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alessandro padovani


padovani@med.unibs.it

Journal articles

2010
Fabrizio Piazza, Gloria Galimberti, Elisa Conti, Valeria Isella, Maria V Perlangeli, Tiziana Speranza, Barbara Borroni, Enrico M Pogliani, Alessandro Padovani, Carlo Ferrarese (2010)  Increased tissue factor pathway inhibitor and homocysteine in Alzheimer's disease.   Neurobiol Aging Mar  
Abstract: We investigated the possible involvement of vascular damage in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), by assessment of plasma levels of tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), a serine protease inhibitor induced by endothelial injury, and homocysteine (Hcy), a known risk factor for cerebrovascular disorders, folate levels were also measured. 110 probable AD, 38 mild cognitive impairment, 31 patients affected by idiopathic Parkinson's disease (without dementia) and 100 healthy controls, who displayed no vascular disorders were enrolled. TFPI and Hcy were significantly higher in AD patients with respect to other groups. The levels of TFPI and Hcy were positively correlated in hyperhomocysteinemic AD and mild cognitive impairment subjects, and were negatively correlated with folate levels. Our findings suggest that an impairment of endothelial function associated with high Hcy levels may occur in AD patients, despite the absence of manifest cerebrovascular lesions. Therefore, TFPI may represent a candidate marker of endothelial damage in AD and might be used for the identification and monitoring of patients that would benefit from folate supplementation treatment.
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Alessandra M S Padovani, Manuel Flores Molina, Koren K Mann (2010)  Inhibition of liver x receptor/retinoid X receptor-mediated transcription contributes to the proatherogenic effects of arsenic in macrophages in vitro.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 30: 6. 1228-1236 Jun  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To determine whether arsenic inhibits transcriptional activation of the liver X receptor (LXR)/retinoid X receptor (RXR) heterodimers, thereby impairing cholesterol efflux from macrophages and potentially contributing to a proatherogenic phenotype. METHODS AND RESULTS: Arsenic is an important environmental contaminant and has been linked to an increased incidence of atherosclerosis. Previous findings showed that arsenic inhibits transcriptional activation of type 2 nuclear receptors, known to heterodimerize with RXR. Environmentally relevant arsenic doses decrease the LXR/RXR ligand-induced expression of the LXR target genes (ABCA1 and SREBP-1c). Arsenic failed to decrease cAMP-induced ABCA1 expression, suggesting a selective LXR/RXR effect. This selectivity correlated with the ability of arsenic to decrease LXR/RXR ligand-induced, but not cAMP-induced, cholesterol efflux. By using chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, we found that arsenic inhibits the ability of LXR/RXR ligands to induce activation markers on the ABCA1 and SREBP-1c promoters and blocks ligand-induced release of the nuclear receptor coexpressor (NCoR) from the promoter. Arsenic did not alter the ability of LXR to transrepress inflammatory gene transcription, further supporting our hypothesis that RXR is the target for arsenic inhibition. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to arsenic enhances the risk of atherosclerosis. We present data that arsenic inhibits the transcriptional activity of the liver X receptor, resulting in decreased cholesterol-induced gene expression and efflux from macrophages. Therefore, arsenic may promote an athersclerotic environment by decreasing the ability of macrophages to efflux excess cholesterol, thereby favoring increased plaque formation.
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Barbara Borroni, Mario Grassi, Chiara Agosti, Giuseppe Bellelli, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Understanding the underpinnings of the frontotemporal lobar degeneration: evidence for benign and malignant forms.   Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 18: 9. 830-838 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) encompasses different clinical subtypes but with overlapping features. Establishing whether FTLD represents a continuum or recognizes distinct subgroups may be crucial for diagnostic purposes and therapeutic approaches. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether cognitive profiles in a large sample of FTLD patients reflect qualitatively distinct subtypes, variants along a single continuum of severity, or severity differences within subtypes. METHOD: Latent class analysis (LCA), exploratory factor analysis (FA), and mixture factor analysis (MFA) modeling were applied to a wide neuropsychological assessment data. LCA corresponds to qualitatively distinct subtypes, FA corresponds to quantitatively severity differences, and MFA allows for both subtypes and severity differences within subtypes. RESULTS: The authors consecutively enrolled 314 FTLD patients. A comparison of the different models shows that MFA models provided a superior fit to the data than any of the LCA or exploratory FA models. The "best" MFA model was defined by two continuous variables evaluating the disease severity within two groups of patients ("good" and "bad" performers). These two populations have been called "benign" and "malignant" FTLD. CONCLUSIONS: FTLD recognizes distinct subgroups beyond the disease severity, namely a benign form and a more malignant form. This observation needs to be taken into account in future clinical trials and for therapeutic approaches.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Maddalena Riva, Renzo Rozzini, Stefano Boffelli, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Changes in the characteristics of Alzheimer patients at the first visit in centers for dementia: a 10-year follow-up study.   Aging Clin Exp Res Apr  
Abstract: Background and aims: The Cronos project is an observational study on the Alzheimer's disease (AD), created by Italy's Ministry of Public Health in 2000. The aim of our study is to evaluate if clinical characteristics at the first visit of patients recruited in UVA (Alzheimer Evaluation Unit) have changed from September 2000 to December 2009, and to investigate the possible reasons for this evolution. Methods: 1532 consecutive patients have been enrolled in two different UVAs (September, 2000 through to December, 2009) in a retrospective, descriptive study, employing medical record as the primary source of data. Results: Patients' age at the first visit was not different throughout the period of observation. No differences have been observed with regards to education and functional characteristics too. However, a reduction of severity of cognitive impairment has been found during the period of evaluation; patients consecutively recruited in the first years were more cognitively, functionally, and psycho behaviourally compromised than patients recruited in the following years observed. Conclusions: Data show a change of the characteristics at the first visit in patients affected by cognitive deterioration during the years of observation. This finding indicates new clinical needs of patients, requiring a change in pharmacological treatments and in general of the clinical approach.
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Barbara Borroni, Roberto Del Bo, Stefano Goldwurm, Silvana Archetti, Cristian Bonvicini, Chiara Agosti, Barbara Bigni, Alice Papetti, Serena Ghezzi, Giorgio Sacilotto, Gianni Pezzoli, Massimo Gennarelli, Nereo Bresolin, Giacomo Pietro Comi, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  VEGF haplotypes are associated with increased risk to progressive supranuclear palsy and corticobasal syndrome.   J Alzheimers Dis 21: 1. 87-94 Jan  
Abstract: Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and corticobasal syndrome (CBS) are in the spectrum of tauopathies and recognized to have a strong genetic background. It has been widely reported that MAPT tau haplotype H1 is a genetic risk factor in both conditions, but no other genetic determinants have so far been proposed. Recently, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) haplotypes were reported to confer risk to frontotemporal dementia (FTD). The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of VEGF genetic determinants in PSP and CBS susceptibility. We evaluated a cohort of 687 unrelated Italian subjects, including 117 PSP, 108 CBS, 199 FTD, and 263 healthy controls. Genotype and allele frequencies of three well-known polymorphisms located within the VEGF promoter (-2578C/A, -1190G/A, and -1154G/A) were carried out. Genetic analysis revealed the presence of significant changes in terms of genotype and allele distributions in patients compared to healthy controls. A-G-G haplotype (-2578C/A, 1190G/A, -1154G/A) was overrepresented in both PSP (OR=6.64, 95% CI=2.3-19.6, P=0.0003, CGG=reference) and CBS (OR=5.20, 95% CI=1.70-15.9, P=0.003, CGG=reference) compared to healthy subjects. No differences between PSP and CBS and FTD were found, and the A-G-G haplotype was also overrepresented in FTD. Overall, these data suggest that VEGF gene variability represents a susceptibility factor for PSP and CBS. These data argue that additional genes may confer disease risk to PSP and CBS, and to FTD as well, beyond the MAPT tau haplotype. Further studies are warranted.
