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Ulisse Corbanese

Dept. Anesthesia & Intensive Care - Ospedale S. Maria dei Battuti - 31015 Conegliano, Italy
ucorbanese@ulss7.it

Journal articles

2009
Luca Basaldella, Valentina Ortolani, Ulisse Corbanese, Carlo Sorbara, Pierluigi Longatti (2009)  Massive venous air embolism in the semi-sitting position during surgery for a cervical spinal cord tumor: anatomic and surgical pitfalls.   J Clin Neurosci 16: 7. 972-975 Jul  
Abstract: Although venous air embolism (VAE) in neurological surgery is mainly associated with posterior fossa procedures, this complication may also occur, with comparable severity, in the posterior cervical spine approach in patients who are semi-sitting. We report a patient with a massive VAE that occurred in the semi-sitting position during a posterior approach to an extended cervical-thoracic level (C3-T2) intramedullary tumor, which interrupted the surgical procedure. We discuss the possible causes of air embolism, the anatomic and pathogenetic mechanisms, treatment and preventive measures.
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Ulisse Corbanese, Clemente Possamai (2009)  Awake intubation with the Bonfils fibrescope in patients with difficult airway.   Eur J Anaesthesiol 26: 10. 837-841 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: In the majority of patients with difficult airways intubated using the Bonfils fibrescope, intubations have been performed under general anaesthesia. Our aim is to report a consecutive series of intubations on awake patients with anticipated difficult airways, performed using the Bonfils fibrescope. METHODS: A prospective case series of intubations performed with the Bonfils fibrescope by a single anaesthesiologist is described in this article. Thirty patients with anticipated difficult airways were included (11 of them after failed intubations with Macintosh laryngoscope). Awake intubation attempts were performed under mild sedation and topical anaesthesia (with or without transcricothyroid membrane injection). The effectiveness was assessed in terms of success rate, number of attempts, difficulties, and complications encountered. RESULTS: Overall, awake intubation was successful in 29 out of 30 patients (96.6%). In the predicted difficult airway group, 19 patients with anticipated difficult airways were included. Awake intubation with Bonfils fibrescope was successful in 18 out of 19 patients (94.7%). In the known failed intubation group, 11 patients were included; the airways of five of them had already been managed with flexible fibrescope. All patients were successfully intubated awake with the Bonfils fibrescope. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings confirm that awake intubation with the Bonfils fibrescope is well tolerated and highly successful, even if performed by operators in training, and strengthen the evidence that the Bonfils fibrescope is one of the most promising devices to assist intubation in patients with difficult airways.
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2006
Pierluigi Longatti, Giorgio Barzoi, Bruno Fusco, Ulisse Corbanese (2006)  Orbital head pain elicited by neuroendoscopy of the third ventricle performed under local anesthesia.   J Neurosurg Anesthesiol 18: 2. 139-141 Apr  
Abstract: Endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETVS) is considered a minimally invasive procedure for blocked hydrocephalus. In 24 cases, this procedure was carried out in awake patients under local anesthesia. All patients reported abrupt orbital pain when the third ventricle floor was manipulated. Although recent advancements in knowledge of some forms of migraine and cluster headache could be regarded as a good basis for interpreting the pain triggered by ETVS, other hypotheses should also be taken into consideration.
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2005
2004
P L Longatti, G Barzoi, F Paccagnella, U Corbanese, A Fiorindi, A Carteri (2004)  A simplified endoscopic third ventriculostomy under local anesthesia.   Minim Invasive Neurosurg 47: 2. 90-92 Apr  
Abstract: The aim of this study is the analysis of our experience with awake endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETVS) in hydrocephalic patients. From September 1994 to December 2001, 24 neuroendoscopic procedures were performed under local anesthesia. Local infiltration was administered using a bupivacaine and lidocaine mixture. Analgesics were titrated to the effect. A free-hand technique with a flexible endoscope was adopted in 24 patients with primitive and secondary (neoplastic) hydrocephalus. ETVS was performed successfully in all cases. No procedure needed to be discontinued due to seizures, bleeding or agitation. Dural incision/coagulation and Fogarty dilatation proved to be the most painful maneuvers requiring, sometimes, supplemental analgesic administration. No intraoperative complications were observed; however, two asymptomatic trajectory hematomas were incidentally discovered two and three days after the operation, respectively. Awake ETVS is a valuable alternative procedure that can be adopted in adult cooperative patients, provided that the procedure is done in an essential and fast way with the free-hand technique, by means of a flexible endoscope, and with the assistance of an anesthesiologist.
