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Marco Fontanella

marco.fontanella@tin.it

Journal articles

2007
 
DOI   
PMID 
Fontanella, Valfrè, Benech, Carlino, Garbossa, Ferrio, Perez, Berardino, Bradac, Ducati (2007)  Vasospasm after SAH due to aneurysm rupture of the anterior circle of Willis: value of TCD monitoring.   Neurol Res Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to verify the presence of angiographic vasospasm in patients with transcranial Doppler (TCD) of high velocities after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH).METHODS: Seven hundred and eighty-six cases admitted within 48 hours after SAH due to the rupture of anterior circulation aneurysm, were prospectively studied with TCD. In cases of TCD velocities higher than 120 cm/s (TCD vasospasm), the patient underwent a control angiography. HuntHess and Fishers grade on admission CT and location of the aneurysm were related to occurrence of TCD vasospasm. The increase in TCD velocities within 24 hours was calculated and related to the presence of cerebral ischemia on discharge CT, considering three groups of patients: Group A with an increase in velocities higher than 60%, Group B with an increase in velocities between 30 and 60%, and Group C with an increase in velocities lower than 30%.RESULTS: TCD vasospasm was observed in 216 patients (27%). In 97% of patients with TCD vasospasm on middle cerebral artery (MCA) and in 71% with TCD vasospasm on anterior cerebral artery (ACA), control angiography confirmed the vasospasm, with a significant lower diagnostic TCD predictivity of ACA spasm (chi(2)=28.204, p=0.000). The overall positive predictive value of TCD was 89%. There was no significant correlation of TCD vasospasm with clinical status on admission and location of the aneurysm, but a significant correlation between occurrence of TCD vasospasm and Fishers grade (chi(2)=15.470, p=0.002) and between the increase rate in TCD velocities and cerebral ischemia (chi(2)=56.564, p=0.000). CONCLUSION: Our study shows a good correlation between TCD and angiography to detect vasospasm on MCA, but the correlation is low for ACA. TCD alone cannot discriminate different hemodynamic pathways after SAH.
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PMID 
Marco Fontanella, Innocenzo Rainero, Salvatore Gallone, Elisa Rubino, Chiara Rivoiro, Walter Valfrè, Diego Garbossa, Chiara Nurisso, Alessandro Ducati, Lorenzo Pinessi (2007)  Lack of association between the apolipoprotein E gene and aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage in an Italian population.   J Neurosurg 106: 2. 245-249 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECT: The results of genome-wide scan studies have suggested the presence of a genetic risk factor for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) on chromosome 19 (at 19p13). The apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene is located in this chromosomal region and encodes a protein that exerts several neuroprotective and neurotrophic functions in the brain. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a particular allele or genotype of the APOE gene would modify the occurrence or the clinical features of SAH. METHODS: Genomic DNA was extracted from 146 patients with aneurysmal SAH and 222 age- and sex-matched healthy controls and genotyped for the triallelic polymorphism of the APOE gene (epsilon2, epsilon3, and epsilon4). Allele and genotype frequencies were compared between patients and controls. The clinical characteristics of the disease were compared according to the different APOE genotypes. Allele and genotype frequencies of the APOE gene polymorphism were nearly identical in cases and controls. Patients carrying the APOE epsilon4 allele had a significantly higher Hunt and Hess grade on admission (p = 0.0014). There was no significant relationship between any of the other clinical characteristics and the APOE genotype. CONCLUSIONS: The authors' data do not support the hypothesis that genetic variations within the APOE gene are associated with aneurysmal SAH. However, the APOE gene influences the disease phenotype and may be regarded as a disease modifier gene.
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DOI   
PMID 
G B Bradac, M Bergui, G Stura, M Fontanella, D Daniele, L Gozzoli, M Berardino, A Ducati (2007)  Periprocedural morbidity and mortality by endovascular treatment of cerebral aneurysms with GDC: a retrospective 12-year experience of a single center.   Neurosurg Rev 30: 2. 117-25; discussion 125-6 Apr  
Abstract: Despite increasing experience and improved material, endovascular treatment of cerebral aneurysms still has risks linked to the technique itself and to the specificity of the pathology treated. The purpose of this report is to examine procedural technical and clinical negative events, even minimal ones, occurring in this type of treatment. We considered 557 procedures carried out from January 1994 to December 2005 in 533 patients harboring 550 aneurysms. Of the patients, 448 presented with SAH and 85 with unruptured aneurysms. All procedures were performed under general anesthesia. The GDC-10 system was routinely used. Additional devices like the balloon remodeling technique, Trispan and stents were also occasionally used. Every procedural complication occurring during or soon after treatment was registered. Endovascular treatment was completed in 539 out of 557 procedures. There were 18 failures (3.3%). Occlusion of the aneurysm was judged complete in 343 (64%), near complete in 184 (34%) and incomplete in 12 (2%). Procedural complications occurred in 72 (13%) of the cases. The most frequent negative events were thromboembolisms (6.6%) and ruptures (3.9%). Other types (coil migration, transient occlusions of the parent vessel, dissections and early rebleeding) were rarer (2.5%). In the majority of cases there were no clinical consequences. Procedural morbidity and mortality were 1.1 and 1.8%, respectively. Considering the 449 procedures performed in ruptured and the 90 in the unruptured aneurysms separately, morbidity and mortality were 1.1 and 2.2% in the former group and 1.1 and 0% in the latter. Many factors influence the risk of complications. Being progressively aware of this and with increasing experience, the frequency can be limited. Negative events linked to the procedure have more significant serious clinical consequences in patients admitted in a critical clinical condition after SAH, because of the already present changes involving the brain parenchyma and cerebral circulation.
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DOI   
PMID 
Marco Fontanella, Innocenzo Rainero, Salvatore Gallone, Elisa Rubino, Pierpaola Fenoglio, Walter Valfrè, Diego Garbossa, Christian Carlino, Alessandro Ducati, Lorenzo Pinessi (2007)  Tumor necrosis factor-alpha gene and cerebral aneurysms.   Neurosurgery 60: 4. 668-72; discussion 672-3 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The pathogenesis of intracranial aneurysms is still uncertain. In addition to atherosclerosis, immunological factors may play a role in the disease. Recent studies have suggested that tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), one of the main proinflammatory cytokines, may play a key role in the formation and rupture of cerebral aneurysms. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the association of a functionally active polymorphism (-308 G<A) in the TNF-alpha gene with the risk and the clinical features of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. METHODS: A total of 171 consecutive aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage patients and 144 healthy controls were involved in the study. Computed tomographic scan findings were assessed by Fisher grade; clinical neurological assessment was performed using the Hunt and Hess grading system. Patients and controls were genotyped for the-308 biallelic (G<A) polymorphism of the TNF-alpha gene. RESULTS: The TNF-alpha G allele was significantly more frequent in patients than in controls (chi2 = 5.59; P = 0.0181) and homozygosity for the G allele, compared with remaining genotypes, was associated with a significantly increased risk of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (odds ratio = 2.20; 95% confidence interval = 1.29<odds ratio<3.75). Allelic and genotypic frequencies of the examined polymorphism were not significantly different in disease subgroups. The different TNF-alpha genotypes do not seem to significantly modify the main clinical features of the disease. CONCLUSION: Our data suggests that the TNF-alpha gene or a linked locus significantly modulates the risk for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Additional studies in different populations are warranted to confirm our findings.
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2006
 