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S Gipponi, E Venturelli, R Rao, P Liberini, A Padovani (2010)  Hypertension is a factor associated with chronic daily headache.   Neurol Sci 31 Suppl 1: S171-S173 Jun  
Abstract: Chronic daily headache (CDH) is one of the more frequently observed headache syndromes at major tertiary care centers. CDH is defined as headache occurring >15 days/month. Different mechanisms are involved in the development of CDH but what factors specifically contributing to the transformation from episodic into CDH remain largely unknown. Analgesic overuse is commonly identified as the most important factor for such transformation. Hypertension, allergy, asthma, arthritis, diabetes, obesity and hypothyroidism were associated with CDH in clinical series. The objective of this study is to identify risk factors of chronicity in patients with headache. A total of 1,483 consecutive patients were studied. We collected information on age, gender, headache type and comorbidity. Patients were divided into three diagnostic groups: migraine and tension-type headache (CTT) diagnosis were made according to ICHD-II, and CDH fulfilling the Proposal Headache Classification for Chronic Daily Headache described by Silberstein and Lipton (in Chronic daily headache including transformed migraine, chronic tension-type headache, and medication overuse, 2001). We used descriptive statistics and Chi-square test. Our data show that age, gender and headache onset were similar in the three groups. Diabetes, hypercolesterolaemia, smoke and cardiopathy prevalence did not differ in the three groups (P > 0.05). Hypertension prevalence in CDH group (16.2%) was significantly higher than in the other two groups (migraine 7.3%; CTT 6.6%; P < 0.01). There were no differences (P > 0.05) in hypertension prevalence between CDH with and without medication overuse. CDH patients (mean age 41.8 +/- 14) referred to the Headache Center later than migraine and CTT patients (mean age 37 +/- 12) (P > 0.05). According to previous studies we found that hypertension is more frequent in CDH than in migraine and CTT. Examining this result it is possible to conclude that there exists an association between CDH and hypertension, but not that a causal relationship necessarily exists. Considering the other somatic conditions we did not find any correlation. The potential role of somatic comorbidity in CDH has to be studied in further clinical trials.
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B Borroni, S Goldwurm, C Cerini, M Cosseddu, N Meucci, C Mariani, G Pezzoli, A Padovani (2010)  Familial aggregation in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy and Corticobasal Syndrome.   Eur J Neurol May  
Abstract: Background: Studies on familial aggregation might be of help to evaluate whether the genetic background has a key role in Progressive Supranuclar Palsy (PSP) and Corticobasal Syndrome (CBS). Only a few studies are available. Objective: To evaluate the prevalence of positive family history (FH) in PSP and CBS in a large sample of patients. Methods: Two hundred and thirty patients and 110 controls entered the study. Patients underwent an extensive clinical, neurological and neuropsychological assessment as well as a structural brain imaging study. A clinical follow-up further confirmed the diagnosis. Familial aggregation was carefully recorded by a standardised questionnaire. Results: One hundred and twenty-nine PSP (age at onset = 66.6 +/- 7.3, female = 46.1%) and 101 CBS (age at onset = 62.8 +/- 8.9, female = 41.6%) were consecutively enrolled. Positive FH was found in 31.8% of PSP (n = 41) and in 31.7% of CBS (n = 32). Familial aggregation was lower in the age-matched control group compared to patient group (21.8%, P = 0.05). Patients with PSP had higher positive FH for Parkinsonism (63.4%) when compared to FH for dementia (36.6%). In CBS, FH was equally distributed between Parkinsonism (53.1%) and dementia (46.9%). In addition, FH was not associated with age at disease onset in PSP (FH+ versus FH-, 67.0 +/- 7.3 vs. 66.7 +/- 7.1, P = 0.788) and in CBS (62.6 +/- 7.9 vs. 62.9 +/- 9.5, P= 0.877). Conclusions: These results argue for familial aggregation in PSP and CBS, further underlying the importance of genetic background in these disorders. Further studies on possible genetic modulators or genetic epistasis contributing to PSP and CBS development are warranted.
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C Agosti, B Borroni, N M Akkawi, A Padovani (2010)  Cerebrovascular risk factors and triggers in transient global amnesia patients with and without jugular valve incompetence: results from a sample of 243 patients.   Eur Neurol 63: 5. 291-294 04  
Abstract: BACKGROUND/AIMS: Different etiologies for transient global amnesia (TGA) have been proposed, such as venous flow abnormalities, spreading depression and migraine-related mechanisms like focal ischemia. Jugular vein valve incompetence (JVI) is commonly described in TGA patients, but its contributing role in TGA pathogenesis is still unknown. We investigated the possible relationship between JVI and pathogenetic mechanisms in TGA. METHODS: 243 TGA patients underwent clinical and neurological assessment. Demographic characteristics, TGA-precipitating factors and vascular comorbidities were carefully recorded. In each patient, JVI was assessed by Doppler ultrasonography. RESULTS: TGA patients were grouped according to the presence (n = 171, 70.4%) or absence (n = 72, 29.6%) of JVI. TGA patients with JVI showed a higher presence of precipitating factors, namely a Valsalva-like maneuver (JVI-positive vs. JVI-negative, 35.8 vs. 17.1%, p = 0.004) and emotional stress (36.6 vs. 21.4%, p = 0.023), but had fewer vascular comorbidities, namely hypertension (37.2 vs. 51.4%, p = 0.047) and carotid arteriosclerosis (20.5 vs. 31.9%, p = 0.050). CONCLUSIONS: These findings support the argument for the existence of at least 2 different TGA-associated mechanisms defined by JVI. On the one hand, JVI associated with a Valsalva-like maneuver and emotional stress supported the venous blood congestion hypothesis, and on the other, the JVI-negative group may have another vascular basis, unrelated to venous congestion.
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Anna Rosati, Luciano Buttolo, Roberto Stefini, Alice Todeschini, Marco Cenzato, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Efficacy and safety of levetiracetam in patients with glioma: a clinical prospective study.   Arch Neurol 67: 3. 343-346 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of levetiracetam in the management of epilepsy in patients with glioma. DESIGN: A prospective study in hospitalized patients with a new diagnosis of glioma. SETTING: Department of Neurological Sciences and Visions, Spedali Civili of Brescia. PATIENTS: From March 1, 2006, until January 1, 2009, 176 consecutive patients (101 men and 75 women) with a first diagnosis of glioma were enrolled in the study. All patients with a diagnosis of epilepsy were treated with levetiracetam. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical, histological, and magnetic resonance imaging findings were analyzed. RESULTS: Age at the diagnosis of glioma ranged from 22 to 79 years (mean [SD], 57 [15] years; median, 59 years). Duration of the disease ranged from 27 days to 2(1/2) years (mean [SD], 13.7 [7.8] months; median, 13 months). Eighty-two patients received levetiracetam because of a diagnosis of epilepsy. At the last evaluation (May 1, 2009), 75 of 82 patients (91%) treated with levetiracetam were seizure free; in 2 of these patients, levetiracetam was withdrawn because of intolerable adverse effects. Prompt and long-lasting control of seizures was obtained in 49 of 82 patients (60%) with a dose of levetiracetam that ranged from 1500 to 3000 mg/d, and 9 (11%) of the treated patients needed an increase of levetiracetam dosage to 4000 mg/d to become seizure free. No laboratory abnormalities were observed in patients with concomitant chemotherapy. CONCLUSION: The results of this study provide good evidence that levetiracetam is efficacious and safe in patients with epilepsy due to glioma.