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2003
Giovanni Prosdocimo, Giorgio Tassinari, Michele Sala, Arturo Di Biase, Pier Giorgio Toschi, Maurizio Gismondi, Ulisse Corbanese (2003)  Posterior capsule opacification after phacoemulsification: silicone CeeOn Edge versus acrylate AcrySof intraocular lens.   J Cataract Refract Surg 29: 8. 1551-1555 Aug  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To compare the rates and morphologic features of posterior capsule opacification (PCO) after small-incision phacoemulsification and in-the-bag implantation of 2 foldable intraocular lenses (IOLs) over an 18-month follow-up. SETTING: Departments of Ophthalmology, Hospital of Conegliano, Conegliano, and Maggiore Hospital of Bologna, Bologna, Italy. METHODS: In an open clinical study, 78 cataract patients were randomly selected to have implantation of a silicone CeeOn Edge (Pharmacia) or acrylate AcrySof (Alcon) IOL after phacoemulsification cataract surgery. All the patients were operated on using a standard technique and in-the-bag IOL implantation. One eye in each patient was studied. Morphologic evaluation of PCO was performed using Evaluation of Posterior Capsule Opacification software. RESULTS: At 18 months in the CeeOn Edge group, 36 eyes (90%) had a clear posterior capsule and 4 (10%) had PCO that did not affect visual acuity. In the AcrySof group, 26 eyes (68%) had a clear posterior capsule, 11 (29%) had PCO that did not affect visual acuity, and 1 (3%) had PCO with a decrease of 2 or more lines of visual acuity that required a neodymium:YAG laser capsulotomy. No eye developed Elschnig pearls or stretched folds in the bag. The postoperative best corrected visual acuity ranged from 0.8 to 1.0 in 96% in the CeeOn Edge group and in 92% in the AcrySof group. No IOL haze or discoloration was observed in the CeeOn Edge group. Mild IOL decentration and tilting occurred in 4 AcrySof eyes; however, no glistenings were found any AcrySof IOL. CONCLUSIONS: Both the CeeOn Edge and AcrySof groups had a low incidence of PCO after an 18-month follow-up. The CeeOn Edge group had significantly less PCO than the AcrySof group. These results confirm that IOLs with square truncated edges create a barrier effect at the optic edge, reducing the overall incidence of PCO.
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2001
1999
C Possamai, U Corbanese (1999)  Slow-resolving pneumonia secondary to bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia.   Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 43: 6. 684-686 Jul  
Abstract: We report a case of slow-resolving pneumonia secondary to bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (BOOP) in a 73-year-old woman. Owing to a delayed diagnosis of BOOP, the clinical course was quite long. This syndrome is caused by a nonspecific inflammatory pneumonitis, either idiopathic or associated with infectious or irritant agents (or drugs). It generally presents as a flu-like illness, followed by progressive dyspnea, cough, fever, and bilateral patchy alveolar infiltrates, and lasts several weeks. The diagnostic work-up of slow-resolving pneumonia is discussed.
