Publications by authors named "Savini R"

Electrical status epilepticus during sleep syndrome and its variants are age-dependent epileptic encephalopathies associated with a sleep-related electroencephalographic pattern of continuous spike-waves, combined with motor or cognitive impairment. These epileptic encephalopathies are usually not responsive to conventional antiepileptic drugs. This report describes two children in whom clonazepam had no effect on cognitive and motor disorders but controlled spike activity, preventing a proper diagnosis.

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Study Design: A presentation of the results from 56 patients with dystrophic spinal deformities caused by neurofibromatosis surgically managed from 1971 to 1992.

Objectives: To focus on the need for combined anterior and posterior fusion in the presence of severe spinal dystrophic changes.

Summary Of Background Data: It has been stated that the most effective management for dystrophic curves is early and aggressive surgery.

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Pulsing electromagnetic fields (PEMFs) were used during the postoperative management of 31 patients submitted to lumbosacral posterolateral fusion (PLF). The fusions were stimulated with PEMFs during the first 2 of the 4 months of postoperative immobilization. Consolidation of PLF was obtained in 20 of the 31 patients after 2 months of stimulation, thus, healing time was cut in half.

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The authors tested the osteoinductive capacity of powdered heterologous (bovine) demineralized bone matrix in rats. The first part of the study concerned a monolateral posterior spinal implant after decortication of three vertebrae, using as a control area the animal's contralateral side, in which neither bone graft nor any other material were placed. In another group of rats, a comparative evaluation was made of powdered heterologous demineralized bone matrix and fresh autologous bone.

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Osteoid osteomas and osteoblastomas have similar histologic characteristics, although their clinical course in the spine may be significantly different. At the authors' institution, spinal osteoblastomas constituted 46% (30/65) of all osteoblastomas treated. Sixteen of the lesions occurred in the lumbar spine (53%), eight in the thoracic spine, and six in the cervical spine.

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The authors review 101 cases of herniated lumbar intervertebral disc in children and adolescents treated by surgery. The most significant etiologic and pathogenetic factors in this series were early onset of disc degeneration, congenital lumbosacral malformations, and repeated trauma. The main clinical symptom was pain, usually sciatica, while neurological symptoms were less common than they are in adults.

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From 1984 to 1987, nine patients with posterior lumbar apophyseal fracture underwent surgery. The clinical pattern was characterized by vertebral rigidity and leg pain in all cases, with associated nerve root deficit in three cases, neurogenic claudication in one, and paraparesis in one. In all patients, treatment consisted of removal of a bony and/or cartilaginous fragment.

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Achondroplasia is the most common type of rhizomelic dwarfism. The abnormal spinal development of the achondroplastic dwarf can result in neurologic damage due primarily to the following two syndromes: lumbar spinal canal stenosis and thoracolumbar kyphosis. The authors report the cases observed at their institution, discussing the diagnosis and operative treatment.

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Between January 1981 and December 1985 at the Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institute 8 patients affected with atlo-axial instability secondary to os odontoideum were submitted to surgery: all of the patients were characterized by persistent cervical pain and neurological deficit, which was still at an initial stage in 5 cases, and more severe in the remaining 3 (severe spastic tetraparesis). All of the patients were submitted to a similar treatment protocol in three stages: 1) preoperative reduction in halo-plaster, 2) surgical stabilization of C1-C2 by posterior vertebral fusion (limited to C1-C2 in 6 cases and extended as far as the occiput in the remaining 2), 3) postoperative immobilization in halo-plaster for an average of 12 weeks. At follow-up obtained after an average of 4 years and 2 months there was consolidation of the fusion in all of the cases treated: in 1 case, however, revision of the fusion was required 3 and 1/2 months after surgery, whereupon fusion was finally obtained.

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The authors analyzed the results obtained in 10 fractures of the posterior arch of the atlas treated nonsurgically. There was consolidation in all of the cases at the end of treatment. According to the authors the element which most characterizes this fracture is constituted by its radiological diagnosis which principally makes use of lateral projection.

