Publications by authors named "Nicita A"

Surgical site infections are a serious public health concern, representing a significant burden on healthcare systems and society. Their occurrence is influenced by several factors, including patient demographics, healthcare facilities and the specific circumstances surrounding surgery. The use of prophylactic antibiotics in this context carries both potential benefits and risks.

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As stated by the Goal Orientation Theory, students want to achieve a goal for multiple reasons, with each having a different impact on academic performance. This framework encompasses a three-factor model of goal achievement: a mastery goal, a performance-avoidance (PAv) goal, and a performance-approach (PAp) goal. Students may experience elevated stress levels and burnout due to adopting an ineffective approach to goal achievement.

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Background: Adolescence is a critical phase of development characterized by numerous physical, psychological and social changes. During this stage, individuals may engage in experimentation and risky behavior, leading to increased vulnerability to addiction. This article aims to present the results of a survey based on the HBSC (Health Behavior in School-aged Children) surveillance model in a province of Southern Italy for primary and secondary school students.

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Healthcare innovations emerge and develop in institutionally dense selective environments. New projects and propositions in healthcare sectoral ecosystems can be understood as product-service compacts, that is, complex solutions that dynamically integrate tangible and intangible elements in close interaction with users' needs and the evolving regulatory context under uncertainty and ambiguity. We advance the concept of "strategic encounters" to encapsulate, capitalise and extend the contribution by Palm and Fischier's on the key enabling managerial factors for healthcare innovation implementation under conditions of imperfect foresight.

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Discomalleolar ligament represents the vestiges of the primitive lateral pterygoid muscle which penetrates in the caudal end of Meckel's cartilage; during the development of newborn, the petrotympanic fissure close almost completely leaving inside the discomalleolar ligament. After entering in tympanic cavity, some fibers of the discomalleolar ligament insert to walls of cavity, other fibers continue with the lateral margin of the anterior ligament and insert in the neck of malleus; in contrast, other Authors demonstrated that discomalleolar ligament is an independent structure inserted in proximity of the neck of the malleus. Although the discomalleolar ligament can be considered as a structure of clinical importance, it is not described by anatomy textbooks.

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The avolition/apathy domain of negative symptoms includes motivation- and pleasure-related impairments. In people with schizophrenia, structural and functional abnormalities were reported in key regions within the motivational reward system, including ventral-tegmental area (VTA), striatum (especially at the level of the nucleus accumbens, NAcc), orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), as well as amygdala (Amy) and insular cortex (IC). However, the association of the reported abnormalities with avoliton-apathy is still controversial.

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Background: Day-Surgery (DS) is a widely spreading reality, both for clinical advantages to patients and organizational and economic profit to hospitals. In the last years, DS has been proposed for the treatment of a large number of diseases as inguinal and crural hernias, varicose vein, benign anorectal and thyroid pathologies. Recently, also laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) has been realised as DS procedure, and the initial results are promising.

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Gallstone disease is one of the most common health problems world-wide. It is also one of the main causes of medical expenditure in Western countries. Asymptomatic gallstones are defined as stones that have not given rise to biliary cholic or other biliary symptoms.

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Aim: The possibility of carrying out surgery in day-surgery (DS) conditions is gradually becoming reality in most branches of surgery; in recent years, DS has also found a place in general surgery, with unquestionable advantages for the management of patients, particularly the elderly. The purpose of the present study is to investigate general surgery needs in DS conditions in elderly patients in order to analyse the clinical-administrative feasibility of DS procedure and the level of its acceptability in this group of patients.

Methods: A specially drafted questionnaire was submitted to patients admitted over a period of 18 months to the General Surgery Division of the University of L'Aquila.

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Since its presentation by Mirizzi in 1931, the role of intraoperative cholangiography (ICHO) has been controversial and has become an argument even more disputed with the introduction of laparoscopic cholecystectomy (VLC) in 1988. The Authors reviewed their experience to determine the most appropriate use of ICHO during VLC on the basis of a retrospective analysis of cases of selective ICHO. From December 1991 to January 2001, 597 patients, 552 elective procedure and 45 emergency procedure, were reviewed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the primary treatment for symptomatic gallstones, but 10-20% of these patients may also have stones in the common bile duct, complicating treatment options.
  • Various surgical strategies exist for addressing common bile duct stones, including laparoscopic exploration and different sequential treatments combining endoscopic and laparoscopic techniques.
  • A study evaluated the efficacy and safety of sequential endoscopic-laparoscopic treatment for patients with concurrent gallstones and common bile duct stones, analyzing data from 552 patients and noting that 11.3% required preoperative endoscopic procedures.
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Article Synopsis
  • Laparoscopy, traditionally known for diagnostics, has become a key therapeutic approach in emergency surgery, with a study analyzing 221 patients over a decade focusing on acute abdomen cases.
  • The majority of patients had conditions like acute appendicitis (57%) and acute cholecystitis (18%), with successful laparoscopic completion in 87% of cases; however, 13% required conversion to a traditional open surgery (laparotomy).
  • The study highlights laparoscopy's benefits, including shorter hospital stays (average 4 days), lower morbidity (3%), and near-zero mortality (0.5%), while emphasizing the need for skilled surgical teams to manage its technical challenges.
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Controversy still exists regarding the clinical features of acute pancreatitis: it is not known whether this is a disease which progresses from mild to severe forms or which arises immediately as severe acute pancreatitis. An early diagnosis, however, is regarded as mandatory for successful treatment. Over the years many Authors have proposed different scoring systems for the early assessment of the clinical evolution of acute pancreatitis.

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