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1998
U Corbanese, A Martinuzzi, C Possamai, G Romeo, G Possamai, L Trubian (1998)  Guillain-Barré syndrome with associated thrombocytopenia: prompt response to combined corticosteroid and immunoglobulin treatment.   Neuromuscul Disord 8: 1. 50-52 Feb  
Abstract: We report a case of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation, associated at its presentation with thrombocytopenia, in a 50-year-old woman. She was treated with immunoglobulin, and short-term corticosteroids for thrombocytopenia. In spite of the severe presentation we observed a very good and rapid recovery, which could have been determined by the therapeutic association. The incidence of thrombocytopenia in GBS patients could be underestimated, and should be kept in mind in order to avoid hemorrhagic complications.
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1997
C Possamai, U Corbanese, G Possamai, L Casagrande, C Farinea (1997)  Multiple organ failure due to Clostridium difficile sepsis. A case report.   Minerva Anestesiol 63: 6. 205-207 Jun  
Abstract: A case of severe sepsis caused by Clostridium difficile infection in a 66-year-old cirrhotic female is described. Severe systemic symptoms evolved rapidly to septic shock and ARDS, with signs and symptoms suggesting an acute abdomen requiring exploration for exclusion of surgical treatable diseases. The delayed diagnosis of Clostridium difficile infection probably contributed to the severity of the clinical course.
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1996
U Corbanese, C Possamai, L Casagrande, P Bordino (1996)  Evaluation of trauma care: validation of the TRISS method in an Italian ICU.   Intensive Care Med 22: 9. 941-946 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To validate the TRISS method as an audit system on a group of patients with severe trauma admitted to an Italian general intensive care unit (ICU). DESIGN: Prospective, cohort study of consecutive admissions to the ICU. SETTING: A 6-bed general ICU in a 500-bed general hospital. PATIENTS: 190 patients with severe trauma admitted from January 1992 to December 1993 were considered eligible. Patients lacking the data necessary to calculate the TRISS probability of survival, or for whom the ultimate outcome was unknown, were excluded. 162 patients were included in the study. INTERVENTIONS: None. OUTCOME MEASURE: Vital status at discharge from the last hospital that admitted the patient for the trauma being considered. RESULTS: The Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit tests were: H = 16.9, df = 10, p = 0.076; C = 5.8, df = 10, p = 0.831; H 3.5, df = 3, p = 0.31. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.963 (SE +/- 0.019). Classification measures at a decision criterion of 0.5 were: sensitivity 0.857, specificity 0.964, positive predictive value 0.782, negative predictive value 0.978, total correct classification 0.950, and the Youden index 0.821. The positive likelihood ratio (LHR) was 24.17, whereas the negative LHR was 0.14. CONCLUSIONS: The results of the validation of the TRISS method showed adequate calibration and high discriminatory power in Italian ICU trauma patients also, allowing confidence in the use of this method as an audit tool in our ICU. Some caution is advisable in extending these results to patients with operable intracranial injuries, due to the relatively low number of such cases included in the study.
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1995
U Corbanese, P Ruga, C Possamai, L Casagrande (1995)  Respiratory obstruction caused by retropharyngeal hematoma secondary to cervical spinal injury. Report of a case   Minerva Anestesiol 61: 7-8. 339-342 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: A case of severe airway obstruction secondary to retropharyngeal hematoma in a young multiple trauma patient with a stable occipitoatloid capsular-ligamentous injury is reported. The onset of mechanical obstruction occurred eight hours after the trauma requiring emergent oral intubation, and lasted seventeen days. The initial lateral cervical spine radiograph was negative, whereas the second one performed 7 hours after and initially underestimated, showed a large prevertebral soft tissue swelling. The initial difficult radiological diagnosis of trauma is described, and the therapeutic implications are discussed.
