: To design a simple scoring model that provides accurate classification of benign and malignant palmo-plantar pigmented skin lesions, by evaluation of parameters obtained by digital dermoscopy analysis (DDA)., Patients and Methods: In the present study we used a digital dermoscopy analyser to evaluate a series of 445 palmo-plantar melanocytic skin lesion images (25 melanomas 420 nevi). Area under the receiver operator curve, sensitivity and specificity were calculated to evaluate the diagnostic performance of our scoring model for the differentiation of benign and malignant palmo-plantar melanocytic lesions., Results: Model performance reached a very high value (0.983). The DDA parameters selected by the model that proved statistically significant were: area, peripheral dark regions, total imbalance of colours, entropy, dark area and red and blue multicomponent. When all seven model variables were used in a multivariate mode, setting sensitivity at 100% to avoid false negatives, we estimated a minimum specificity of about 80%., Conclusions: Simplicity of use and effectiveness of implementation are important requirements for the success of quantitative methods in routine clinical practice. Scoring systems meet these requirements. Their outcomes are accessible in real time without the use of any data processing system, thus allowing decisions to be made quickly and effectively., (© 2012 The Authors. Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology © 2012 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.)
- Published
- 2013
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27. Dermoscopy and digital dermoscopy analysis of palmoplantar 'equivocal' pigmented skin lesions in Caucasians.
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Rubegni P, Cevenini G, Nami N, Argenziano G, Saida T, Burroni M, Bono R, Quaglino P, Barbini P, Miracco C, Lamberti A, and Fimiani M
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Algorithms, Dermoscopy methods, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Nevus ethnology, Pigmentation Disorders ethnology, Retrospective Studies, Skin Neoplasms ethnology, Young Adult, Melanoma diagnosis, Nevus diagnosis, Pigmentation Disorders diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis, White People
- Abstract
Background/aim: The diagnosis of palmoplantar melanoma is often delayed and misdiagnosis is common, due to frequently unusual clinical presentation. We used a digital dermoscopy analyzer with a series of palmoplantar pigmented skin lesions (PP-PSL), and we compared sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy obtained with digital dermoscopy analysis (DDA) and classical dermoscopy., Methods: Digital dermoscopy images of 107 PP-PSL were retrospectively obtained from the database of images of 3 Italian centers. The lesions (25 melanomas and 82 nevi) were all removed because of the presence of clinical and/or dermoscopic suspicious features. All digital images were analyzed using appropriate algorithms, and the diagnostic accuracy of the model was calculated. For comparison, dermoscopic images were clinically evaluated by two dermatologists and the Cohen ĸ concordance with DDA was calculated., Results: The stepwise logistic regression analysis selected only 5 parameters out of 49. The logistic model achieved a sensitivity of 96% and a specificity of 87.8%. The Cohen ĸ concordance, evaluated by the Landis and Koch scale, supplied a substantial agreement between dermoscopy and DDA., Conclusions: DDA might be a useful diagnostic instrument in the evaluation of preselected PP-PSL. However, these findings should be confirmed in a formal clinical trial., (Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2012
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28. Impact of digital dermoscopy analysis on the decision to follow up or to excise a pigmented skin lesion: a multicentre study.
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Burroni M, Wollina U, Torricelli R, Gilardi S, Dell'Eva G, Helm C, Bardey W, Nami N, Nobile F, Ceccarini M, Pomponi A, Alessandro B, and Rubegni P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Dermoscopy standards, Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome pathology, Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome surgery, False Positive Reactions, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted standards, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Nevus, Pigmented surgery, Predictive Value of Tests, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Dermoscopy methods, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Melanoma pathology, Melanoma surgery, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Skin Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: The quality of early malignant melanoma (MM) diagnosis is dependent on the experience of dermatologists, tools like dermoscopy and histopathology, and awareness and education of the studied population. Does a higher rate of excision of pigmented skin lesions (PSL) increase the rate of detected melanomas?, Material and Methods: The DB-MIPS objective tool, able to evaluate mathematical defined variables, has been used to verify the variability of measurements among PSL stored by five different centres located in Italy, Switzerland, and Germany., Results: The objective analysis showed low differences in terms of moles' features among the different groups, arguing for robustness of the dermatological patient's PSL inspection. Differences in terms of false positives and predictive positive values have been detected. The tendency to follow up a lesion was proportional to the percentage of thin MM (<0.75 mm tumour thickness), while the interventism was proportional to the percentage of dysplastic moles. Similar percentage of thin melanoma has been observed in all the centres, indicating a standardization in early diagnosing among experienced dermatologists. The main difference among the centres was their mode of action, i.e. to follow up or remove suspicious PSL., Conclusion: Interventism depends neither on the geographic site nor on the features of the observed moles. Higher removal rates do not correspond to higher MM detections: this means that an in-depth knowledge of melanoma patterns is required and follow-up of suspicious moles is highly suggested., (© 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S.)
