Publications by authors named "Angela Dele Rampini"

Background And Objectives: Choosing the correct site for a nerve biopsy remains a challenge due to nerve sacrifice and major donor site complications, such as neuroma, as seen in sural nerve biopsy. Selecting a deeper donor nerve can help in burying nerve stumps in deep soft tissues, preventing neuroma. Moreover, using an expendable, deeply situated motor nerve can aid indiagnosis when a motor neuropathy is suspected.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the rare condition of multicentric high-grade glioma (MC HGG), comparing surgical outcomes in patients and existing literature to assess potential advantages of surgery.
  • A retrospective analysis was conducted on 16 patients with MC HGG, revealing factors such as age, performance status, and the extent of tumor resection significantly correlate with better prognosis.
  • The findings suggest that while MC gliomas are associated with poor outcomes, aggressive surgical intervention may improve survival rates, challenging the belief that they develop from lower-grade gliomas.
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Background: Human placenta is recognized as a valuable vascular microneurosurgery training model because of its abundant availability, ethical acceptance, and analogous vasculature with other vessels of the human body; however, human placenta laboratory preparation techniques are not well described in the literature. This study outlines a detailed and standardized laboratory protocol for preparation of a color-perfused human placenta model. Survey-based validation of the model is also reported herein.

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Background: Surgical approaches to orbital apex lesions involve the medial and lateral corridors. The transorbital neuroendoscopic (TONE) approach has been recently proposed as an elegant, bone-sparing, and minimally invasive alternative for tumors of the lateral orbital compartment. However, its effectiveness compared with the standard lateral orbitotomy approach still requires confirmation.

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Superficial siderosis of the central nervous system (SSCNS) is an uncommon and often unrecognized disorder that results from recurrent and persistent bleeding into the subarachnoid space. Currently, there is no effective treatment for SSCNS. The identification and surgical resolution of the cause of bleeding remains the most reliable method of treatment, but the cause of bleeding is often not apparent.

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