Publications by authors named "Michele Amoruso"

Introduction: Acute colonic intussusception occurring in the absence of organic cause is uncommon in adults.

Presentation Of Case: We report acute colonic intussusception in a 46-year-old female; clinical evidence of a palpable mass, abdominal pain and bloody mucoid stools appeared a few hours after hospital admission. Multislice CT-scan confirmed the clinical diagnosis and surgical exploration revealed right colonic obstruction caused by intussusception of the cecum into the ascending colon.

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Splenosis results from autotransplantation of splenic tissue after traumatic splenic rupture or surgery. Usually asymptomatic, splenosis is an incidental finding at surgery, unrelated to the splenosis, for intestinal obstruction or suspected appendicitis or gynaecological pathology. This article describes a unique case of massive gastrointestinal bleeding caused by deep invasion of a splenotic nodule into the gastric wall.

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Plasma exchange has been proposed as support therapy in both acute and chronic forms of multiple sclerosis (MS). For the first time, we aimed to assess whether double filtration plasmapheresis (DFPP) could be clinically efficacious. We describe the case of a patient affected by MS who developed a severe crisis refractory to conventional steroids, and immunosuppressive and immunomodulating therapy.

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Despite the indisputable progress of technology (laboratory analyses, scintigraphy, ultrasonography, computed tomography), the diagnosis of acute appendicitis often remains uncertain, with a rate of useless appendectomies amounting to almost 20% of cases. The ideal diagnostic test has yet to be discovered and, in any case, clinical observation remains the cornerstone of any decision-making algorithm. Thus, acute appendicitis continues to offer food for thought in relation to the aetiology of the condition, which is still unknown, the primacy of the clinical diagnosis, and the learning of the surgical skills required.

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Hemorrhage following prolonged oral anticoagulant administrations is a well recognized hazard of therapy, and hemorrhagic complications are said to occur in 10-30% of patients. Following the presentation of the cases, the authors examine the current literature concerning the problems with anticoagulants, and recommend models of diagnosis and treatment of complications by bowel obstruction. Authors report on two cases of small bowel obstruction due to intramural hematoma during anticoagulant therapy.

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