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- 2011
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29. Objective melanoma progression.
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Rubegni P, Burroni M, Nami N, Cevenini G, Bono R, Sbano P, and Fimiani M
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- Disease Progression, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Multivariate Analysis, Retrospective Studies, Dermoscopy, Melanoma pathology, Melanoma physiopathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Skin Neoplasms physiopathology
- Abstract
Background/purpose: Many aspects of the natural history of malignant melanoma (MM) are still unclear, specifically its appearance at onset and particularly how it changes in time. The purpose of our study was to retrospectively determine objective changes in melanoma over a 3-24-month observation period., Materials and Methods: Our study was carried out in two Italian dermatology centers. Digital dermoscopy analyzers (DB-Mips System) were used to retrospectively evaluate dermoscopic images of 59 MM (with no initial clinical aspects suggesting melanoma) under observation for 3-24 months. The analyzer evaluates 49 parameters grouped into four categories: geometries, colors, textures and islands of color. Multivariate analysis of variance for repeated measures was used to evaluate the statistical significance of the changes in the digital dermoscopy variables of melanomas., Results: Within-lesion analysis indicated that melanomas increased in dimension (Area, Minimum, and Maximum Diameter), manifested greater disorganization of the internal components (Red, Green and Blue Multicomponent, Contrast, and Entropy) and increased in clusters of milky pink color (Light Red Area)., Conclusion: Analysis of the parameters of our model and statistical analysis enabled us to interpret/identify the most significant factors of melanoma modification, providing quantitative insights into the natural history of this cutaneous malignancy., (© 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.)
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- 2011
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30. Objective follow-up of atypical melanocytic skin lesions: a retrospective study.
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Rubegni P, Cevenini G, Burroni M, Bono R, Sbano P, Biagioli M, Risulo M, Nami N, Perotti R, Miracco C, and Fimiani M
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- Adult, Dermoscopy, Diagnosis, Differential, Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome pathology, Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome physiopathology, Early Detection of Cancer, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Melanoma pathology, Melanoma physiopathology, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Skin Neoplasms physiopathology, Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome diagnosis, Melanoma diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Various authors have suggested that information from longitudinal observation (follow-up) of dynamic changes in atypical melanocytic pigmented skin lesions (MPSL) could enable identification of early malignant melanoma escaping initial observation due to an absence of specific clinical and dermoscopic features. The aim of our retrospective study was to determine the existence of numerical variables regarding changes in MPSL that could be useful to differentiate early melanomas and atypical nevi. The study was carried out in two Italian dermatology Centres. Digital dermoscopy analyzers (DB-Mips System) were used to evaluate dermoscopic images of 94 equivocal pigmented skin lesions under observation for 6-12 months and then excised because of changes across time (29 melanomas and 65 nevi). The analyzer evaluates 49 parameters grouped into four categories: geometries, colours, textures and islands of colour. The ROC curve designed on the 49 digital dermoscopy analysis parameters showed good accuracy. At sensitivity (SE) = specificity (SP), it correctly classified 89.3% of cases. When objective pigmented skin lesion parameters were considered together with their objective changes over 6-12 months, a decisive increase in discrimination capacity was obtained. At SE = SP accuracy was 96.3%. Analysis of the parameters of our model and statistical analysis enabled us to interpret/identify the most significant factors of modification and differentiation of lesions, providing quantitative insights into the diagnosis of equivocal MPSL and demonstrating the utility of objective/numerical follow-up.
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- 2010
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31. Evaluation of cutaneous melanoma thickness by digital dermoscopy analysis: a retrospective study.
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Rubegni P, Cevenini G, Sbano P, Burroni M, Zalaudek I, Risulo M, Dell'Eva G, Nami N, Martino A, and Fimiani M
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Dermoscopy methods, Melanoma diagnosis, Melanoma pathology, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Digital dermoscopy analysis (DDA) exploits computerized analysis of digital images and offers the possibility of parametric analysis of morphological aspects of pigmented skin lesions by means of integration with dedicated software. We conducted a study by DDA in 141 melanomas, with the aim assessing whether the numerical variables extrapolated by univariate logistic analysis could be used in a system of multivariate analysis to predict melanoma thickness before surgery. Melanoma images were evaluated for 49 DDA parameters. Logistic analysis was conducted to identify statistically significant variables. The leave-one-out method was used to evaluate the predictive representations of rules for stepwise logistic classification. The percentage of correctly classified cases was calculated by a classification matrix. Melanomas less than 1 mm had a smaller area, faded borders and were more symmetrical than melanomas greater than 1 mm. The latter had a bluer colour and more random disposition of elements. The accuracy was 86.5%. Specifically, 97 of 108 thin melanomas (specificity 89.8%) and 25 of 33 thick melanomas (sensitivity 75.7%) were correctly classified. In conclusion, the predictive value of DDA for melanoma thickness was quite good. Moreover, DDA allowed us to know objectively those dermoscopic features important in the differentiation between thick and thin melanoma. However, further studies should be performed in a prospective setting before the clinical application.