DOI   
PMID 
Salvatore Gentile, Marco Fontanella, Rossana Lo Giudice, Innocenzo Rainero, Elisa Rubino, Lorenzo Pinessi (2006)  Resolution of cluster headache after closure of an anterior communicating artery aneurysm: the role of pericarotid sympathetic fibres.   Clin Neurol Neurosurg 108: 2. 195-198 Feb  
Abstract: We report the case of a patient suffering from migraine without aura since childhood who, at the age of 58 years, developed cluster headache (CH) attacks. This second type of headache was related to an aneurysm of the anterior communicating artery (ACoA) whose bursting caused subarachnoid haemorrhage. The aneurysm's clipping made the cluster headache subside and there was no recurrence for almost four years. However, nine months after haemorrhage, the patient experienced new migraine without aura attacks. As a pathogenetic interpretation of this secondary cluster headache, we discuss the possible role of pericarotid sympathetic nerves in cluster headache attacks. We suggest that the surgical dissection of the pericarotid sympathetic fibres could prevent the onset of the cluster headache attacks by cutting part of the circuit underlying it.
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DOI   
PMID 
D Garbossa, M Fontanella, C Fronda, C Benevello, G Muraca, A Ducati, A Vercelli (2006)  New strategies for repairing the injured spinal cord: the role of stem cells.   Neurol Res 28: 5. 500-504 Jul  
Abstract: Thanks to advances in the stem cell biology of the central nervous system, the previously unconceivable regeneration of the damaged spinal cord is approaching reality. A number of potential strategies aim to optimize functional recovery after spinal cord injury. They include minimizing the progression of secondary injury, manipulating the inhibitory environment of the spinal cord, replacing lost tissue with transplanted cells or peripheral nerve grafts, remyelinating denuded axons and maximizing the intrinsic regenerative potential of endogenous progenitor cells. We review the application of stem cell transplantation to the spinal cord, emphasizing the use of embryonic stem cells for remyelinating damaged axons. Recent advancements in neural injury and repair, and the progress towards development of neuroprotective and regenerative interventions are discussed.
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2005
 
