Publications by authors named "Michele Giaccone"

The laparoscopic treatment of abdominal wall defects is currently a valid alternative to the open technique, given the possibility to significantly reduce the length of hospital stay and, consequently, to allow its carrying out in a day surgery setting. The comparison between the two methods has also been the subject of a Cochrane meta-analysis performed by Sauerland et al. (Cochrane Database Syst Rev 3: CD007781, 2011), which pointed out how, in spite of many clinical trials indicating the superiority of laparoscopy in terms of invasiveness and postoperative pain control, the quality of evidence is low due to the excessive variability among the different series in terms of reported complications.

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In the daily clinical practice of surgeons operating electively or, more frequently, in the emergency setting, within the abdominal cavity and pelvis, the detection of an intestinal adhesive disorder is frequent and is capable of causing numerous complications and subsequent reintervention. We report three cases of female patients referred to our observation for bowel subocclusion due to adhesive syndrome. After laparotomy, which revealed the presence of singular tenacious fibrovascular adhesions, the patients were subjected to immunohistochemical and receptor analysis yielding a diagnosis of leiomyomatosis peritonealis disseminata.

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Cutaneous sebaceous carcinoma (SC) is a rare malignancy deriving from the adnexal epithelium of the sebaceous glands. Periorbital SC is approximately three times more common than extraorbital cutaneous SC. Extraocular SC is reported to be less aggressive than orbital sebaceous carcinoma and rarely metastasizes.

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Destruction of the groin ligament is an unusual occurrence, often of traumatic or surgical origin. In the event of recurrent inguinal hernia with a destroyed inguinal ligament, the reconstruction of the wall with the surgical techniques currently available yields prognostically unfavourable results with frequent recurrence in only a short space of time. The aim of this report was to present a hernioplasty technique using the "three-sheet" implant involving reduction of the hernia sac and the affixing of two reinforcement nets in Prolene in an attempt to reconstruct the destroyed groin ligament.

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