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- 2010
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32. Like milia-like cysts.
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Burroni M, Nami N, and Rubegni P
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- False Positive Reactions, Humans, Sensitivity and Specificity, Artifacts, Dermoscopy instrumentation, Epidermal Cyst pathology, Image Enhancement methods, Microscopy, Fluorescence methods
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- 2009
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33. Geographical epidemiology of neonatal transitory hypothyroidism. Trend evidence in central Italian region.
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Rocchi MB, Sisti D, Albertini MC, Burroni G, Stoppioni V, Ciatti R, and Burroni M
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- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Iodine metabolism, Italy, Thyroid Function Tests, Thyrotropin blood, Hypothyroidism epidemiology, Neonatal Screening
- Abstract
Aim: To study the geographical distribution of high thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level in the Marche region (central Italy)., Methods: Data were drawn from the Register of Neonatal Screening for Congenital Hypothyroidism (CH) of the Marche region (Italy), located at the Child Neuropsychiatry Department of Civil Hospital in Fano (Marche, Italy). Data were analyzed by Ohno's method., Results: The findings of this study show a nonuniform distribution of high TSH levels in the Marche region, with an evident gradient from North to South., Conclusions: It is not possible to provide a definitive interpretation of these findings, although the specialized literature suggests that a high level of TSH in neonates should be interpreted as a marker of insufficient iodine uptake. Other factors affecting TSH level are also taken into consideration.
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- 2008
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34. [Stapled transanal rectal resection (STARR) in the treatment of rectocele: personal experience].
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Guarnieri A, Cesaretti M, Tirone A, Vuolo G, Verre L, Savelli V, Piccolomini A, Di Cosmo L, Carli AF, Burroni M, and Pitzalis M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anal Canal, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Rectocele surgery, Surgical Stapling methods
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Rectocele is an organic cause of chronic constipation, with a prevalence ranging from 8.95% to 12% in Europe and United States. Necessarily, the approach for rectocele repair is a surgical operation. Stapled transanal rectal resection (STARR) is safe and effective in the treatment of obstructed defecation syndrome. The authors' experience suggests that the surgical operation needs to be combined to rehabilitation exercises, before and after the surgical treatment, in order to strengthen the muscles of the pelvic pavement. From January 2005 to January 2007, 20 patients with outlet obstruction underwent STARR. Patients were selected for operation based on a strict diagnostic protocol: anamnesis, clinical examination, coloproctological and urogynaecological examinations, defecography, anorectal manometry, transrectal ultrasonography and peritoneal electromyography. The therapeutic protocol consists of 3 parts: phase I: rehabilitation of the pelvic pavement; phase II: surgical operation; III phase: post-surgical rehabilitation of the pelvic pavement; The clinical result was classified into: excellent (6 patients), when all constipation symptoms disappeared, good (11 patients), when patient has 1 or 2 obstructed defecation episodes treated with a laxative, fairly good (2 patients), more than 2 episodes, and poor (1 patient), when surgical operation doesn't improve any of the symptoms. Our results, confirmed by the literature, suggest that Longo's technique should be considered as gold standard for rectocele treatment.
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- 2008
35. Melanocytic skin lesions and pregnancy: digital dermoscopy analysis.
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Rubegni P, Sbano P, Burroni M, Cevenini G, Bocchi C, Severi FM, Risulo M, Petraglia F, Dell'Eva G, Fimiani M, and Andreassi L
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- Adult, Dermoscopy instrumentation, Female, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted instrumentation, Pregnancy, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Dermoscopy methods, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Pregnancy Complications, Neoplastic pathology, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Skin pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Very few studies have tried to clarify how pregnancy influences the morphology of pigmented skin lesions (PSL). Our purpose was to objectively determine, by digital dermoscopy analysis (DDA), any dermoscopic changes of acquired melanocitic nevi during pregnancy and after 1 year from delivery., Methods: Thirty-five healthy pregnant women and 35 age-matched female controls were enrolled in the study. Nevi of pregnant women were analysed by DDA between 5 and 8 weeks of pregnancy, between 39 and 41 weeks of pregnancy and 12 months after delivery. Nevi of control women were analysed by DDA in a month of the year matching the period of recruitment of pregnant women and 21 months later., Results: Multivariate analysis of variance (manova) for repeated measures revealed that dermoscopic variables SKIN-GREEN-AVERAGE, SKIN-BLUE-AVERAGE and CONTRAST changed during pregnancy but returned to non-significant values after a year from delivery. The variable ENTROPY showed significant differences between initial evaluation and 1 year after delivery. Finally, the variable VARIANCE OF BORDER GRADIENT showed a significant difference between the first and the last evaluations, in both pregnant and control subjects., Conclusions: The study showed that pregnancy leads to significant modifications in PSL, especially with regard to pigment network, globules and architectural order or disorder.