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A Giossi, A Pezzini, E Del Zotto, I Volonghi, P Costa, D Ferrari, A Padovani (2010)  Advances in antiplatelet therapy for stroke prevention: the new P2Y12 antagonists.   Curr Drug Targets 11: 3. 380-391 Mar  
Abstract: Thrombus formation at a site of arterial injury (eg, rupture of an atherosclerotic plaque in a carotid artery), a crucial step in the pathogenesis of cerebral ischemia, is initiated by the adhesion of platelets to the arterial wall. In vivo, activated platelets release adenosine diphosphate (ADP), whose binding to the platelet P2Y12 receptor elicits progressive and sustained platelet aggregation. As a result, this receptor has been a target for the development of clinically effective antiplatelet agents, such as the thienopyridines ticlopidine and, more recently, clopidogrel, the only two currently FDA-approved P2Y12 antagonists. Clopidogrel has a well-established role as an antithrombotic agent in the setting of ischemic stroke. However, several challenges remain, including the relatively slow onset of action of this drug and the phenomenon of clopidogrel response variability or "resistance". A number of novel P2Y12 antagonists are therefore under investigation to determine whether they can result in better or more rapid antithrombotic effects than clopidogrel, without an unacceptable increase in hemorrhagic (or other) side effects. These include 1) prasugrel, an orally-administered thienopyridine prodrug, 2) ticagrelor (AZD6140), an ATP analog reversible P2Y12 antagonist, 3) cangrelor, an intravenously-administered reversible P2Y12 antagonist, and 4) PRT060128. Whether the promising pharmacological profile of these drugs will be translated into clinical benefit for stroke patients will be determined by the results of clinical trials.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Marta Conti, Erik Bertoletti, Marina Zanetti, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Efficacy of SSRIs on cognition of Alzheimer's disease patients treated with cholinesterase inhibitors.   Int Psychogeriatr 22: 1. 114-119 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: This study examines the joint effect on cognition of selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and cholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) in depressed patients affected by Alzheimer's disease (AD) living at home. METHODS: The study was conducted in two different outpatient neurological clinics. 338 patients with probable AD were treated with ChEis (donepezil, rivastigmine and galantamine) as per the clinician's judgment and were observed for nine months. At study entry, participants underwent a multidimensional assessment evaluating cognitive, functional and psychobehavioral domains. All patients were evaluated at baseline, after one (T1), three (T2) and nine months (T3). Patients were grouped in three different categories (patients not depressed and not treated with SSRIs, patients depressed and treated with SSRIs, and patients depressed but not treated with SSRIs). RESULTS: At baseline 182 were diagnosed as not depressed and not treated with SSRIs, 66 as depressed and treated with SSRIs, and 90 as depressed but not treated with SSRIs. The mean change in MMSE score from baseline to nine months showed that depressed patients not treated worsened in comparison with those not depressed and not treated with SSRIs (mean change -0.8 +/- 2.3 vs 0.04 +/- 2.9; p = 0.02) and patients depressed and treated with SSRI (mean change -0.8 +/- 2.3 vs 0.1 +/- 2.5; p = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: In AD patients treated with AChEIs, SSRIs may exert some degree of protection against the negative effects of depression on cognition.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Mario Grassi, Corrado Lodigiani, Rosalba Patella, Carlo Gandolfo, Federica Casoni, Rossella Musolino, Rocco Salvatore Calabrò, Paolo Bovi, Alessandro Adami, Maria Luisa Delodovici, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Lidia Luciana Rota, Maurizia Rasura, Massimo Del Sette, Alessia Giossi, Irene Volonghi, Andrea Zini, Paolo Cerrato, Paolo Costa, Mauro Magoni, Licia Iacoviello, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Predictors of Migraine Subtypes in Young Adults With Ischemic Stroke. The Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults.   Stroke Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The mechanisms underlying the relationship between migraine and ischemic stroke remain uncertain. The aim of the present study was to investigate the predictive value of major cardiovascular risk factors, cardiac interatrial abnormalities, and additional biological markers on migraine subtypes in young adults with ischemic stroke. METHODS: Ischemic stroke patients aged 45 years or younger were consecutively enrolled as part of the Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults. A comprehensive evaluation was performed including assessment of self-reported migraine and cardiovascular risk factors, interatrial right-to-left shunt, and genotyping to detect factor V Leiden and the G20210A mutation in the prothrombin gene. RESULTS: Nine hundred eighty-one patients (mean age, 36.0±7.6 years; 50.7% women) were included. The risk of migraine with aura increased with decreasing number of cardiovascular risk factors (OR, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.24-0.99 for 2 factors or more), increasing number of thrombophilic variants (OR, 2.21; 95% CI, 1.05-4.68 for carriers of at least 1 of the 2), and the presence of right-to-left shunt (OR, 2.41; 95% CI, 1.37-3.45), as compared to patients without migraine. None of these factors had influence on the risk of migraine without aura. CONCLUSIONS: In young adults with ischemic stroke, low cardiovascular risk profile, right-to-left shunt, and an underlying procoagulant state are predictors of migraine with aura. The biological effects of these factors should be considered in future studies aimed at investigating the mechanisms linking migraine to brain ischemia.
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Barbara Borroni, Mario Grassi, Chiara Agosti, Enrico Premi, Silvana Archetti, Antonella Alberici, Giuseppe Bellelli, Luigi Caimi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Establishing short-term prognosis in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration spectrum: role of genetic background and clinical phenotype.   Neurobiol Aging 31: 2. 270-279 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Establishing the short-term prognosis in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD) is a clinical challenge for defining disease outcomes and monitoring therapeutic interventions. No reliable neuropsychological assessment balancing all FTLD aspects is available yet, thus no clear-cut follow-up study has been performed. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the rate of progression and the predictors of worsening in FTLD patients. METHODS: One-hundred twenty-seven FTLD patients entered the study and were re-evaluated at 1-year follow-up. A statistical driven approach on wide neuropsychological, behavioral, and functional data was applied to identify homogeneous groups both at baseline and at follow-up within FTLD. Three set of predictors on disease progression were considered: (i) the demographic characteristics, (ii) the genetic background, i.e. Apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype, Tau haplotype, and functional polymorphisms affecting serotonin and dopamine pathways, and (iii) the clinical phenotype. RESULTS: Among FTLD, two groups of patients were recognized on the basis of the overall assessment, thus termed for different disease severity as "good performers" and "bad performers". At 1-year follow-up, almost 30% of FTLD patients progressed from "good" to "bad" performances, whilst 70% maintained stable "good" performances. APOE varepsilon4 allele, Tau H2 haplotype and behavioral variant FTD phenotype were associated with worse prognosis over time. CONCLUSIONS: This preliminary study proposed genetic and clinical predictors in FTLD progression. The identification of disease-modifying predictors of prognosis opens a new avenue in studying FTLD, and may contribute to define outcomes and to monitor pharmacological targets.
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Barbara Borroni, Chiara Agosti, Elena Marcello, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Blood cell markers in Alzheimer Disease: Amyloid Precursor Protein form ratio in platelets.   Exp Gerontol 45: 1. 53-56 Jan  
Abstract: A correct clinical diagnosis in the early stage of Alzheimer Disease (AD) is mandatory given the current available treatment with acetylcholine esterase inhibitors. Moreover, a early to preclinical diagnosis would allow to identify patients eligible for future disease-modifying therapies. In the last ten years, we have focused our attention on peripheral markers, evaluating the role of platelet Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) forms as a reliable tool for AD diagnosis since preclinical stages. APP is the key player in AD pathogenesis, and platelets contain all the enzymatic machinery to its processing, thus being the ideal candidate where to study AD pathogenetic mechanisms. In this review, we summarise the published data regarding the usefulness of platelet APP form ratio in the diagnosis of early AD. Approaches combining APP form ratio along with neuroimaging markers show the promise to accurately identify AD, even in the pre-symptomatic stage.
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B Borroni, C Agosti, E Premi, C Cerini, M Cosseddu, B Paghera, G Bellelli, A Padovani (2010)  The FTLD-modified Clinical Dementia Rating scale is a reliable tool for defining disease severity in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration: evidence from a brain SPECT study.   Eur J Neurol 17: 5. 703-707 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD) is a heterogeneous disorder characterized by impairment in executive functions, behavioural disturbance and language deficit. Reliable scales of global impairment are under evaluation. A consortium of Mayo Clinic and University of California FTLD Centers has recently developed the FTLD-modified Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) scale to assess FTLD severity. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether FTLD-modified CDR scores correlate with the pattern and degree of brain SPECT hypoperfusion in patients with FTLD. METHODS: Ninety-nine patients with FTLD entered the study. Patients underwent a clinical evaluation and a wide standardized neuropsychological assessment, including mini-mental state examination (MMSE) and FTLD-modified CDR. A brain SPECT perfusion imaging study was carried out in each patient. A linear correlation analysis between frontotemporal dementia-modified CDR or neuropsychological tests scores and perfusion data was performed. RESULTS: There was a significant relationship between higher FTLD-modified CDR score and lower global regional cerebral blood flow in the frontal and temporal lobes, bilaterally. No significant correlation between MMSE and brain frontotemporal hypoperfusion was found. The correlation between brain hypoperfusion pattern and neuropsychological test scores tapping different cognitive domains fitted with previously published data. CONCLUSIONS: The recently introduced FTLD-modified CDR scale correlates with the degree of frontotemporal hypoperfusion in patients with FTLD. This study confirms and further supports the usefulness of FTLD-modified CDR in future clinical trials to monitor disease progression.
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I Volonghi, A Pezzini, E Del Zotto, A Giossi, P Costa, D Ferrari, A Padovani (2010)  Role of COL4A1 in basement-membrane integrity and cerebral small-vessel disease. The COL4A1 stroke syndrome.   Curr Med Chem 17: 13. 1317-1324  
Abstract: Type IV collagens are basement membrane (BM) proteins expressed in all tissues including the vasculature. COL4A1 and COL4A2, the most abundant type IV collagens, form heterotrimers with a 2:1 stoichiometry and each heterotrimer forms a triple helix along the length of the collagenous domains. Recently, mutations in COL4A1 on chromosome 13q34, encoding the alpha1 chain of type IV collagen, have been linked to a spectrum of cerebral small-vessel disease in humans, including perinatal intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) with consequent porencephaly, adult-onset ICH, microbleeds, lacunar strokes, and leukoaraiosis, which follows an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance. This variable phenotype has been named the "COL4A1 stroke syndrome". In COL4A1 stroke syndrome most mutations are missense mutations involving a glycine residue, including G562E, G749S, G805R, G1130D, G1236R, G1423R, G720D, G1580R, and G755R. Mutations replacing a highly conserved hydrophobic glycine residue likely lead to synthesis of an abnormal protein with abnormal structure and inhibit heterotrimer secretion into the vascular BM, modify its structural properties (when imaged with electron microscopy BM is uneven, with inconsistent density and focal disruptions), and, thus, increase the fragility of the vessel wall when exposed to environmental factors. Although pathological changes in BM also occur in other tissues (mostly retina and kidney), the major site of vessel damage is the brain. In the present review article we will focus on the molecular basis of the COL4A1 stroke syndrome, summarize data on its variable phenotype, and explore additional questions concerning the possible genotype-phenotype correlations and the mechanisms leading to cerebral small-vessel disease in this clinically heterogeneous condition.