DOI   
PMID 
Diego Garbossa, Marco Fontanella, Simone Tomasi, Alessandro Ducati, Alessandro Vercelli (2005)  Differential distribution of NADPH-diaphorase histochemistry in human cerebral cortex.   Brain Res 1034: 1-2. 1-10 Feb  
Abstract: Beta-nicotinamidedinucleotide phosphate diaphorase (NADPH-d) colocalizes with NOS in the central nervous system. Two types of NADPH-d-positive neurons are present in the primate cerebral cortex: type 1, intensely and Golgi-like labeled neurons, a subset of GABAergic interneurons; type 2, lightly labeled neurons (divided into two subclasses, a first one having a lightly stained cell body bearing only one short process, and a second one showing intense NADPH-d staining with short processes extending radially). We have analyzed the distribution of NADPH-d activity in human frontal, temporal, and occipital cortical areas, finding remarkable laminar and interareal differences in cell size and distribution of the different cell types. There was a clear bias for type 1 neurons in infragranular layers in all areas considered; both in supra- and infragranular layers, their density was highest in frontal, and lowest in temporal cortex. The density of type 2 neurons was lower supragranularly in temporal cortex and infragranularly in occipital cortex. The overall density of type 2 cells was remarkably higher in occipital cortex than in the temporal and frontal ones. Type 1 neurons were significantly larger than type 2, and were smaller in the supragranular than in the infragranular subzone in occipital and temporal cortex. Type 1 cells were significantly larger in frontal cortex than in occipital and temporal cortex, and type 2 cells were significantly smaller in occipital than in temporal and frontal cortex. These area-related differences might reflect differences between heterotypic and homotypic cortex in the regulation of cortical blood flow.
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DOI   
PMID 
Franco Benech, Rosa Perez, Marco Maria Fontanella, Bruno Morra, Roberto Albera, Alessandro Ducati (2005)  Cystic versus solid vestibular schwannomas: a series of 80 grade III-IV patients.   Neurosurg Rev 28: 3. 209-213 Jul  
Abstract: Cystic acoustic neuromas are less frequent than solid ones and present different clinical and radiological features. Cystic schwannomas are larger, show a shorter clinical history and a different risk of postoperative complications. This study was designed to compare surgical results and complications of solid and cystic vestibular schwannomas of matching size operated upon via either a retrosygmoid or a translabyrinthine approach. The study included 80 patients presenting with grade III and IV acoustic vestibular schwannomas referred to the Neurosurgical and ENT team in the Department of Neuroscience of Torino, Italy. Twenty-six were cystic and 54 were solid tumours. Clinical history, surgical results and complications were compared between the two groups. In cystic tumors, rapid clinical worsening is common, due to sudden expansion of cystic elements. Tighter adherences are found between cystic tumours and nervous elements (particularly brainstem and possibly facial nerve), once compared to solid ones. Operative morbidity appears to be higher in cystic tumours. A wait and see policy should not to be applied to patients with cystic tumours. Careful technique, possibly sharp dissection, to divide the tumour adherences from the nervous tissue must be employed, in order to avoid lesions on brainstem veins and traction on a thin facial nerve. Severe complications may be caused by the excessive efforts to dissect brainstem adherences.
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R Perez, A Ducati, D Garbossa, F Benech, M M Fontanella, A Canale, R Albera (2005)  Retrosigmoid approach for vestibular neurectomy in Meniere's disease.   Acta Neurochir (Wien) 147: 4. 401-4; discussion 404 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Vestibular nerve section is considered to be the most effective surgical procedure to control intractable symptoms secondary to Meniere's disease (MD). This study was developed to analyze the adequacy of retrosigmoid vestibular neurectomy in terms of vertigo control, hearing preservation and clinical complications of this procedure. METHODS: A retrospective review was carried out on 14 patients affected by definite unilateral MD who underwent vestibular neurectomy via the retrosigmoid approach. FINDINGS: One patient was lost from follow-up; another one had only a short postoperative observation. At follow-up performed on 12 cases, no patients reported any crisis of acute vertigo. Four patients were free from any vestibular symptoms, while 8 reported some slight gait disturbances. Hearing function was preserved in 10 patients and improved in 2. 1 year postoperative vestibular function was absent at the side operated on and unchanged on the other side in all the cases. CONCLUSIONS: Vestibular neurectomy via the retrosigmoid approach can be considered a safe and effective procedure in relieving medically refractory vertigo in Meniere's disease, while preserving hearing.
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DOI   
PMID 
G B Bradac, M Bergui, M Fontanella (2005)  Endovascular treatment of cerebral aneurysms in elderly patients.   Neuroradiology 47: 12. 938-941 Dec  
Abstract: We report our experience in the endovascular treatment with detachable platinum coils of ruptured or symptomatic unruptured cerebral aneurysms in 61 patients aged 70-82 years. Complete occlusion was achieved in 38, subtotal in 17 and partial in one. The treatment failed in five patients. Clinical follow-up was performed in all patients for 8 months to 8 years. No bleeding occurred during the follow-up period. Outcome was favourable in 63% of the patients. When we compared the outcome of elderly patients with those of younger age endovascularly treated in the same period of time, we found a significantly higher frequency of poorer outcome in the elderly group (chi(2) = 9.084; P = 0.011). The frequency of favourable outcome in the elderly was significantly lower than in the younger group for H-H IV-V (chi(2) = 9.299; P = 0.010). The most important factor influencing the outcome was not age itself, but primary clinical condition on admission. The therapy of symptomatic aneurysms in elderly patients should not be purely conservative--a direct approach of the aneurysm should be considered. Endovascular treatment whenever possible seems to be a good alternative to surgery.
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2004
2003
 
