A. Ponticelli
Boston Children's Hospital
9 Papers
130 Citations
A. Ponticelli is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gastric emptying & Predictive value of tests. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Stenting for caustic strictures: Esophageal replacement replaced
F. De Peppo,Antonio Zaccara,Luigi Dall'Oglio,G. Federici di Abriola,A. Ponticelli,P. Marchetti,M. C. Lucchetti,M. Rivosecchi +7 more
TL;DR: Esophageal replacement should be considered only in cases complicated by tracheoesphageal fistula or in the rare patients who do not respond to repeated esophageAL stenting.
50
Paediatric eosinophilic oesophagitis: towards early diagnosis and best treatment.
P. De Angelis,Jonathan E. Markowitz,Filippo Torroni,Tamara Caldaro,A. Pane,G. Morino,R. Sforza Wietrzykowska,G. Federici di Abriola,A. Ponticelli,Luigi Dall'Oglio +9 more
TL;DR: The recognition of typical endoscopic picture with careful biopsies extended to the whole oesophagus could more quickly lead to the correct diagnosis and avoid severe complications of eosinophilic oesphagitis in children, as stricture and failure to growth.
34
Abdominal pain and wandering spleen in young children: the importance of an early diagnosis.
TL;DR: In this article, four cases operated for torsion of the wandering spleen in childhood were retrospectively reviewed and all subjects led a history of abdominal pain and a mass on physical examination.
28
Role of electrogastrography in detecting motility disorders in children affected by chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction and Crohn's disease.
F. Bracci,B. D. Iacobelli,Bronislava Papadatou,Francesca Ferretti,M. C. Lucchetti,D. Cianchi,P. Francalanci,A. Ponticelli +7 more
TL;DR: Electrogastrography is a non-invasive method to study gut motility related to GEA alterations present in CIPO as well as in CD patients.
13
Preliminary report of electrogastrography in pediatric gastroresection: can it be predictive of alteration of gastric motility?
TL;DR: In normal subjects, GEA showed a complete variation after the meal, whereas in operated patients GEA was impaired and only partially modified after the Meal, suggesting that in patients with gastric resection, adaptation of the stomach to food ingestion is present but incomplete with respect to normal subjects.
7