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Barbara Borroni, Antonella Alberici, Silvana Archetti, Enrico Magnani, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  New insights into biological markers of frontotemporal lobar degeneration spectrum.   Curr Med Chem 17: 10. 1002-1009  
Abstract: In the last decade, there has been enormous progress in our understanding of Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD). Published clinicopathological series have clearly demonstrated an overlap between the clinical syndromes subsumed under the term frontotemporal dementia and the Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP), and the Corticobasal Degeneration (CBD) syndrome. From a neuropathological point of view, two broad pathological subdivisions of FTLD are currently recognized: a) tau-positive pathology due to the accumulation of various forms of the microtubule-associated protein tau, that encompasses FTLD with Pick bodies, PSP and CBD, and b) tau-negative pathology, mainly characterized by ubiquitin/TDP-43-immunoreactive inclusions and in some cases due to Progranulin mutations. Several biological markers in cerebrospinal fluid and in blood have been evaluated to identify monogenic forms of FTLD and to differentiate either FTLD spectrum disorders or FTLD from other neurodegenerative disorders. The proposed biomarkers are primarily related to the mechanisms underlying the accumulation of the abnormal proteins in FTLD such as Tau, TDP-43 and Progranulin. These biomarkers may support the accurate diagnosis of the specific diseases causing FTLD, can be useful in assessing efficacy during pharmacological trials, and may help in identifying new molecular targets for treatment approaches. In this review, we summarise the most recent findings on biological markers and their usefulness in clinical practice for the diagnosis and management of FTLD.
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Barbara Borroni, Antonella Alberici, Mario Grassi, Marinella Turla, Orazio Zanetti, Angelo Bianchetti, Giorgio Dalla Volta, Renzo Rozzini, Nicola Gilberti, Giuseppe Bellelli, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Is frontotemporal lobar degeneration a rare disorder? Evidence from a preliminary study in Brescia county, Italy.   J Alzheimers Dis 19: 1. 111-116  
Abstract: Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD) has always been considered a rare disorder, but only a few epidemiologic studies are available. The aim of the present work was to ascertain all FTLD patients in a Northern Italy area from January 2001 to December 2008, and to estimate the disease prevalence. On the census day, 213 FTD patients were still alive, resulting in an overall prevalence of 17.6 per 100,000 inhabitants. The prevalence of FTLD in patients aged 45-65 years was 22 per 100,000 inhabitants (95% CI=17-27). The prevalence of FTLD was the highest in patients aged 66-75 (78 per 100,000 inhabitants, 95% CI=56-100), and it was still high over 75 years (54 per 100,000 inhabitants, 95% CI=36-69). FTLD is a more common form of dementia than previously recognized. Our results claimed that FTLD is not only an early-onset disorder, but it is frequent in advanced age as well.
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B Borroni, S Archetti, R Del Bo, A Papetti, E Buratti, C Bonvicini, C Agosti, M Cosseddu, M Turla, D Di Lorenzo, G Pietro Comi, M Gennarelli, A Padovani (2010)  TARDBP Mutations in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration: Frequency, Clinical Features, and Disease Course.   Rejuvenation Res Jul  
Abstract: Abstract The 43-kD transactive response (TAR)-DNA-binding protein (TARDBP) mutations have been demonstrated to be causative of sporadic and familial forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. More recently, these mutations have been reported in cases of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of TARDBP genetic variations in a large sample of consecutive patients with FTLD. A total of 252 FTLD patients were investigated. Each subject had a clinical and neuropsychological evaluation and a brain imaging study. The clinical diagnosis was confirmed by at least 1 year of follow up. The entire TARDBP gene, the intronic flaking regions, and the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR) were screened. Six genetic variations were identified in patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and FTD with motor neuron disease phenotypes. Two of these mutations, namely N267S and M359V, lead to amino acid changes within exon 6. We further identified three genetic variations, i.e., Y214Y, IVS-IV + 45C/T, and 5'-UTR G/A, that could potentially affect the normal splicing process as predicted by in silico analyses. None of these genetic variations was found in healthy age-matched controls. Moreover, we identified a previously described benign variant, A66A, in 5 patients. Our study has confirmed and extended the list of pathogenetic mutations in the TARDBP gene in both apparently sporadic and familial FTLD patients. This work further supports the need for TARDBP screening in FTLD. Also intronic splicing that affects mutations should be considered as well.
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Barbara Borroni, Chiara Costanzi, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Genetic susceptibility to behavioural and psychological symptoms in Alzheimer disease.   Curr Alzheimer Res 7: 2. 158-164 Mar  
Abstract: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive cognitive decline including loss of memory, orientation and reasoning. However, a relevant aspect of AD is the presence of a variety of behavioural and psychological symptoms in dementia (BPSD), beyond the well-known progressive cognitive impairment. Approximately 50% to 80% of patients diagnosed with AD present behavioural or psychiatric disturbances such as psychosis, depression, agitation, disinhibition, aggression, hyperactivity, and socially intrusive behaviours. These symptoms may be burdensome for physicians and caregivers and lead to earlier institutionalization and increased social and economic costs. In this view, recent literature has considered the likely genetic component of BPSD in AD, defining different clusters. Several studies have investigated whether the main recognised genetic risk factor for late-onset AD, namely the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene, is associated with BPSD, with conflicting results. The involvement of dopamine- or serotonin-related pathways and associated genetic variabilities has been demonstrated as being interesting candidates for the neuropsychiatry manifestations of dementia. Moreover, genetic variations of neurotrophins, such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), have been related to depression susceptibility in AD. In the present review, we summarise the current literature on genetic risk factors to BPSD susceptibility in AD and discuss future possible treatment strategies.
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Barbara Borroni, Cristian Bonvicini, Daniela Galimberti, Lucio Tremolizzo, Alice Papetti, Silvana Archetti, Marinella Turla, Antonella Alberici, Chiara Agosti, Enrico Premi, Ildebrando Appollonio, Innocenzo Rainero, Carlo Ferrarese, Massimo Gennarelli, Elio Scarpini, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Founder effect and estimation of the age of the Progranulin Thr272fs mutation in 14 Italian pedigrees with frontotemporal lobar degeneration.   Neurobiol Aging Oct  
Abstract: Progranulin (PGRN) mutations have been recognized to be monogenic causes of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). PGRN Thr272fs mutation in the Italian population has been previously identified. In the present study, we evaluated the occurrence of a founder effect studying 8 polymorphic microsatellite markers flanking the PGRN gene in 14 apparently unrelated families. We identified a common haplotype associated with PGRN Thr272fs carriers, assuming common ancestry. The inferred age analysis (range between 260 [95% credible set: 227-374] and 295 [95% credible set: 205-397] generations) places the introduction of the mutation back to the Neolithic era when the Celts, the population of that period, settled in Northern Italy. PGRN Thr272fs mutation appears to be as either behavioral frontotemporal dementia (80%) or primary progressive aphasia (20%), it was equally distributed between male and female, and the mean age at onset was 59.6 ± 5.9 (range 53-68). In 14 families, autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance was present in 64.2% of cases. No clinical predictors of disease onset were demonstrated. The identification of a large cohort of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) patients with homogeneous genetic background well may be used in the search of disease modulators to elucidate genotype-phenotype correlations of progranulopathies.
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Barbara Borroni, Carlo Cerini, Silvana Archetti, Enrico Premi, Maura Cosseddu, Maria Ferrari, Giuseppe Bellelli, Roberto Gasparotti, Luigi Caimi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Cerebrospinal Fluid Tau in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration: Clinical, Neuroimaging, and Prognostic Correlates.   J Alzheimers Dis Nov  
Abstract: Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) refers to heterogeneous clinical and biological conditions. In FTLD, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tau levels have been reported highly variable. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether CSF tau might be the hallmark of a distinct FTLD phenotype. Fifty-five FTLD patients, who underwent CSF analysis, were considered in the present study. In each patient, a wide standardized neuropsychological evaluation, and CSF tau, phospho-tau, and amyloid-β (Aβ) dosages were performed. Each patient was followed-up to five years, and outcomes carefully recorded. In a subgroup of patients (n = 24), magnetic resonance imaging scanning was performed, by using voxel-based morphometry, for grey matter investigation. The higher the CSF tau levels, the worse the neuropsychological and neuroimaging pattern, mainly characterized by greater language disturbances and left temporal grey matter loss. The same pattern, even if less significant, was associated with CSF phospho-tau, while CSF Aβ levels did not play any influence on FTLD phenotype. FTLD patients with high CSF tau showed poor prognosis compared to those with low CSF tau (p = 0.031). In FTLD, CSF tau levels might be considered a marker of neurodegeneration, associated with a specific clinical and neuroimaging picture, and significantly related to poor outcome. Further studies aimed at defining the biological underpinnings of these findings are warranted.