DOI   
PMID 
M Fontanella, P Perozzo, R Ursone, D Garbossa, M Bergui (2003)  Neuropsychological assessment after microsurgical clipping or endovascular treatment for anterior communicating artery aneurysm.   Acta Neurochir (Wien) 145: 10. 867-72; discussion 872 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: After open surgery for ruptured ACoA aneurysms, several patients who have achieved a favourable neurological outcome still exhibit significant cognitive deficits. The aim of this study was to investigate the cognitive performances in patients with ACoA aneurysms submitted to different therapeutic options such as endovascular treatment and surgical clipping. METHODS: We evaluated 37 consecutive patients in WFNS grade I or II, who underwent an early treatment (within 48 hours) of a bleeding ACoA aneurysm: 20 out of 37 were surgically clipped (group A) and 17 were treated with endovascular coiling (group B).These two groups were compared with 16 patients (group C) with subarachnoid haemorrhage and negative cerebral panangiography and with 18 volunteers (group D) without neurological or psychiatric disorders.All patients were neurologically intact at discharge and were in Glasgow Outcome Scale 1 at 6 months follow-up after SAH.All subjects were tested to assess selective attention, verbal, spatial and logical memory, frontal lobe executive functions, language and intelligence. Depressive symptoms and anxiety were also examined. FINDINGS: Selective attention, verbal and spatial memory, and intelligence tests didn't show any significant difference between the patients and the controls.Surgically treated patients showed a significant worse performance on the logical memory and on the frontal lobe executive functions compared to controls, while the endovascular group and the group C (not treated) showed a significant decrease only in the literal fluency score.Moreover, the surgical group showed a significant impairment in using grammatical and syntactical rules to produce sentences. No significant difference was found between the group B, C and controls. Treated patients were not significantly more depressive or anxious than controls. INTERPRETATION: Investigation of neuropsychological deficits can show an impairment, even in patients classified as good outcome by Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS).The frontal lobe functions and language are impaired especially in surgically treated in comparison with controls, but no significant difference was found respect to the endovascular and no treated patients (group C).
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2001
 
