Publications by authors named "Chiara Cacciatore"

: Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) represent a rare subset of pancreatic cancer. Functional tumors cause hormonal changes and clinical syndromes, while non-functional ones are often diagnosed late. Surgical management needs multidisciplinary planning, involving enucleation, distal pancreatectomy with or without spleen preservation, central pancreatectomy, pancreaticoduodenectomy or total pancreatectomy.

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Anal incontinence is a frequent pathological condition with devastating impact on quality of life. The prevalence is approximately 15% of the population, with higher incidence reported in the elderly and multiparous women, and several factors have a major role in its pathogenesis, such as anatomical sphincter defects (Glasgow and Lowry in Dis Colon Rectum 55(4): 482-490, 2012), delivery injuries, and colorectal, uro-gynecological, and perineal surgery. The direct surgical approach is the gold standard treatment for fecal incontinence, especially through anterior sphincteroplasty, although a permanent defect of continence persists over time.

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Background: Laparoscopic adrenalectomy (LA), which avoids large abdomen incisions, is considered the gold standard technique for the treatment of benign small- and medium-size adrenal masses (<6 cm) and weighing < 100 g. A trascurable mortality and morbidity rate, short hospitalization and patient rapid recovery are the main advantages compared to traditional surgery. During the past decade, a new surgical technology has been developed that expedites a "clipless" adrenalectomy.

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Mental health disorders pose a significant challenge to society. The Bayesian perspective on the mind offers unique insights and tools that may help address a variety of mental health conditions. Psychopathological dysfunctions are often connected to altered predictive and active inference processes, in which cognitive and physiological pathogenic beliefs shape the clinical condition and its symptoms.

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Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine malignancy, representing 2.9% of all new cancers in the United States. It has an excellent prognosis, with a five-year relative survival rate of 98.

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Discrepant thyroid function tests (TFTs) are typical of inappropriate secretion of TSH (IST), a rare entity encompassing TSH-secreting adenomas (TSHoma) and Resistance to Thyroid Hormone (RTHβ) due to mutations. The differential diagnosis remains a clinical challenge in most of the cases. The objective of this study was to share our experience with patients presenting with discrepant TFTs outlining the main pitfalls in the differential diagnosis.

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Native nephrectomy (NN) in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is indicated in cases of recurrent urinary tract infections and hematuria, neoplastic degeneration, and encumbrance. Timing, indication, and surgical approach of NN depends on the symptoms or policy of the center. The aim of our study is to evaluate our experience.

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Incidence of malignant tumors in kidney transplant recipients is higher than nontransplanted population due to many factors, such as immunosuppression therapy and complex donor-recipient interaction. Genitourinary malignancies have been reported as the second most common malignancy in kidney transplant recipients. In this regard, prostate cancer is the most common neoplasm.

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Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a disorder characterized by alterations in body perception. Recent literature suggested that AN can also impair the processing of stimuli from inside the body (i.e.

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Background: A large number of studies have contributed to understanding the general mechanisms driving ovarian folliculogenesis in humans and show a complex endocrine dialog between the central nervous system, the pituitary and the ovary, integrated by various intraovarian paracrine messages. The role of intraovarian paracrine regulation has acquired more relevance in the recent years owing to the discovery of previously unknown factors, such as the oocyte-derived bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)15.

Methods: A thorough literature search was carried out in order to summarize what has been reported so far on the role of BMP15, and the BMP15 paralog, growth and differentiation factor 9 (GDF9), in ovarian function and female fertility.

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Context: Calcitonin (CT) measurement is crucial to the early diagnosis and the follow-up of medullary thyroid cancer (MTC). If the evaluation of stimulated CT levels is required, a provocative test can be performed, being the high-dose Ca test recently reintroduced in clinical practice.

Objective: Our objective was to identify gender-specific thresholds for MTC diagnosis in a large series of patients who underwent the Ca test.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the impact of X chromosome mosaicism on spontaneous menarche in patients with Turner syndrome, finding a significant association between the two.
  • Analysis of 40 Turner syndrome patients revealed that those with spontaneous menarche had a higher percentage of the normal 46,XX chromosome lineage compared to those with primary amenorrhea.
  • Genetic and molecular-cytogenetic techniques indicated that a mosaicism of around 10% for normal cells could predict spontaneous puberty, highlighting the complexity of genetic factors in Turner syndrome's ovarian function.
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Article Synopsis
  • Primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) is a fertility issue linked to reduced ovarian function, and its causes are not well understood, though mitochondrial defects may be involved.
  • A study found that women with POI had significantly lower mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) levels in their blood compared to women with intact ovarian function, indicating a possible connection to ovarian aging.
  • The lack of harmful mutations in the mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ (POLG) gene suggests that the mtDNA depletion could signal a broader mitochondrial dysfunction, which could help predict the risk of developing POI.
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Premature ovarian failure (POF) is an ovarian defect characterized by the premature depletion of ovarian follicles before the age of 40 years, representing one major cause of female infertility. POF relevance is continuously growing because women tend to conceive ever more frequently in their thirties and forties. POF can present very early with a pubertal defect.

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Premature ovarian failure (POF) is a primary ovarian defect characterized by absent menarche or premature depletion of ovarian follicles before the age of 40 years. However, in several instances the distinction between definitive or intermittent POF may be difficult on clinical bases, therefore the more appropriate term Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) has been recently proposed and will be used in this review. POI is a heterogeneous disorder affecting approximately 1% of women <40 years.

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