1.Metastatic Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Lower Lip: Analysis of the 5-Year Survival Rate.
Tommaso AGOSTINI ; Giuseppe SPINELLI ; Francesco ARCURI ; Raffaella PERELLO
Archives of Craniofacial Surgery 2017;18(2):105-111
OBJECTIVES: The author analyse the impact of extracapsular lymph node spread and bone engagement in the ipsilateral neck of patients suffering squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the lower lip. METHODS: The data of 56 neck dissections performed in patients suffering SCC of the lower lip between January 2000 and December 2008 were retrospectively analysed. Statistical analysis was performed with the Kaplan-Meier life table method, and the survival rate was investigated with the log rank statistic and significance test. The values were considered statistically significant at p<0.05. RESULTS: Nine patients took advantage from simultaneous treatment of tumor and prophylactic neck dissection (level I-III), reaching 100% survival rate. Patients suffering metastasized disease, who received radical neck dissection at the time of tumor treatment, presented 83.3% survival rate. Patients who underwent previous surgery and radiotherapy presented worse prognosis although radical neck dissection in case of extra-capsular spread only (24.7%) and osseous engagement (22.2%). CONCLUSION: Prophylactic neck dissection (level I–III) is recommended in T3–T4 N0 SCC. Simultaneous treatment of tumor and cervical lymph nodes provides a better prognosis as respect to delayed nodal management. Extra-capsular spread with or without bone engagement represents independent risk factor responsible for high mortality rate of SCC of the lower lip.
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell*
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Epithelial Cells*
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Humans
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Life Tables
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Lip*
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Lymph Nodes
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Mortality
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Neck
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Neck Dissection
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Prognosis
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Radiotherapy
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Retrospective Studies
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Risk Factors
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Survival Rate*
2.Adipofascial Anterolateral Thigh Flap Safety: Applications and Complications.
Tommaso AGOSTINI ; Giulia Lo RUSSO ; Yi Xin ZHANG ; Giuseppe SPINELLI ; Davide LAZZERI
Archives of Plastic Surgery 2013;40(2):91-96
BACKGROUND: A thinned anterolateral thigh (ALT) flap is often harvested to achieve optimal skin resurfacing. Several techniques have been described to thin an ALT flap including an adipocutaneous flap, an adipofascial flap and delayed debulking. METHODS: By systematically reviewing all of the available literature in English and French, the present manuscript attempts to identify the common surgical indications, complications and donor site morbidity of the adipofascial variant of the ALT flap. The studies were identified by performing a systematic search on Medline, Ovid, EMBASE, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Current Contents, PubMed, Google, and Google Scholar. RESULTS: The study selection process was adapted from the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses statement, and 15 articles were identified using the study inclusion criteria. These articles were then reviewed for author name(s), year of publication, flap dimensions and thickness following defatting, perforator type, type of transfer, complications, thinning technique, number of cases with a particular area of application and donor site morbidity. CONCLUSIONS: The adipofascial variant of the ALT flap provides tissue to fill large defects and improve pliability. Its strong and safe blood supply permits adequate immediate or delayed debulking without vascular complications. The presence of the deep fascia makes it possible to prevent sagging by suspending and fixing the flap for functional reconstructive purposes (e.g., the intraoral cavity). Donor site morbidity is minimal, and thigh deformities can be reduced through immediate direct closure or liposuction and direct closure. A safe blood supply was confirmed by the rate of secondary flap debulking.
Congenital Abnormalities
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Fascia
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Free Tissue Flaps
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Humans
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Lipectomy
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Microsurgery
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Pliability
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Publications
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Skin
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Thigh
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Tissue Donors
3.Through-and-through Nasal Reconstruction with the Bi-Pedicled Forehead Flap.
Tommaso AGOSTINI ; Raffaella PERELLO ; Giulia Lo RUSSO ; Giuseppe SPINELLI
Archives of Plastic Surgery 2013;40(6):748-753
BACKGROUND: Nasal reconstruction is one of the most difficult challenges for the head and neck surgeon, especially in the case of complex full thickness defects following malignant skin tumor resection. Full-thickness defects require demanding multi-step reconstruction. METHODS: Seven patients underwent surgical reconstruction of full-thickness nasal defects with a bi-pedicled forehead flap shaped appropriately to the defect. Patients were aged between 58 and 86 years, with a mean age of 63.4 years. All of the tumors were excised using traditional surgery, and in 4 of the patients, reconstruction was performed simultaneously following negativity of fresh frozen sections of the margins under general anesthesia. RESULTS: Nasal reconstruction was well accepted by all of the patients suffering non-melanoma skin tumors with acceptable cosmetic outcomes. The heart-shaped forehead flap was harvested in cases of subtotal involvement of the nasal pyramid, while smaller defects were reconstructed with a wing-shaped flap. No cartilaginous or osseous support was necessary. CONCLUSIONS: This bi-pedicled forehead flap was a valid, versatile, and easy-to-implement alternative to microsurgery or multi-step reconstruction. The flap is the best indication for full-thickness nasal defects but can also be indicated for other complex facial defects in the orbital (exenteratio orbitae), zygomatic, and cheek area, for which the availability of a flap equipped with two thick and hairless lobes can be a valuable resource.