- Published
- 2007
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36. Digital dermoscopy in clinical practise: a three-centre analysis.
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Wollina U, Burroni M, Torricelli R, Gilardi S, Dell'Eva G, Helm C, and Bardey W
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- Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Switzerland epidemiology, Dermoscopy statistics & numerical data, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted instrumentation, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted standards, Melanoma epidemiology, Melanoma pathology, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted instrumentation, Skin Neoplasms epidemiology, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Early detection of cutaneous melanoma is the most important step to improve prognosis. In recent years objective techniques have been developed to improve diagnostics of pigmented lesions superior to the naked eye. Digital dermoscopy offers several advantages such as independence from the investigator, format ready for teledermatology and image storage, and comparability., Setting: In a routine setting including three centres in Europe, i.e. Lugano and Locarno in Switzerland, and Dresden in Germany, the usefulness of digital dermoscopy in daily routine has been evaluated., Patients and Methods: Digital dermoscopy was performed with the DB-MIPS system in 1308 patients, and 3544 pigmented lesions were evaluated. A total of 466 pigmented lesions were surgically removed and classified by histopathology. Among those 52 melanomas and 299 dysplastic, naevi could be identified. DB-MIPS system evaluated 35 variables of geometrics, colour, colour distribution and texture. Lesion identification is realized by clustering. Another important part of the analysis was to study the decision making, i.e. removal or follow-up of lesions. The tendency to follow-up was defined as the ratio of (number of suspicious lesions-removed lesions)/suspicious lesions. The interventism is defined as the ratio of the number of removed lesions to the number of suspicious lesions., Results: The DB-MIPS system was robust and easy in handling in daily routine. The data analysis and digital imaging were realized in real time. Fifty-two melanomas could be identified including eight in situ melanomas and 33 T1a melanomas (thinner than 1 mm). Sensitivity of digital dermoscopy varied between 90% and 95% between the three centres. Specificity varied between 79.6% and 93.3%. The centres differed in the patient population, the mean diameter of pigmented lesions and decisions. Interventism varied between 36.3% and 76.0%, follow-up varied from 24% to 63%. Higher levels of clinician's false positive were associated with a higher percentage of interventism., Conclusions: Digital dermoscopy offers advantages for daily routine in detection of early melanoma. Sensitivity and specificity for early melanomas is high and thereby, the experienced dermatologist can be easily supported in daily routine of a pigment lesion clinic to improve diagnostics and hopefully prognosis in cutaneous melanoma.
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- 2007
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37. The pathogenesis of the white matter abnormalities in phenylketonuria. A multimodal 3.0 tesla MRI and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H MRS) study.
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Leuzzi V, Tosetti M, Montanaro D, Carducci C, Artiola C, Carducci C, Antonozzi I, Burroni M, Carnevale F, Chiarotti F, Popolizio T, Giannatempo GM, D'Alesio V, and Scarabino T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Brain metabolism, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Phenylalanine blood, Phenylalanine metabolism, Phenylketonurias blood, Phenylketonurias metabolism, Severity of Illness Index, Brain pathology, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Phenylketonurias diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: To gain insights into the nature and pathogenesis of white matter (WM) abnormalities in PKU., Methods: Thirty-two patients with phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency (21 with early and 11 with late diagnosis and treatment) and 30 healthy controls underwent an integrated clinical, neuroimaging (3.0 T MRI, diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), diffusion tensor imaging (DTI)) and neurochemical (1H MRS) investigation., Results: All patients had white matter abnormalities on T2-weighted (T2W) and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) scans; parietal white was consistently affected, followed by occipital, frontal and temporal white matter. T1-weighted hypointense alterations were also found in 8 of 32 patients. DWI hyperintense areas overlapped with those detected on T2W/FLAIR. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) was reduced and correlated inversely with severity of white matter involvement. Fractional anisotropy index, eigenvalues lambda(min), lambda(middle), lambda(max) obtained from DTI data, and the principal brain metabolites assessed by 1H MRS (except brain phenylalanine (Phe)) were normal. Brain Phe peak was detected in all but two subjects. Brain and blood Phe were strictly associated. Blood Phe at the diagnosis, patient's age, and concurrent brain Phe independently influence white matter alteration (as expressed by conventional MRI or ADC values)., Conclusions: (a) MRI abnormalities in phenylketonuria are the result of a distinctive alteration of white matter suggesting the intracellular accumulation of a hydrophilic metabolite, which leaves unaffected white matter architecture and structure. (b) White matter abnormalities do not seem to reflect the mechanisms involved in the derangement of mental development in PKU. (c) Our data do not support the usefulness of conventional brain MRI examination in the clinical monitoring of phenylketonuria patients.