PMID 
F Giordano, R M Urciuoli, P Ragazzi, F Griva, C Cossandi, M Fontanella, C A Pagni (2001)  Sudden presentation of intracranial meningioma after elective general anesthesia.   J Neurosurg Anesthesiol 13: 2. 138-142 Apr  
Abstract: A case of "silent" intracranial meningioma unmasked by narcosis is described. The diagnosis was made because of the patient's failure to wake up after elective general anesthesia for orthopaedic surgery. Factors leading to this complication and its management are discussed. Early computed tomography scan and antiedema therapy are strongly suggested for these patients.
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PMID 
D Garbossa, M Fontanella, C A Pagni, A Vercelli (2001)  Nitric oxide synthase and cytochrome c oxidase changes in the tumoural and peritumoural cerebral cortex.   Acta Neurochir (Wien) 143: 9. 897-908 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: We analysed changes in nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and cytochrome oxidase (CO) activities in the tumoural and peritumoural cerebral cortex in order to investigate: a) the role of NO in tumourigenesis, in TBF regulation, and in vasogenetic PBE; b) the metabolic changes caused by the neoplasm in the surrounding tissues. METHOD: Intra-operative samples of cerebral cortex were studied by means of immunohistochemistry for nNOS and iNOS, and by histochemistry for NADPH-diaphorase (NADPH-d) and CO. FINDINGS: In contrast with normal cortex, reactive glial cells and the endothelium of small blood vessels displayed strong NADPH-d and iNOS activities in oedematous peritumoural tissue. In the tumoural cortex, NADPH-d and nNOS-positive neurones were reduced in number and their dendrites were thin and interrupted, and infiltrates of NADPH-d and iNOS-positive tumoural cells were frequent. CO activity was decreased in the deep layers of peritumoural cortex, and it was almost absent in the tumoural cortex. INTERPRETATION: In peritumoural and tumoural cortex changes in NOS and CO activities suggest that the coupling between neuronal activity and blood flow is impaired in the damaged cerebral cortex, and that the increase in NOS activity may play a role in tumour vascularization and progression.
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2000
 
PMID 
M M Fontanella, L Bergamasco, P Perozzo, L Priano, S Vighetti, F Griva, C A Pagni (2000)  Neuropsychological and neurophysiological evaluation after anterior communicating artery (ACoA) aneurysm surgery.   J Neurosurg Sci 44: 2. 61-6; discussion 66-7 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: We evaluated high cerebral functions 6 months after surgery for bleeding ACoA aneurysms comparing neurophysiological and neuropsycological tests. METHODS: Twelve patients were chosen among a series of cases operated on in the first 48 hours after ACoA aneurysm bleeding. All of them were in Hunt-Hess grade I or II. We excluded patients over 65 years, or with intracranial haematomas, intraventricular haemorrhage, hydrocephalus, or with multiple or giant aneurysms. All of them underwent neurophysiological evaluation with recording and mapping of long latency (P300) auditory and visual event-related potentials (ERPs) and a neuropsychological assessment for memory, intelligence, frontal lobe functions and language. RESULTS: Neuropsychological assessment: All patients were severely damaged on phonemic fluency. In a first group (group A: 3 cases) tests were all in a normal range. In a second (group B: 3 cases) the tests showed severe impairment on learning and long term memory. In a third (group C: 6 cases) tests showed memory and "frontal lobe" deficits. Neurophysiological assessment: The whole group of patients showed significant delay in ERPs recordings compared to controls. ERPs of patients in group A and B showed no significant differences from controls, while being significantly delayed in 5 patients out of 6 of group C. CONCLUSIONS: All patients had difficulties in the phonemic task in which a notable cognitive effort is necessary, while intelligence, short term memory, attention and language were within normal limits. Patients in group C showed severe frontal lobe type cognitive impairment. Those ones in groups A and B did not present cognitive derangements (A) or only memory and learning impairment (B). ERPs may be an objective parameter in the follow-up of cases with cognitive impairment, even if neurophysiological tests cannot be replaced.
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1998
 