Cheek
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Forehead*
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Frozen Sections
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General Surgery
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Head
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Humans
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Microsurgery
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Nasal Bone
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Nasal Surgical Procedures
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Neck
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Nose Deformities, Acquired
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Nose Neoplasms
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Orbit
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Skin
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Surgical Flaps
4.Indications, Outcomes, and Complications of Pedicled Propeller Perforator Flaps for Upper Body Defects: A Systematic Review.
Davide LAZZERI ; Georg M HUEMER ; Fabio NICOLI ; Lorenz LARCHER ; Talal DASHTI ; Luca GRASSETTI ; Qingfeng LI ; Yixin ZHANG ; Giuseppe SPINELLI ; Tommaso AGOSTINI
Archives of Plastic Surgery 2013;40(1):44-50
BACKGROUND: The aim of this investigation was to systematically review the current literature to provide the best data for indications, outcomes, survival, and complication rates of pedicled propeller perforator flaps for upper body defects. METHODS: A comprehensive literature review for articles published from January 1991 to December 2011 was performed using the PubMed, Medline, and Cochrane Databases. Articles without available full-text, single case reports or papers with excessive missing data were excluded. Papers reporting pedicle-perforator (propeller) flaps used for lower extremity reconstruction were excluded from meta-analysis. RESULTS: From the initial 1,736 studies our search yielded, 343 studies qualified for the second stage of selection. Of 117 full-text reports screened, 41 studies, met the definitive inclusion and exclusion criteria. Of the selected 41 articles, 26 were case series, original papers or retrospective reviews and were included, whereas 15 were case report papers and therefore were excluded. Two hundred ninety-five propeller flaps were reported to have been used in a total of 283 patients. Indications include repair of trauma-induced injuries, post-trauma revision surgery, cancer resection, chronic infection, pressure sores, and chronic ulcers with a major complication rate (3.3%) comparable to that of free flaps. No specific exclusion criteria for the procedure were presented in the studies reviewed. CONCLUSIONS: Pedicled propeller flaps are a versatile and safe reconstructive option that are easy and quick to raise and that provide unlimited clinical solutions because of the theoretical possibility of harvesting them based on any perforator chosen among those classified in the body.
Free Tissue Flaps
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Humans
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Lower Extremity
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Perforator Flap
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Pressure Ulcer
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Retrospective Studies
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Surgical Flaps
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Ulcer
5.Granulomatous Mastitis during Chronic Antidepressant Therapy: Is It Possible a Conservative Therapeutic Approach?.
Maurizio BELLAVIA ; Giuseppe DAMIANO ; Vincenzo Davide PALUMBO ; Gabriele SPINELLI ; Giovanni TOMASELLO ; Antonio MARRAZZO ; Silvia FICARELLA ; Antonio BRUNO ; Antonino SAMMARTANO ; Tiziana FIORENTINI ; Antonio SCIO ; Carolina MAIONE ; Attilio Ignazio LO MONTE
Journal of Breast Cancer 2012;15(3):371-372
Granulomatous mastitis is a rare benign inflammatory disease of the breast with multiple etiologies such as tuberculosis, sarcoidosis, foreign body reaction, and mycotic and parasitic infections. In contrast, idiopathic granulomatous mastitis (IGM) is characterized by the presence of chronic granulomatous lobulitis in the absence of an obvious etiology. Clinically and radiologically it may mimic breast carcinoma and so awareness of surgeons, pathologists, and radiologists is essential to avoid unnecessary mastectomies. Cases of IGM are reported during antidepressant therapy in patients also showing high levels of prolactinemia. In these cases, we believe that surgical excision must be avoided being replaced with a conservative management of the pathological condition based on a corticosteroid treatment.
Breast
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Foreign-Body Reaction
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Granulomatous Mastitis
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Humans
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Hydrazines
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Hyperprolactinemia
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Immunoglobulin M
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Mastectomy
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Sarcoidosis
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Serotonin Uptake Inhibitors
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Tuberculosis