Publications by authors named "G Tanfani"

A significant clinical case presenting carotid occlusion pathology; successfully treated with the most recent surgical techniques is reported. The etiopathogenetic problem of this pathology which is of remarkable scientific interest in the medical literature is underlined.

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Computed tomography studies concerning pineal calcification (PC) in schizophrenia have been conducted mainly by one author who correlated this calcification with several aspects of the illness. On the basis of these findings the aim of the present study was to analyze size and incidence of pineal gland calcification by CT in schizophrenics and healthy controls, and to verify the relationship between pineal calcification and age, and the possible correlation with psychopathologic variables. Pineal calcification was measured on CT scans of 87 schizophrenics and 46 controls divided into seven age subgroups of five years each.

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Choroid plexus calcification (CPC) was measured on computed tomography (CT) scans of 87 schizophrenics and 46 controls divided into age subgroups. We studied the relationship between presence and size of CPC and age in both groups, whilst in the schizophrenic group we also investigated the possible correlation between CPC size and age of onset and duration of illness, duration of formal education, psychopathological features of the illness as well as some neuroradiological brain measures. CPC size correlated with age in healthy controls but not in schizophrenics.

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Lesions consistent with demyelinating plaques were retrospectively identified in the cervical spinal cord of 15/49 patients (31%) with multiple sclerosis examined with cranial and cervical MR imaging. The lesions appeared as hyperintense areas on proton-density and T2-weighted images. Clinical signs and symptoms suggestive of spinal cord location of the demyelinating plaques were observed in 14 of the 15 patients presenting with spinal cord lesions at MR, and also in 11 of the 34 patients with negative MR findings.

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The direction of CSF flow within the cerebral aqueduct was studied by cardiac-gated magnetic resonance (MR) phase images in five healthy volunteers and 10 patients with presumably normal cerebral CSF circulation. Caudal CSF flow was observed during systole and cranial flow during diastole. Using phantom based calibrations of the imager, aqueductal CSF velocities of 3-5 mm/s were calculated.

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