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Antonio Nicolato
Researcher at University of Verona
Publications - 86
Citations - 1848
Antonio Nicolato is an academic researcher from University of Verona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radiosurgery & Meningioma. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 83 publications receiving 1685 citations.
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Radiosurgical treatment of cavernous sinus meningiomas: experience with 122 treated patients.
TL;DR: GK radiosurgery seems to be both safe and effective for the follow-up periods in the series (median, >4 yr), and might be considered a first-choice treatment for selected patients with cavernous sinus meningiomas.
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Prognostic factors in low-grade supratentorial astrocytomas: a uni-multivariate statistical analysis in 76 surgically treated adult patients
TL;DR: Radical resection of the neoformation, a higher preoperative Karnofsky performance status (KPS) score, and an age younger than 50 years are strongly correlated with survival; postoperative radiotherapy appears to be associated with increased survival only in patients under 50 years of age.
Journal ArticleDOI
Gamma knife radiosurgery for brain metastases: a primary therapeutic option
Massimo Gerosa,Antonio Nicolato,Roberto Foroni,B. Zanotti,Laura Tomazzoli,Massimo Miscusi,Franco Alessandrini,Albino Bricolo +7 more
TL;DR: Gamma knife radiosurgery seems to be the primary treatment option for patients harboring small-to-medium size brain metastases with reasonable life expectancy and no impending intracranial hypertension.
Journal ArticleDOI
The role of Gamma Knife radiosurgery in the management of cavernous sinus meningiomas
Antonio Nicolato,Roberto Foroni,Franco Alessandrini,Sergio Maluta,Albino Bricolo,Massimo Gerosa +5 more
TL;DR: GK radiosurgery seems to be both safe (permanent morbidity 1%) and effective (96% neurologic improvement/stability, 97% overall TGC, 96% actuarial TGC at 5 years) and might be considered as a first-choice treatment for selected patients with CSM.
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Glomus jugulare tumors: the option of gamma knife radiosurgery.
TL;DR: Despite the constraints of the limited case material, the preliminary results with GKR at a mid-term follow-up examination suggest an effective tumor growth control with negligible incidence of untoward sequelae.