Publications by authors named "G Stefanizzi"

From mid-March 2020, the pandemic caused by COVID 19 has placed health facilities in front of the need to implement a rapid and profound reorganization. However, many hospitals have not had time to organize a rapid and effective response, both for the speed of spread of the virus, and for the lack of previous experience with a pandemic of this magnitude. With the aim of assessing the knowledge and adoption of the procedures and recommendations disseminated by hospitals during the COVID-19 pandemic, in the dialysis and hemodialysis services of Italian centers, a cross-sectional survey was designed by the Society of Nurses in Nephrology (SIAN).

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Aim: To investigate the prevalence of biopsy-proven non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) in a cohort of patients with morbid obesity and with or without type 2 diabetes (T2D) and to find non-invasive predictors of NASH severity.

Methods: We evaluated a cohort of 412 subjects (age 19-67 years, body mass index-BMI: 44.98 kg/m), who underwent fine-needle liver biopsy during bariatric surgery.

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Background and Objectives: Lower extremity lymphedema (LEL) is one of the most relevant chronic and disabling sequelae after gynecological cancer therapy involving pelvic lymphadenectomy (PL). Supermicrosurgical lymphaticovenular anastomosis (LVA) is a safe and effective procedure to treat LEL, particularly indicated in early-stage cases when conservative therapies are insufficient to control the swelling. Usually, preoperative assessment of these patients shows patent and peristaltic lymphatic vessels that can be mapped throughout the limb to plan the sites of skin incision to perform LVA.

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Inguinofemoral lymphadenectomy, frequently performed for vulvar cancer, is burdened with substantial immediate and long-term morbidity. One of the most disabling treatment-related sequelae is lower limb lymphedema (LLL). The present study aims to describe the wound complications and the severity of LLL in patients who have undergone groin dissection for vulvar cancer and immediate inguinal reconstruction with the Lymphatic Superficial Circumflex Iliac Perforator flap (L-SCIP).

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Introduction: Surgical therapy for vulvar cancer involves wide defects that often require flap-based reconstruction. The goal of the reconstruction is fast wound healing with low donor site morbidity.

Materials And Methods: This is a retrospective observational cohort study in which we reviewed all patients who underwent surgery for vulvar cancer followed by reconstruction using the Superficial Circumflex Iliac Artery Perforator (SCIP) flap between 2015 and 2020.

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