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- 2007
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38. Comments on "A new algorithm for border description of polarized light surface microscopic images of pigmented skin lesions".
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Burroni M, Alparone L, and Argenti F
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- Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted, Melanoma classification, Nevus, Pigmented classification, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Algorithms, Image Enhancement methods, Melanoma pathology, Microscopy, Polarization methods, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Skin Neoplasms classification, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
In this paper, discrepancies and reference inaccuracies in the paper (Grana et al., 2003) are pointed out. Specifically, it is demonstrated that the definitions of "lesion gradient" and "skin lesion gradient," widely used in a number of medical papers on computer analysis of pigmented skin lesions, are unambiguous, and that the "new algorithm for border description" described in the subject paper substantially relies on well-established concepts dating back over one decade ago.
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- 2006
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39. Predominant dermoscopic patterns observed among nevi.
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Scope A, Burroni M, Agero AL, Benvenuto-Andrade C, Dusza SW, Rubegni P, Bono R, Dell'Eva G, Salaro C, and Marghoob AA
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- Adult, Humans, Middle Aged, Nevus pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Dermoscopy, Nevus classification, Skin Neoplasms classification
- Abstract
Background: It has been clinically observed that patients' "normal" moles resemble each other. Whether this concept is applicable to dermoscopic practice has not been sufficiently studied., Objective: To investigate whether physicians evaluating dermoscopic images would identify common dermoscopic profiles of nevi within individual patients., Methods: Images of 205 nevi belonging to 18 patients were evaluated by 2 dermatologists for dermoscopic global pattern, color, and specific structures. We defined dermoscopic patterns as dominant if seen in >or= 40% of the patient's nevi; a minor pattern was defined as 20 to 39%., Results: A dominant pattern was seen in 15 patients (83%). In 13 (72%) of the patients, >or= 80% of the nevi were classified into one, two, or three global patterns. The reticular global pattern was the most prevalent dominant pattern, seen in 9 patients (50%); the homogeneous pattern was the most prevalent minor pattern, seen in 16 patients (89%)., Conclusion: Individuals tend to have one to three predominant dermoscopic nevus global patterns.
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- 2006
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40. Risk factors for congenital hypothyroidism: results of a population case-control study (1997-2003).
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Medda E, Olivieri A, Stazi MA, Grandolfo ME, Fazzini C, Baserga M, Burroni M, Cacciari E, Calaciura F, Cassio A, Chiovato L, Costa P, Leonardi D, Martucci M, Moschini L, Pagliardini S, Parlato G, Pignero A, Pinchera A, Sala D, Sava L, Stoppioni V, Tancredi F, Valentini F, Vigneri R, and Sorcini M
- Subjects
- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Child, Preschool, Diseases in Twins, Environment, Female, Fetal Growth Retardation, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Iodine deficiency, Male, Maternal Age, Pregnancy, Pregnancy in Diabetics, Risk Factors, Congenital Hypothyroidism etiology
- Abstract
Objective: To identify risk factors for permanent and transient congenital hypothyroidism (CH)., Design: A population-based case-control study was carried out by using the network created in Italy for the National Register of Infants with CH., Methods: Four controls were enrolled for each new CH infant; 173 cases and 690 controls were enrolled in 4 years. In order to distinguish among risk factors for permanent and transient CH, diagnosis was re-evaluated 3 years after enrollment when there was a suspicion of transient CH being present. Familial, maternal, neonatal and environmental influences were investigated., Results: An increased risk for permanent CH was detected in twins by a multivariate analysis (odds ratio (OR) = 12.2, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.4-62.3). A statistically significant association with additional birth defects, female gender and gestational age >40 weeks was also confirmed. Although not significant, an increased risk of CH was observed among infants with a family history of thyroid diseases among parents (OR = 1.9, 95% CI: 0.7-5.2). Maternal diabetes was also found to be slightly associated with permanent CH (OR = 15.7, 95% CI: 0.9-523) in infants who were large for gestational age. With regard to transient CH, intrauterine growth retardation and preterm delivery were independent risk factors for this form of CH., Conclusion: This study showed that many risk factors contribute to the aetiology of CH. In particular, our results suggested a multifactorial origin of CH in which genetic and environmental factors play a role in the development of the disease.