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Laura Serra, Roberta Perri, Lucia Fadda, Alessandro Padovani, Sebastiano Lorusso, Carla Pettenati, Carlo Caltagirone, Giovanni A Carlesimo (2010)  Relationship between cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances in Alzheimer's disease patients.   Behav Neurol 23: 3. 123-130 Jan  
Abstract: Background and aims: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder in which the patients can exhibit some behavioural disturbances in addition to cognitive impairment. The aims of the present study were to investigate the relationship between severity and rate of decline of the cognitive and behavioural impairment in patient with AD. Methods: 54 AD patients were assessed at baseline and after 12 months with the Mental Deterioration Battery (MDB), the Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive (ADAS-Cog) and the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI-10). Results: MDB was more accurate than ADAS-Cog in the early diagnosis of AD. Conversely, ADAS-Cog was more sensitive at revealing the progression of cognitive decline. Depression, Apathy and Anxiety are the most frequent and severe behavioural disturbances at baseline. At follow-up Delusions and Irritability increased significantly. Significant correlations were observed between severity of cognitive impairment and behavioural disorders both at baseline and in the progression rate passing from T0 to T12.Conclusions: Severity and progression rate of behavioural and cognitive alterations in patients with AD are significantly associated.
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Maurizio Paciaroni, Giancarlo Agnelli, Andrea Bertolini, Alessandro Pezzini, Alessandro Padovani, Valeria Caso, Michele Venti, Andrea Alberti, Rosa Antonietta Palmiero, Paolo Cerrato, Giorgio Silvestrelli, Alessia Lanari, Paolo Previdi, Francesco Corea, Alessandro Balducci, Roberto Ferri, Francesca Falcinelli, Esmeralda Filippucci, Paolo Chiocchi, Fabio Chiodo Grandi, Laura Ferigo, Rosa Musolino, Anna Bersano, Isabella Ghione, Simona Sacco, Antonio Carolei, Antonio Baldi, Walter Ageno (2010)  Risk of Recurrent Cerebrovascular Events in Patients with Cryptogenic Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack and Patent Foramen Ovale: The FORI (Foramen Ovale Registro Italiano) Study.   Cerebrovasc Dis 31: 2. 109-116 Nov  
Abstract: Background: The optimal management of patients with cryptogenic ischemic stroke found to have a patent foramen ovale (PFO) at diagnostic workup remains unclear. The aims of this observational multicenter study were to evaluate: (1) the risk of recurrent cerebrovascular events in patients with cryptogenic minor ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA) and PFO who either underwent percutaneous PFO closure or received only medical treatment, and (2) the risk factors associated with recurrent events. Methods: Consecutive patients (aged 55 years or less) with first-ever cryptogenic minor ischemic stroke or TIA and PFO were recruited in 13 Italian hospitals between January 2006 and September 2007 and followed up for 2 years. Results: 238 patients were included in the study (mean age 42.2 ± 10.0 years; 118 males); 117 patients (49.2%) received only antithrombotic therapy while 121 patients underwent percutaneous PFO closure (50.8%). Stroke as the qualifying event was more common in the medical treatment group (p = 0.01). The presence of atrial septal aneurysm and evidence of 20 bubbles or more on transcranial Doppler were more common in the PFO closure group (p = 0.002 and 0.02). Eight patients (6.6%) experienced a nonfatal complication during PFO closure. At the 2-year follow-up, 17 recurrent events (TIA or stroke; 3.6% per year) were observed; 7 of these events (2.9% per year) occurred in the percutaneous PFO closure group and 10 events (4.2% per year) in the medical treatment group. The rate of recurrent stroke was 0.4% per year in patients who underwent percutaneous closure (1 event) and 3.4% per year in patients who received medical treatment (8 events). On multivariate analysis, percutaneous closure was not protective in preventing recurrent TIA or stroke (OR = 0.1, 95% CI = 0.02-1.5, p = 0.1), while it was barely protective in preventing recurrent stroke (OR = 0.1, 95% CI = 0.0-1.0, p = 0.053). Conclusions: The results of this observational, nonrandomized study suggest that PFO closure might be superior to medical therapy for the prevention of recurrent stroke. Periprocedural complications were the trade-off for this clinical benefit. Controlled randomized clinical trials comparing percutaneous closure with medical management are required.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Mario Grassi, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Irene Volonghi, Alessia Giossi, Paolo Costa, Manuel Cappellari, Mauro Magoni, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Influence of acute blood pressure on short- and mid-term outcome of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke.   J Neurol Nov  
Abstract: The optimal management of blood pressure (BP) during acute stroke is controversial. We aimed to investigate whether (1) acute BP has differential impact on clinical outcome of ischemic stroke (IS) and spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), and (2) the magnitude of such an effect varies from the very acute phase to the postacute phase of the two diseases. BP values were automatically recorded at 15-min intervals within the first 48 h in consecutive patients with stroke onset less than 24 h before Stroke Unit admission. Growth mixture models were applied to evaluate the association between binary outcome measures [(1) early neurological deterioration (defined as a ≥4-point increase in 48-h National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS] score), (2) 90-day unfavorable functional status (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] 3-6), and (3) 90-day mortality] and the latent heterogeneity of maximum BP trajectories over time, expressed by two (high/low) BP latent classes within stroke groups. After exclusions, 264 patients (198 IS, 66 ICH) were included. High systolic BP (sBP) class was associated with (1) a direct ~15% increased risk of early neurological deterioration [risk difference (RD), +0.151; 95% confidence interval (CI) +0.039 to +0.263] and ~4% worse 48-h outcome for ICH with respect to IS (RD, +0.038; 95% CI +0.005 to +0.071), (2) a ~28% increased risk of 90-day unfavorable outcome in the group of patients with ICH with respect to IS [IRD = RD(ICH) - RD(IS), +0.289; 95% CI +0.010 to +0.571], and (3) no significant effect on 90-day mortality. The influence of acute BP values on mid-term stroke outcome varies depending on the stroke subtype.
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Orso Bugiani, Giorgio Giaccone, Giacomina Rossi, Michela Mangieri, Raffaella Capobianco, Michela Morbin, Giulia Mazzoleni, Chiara Cupidi, Gabriella Marcon, Annarita Giovagnoli, Alberto Bizzi, Giuseppe Di Fede, Gianfranco Puoti, Francesco Carella, Andrea Salmaggi, Alessandro Romorini, Giorgio M Patruno, Mauro Magoni, Alessandro Padovani, Fabrizio Tagliavini (2010)  Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis associated with the E693K mutation of APP.   Arch Neurol 67: 8. 987-995 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To report the clinical, genetic, neuroimaging, and neuropathologic studies of patients with the hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis linked to the APP E693K mutation. DESIGN: Case series. Clinical details and laboratory results were collected by direct evaluation and previous medical records. DNA analysis was carried out in several affected subjects and healthy individuals. Neuropathologic examination was performed in 2 subjects. SETTING: Southern Lombardy, Italy. Patients Individuals with and without amyloidosis in 4 unrelated Italian families (N = 37). Main Outcome Measure Genotype-phenotype relationship. RESULTS: The affected individuals presented with recurrent headache and multiple strokes, followed by epilepsy and cognitive decline in most of them. The disease was inherited with an autosomal dominant trait and segregated with the APP E693K mutation. Neuroimaging demonstrated small to large hematomas, subarachnoid bleeding, scars with hemosiderin deposits, small infarcts, and leukoaraiosis. Amyloid-beta immunoreactivity was detected in the wall of leptomeningeal and parenchymal vessels and in the neuropil, whereas phosphorylated tau, neurofibrillary changes, and neuritic plaques were absent. CONCLUSIONS: These findings expand the number of APP mutations linked to hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis, reinforcing the link between this phenotype and codon 693 of APP.
