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Nicolò Patroniti
Researcher at University of Genoa
Publications - 160
Citations - 8079
Nicolò Patroniti is an academic researcher from University of Genoa. The author has contributed to research in topics: ARDS & Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 151 publications receiving 6180 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicolò Patroniti include University of Milan & Health Science University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Lung Recruitment in Patients with the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Luciano Gattinoni,Pietro Caironi,Massimo Cressoni,Davide Chiumello,V. Marco Ranieri,Michael Quintel,Sebastiano G. Russo,Nicolò Patroniti,Rodrigo Cornejo,Guillermo Bugedo +9 more
TL;DR: In ARDS, the percentage of potentially recruitable lung is extremely variable and is strongly associated with the response to PEEP, which may decrease ventilator-induced lung injury by keeping lung regions open that otherwise would be collapsed.
Journal ArticleDOI
The application of esophageal pressure measurement in patients with respiratory failure.
E Akoumianaki,Salvatore Maurizio Maggiore,Franco Valenza,Giacomo Bellani,Amal Jubran,Stephen H. Loring,Paolo Pelosi,Daniel Talmor,Salvatore Grasso,Davide Chiumello,Claude Guérin,Nicolò Patroniti,Vito Marco Ranieri,Luciano Gattinoni,Stefano Nava,Pierpaolo Terragni,Antonio Pesenti,Martin J. Tobin,Jordi Mancebo,Laurent Brochard +19 more
TL;DR: The time is now right to apply the knowledge obtained with Pes to improve the management of critically ill and ventilator-dependent patients, as Pes measurements have enhanced the understanding of the pathophysiology of acute lung injury, patient-ventilator interaction, and weaning failure.
Journal Article
A meta-analysis of complications and mortality of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
Alberto Zangrillo,Giovanni Landoni,Giuseppe Biondi-Zoccai,Massimiliano Greco,Teresa Greco,Giacomo Frati,Nicolò Patroniti,Massimo Antonelli,Antonio Pesenti,Federico Pappalardo +9 more
TL;DR: Even with conditions usually associated with a high chance of death, almost 50% of patients receiving ECMO survive up to discharge, and the most common complications associated with ECMO were renal failure, pneumonia or sepsis, and bleeding.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Italian ECMO network experience during the 2009 influenza A(H1N1) pandemic: preparation for severe respiratory emergency outbreaks.
Nicolò Patroniti,Alberto Zangrillo,Federico Pappalardo,Adriano Peris,Giovanni Cianchi,Antonio Braschi,Giorgio Antonio Iotti,Antonio Arcadipane,Giovanna Panarello,V. Marco Ranieri,Pierpaolo Terragni,Massimo Antonelli,Luciano Gattinoni,Fabrizio Oleari,Antonio Pesenti +14 more
TL;DR: A network organization based on preemptive patient centralization allowed a high survival rate and provided effective and safe referral of patients with severe H1N1-suspected ARDS.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prone positioning improves oxygenation in spontaneously breathing nonintubated patients with hypoxemic acute respiratory failure: a retrospective study
Vittorio Scaravilli,Giacomo Grasselli,Luigi Castagna,Alberto Zanella,Stefano Isgrò,Alberto Lucchini,Nicolò Patroniti,Giacomo Bellani,Antonio Pesenti +8 more
TL;DR: Prone positioning improves oxygenation and outcome of patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome undergoing invasive ventilation and was feasible and improved oxygenation in non-intubated, spontaneously breathing patients with ARF.