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- 2005
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41. The role of dermoscopy and digital dermoscopy analysis in the diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions.
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Rubegni P, Burroni M, Andreassi A, and Fimiani M
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- Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Predictive Value of Tests, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Dermoscopy methods, Nevus, Pigmented diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis
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- 2005
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42. Dysplastic naevus vs. in situ melanoma: digital dermoscopy analysis.
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Burroni M, Sbano P, Cevenini G, Risulo M, Dell'eva G, Barbini P, Miracco C, Fimiani M, Andreassi L, and Rubegni P
- Subjects
- Dermoscopy methods, Diagnosis, Differential, Humans, Regression Analysis, Skin Pigmentation, Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome pathology, Melanoma pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: To date, much confusion exists about the biological significance of dysplastic naevi and about the relationship between melanocytic dysplasia and clinical atypia., Objectives: To use a digital dermoscopy analyser with a series of 'borderline' pigmented skin lesions (i.e. dysplastic naevi and in situ melanomas) to find correlation between the studied variables and to determine their discriminating power with respect to histological diagnosis., Methods: The pigmented skin lesions (n = 174) were histologically examined by three experienced dermatopathologists and identified as in situ melanomas (n = 38) and dysplastic naevi (n = 136). The system evaluated 48 parameters as possible discriminant variables, grouped into four categories: geometry, colours, textures and islands of colour. Once the lesions were analysed (stepwise discriminant analysis), sensitivity, specificity and accuracy were calculated., Results: At the end of the stepwise procedure the percentage of cases classified correctly was 71.8%. Of 136 dysplastic naevi only 98 were classified correctly, while 27 of 38 in situ melanomas were recognized correctly., Conclusions: We conclude that there are so far no digital dermoscopic criteria that can clearly distinguish dysplastic naevi from in situ melanomas.
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- 2005
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43. Digital dermoscopy analysis and internet-based program for discrimination of pigmented skin lesion dermoscopic images.
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Rubegni P, Burroni M, Sbano P, and Andreassi L
- Subjects
- Dermoscopy methods, Diagnosis, Differential, Humans, Internet, Remote Consultation standards, Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted methods, Melanoma diagnosis, Nevus, Pigmented diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis
- Published
- 2005
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44. Digital surface microscopy analysis of conjunctival pigmented lesions: a preliminary study.
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Tosi GM, Rubegni P, Schuerfeld K, Toti P, Cevenini G, Dell'Eva G, Andreassi L, Caporossi A, and Burroni M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Conjunctival Neoplasms pathology, Eye Neoplasms pathology, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Melanoma diagnosis, Melanosis diagnosis, Middle Aged, Nevus diagnosis, Nevus pathology, Conjunctiva pathology, Conjunctival Neoplasms diagnosis, Dermoscopy methods, Eye Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to investigate whether digital surface microscopy (DSM) could be used for the follow-up and comparison of malignant and benign conjunctival pigmented lesions (CPLs). Thirty-nine CPLs [16 de novo malignant melanomas (MMs), one MM arising from primary acquired melanosis (PAM), six PAMs and 16 naevi] were digitally analysed and biopsied. All of the PAMs and 10 naevi, which had not been surgically excised, were followed up using DSM. Thirty parameters were evaluated grouped into four categories: geometry, colour, texture and islands of colour. None of the CPLs that were followed up, which comprised 10 naevocytic naevi and seven PAMs, showed any morphological change at DSM analysis, except for one PAM which developed an MM 1 year later. Of the geometric variables examined, the area, maximum diameter and minimum diameter showed significantly higher values in MMs compared with benign CPLs. With regard to the colour of CPLs, MMs were significantly darker and bluer than naevi. In the texture group, contrast was significantly higher in MMs. In the islands-of-colour group, the imbalance of blue-grey regions and the presence of dark areas were significantly higher in MMs. DSM greatly simplified the follow-up of CPLs, such as PAMs with atypia, by providing satisfactory quality images with high reproducibility; this technique is also easy to use and well accepted by patients. Moreover, this preliminary study allowed us to determine which objective variables could be important for distinguishing between benign CPLs and conjunctival MMs.
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- 2004
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45. Inter- and intra-variability of pigmented skin lesions: could the ABCD rule be influenced by host characteristics?