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Giuseppe Bellelli, Giovanni Buccino, Bruno Bernardini, Alessandro Padovani, Marco Trabucchi (2010)  Action observation treatment improves recovery of postsurgical orthopedic patients: evidence for a top-down effect?   Arch Phys Med Rehabil 91: 10. 1489-1494 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess whether action observation treatment (AOT) may also improve motor recovery in postsurgical orthopedic patients, in addition to conventional physiotherapy. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Department of rehabilitation. PARTICIPANTS: Patients (N=60) admitted to our department postorthopedic surgery were randomly assigned to either a case (n=30) or control (n=30) group. Exclusion criteria were age 18 years or younger and 90 years or older, Mini-Mental State Examination score of 21 of 30 or lower, no ambulating order, advanced vision impairment, malignancy, pneumonia, or heart failure. INTERVENTIONS: All participants underwent conventional physiotherapy. In addition, patients in the case group were asked to observe video clips showing daily actions and to imitate them afterward. Patients in the control group were asked to observe video clips with no motor content and to execute the same actions as patients in the case group afterward. Participants were scored on functional scales at baseline and after treatment by a physician blinded to group assignment. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: Changes in FIM and Tinetti scale scores, and dependence on walking aids. RESULTS: At baseline, groups did not differ in clinical and functional scale scores. After treatment, patients in the case group scored better than patients in the control group (FIM total score, P=.02; FIM motor subscore, P=.001; Tinetti scale score, P=.04); patients in the case group were assigned more frequently to 1 crutch (P=.01). CONCLUSIONS: In addition to conventional physiotherapy, AOT is effective in the rehabilitation of postsurgical orthopedic patients. The present results strongly support top-down effects of this treatment in motor recovery, even in nonneurologic patients.
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Elena Marcello, Roberta Epis, Claudia Saraceno, Fabrizio Gardoni, Barbara Borroni, Flaminio Cattabeni, Alessandro Padovani, Monica Di Luca (2010)  SAP97-mediated local trafficking is altered in Alzheimer disease patients' hippocampus.   Neurobiol Aging Oct  
Abstract: Synapse-asssociated protein-97 (SAP97) is responsible for the trafficking of both glutamate receptor subunits, GluR1 and NR2A, and α-secretase ADAM10 to the synaptic membrane. Here we evaluate the trafficking capability of SAP97 in Alzheimer disease (AD) patients' brain. We analyzed autoptic hippocampus and superior frontal gyrus, respectively as an affected and a less affected area, from 6 AD patients (Braak 4) and 6 healthy controls. In hippocampus, but not in superior frontal gyrus, of AD patients, ADAM10 and GluR1 synaptic membrane levels are altered while NR2A localization is not affected. Both immunoprecipitation and pull-down assays demonstrated that SAP97 failed to correctly couple to ADAM10 and GluR1, but not to NR2A. These findings not only indicate SAP97 as a point of convergence between amyloid cascade and synaptic failure in AD, but also allow a different interpretation of AD which can be now perceived as synaptic trafficking defect pathology.
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F Forette, A Padovani, K Berthet, S Knox (2010)  Implications of the Impact Survey for payors across Europe.   J Nutr Health Aging 14: 7. 553-557  
Abstract: People involved with development of health care policy must be appreciative of the social and economic challenges that will likely develop as a result of the rise in Alzheimer's disease (AD) as the 21st century progresses. Their attitudes, perceptions and understanding regarding AD were captured in the IMPACT survey, a 30-minute Web-based questionnaire. Fifty health policy managers and decision-makers (payors) were recruited, 10 each from 5 European countries--France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom. Most payors felt that AD was underdiagnosed and undertreated in their country (80% and 68%, respectively). Half of all payors felt that their government did not invest enough in treating AD, and 30% felt their government hindered access to drug therapy. Payors believed that treatment should be initiated as early as possible after a diagnosis of AD (82%), and that early treatment can delay progression of the disease (82%). Even more than caregivers, payors agreed that AD can have devastating effects on the family of the sufferer (90% vs 75%; P<0.05). Payors more often cited cancer, stroke and heart disease than AD as affecting their budgets, but cited AD more often than depression, diabetes, HIV/AIDs and arthritis. Cost savings were seen as the most important factor regarding policy decisions. These attitudes of the surveyed payors towards AD and the patients and caregivers affected by it suggest that they may advocate for national and international policies that will facilitate earlier diagnosis and improved access to treatment.
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Gianfranco Spalletta, Massimo Musicco, Alesandro Padovani, Luca Rozzini, Roberta Perri, Lucia Fadda, Vincenzo Canonico, Alberto Trequattrini, Carla Pettenati, Carlo Caltagirone, Katie Palmer (2010)  Neuropsychiatric symptoms and syndromes in a large cohort of newly diagnosed, untreated patients with Alzheimer disease.   Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 18: 11. 1026-1035 Nov  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Neuropsychiatric symptoms are common in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD). Treatment for both AD and psychiatric disturbances may affect the clinical observed pattern and comorbidity. The authors aimed to identify whether particular neuropsychiatric syndromes occur in untreated patients with AD, establish the severity of syndromes, and investigate the relationship between specific neuropsychiatric syndromes and AD disease severity. DESIGN: Cross-sectional, multicenter, clinical study. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1,015 newly diagnosed, untreated outpatients with AD from five Italian memory clinics were consecutively enrolled in the study from January 2003 to December 2005. MEASUREMENTS: All patients underwent thorough examination by clinical neurologists/geriatricians, including neuropsychiatric symptom evaluation with the Neuropsychiatric Inventory. RESULTS: Factor analysis revealed five distinct neuropsychiatric syndromes: the apathetic syndrome (as unique syndrome) was the most frequent, followed by affective syndrome (anxiety and depression), psychomotor (agitation, irritability, and aberrant motor behavior), psychotic (delusions and hallucinations), and manic (disinhibition and euphoria) syndromes. More than three quarters of patients with AD presented with one or more of the syndromes (N = 790, 77.8%), and more than half exhibited clinically significant severity of symptoms (N = 603, 59.4%). With the exception of the affective one, all syndromes showed an increased occurrence with increasing severity of dementia. CONCLUSIONS: The authors' study supports the use of a syndrome approach for neuropsychiatric evaluation in patients with AD. Individual neuropsychiatric symptoms can be reclassified into five distinct psychiatric syndromes. Clinicians should incorporate a thorough psychiatric and neurologic examination of patients with AD and consider therapeutic strategies that focus on psychiatric syndromes, rather than specific individual symptoms.
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Roberta Epis, Elena Marcello, Fabrizio Gardoni, Csaba Vastagh, Matteo Malinverno, Claudia Balducci, Alessio Colombo, Barbara Borroni, Hugo Vara, Mario Dell'Agli, Flamino Cattabeni, Maurizio Giustetto, Tiziana Borsello, Gianluigi Forloni, Alessandro Padovani, Monica Di Luca (2010)  Blocking ADAM10 synaptic trafficking generates a model of sporadic Alzheimer's disease.   Brain 133: 11. 3323-3335 Nov  
Abstract: We describe here an innovative, non-transgenic animal model of Alzheimer's disease. This model mimics early stages of sporadic disease, which represents the vast majority of cases. The model was obtained by interfering with the complex between a disintegrin and metalloproteinase domain containing protein 10 (ADAM10), the main α-secretase candidate, and its partner, synapse-associated protein 97, a protein of the postsynaptic density-membrane associated guanylate kinase family. Association of ADAM10 with synapse-associated protein 97 governs enzyme trafficking and activity at synapses. Interfering with the ADAM10/synapse-associated protein 97 complex for 2 weeks by means of a cell-permeable peptide strategy is sufficient to shift the metabolism of the amyloid precursor protein towards amyloidogenesis and allows the reproduction of initial phases of sporadic Alzheimer's disease. After 2 weeks of treatment, we detected progressive Alzheimer's disease-like neuropathology, with an increase of β-amyloid aggregate production and of tau hyperphosphorylation, and a selective alteration of N-methyl-d-aspartic acid receptor subunit composition in the postsynaptic compartment of mouse brain. Behavioural and electrophysiological deficits were also induced by peptide treatment.
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Alessandro Padovani, Maura Cosseddu, Enrico Premi, Silvana Archetti, Alice Papetti, Chiara Agosti, Barbara Bigni, Carlo Cerini, Barbara Paghera, Giuseppe Bellelli, Barbara Borroni (2010)  The Speech and Language FOXP2 Gene Modulates the Phenotype of Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration.   J Alzheimers Dis Sep  
Abstract: The FOXP2 gene is mutated in a severe monogenic form of speech and language deficits, but no study on the influence of genetic variations within FOXP2 in neurological disorders characterized by language impairment is available yet. In the present study, we investigated the impact of common FOXP2 polymorphisms with regard to frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). Two-hundred ten FTLD patients underwent clinical and a wide standardized neuropsychological examination as well as brain imaging study. In all patients, and in 200 age-matched healthy controls, four FOXP2 polymorphisms were evaluated, namely rs2396753, rs1456031, rs17137124 and rs1852469. SPECT images were analyzed by Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM5). No significant differences of the four FOXP2 polymorphisms in genotype distribution and allele frequency between FTLD and controls were observed. A significant and specific association between rs1456031 TT and rs17137124 TT genotypes and verbal fluency scores was reported. The two polymorphisms showed an addictive effect. When the analysis was computed on the number of observations over time, and 391 assessments considered, comparable results were obtained. FTLD patients carrying at-risk polymorphisms showed greater hypoperfusion in the frontal areas, namely the left inferior frontal gyrus, and putamen, compared to the non-carriers (p < 0.005). Genetic variations within FOXP2 do not represent a genetic risk to FTLD per se, but modulate FTLD presentation when disease is overt, affecting language performances and leading to hypoperfusion in language-associated brain areas.
