S
Stefano Siboni
Researcher at University of Milan
Publications - 69
Citations - 1240
Stefano Siboni is an academic researcher from University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dysphagia & GERD. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 69 publications receiving 864 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefano Siboni include University of Southern California.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Esophageal emergencies: WSES guidelines
M Chirica,Michael D. Kelly,Stefano Siboni,Alberto Aiolfi,Carlo Galdino Riva,Emanuele Asti,Davide Ferrari,Ari Leppäniemi,Richard P. G. ten Broek,Pierre Yves Brichon,Yoram Kluger,Gustavo Pereira Fraga,Gil Frey,Nelson Adami Andreollo,Federico Coccolini,Cristina Frattini,Ernest E. Moore,Osvaldo Chiara,Salomone Di Saverio,Massimo Sartelli,Dieter G. Weber,Luca Ansaloni,Walter L. Biffl,Helene Corte,Imtaz Wani,Gian Luca Baiocchi,Pierre Cattan,Fausto Catena,Luigi Bonavina +28 more
TL;DR: The esophagus traverses three body compartments (neck, thorax, and abdomen) and is surrounded at each level by vital organs and can be life-threatening either by digestive contamination of surrounding structures in case of esophageal wall breach or concomitant damage of surrounding organs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tourniquet use for civilian extremity trauma.
Kenji Inaba,Stefano Siboni,Shelby Resnick,Jay Zhu,Monica Darlene Wong,Tobias Haltmeier,Elizabeth Benjamin,Demetrios Demetriades +7 more
TL;DR: Tourniquet use in the civilian sector is associated with a low rate of complications and with the low complication rate and high potential for benefit, aggressive use of this potentially lifesaving intervention is justified.
Journal ArticleDOI
A multi-institutional analysis of prehospital tourniquet use.
Rebecca Schroll,Alison Smith,Norman E. McSwain,John G. Myers,Kristin Rocchi,Kenji Inaba,Stefano Siboni,Gary Vercruysse,Irada Ibrahim-Zada,Jason L. Sperry,Christian Martin-Gill,Jeremy W. Cannon,Jeremy W. Cannon,Seth R. Holland,Martin A. Schreiber,Diane Lape,Alexander L. Eastman,Cari S. Stebbins,Paula Ferrada,Jinfeng Han,Peter Meade,Juan Duchesne +21 more
TL;DR: This study is the largest evaluation of prehospital tourniquet use in a civilian population to date and found that tournique was applied safely and effectively in the civilian population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Early results of magnetic sphincter augmentation versus fundoplication for gastroesophageal reflux disease: Systematic review and meta-analysis.
Alberto Aiolfi,Emanuele Asti,Daniele Bernardi,Gianluca Bonitta,Emanuele Rausa,Stefano Siboni,Luigi Bonavina +6 more
TL;DR: Both anti-reflux procedures are safe and effective up to 1-year follow-up and MSA is associated with less gas/bloat symptoms and increased ability to vomit and belch.
Journal ArticleDOI
Removal of the Magnetic Sphincter Augmentation Device: Surgical Technique and Results of a Single-center Cohort Study.
TL;DR: Laroscopic removal of the Linx device can be safely performed as a 1-stage procedure and in conjunction with fundoplication even in patients presenting with device erosion.