PMID 
C A Pagni, M Fontanella, C Cossandi, F Griva, N Zullo, G B Bradac (1998)  Therapeutic decisions and grading of subarachnoid hemorrhage   Minerva Anestesiol 64: 4. 159-162 Apr  
Abstract: Early admission and medical treatment can improve prognosis in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). In our Centre in 10 years, 595 patients with SAH have been treated: 422 were admitted within 24 hours (71%) and 498 (84%) within 72 hours. 374 underwent surgical treatment: 283 within 48 hours and 91 underwent late surgery. Thirty-three patients underwent emergency surgery for intracranial hematomas, with a mortality rate of 30%. One hundred eighty-one patients in Hunt-Hess grade I-II underwent early surgery. Mortality rate was 7%. Mortality rate for rebleeding, when surgery was delayed was more than 10%. Patients in Hunt-Hess grade III underwent early surgery in the majority of cases (68 out of 111). Only in 52% of cases surgical result was good. Thirty-four out of 108 in grade IV-V underwent early surgery, with a mortality rate of 45%. The analysis of general results shows that early surgery improves prognosis in Hunt-Hess grade III patients. Also patients in Hunt-Hess grade III-IV-V can take advantage of early surgery. Old age, arterial hypertension and angiographical vasospasm do not worsen prognosis even in patients operated on early. Endovascular treatment even in acute phase has improved results especially in cases of certain aneurysms types such as posterior circulation aneurysms.
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C A Pagni, C Cossandi, M Fontanella, F Griva, N Zullo (1998)  Pharmacologic therapy of subarachnoid hemorrhage   Minerva Anestesiol 64: 5. 221-224 May  
Abstract: Medical treatment of subarachnoid haemorrhage, is focused on the prevention of rebleeding and vasospasm, of damages of oxitading products, and on the improvement of general conditions of the patient. Some authors consider use of antifibrinolytic usefull to reduce the risk of rebleeding, but the percentage of hydrocephalus and ischemia are increased. In our Centre combination of nimodipine-cloricromene and hemodilution is used for the prevention of vasospasm. We report conclusions about 216 patients in I-II-III grade of Hunt-Hess scale, treated before 48 hours from SAH. We obtained only 8% postspasm ischemias, with no neurological deficit, and only 23% of increased cerebral blood flow revealed by transcranial Doppler. Cloricromene is used only after aneurysm is occlused. It presents different action mechanisms. It is an inhibitor of platelet activation and aggregation, of cyclooxygenase and lipooxygenase activity, so reducing thromboxanes ratio. Phospholipase A2 inhibition it's possible but not demonstrated. It also interferes with phosphoinositoles path and so with proteinkinase C activity, and reduces hemostatic thrombotic balance activation and leukocyte endothelial adhesion and activation. It reduces, finally, the release of free radicals, cytokines inflammation amplyfing. The reduced damage to the endothelium allows the releasing of vasodilatatory agents like NO.
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1997
 
PMID 
G B Bradac, M Bergui, M F Ferrio, M Fontanella, G Stura (1997)  False-negative angiograms in subarachnoid haemorrhage due to intracranial aneurysms.   Neuroradiology 39: 11. 772-776 Nov  
Abstract: Of 440 patients with spontaneous subarachnoid haemorrhage in whom an aneurysm was suspected, 60 had a negative angiogram. A second angiogram performed 1-4 weeks later revealed an aneurysm in 5 of 40 cases. Of these patients, 3 had a second haemorrhage. In all cases, diffuse bleeding, with involvement of the anteroinferior interhemispheric fissure, was present on CT. There were three aneurysms of the anterior communicating artery and two of the carotid siphon. The reasons for the false-negative angiograms and the usefulness of repeated angiography are discussed.
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