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J Bond, N Graham, A Padovani, J Mackell, S Knox, J Atkinson (2010)  Screening for cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's disease and other dementias: opinions of European caregivers, payors, physicians and the general public.   J Nutr Health Aging 14: 7. 558-562  
Abstract: The IMPACT survey queried physicians, caregivers, payors and members of the general public from 5 European countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) regarding their opinions towards screening for Alzheimer's disease (AD) as part of a 30-minute Web-based questionnaire conducted between April and May 2009. A larger proportion of caregivers (84%) and members of the general public (80%) than of physicians (56%) or payors (40%) viewed routine screening for AD as extremely or very important (P < 0.001 for caregivers or general public vs physicians or payors). When asked if everyone should be routinely screened for AD at age 65, a smaller proportion of physicians (42%) and payors (44%) than members of the general public (81%) or caregivers (80%) agreed (P < 0.001 for caregivers or general public vs physicians or payors). These opinions were generally consistent across the 5 countries for each respondent group. A notable exception was physician respondents from Italy, where most generalists and specialists actually favoured screening. Overall, generalists had a more positive attitude towards screening than specialists. The most frequently cited reason given by those who did not favour routine screening at age 65 was screening inaccuracy. This article discusses these results in relation to what screening is, when to screen and the barriers to screening. Despite the majority of IMPACT respondents being in favour of screening for AD, the evidence to support the introduction of population screening for cognitive impairment is not available; however, the importance of optimal identification of AD and other dementias in primary care should be a priority for community health professionals and payors. In order to do this effectively, further work is required to identify good assessment guidelines for use during opportunistic screening for cognitive impairment in primary care.
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Mauro Scarpelli, Maria Sofia Cotelli, Michelangelo Mancuso, Giuliano Tomelleri, Paola Tonin, Carla Baronchelli, Valentina Vielmi, Valeria Gregorelli, Alice Todeschini, Alessandro Padovani, Massimiliano Filosto (2010)  Current options in the treatment of mitochondrial diseases.   Recent Pat CNS Drug Discov 5: 3. 203-209 Nov  
Abstract: Mitochondrial diseases (MD) are disorders caused by an impairment of the mitochondrial respiratory chain function. They are usually progressive, isolated or multi-system diseases and have variable times of onset. Because mitochondria have their own DNA (mtDNA), MD can be caused by mutations in both mtDNA and nuclear DNA (nDNA). The complexity of genetic control of mitochondrial function is in part responsible for the intra- and inter-familiar clinical heterogeneity of this class of diseases. Despite the remarkable progress in understanding of the molecular bases of these disorders, therapy of MD is quite inadequate. Present options of treatment mainly include physical, pharmacological and gene therapy approaches. Aerobic exercise and physical therapy is useful to prevent or correct deconditioning and may improve exercise tolerance. Pharmacological approach is based on removing noxious metabolites, using reactive oxygen species scavengers and administrating vitamins and cofactors which is especially important in case of primary deficiencies of specific compounds such as Coenzyme Q10. Gene therapy is fascinating but it is difficult to apply because of polyplasmy and heteroplasmy. Experimental methods include gene shifting, allotopic expression, mitochondrial transfection or correcting mtDNA mutations with specific restriction endonucleases. Here, we discussed some recent patents. Progresses in each of these fields may open interesting perspectives for the future.
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Barbara Borroni, Matteo Malinverno, Fabrizio Gardoni, Mario Grassi, Lucilla Parnetti, Chiara Agosti, Antonella Alberici, Enrico Premi, Ubaldo Bonuccelli, Roberto Gasparotti, Paolo Calabresi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  A combination of CSF tau ratio and midsaggital midbraintopons atrophy for the early diagnosis of progressive supranuclear palsy.   J Alzheimers Dis 22: 1. 195-203  
Abstract: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tau ratio decrease (33kDa/55kDa forms) and mid-saggital midbrain-to-pons (MP) atrophy have been suggested as diagnostic markers for progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). The usefulness of their combined evaluation has never been tested. We evaluated the CSF tau ratio and the MP atrophy as a combined marker for early identification of PSP. A total of 87 subjects, namely 18 PSP, 25 controls (CON), 16 corticobasal syndrome (CBS), and 28 frontotemporal dementia (FTD), were included. Each subject underwent a lumbar puncture and a conventional MRI scan to assess CSF tau 33 kDa/55 kDa ratio and mid-saggital MP measure, respectively. CSF tau ratio and MP ratio were significantly reduced in PSP patients when compared to CON, CBS, and FTD (p< 0.001). Data-based "optimal" combination of CSF tau ratio and MP measure was defined, and the combined marker TrMp= sqrt[3]{CSF Tau ratio}} × {MP ratio} was considered. Considering the combined marker, the difference between the area under the curve (dAUC) of the receiver operating characteristic analysis in PSP versus the various subgroups was higher by about 10% than that obtained by each marker individually. In PSP versus others, a proposed "best" cut-off of TrMP = 0.182 resulted in 94.2% sensitivity and 84.0% specificity. When patients with onset of symptoms ≤ 2 years were included, TrMP resulted significantly decreased in PSP compared to CBS (p< 0.001) and FTD (p< 0.001). The combined marker increases the discriminative power in identifying PSP and suggests that the interplay of different markers should be considered in future trials to enhance diagnostic accuracy from the early stages.
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Barbara Vicini-Chilovi, Maddalena Riva, Marta Conti, Marina Zanetti, Salvatore Caratozzolo, Gulia Mombelli, Erik Bertoletti, Luca Rozzini, Alessandro Padovani (2010)  Does age at observation time affect the clinical presentation of mild cognitive impairment?   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 30: 3. 212-218 09  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: To date, there are no published data investigating the role of age in the clinical and neuropsychological presentation of mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The aim of the study was to evaluate whether age at the time of evaluation modulates clinical, functional or cognitive profiles in MCI subjects. METHODS: A total of 167 outpatients with a clinical diagnosis of MCI were consecutively enrolled and entered in the study. Clinical and demographic characteristics were carefully recorded. Each patient underwent a wide neuropsychological standardized assessment. RESULTS: MCI subjects were divided into 3 groups according to their age at observation time: 58 MCI patients were classified as young (≤ 69 years), 89 as old (70-79 years) and 20 as very old (≥ 80 years). The 3 groups did not differ in demographic characteristics, general cognitive functions and memory impairment. Very old MCI subjects showed a significantly greater impairment than younger MCI patients in cognitive domains involving executive functions. In particular, very old MCI patients were more frequently classified as having multiple-domain amnestic MCI. CONCLUSION: Present data highlight that the clinical presentation of MCI is affected by age: at presentation, very old MCI subjects show a worse performance than younger MCI subjects on multiple abilities, particularly on executive functions.
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2009
Alessandro Pezzini, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Alessia Giossi, Irene Volonghi, Mario Grassi, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  The migraine-ischemic stroke connection: potential pathogenic mechanisms.   Curr Mol Med 9: 2. 215-226 Mar  
Abstract: Strong epidemiological evidence indicates that migraine, especially migraine with aura, is associated with increased risk of ischemic stroke. However, the precise mechanisms of such a relation are currently not fully elucidated and are still a matter of speculation. Migraine may directly cause an ischemic event (i.e, migrainous infarct), by inducing cerebral microcirculatory vasoconstriction (cortical spreading depression-related oligemia), intracerebral large vessels spasm, and vascular endothelium-related hypercoagulability. On the other hand, migraine may predispose to cerebral ischemia outside of a migraine attack by affecting endothelial function, alone or in combination with traditional vascular risk factors, or by interacting with pre-existent stroke susceptibility conditions (i.e, patent foramen ovale). At least theoretically, the migraine-stroke link may be the consequence of the unfavourable effect of migraine-specific drugs (i.e, triptans or ergot alkaloids). Finally, migraine and ischemic vascular events may be linked via genetic pathways, certain genes playing a role on both diseases and influencing their relation. The coexistence of ischemic stroke and migraine in the context of specific syndromes (i.e, CADASIL) characterized by peculiar phenotype, proven inherited background and chronic alterations of the wall of cerebral small vessel arteries suggests that migraine and ischemic stroke may be the end phenotype of common pathogenic mechanisms. How to identify those migraineurs at highest risk of ischemic stroke and whether stroke can be prevented by specific therapeutic strategies are the goals of future research.
