Giuliano Sette
Sapienza University of Rome
46 Papers
471 Citations
Giuliano Sette is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: Migraine & Stroke. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 46 publications. Previous affiliations of Giuliano Sette include French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission & University of Caen Lower Normandy.
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Papers
Hemorrhagic transformation of brain infarct: predictability in the first 5 hours from stroke onset and influence on clinical outcome.
Danilo Toni,Marco Fiorelli,Stefano Bastianello,Maria Luisa Sacchetti,Giuliano Sette,Corrado Argentino,E. Montinaro,Luigi Bozzao +7 more
TL;DR: HT of a brain infarct is a common event that occurs independently of anticoagulation and can be reliably predicted as early as 5 hours from stroke onset by the presence of focal hypodensity at CT.
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In vivo mapping of brain benzodiazepine receptor changes by positron emission tomography after focal ischemia in the anesthetized baboon.
Giuliano Sette,Jean-Claude Baron,Alan R. Young,H. Miyazawa,I. Tillet,Louisa Barré,J.-M. Travere,J M Derlon,Eric T. MacKenzie +8 more
TL;DR: The marked depression in [11C] flumazenil specific binding, which appears selective for synaptic damage, is both precocious and sustained and thus may be better suited for the early assessment of ischemic damage in humans.
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A method for the in vivo investigation of the serotonergic 5-HT2 receptors in the human cerebral cortex using positron emission tomography and 18F-labeled setoperone
J. Blin,Giuliano Sette,Marco Fiorelli,Olivier Bletry,Jean Luc Elghozi,Christian Crouzel,Jean-Claude Baron +6 more
TL;DR: These data in humans with PET demonstrate that [18F]setoperone labels with high sensitivity and selectivity 5‐HT2 receptors in the frontal cortex are binding to plasma proteins and is significantly metabolized into several labeled metabolites that are much more hydrophilic than setoperone and, hence, presumably do not cross the blood–brain barrier.
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Acute Ischemic Strokes Improving During the First 48 Hours of Onset: Predictability, Outcome, and Possible Mechanisms A Comparison With Early Deteriorating Strokes
Danilo Toni,Marco Fiorelli,Stefano Bastianello,Anne Falcou,Giuliano Sette,V. Ceschin,Maria Luisa Sacchetti,Corrado Argentino +7 more
TL;DR: Early improvement can be predicted by the absence of early CT hypodensity and is highly predictive of good outcome.
112
Early Reperfusion in the Anesthetized Baboon Reduces Brain Damage Following Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion A Quantitative Analysis of Infarction Volume
TL;DR: It is concluded that under optimal experimental conditions, an ischemic episode of 6 hours in duration is well tolerated in the anesthetized adolescent baboon and indeed is beneficial in terms of the final infarct volume produced by occlusion of a major cerebral artery.
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