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U Corbanese, C Possamai (1995)  Comparison of 2 modified Fick methods and thermodilution for determining the cardiac output in patients with mechanical ventilation   Minerva Anestesiol 61: 5. 191-199 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE. To evaluate the effectiveness of two cardiac output measurement methods based on a modified Fick equation, that calculate the O2 consumption (VO2) dividing the CO2 production (VCO2) by a fixed respiratory quotient (RQ). DESIGN. Comparative study. SETTING. One 5 beds general intensive care unit in a 500 beds general hospital. PATIENTS. Ten mechanically ventilated critically ill patients requiring the right heart catheterization. The mean age was 65.5 years and the mean APACHE II score at admission was 24. MEASUREMENTS. The cardiac output was measured using two modified Fick methods. The VO2 was calculated dividing VCO2 by 0.9, while the arteriovenous O2 content difference was calculated using the mixed venous O2 content in the first method (COF), and the central venous O2 content in the second one (COFra). Moreover the cardiac output was measured with the thermodilution technique (COTD) as gold standard. RESULTS. The mean difference between the COTD and COF determinations was 0.571 L +/- 1.81 L, with limits of agreement ranging from -3.057 to +4.200 L. The mean difference between the COTD and COFra determinations was -0.322 L +/- 2.05 L, with limits of agreement ranging from -4.430 to +3.785 L. Both differences were nonsignificant. The correlation coefficients with COTD were: COF determinations 0.72, COFra determinations 0.70. In the group of COFra determinations less than 7 L the mean difference between COTD and COFra was 0.495 L with limits of agreement ranging from +2.208 L to -1.218 L. CONCLUSIONS. The correlation coefficients of the two modified Fick methods with COTD are good, and the mean differences between their results and the gold standard are small, but the low precision of both tested methods demonstrated by the very large limits of agreement, severely reduce the clinical reliability of the measurements. Only for the less than 7 L cardiac outputs the COFra limits of agreement with COTD are narrow enough, and in this range the technique can be useful e.g. revealing a low cardiac output.
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1993
M Santonastaso, P Bovo, R Colaceci, U Corbanese, P Ruga (1993)  Acute adrenal failure due to adrenal hemorrhagic necrosis secondary to heparin-induced thrombocytopenia   Recenti Prog Med 84: 10. 687-690 Oct  
Abstract: The authors describe a clinical case with a peculiar sequence of unhealthy events. An operated by osteotomy woman presented a deep venous thrombosis of lever lower extremity with following pulmonary embolism. The patient was treated with heparin. After 5 days, the patient showed a thrombocytopenia, that was not determined by an immune mechanism. The heparin was stopped and the thrombocythemia returned to normal values. But the patient still presented somnolence, asthenia and hypotension. The tests of adrenocortical function showed below normal values. The abdominal CAT showed haemorrhagic necrosis of the suprarenal glands.
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1992
C Russo, U Corbanese, E Della Mora (1992)  Nasocardiac reflex evoking during rhinoseptoplasty. Description of a clinical case   Minerva Anestesiol 58: 1-2. 63-64 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: We report a case of nasocardiac reflex which occurred during a septorhinoplasty. Management and preventive treatment is briefly discussed.
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1990
1989
C Possamai, U Corbanese, P Ruga, R Cipriano, M Scarpellini, G Uzzielli, A Da Ros (1989)  Prospective evaluation of the role of abdominal echocardiography in the treatment of seriously traumatized patients   Minerva Anestesiol 55: 7-8. 313-317 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: The reliability of abdominal ultrasonography (US) in a clinical algorithm for emergency management of blunt trauma was evaluated prospectively. From November 1, 1987 to December 31, 1988, of 111 severe trauma victims admitted to our ICU, 63 were screened according to protocol by US for peritoneal fluid and splenic and/or hepatic injuries. The mean age was 49.6 years. The mean ISS and APACHE II Score was 26.9 and 13.7 respectively. The sensitivity of US for detection of peritoneal fluid was 95%, specificity 97.6%, positive predictive value 95%, negative predictive value 97.6% with a prevalence of 31.7%. For hepatic and splenic injuries instead the results were not as good as for abdominal fluid. Twelve patients underwent laparotomy and 6 with abdominal injuries were successfully treated nonoperatively with serial US examinations. Overall mortality was 12 (19%). No patients died for delayed or missed diagnosis of abdominal injury.
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1988
1987
1986
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