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The authors present a histological study conducted in the rat after powdered alumina implantation in the subcutis, the muscle and the peritoneum. After two weeks the same intense acute inflammatory reaction was observed in all of the implantation sites. After eight weeks the inflammatory reaction had regressed: there was a thin layer of connective tissue around the implant, completely isolating it from the surrounding tissues.

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Surgical treatment of vertebral deformity due to myelomeningocele has always presented important technical problems. Many complications, the foremost of which pseudarthrosis and infection, are reported in the literature. The authors discuss 14 patients with vertebral deformity from myelomeningocele who were treated with different surgical methods and reviewed after an average of eight years.

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Based on their observation of 5 cases of acute posttraumatic cervical disc herniation with medullary lesion, as well as on what is reported in the literature, the authors examine the clinical features of the disease, at the same time evaluating and comparing the major diagnostic studies. What emerges from the study is the importance of NMR and CAT in the diagnosis of the lesion. Finally, the authors emphasize the importance of early surgical treatment.

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The authors examined 25 fractures of the dens epistrophei treated conservatively by several methods in order to evaluate the most suitable treatment for this lesion. A Minerva plaster cast proved to be effective in the treatment of type III fractures, while the halo plaster system obtained the best results in type II fractures.

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The authors report their experience at the Rizzoli Institute in treating osteoid osteomas localized to the spine (40 cases). This clinical study confirms that osteoid osteomas are tumors of adolescence, which are often diagnosed late due to their spinal localization. The role of additional investigations, dominated by bone scan and computed tomography is discussed.

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The authors report three cases in which paraparesis related to a pseudarthrosis occurred several years after a posterior spinal fusion, but with a different mechanism (stretching of the spinal cord for progression of the deformity in kyphosis in two cases, and spinal cord compression for bone overgrowth within the canal in the site of pseudarthrosis in the third patient). Treatment was different. Partial correction of the deformity and stabilization of the spine by combined fusion (anterior and posterior) was sufficient in the first two cases for a complete neurological recovery.

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The authors report the results obtained in a review of all of the young patients who have been found to be affected with vertebral deformity in an epidemiological study conducted during the academic years 1983-84 and 1984-85. There is predilection for the female sex, which is also more vulnerable to the risk of progression. Menarchal age constitutes the most important period for the progression of the deformity.

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Most of the halo connection devices currently used with both the halo-plaster and halo-vest cannot be adjusted on the different displacement planes during reduction treatment. This makes it difficult to obtain good radiograms for the interposition of connection bars. The connection device designed by the Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institute (D.

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A case of horizontal fracture of the anterior arch of the atlas is described. This is a rare lesion which occurs with trauma in hyperextension; it is a benign lesion and one which is easily treated.

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Thirty-five cases of vertebral histiocytosis are examined for a total of 52 vertebrae affected. The study is conducted on the radiographic picture at the onset and at long-term follow-up in 32 cases (24-223 months, average 45). Diagnosis may be based on radiology only in typical cases, otherwise there may be errors in differential diagnosis with malignant neoplastic lesions.

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Twenty-one thyroprival patients, previously submitted to total thyroidectomy for tumours, were investigated during stabilized L-thyroxine supplementation and at the end of a 20-25 day "no-therapy" period, necessary for a 131I total body scintigraphy. During supplementation therapy a lower than normal mean beta-thromboglobulin (beta-TG) release level was found, the other blood clotting and platelet function tests being normal. After substitution therapy withdrawal, platelet function tests showed reduced adrenalin aggregation, increased collagen threshold aggregating concentrations, decreased beta-TG release values and reduced aggregation to ristocetin, whereas blood clotting tests showed prolonged aPTT values and reduced levels of factor VIII:C and vWf:Ag.

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This is a report on the natural history of 109 patients with infantile spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). All 18 children with the severe form died, as did five of the 52 with the intermediate form. Functional ability was more or less stable in the 47 living patients with the intermediate form, but 16 of the 39 with mild SMA lost the ability to walk.

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