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Burroni M, Dell'Eva G, Corona R, Sera F, Bono R, Sbano P, Andreassi L, and Rubegni P
- Subjects
- Humans, Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Nevus, Pigmented physiopathology, Skin pathology, Skin Pigmentation
- Abstract
Background/purpose: Many differences in color, shape and dimension exist between different moles even in the same individual. Major differences might be accounted for anatomical location, genetic factors and by environmental factors, mainly sunlight exposure. Therefore, it would be of great value, when evaluating skin lesions, to take into account the degree of intra- and inter-variability of several diagnostic parameters. In order to assess the morphologic and chromatic differences between lesions belonging to different patients and between lesions belonging to the same individual, we examined objective digital parameters obtained with dermatoscopic analysis, using the DBDermo MIPS system (BIO MIPS Engineering, S.R.L, siena, Italy)., Methods: The automatic classifier inside the software is based on a 'match by similarity' algorithm, based on the measurement of the Euclidean distances of all variables considered from the reference image. Two-hundred and four clinically benign pigmented lesion, belonging to 18 patients were examined, stored and automatically processed. For each lesion objective parameters related to geometry, color and texture were automatically evaluated., Results: We found skin color (healthy skin) is objectively different from subject to subject and the lesion color is more similar among different lesions of the same patient than among lesions belonging to different individuals both in their darkest and slightly dark component. We also observed that lesion dimensions are individual correlates, i.e. the probability for a lesion to be large is higher when the other, in the same patient, is large., Conclusion: Many parameters of pigmented skin lesions evaluated by digital dermoscopy analysis are similar in the same patient and different from those belonging to different individuals. This indicates that, when considering a lesion, we should take into account the peculiar patient's characteristics.
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- 2004
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46. Melanoma computer-aided diagnosis: reliability and feasibility study.
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Burroni M, Corona R, Dell'Eva G, Sera F, Bono R, Puddu P, Perotti R, Nobile F, Andreassi L, and Rubegni P
- Subjects
- Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted, Diagnosis, Differential, Discriminant Analysis, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Melanoma classification, Nevus, Pigmented diagnosis, Reproducibility of Results, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis, Melanoma diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Differential diagnosis of melanoma from melanocytic nevi is often not straightforward. Thus, a growing interest has developed in the last decade in the automated analysis of digitized images obtained by epiluminescence microscopy techniques to assist clinicians in differentiating early melanoma from benign skin lesions., Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate diagnostic accuracy provided by different statistical classifiers on a large set of pigmented skin lesions grabbed by four digital analyzers located in two different dermatological units., Experimental Design: Images of 391 melanomas and 449 melanocytic nevi were included in the study. A linear classifier was built by using the method of receiver operating characteristic curves to identify a threshold value for a fixed sensitivity of 95%. A K-nearest-neighbor classifier, a nonparametric method of pattern recognition, was constructed using all available image features and trained for a sensitivity of 98% on a large exemplar set of lesions., Results: On independent test sets of lesions, the linear classifier and the K-nearest-neighbor classifier produced a mean sensitivity of 95% and 98% and a mean specificity of 78% and of 79%, respectively., Conclusions: In conclusion, our study suggests that computer-aided differentiation of melanoma from benign pigmented lesions obtained with DB-Mips is feasible and, above all, reliable. In fact, the same instrumentations used in different units provided similar diagnostic accuracy. Whether this would improve early diagnosis of melanoma and/or reducing unnecessary surgery needs to be demonstrated by a randomized clinical trial.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The 'common mole' from the point of view of digital dermoscopy analysis: subjective vs. objective evaluation of easy pigmented skin lesions.
- Author
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Burroni M, Rubegni P, Dell'eva G, Santini S, Perotti R, Biagioli M, Taddeucci P, and Andreassi L
- Subjects
- Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted, Discriminant Analysis, Humans, Luminescent Measurements, Skin pathology, Melanoma pathology, Nevus pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: The term 'common mole', often used to describe a subset of benign pigmented skin lesions, is traditionally defined on the basis of morpho-chromatic features. In recent years, certain research groups have developed equipment and methods, such as digital dermoscopy analysis, that enable objective evaluation of pigmented skin lesions., Objective: In this study we use a digital dermoscopy analyser trained for the recognition of pigmented skin lesions to compare the subjective definition of 'common' and the mathematical concept of 'close to the mean of measurements'., Methods: A subset (100) of digital images of flat pigmented lesions, obtained in daily practice, were classified by trained and non-expert clinicians as common moles (60) or clear-cut melanoma (40), and processed with a DB-Mips analyser. The resulting parameters, validated by a classifier, were used to evaluate Hotelling's T2 multivariate distances from the mean., Results: 'Common' moles could not be clearly defined in terms of closeness to the means of objectively evaluated parameters. Their diagnosis indudes many other evaluations and clusters of variables., Conclusion: The clinical semantics of the term 'common' does not conform to any unambiguous mathematical definition.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Digital dermoscopy analysis of atypical pigmented skin lesions: a stepwise logistic discriminant analysis approach.
- Author
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Rubegni P, Cevenini G, Burroni M, Dell'Eva G, Sbano P, Cuccia A, and Andreassi L
- Subjects
- Discriminant Analysis, Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted methods, Melanoma pathology, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Digital microscopy is a non-invasive diagnostic technique enabling determination of characteristics that cannot be appreciated by direct observation. If correctly applied, this technique can be useful for the diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions., Purpose: To evaluate the utility of digital microscopy for analysing atypical benign and malignant pigmented skin lesions exploiting digital numerical filtering and automatic measurements., Methods: Forty-eight parameters were identified as possible discriminating variables, and were grouped in four categories: geometries, colours, textures, and islands of colour. Statistical analysis was used to identify the variables with the highest discriminating power., Results: The high quality of the digital image made it possible to observe diagnostic signs in pigmented skin lesion images, acquired by the present technique, in great detail. Specially designed filtering enhanced certain diagnostic patterns. Stepwise discriminant analysis selected only 10 variables (the means of these variables were higher in melanomas than in nevi)., Conclusions: The combined use of digital dermoscopy and stepwise logistic discriminant analysis made it possible to single out the best objective variables for distinguishing atypical nevi and early melanoma.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Automated diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions.
- Author
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Rubegni P, Cevenini G, Burroni M, Perotti R, Dell'Eva G, Sbano P, Miracco C, Luzi P, Tosi P, Barbini P, and Andreassi L
- Subjects
- Automation methods, Humans, Melanoma pathology, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Reproducibility of Results, Melanoma diagnosis, Microscopy methods, Nevus, Pigmented diagnosis
- Abstract
Since advanced melanoma remains practically incurable, early detection is an important step toward a reduction in mortality. High expectations are entertained for a technique known as dermoscopy or epiluminescence light microscopy; however, evaluation of pigmented skin lesions by this method is often extremely complex and subjective. To obviate the problem of qualitative interpretation, methods based on mathematical analysis of pigmented skin lesions, such as digital dermoscopy analysis, have been developed. In the present study, we used a digital dermoscopy analyzer (DBDermo-Mips system) to evaluate a series of 588 excised, clinically atypical, flat pigmented skin lesions (371 benign, 217 malignant). The analyzer evaluated 48 parameters grouped into 4 categories (geometries, colors, textures and islands of color), which were used to train an artificial neural network. To evaluate the diagnostic performance of the neural network and to check it during the training process, we used the error area over the receiver operating characteristic curve. The discriminating power of the digital dermoscopy analyzer plus artificial neural network was compared with histologic diagnosis. A feature selection procedure indicated that as few as 13 of the variables were sufficient to discriminate the 2 groups of lesions, and this also ensured high generalization power. The artificial neural network designed with these variables enabled a diagnostic accuracy of about 94%. In conclusion, the good diagnostic performance and high speed in reading and analyzing lesions (real time) of our method constitute an important step in the direction of automated diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions., (Copyright 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Digital dermoscopy analysis and artificial neural network for the differentiation of clinically atypical pigmented skin lesions: a retrospective study.
- Author
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Rubegni P, Burroni M, Cevenini G, Perotti R, Dell'Eva G, Barbini P, Fimiani M, and Andreassi L
- Subjects
- Humans, Luminescent Measurements, Microscopy, Retrospective Studies, Melanoma pathology, Neural Networks, Computer, Nevus, Pigmented pathology, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Skin pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Noninvasive diagnostic methods such as dermoscopy or epiluminescence light microscopy have been developed in an attempt to improve diagnostic accuracy of pigmented skin lesions. The evaluation of the many morphologic characteristics of pigmented skin lesions observable by epiluminescence light microscopy, however, is often extremely complex and subjective. With the aim of obviating these problems of qualitative interpretation, methods based on mathematical analysis of pigmented skin lesions have recently been designed. These methods are based on computerized analysis of digital images obtained by epiluminescence light microscopy. In this study we used a digital dermoscopy analyzer with 147 clinically atypical pigmented skin lesions (90 nevi and 57 melanomas) to determine its discriminating power with respect to histologic diagnosis. The system evaluated 48 objective parameters used to train an artificial neural network. Using the artificial neural network with 10 variables selected by a stepwise procedure, we obtained a maximum accuracy in distinguishing melanoma from benign lesions of about 93%. Comparing this result with those of the many studies using classical epiluminescence light microscopy, it emerges that the method proposed is equal or even superior in diagnostic accuracy and has the advantage of not depending on the expertise of the clinician who examines the lesion.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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