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B Borroni, M Grassi, C Agosti, E Premi, A Alberici, B Paghera, S Lucchini, M Di Luca, D Perani, A Padovani (2009)  Survival in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and related disorders: latent class predictors and brain functional correlates.   Rejuvenation Res 12: 1. 33-44 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Establishing survival rate in frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is a clinical challenge for defining disease outcomes and monitoring therapeutic interventions. Using the latent profile analysis (LPA) approach, we have previously suggested that FTLD patients can be grouped into specific phenotypes- "pseudomanic behavior" (LC1), "cognitive" (LC2), and "pseudodepressed behavior" (LC3)-on the basis of neuropsychological, functional, and behavioral data. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the rate of survival in FTLD, to identify predictors of survival, and to determine the likely usefulness of LPA in defining prognosis. METHODS: A total of 252 FTLD patients entered the study. A clinical evaluation and standardized assessment were carried out, as well as a brain imaging study. LPA on neuropsychological, functional, and behavioral data was performed. Each patient was followed up over a 5-year period, and institutionalization or death was considered. RESULTS: The survival rate was associated neither with demographic characteristics, co-morbidities, family history for dementia, nor clinical diagnosis. The presence of the three LC phenotypes was confirmed by LPA. A different survival rate was predicted by LCs, the worse prognosis being found in LC1 (hazard ratio [HR] = 15.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 7.2-34.9, p < 0.001, reference LC3). LC2 had a worse prognosis compared to LC3 (HR = 2.07, 95% CI = 0.98-4.37, p = 0.06). Greater hypoperfusion in the orbitomesial frontal cortex was specifically associated with LC1 compared with the other LCs. CONCLUSIONS: A data-driven approach regarding neuropsychological and behavioral assessment might be useful in clinical practice for defining a FTLD prognosis and hopefully will lead to the possibility of identifying patient groups for the evaluation of treatment response in future trials.
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Barbara Borroni, Antonella Alberici, Chiara Agosti, Maura Cosseddu, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  Pattern of behavioral disturbances in corticobasal degeneration syndrome and progressive supranuclear palsy.   Int Psychogeriatr 21: 3. 463-468 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A careful characterization of behavioral abnormalities in corticobasal degeneration syndrome (CBDS) and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) by reliable tools is still lacking. Literature data provided evidence of the usefulness of the Frontal Behavioral Inventory (FBI) to operationalize such disturbances, particularly in the frontotemporal lobar degeneration spectrum. The study aimed to evaluate the frequency and pattern of presentation of behavioral disturbances in a large sample of CBDS and PSP patients by FBI. METHODS: Sixty-eight CBDS and 57 PSP patients entered the study and underwent a standardized clinical and neuropsychological battery, and a structural brain imaging study. Behavioral disturbances were carefully analyzed by FBI. RESULTS: FBI scores were relatively low in both groups, being 6.7 +/- 8.2 and 5.6 +/- 6.1 in CBDS and PSP, respectively. Comparison of the behavioral profile between CBDS and PSP patients showed significant differences in apathy were more frequent in the latter (57.9% vs. 33.8%, P = 0.007), and the presence of alien hand/apraxia more frequent in the former group 39.7% vs. 10.5%, P = 0.001). Apathy correlated neither with age nor with motor disturbances as measured by UPDRS-III. Overall, the most frequent behavioral abnormalities present in both groups (>25%) were aspontaneity and logopenia. Aphasia (27.9%) and irritability (35.3%) were more frequent in CBDS compared to PSP, even if not statistically different. DISCUSSION: The present study has provided measures of behavioral disturbances in a population of PSP and CBDS patients, and further confirms the usefulness of the FBI scale.
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B Borroni, S Archetti, C Costanzi, M Grassi, M Ferrari, A Radeghieri, L Caimi, C Caltagirone, M Di Luca, A Padovani (2009)  Role of BDNF Val66Met functional polymorphism in Alzheimer's disease-related depression.   Neurobiol Aging 30: 9. 1406-1412 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The gene encoding brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) has been suggested as a candidate for major depression, and for depression susceptibility in different neurological and psychiatric diseases. No study has investigated the role of BDNF genetic variation and depressive symptoms in Alzheimer's disease (AD). OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the genetic contribution of BDNF Val66Met functional polymorphism to AD-related depression. METHODS: Two-hundred and sixty-four AD patients underwent clinical and neuropsychological examination as well as an evaluation of behavioral and psychiatric disturbances. They were subsequently divided into two subgroups according to the presence (AD-D) or the absence (AD-nD), based on DSM-IV criteria for depression in AD. In each subject, BDNF Val66Met functional polymorphism and apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype were evaluated. RESULTS: In our sample, 35.2% of patients (n=93) reported AD-related depressive symptoms. Compared to patients bearing no polymorphisms (BDNF G/G), BDNF G/A carriers showed more than twofold-time risk (OR=2.38; 95%CI=1.38-4.13), and BDNF A/A carriers had a threefold-time risk (OR=3.04; 95%CI=1.15-8.00) for depression in AD. Accordingly, considering the allele frequencies, BDNF A allele was significantly over-represented in AD-D (32.8%) compared to AD-nD (19.0%) (OR=2.08; 95%CI=1.38-3.13). An association between the number of carried A allele and the severity of depressive symptoms was observed (P<0.002). No effect of APOE genotype on risk for depression was found. CONCLUSIONS: The present findings provide evidence of BDNF genetic variation role in the susceptibility to AD-related depression. This study puts emphasis on the usefulness of considering genetic background for better defining individualized risk profiles in AD.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Matteo Peli, Marta Conti, Renzo Rozzini, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  Anxiety symptoms in mild cognitive impairment.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 24: 3. 300-305 Mar  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Anxiety disorders are less well studied in elderly people than other disorders such as depression. In particular the diagnosis of anxiety is more difficult in patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) since the current definition of MCI does not mention neuropsychiatric symptoms. OBJECTIVES: To validate the Italian version of Geriatric Anxiety Inventory (GAI), an instrument that measures dimensional anxiety in elderly people, and assess whether MCI subjects with anxiety symptoms show different neuropsychological profiles in comparison with MCI without anxiety symptoms. METHODS: Fifty-seven outpatients with MCI were consecutively recruited. All patients were assessed using a complete neuropsychological battery to detect the cognitive impairment, and the GAI for the presence of anxiety symptoms. RESULTS: Anxiety + patients (GAI >or= 10) show more behavioral and psychological disturbances than patients with Anxiety- (GAI < 10); in particular they had more agitation, anxiety, depression and more sleep disorders. Moreover, Anxiety + patients are more compromised on instrumental daily functions and on executive functions evaluated with Trail Making B test (TMB). Linear Regression analysis was completed to estimate the coefficients of the linear equation, involving neuropsychological, psychobehavioural and functional characteristics: the executive functions (TMB) are the only variable independently related to the presence of anxiety disturbances. CONCLUSIONS: Executive functions are independently related to anxiety disorders in MCI patients. We hypothesized that the strict interaction between anxiety symptoms and executive functions could depend on specific pathological features at the level of caudate nucleus characterizing early phases of dementia.
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Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Marta Conti, Marina Zanetti, Ilenia Mazzù, Luca Rozzini, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  Differential impact of apathy and depression in the development of dementia in mild cognitive impairment patients.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 27: 4. 390-398 04  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Neuropsychiatric symptoms may accompany mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and assist in identifying incipient dementia. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of apathy and depression in the conversion to dementia among MCI subjects. METHODS: 124 MCI outpatients were investigated. Diagnosis of apathy and depression was based on clinical criteria. The main endpoint was the development of dementia within 2 years from the enrolment. RESULTS: 50 (40.3%) subjects were classified as MCI normal, 38 (30.7%) as MCI depressed, 21 (16.9%) as MCI depressed-apathetic and 15 (12.1%) as apathetic. The rates of conversion were 24% for MCI normal, 7.9% for MCI depressed, 19% for MCI depressed-apathetic and 60% for MCI apathetic. Diagnosis of apathy was a risk factor for conversion apart from age, functional and cognitive status at baseline (OR = 7.07; 95% CI 1.9-25.1; p = 0.003). In contrast, MCI depressed subjects had a reduced risk of conversion (OR = 0.10; 95% CI 0.02-0.4; p = 0.001). CONCLUSION: These findings argue for a differential role of apathy and depression in the development of dementia, and suggest the need of dissecting in MCI patients apathy and depression symptoms in the reading of mood disorders.
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B Borroni, F Gardoni, L Parnetti, L Magno, M Malinverno, E Saggese, P Calabresi, M G Spillantini, A Padovani, M Di Luca (2009)  Pattern of Tau forms in CSF is altered in progressive supranuclear palsy.   Neurobiol Aging 30: 1. 34-40 Jan  
Abstract: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) total Tau levels vary widely in neurodegenerative disorders, thus being not useful in their discrimination over Alzheimer disease. No CSF marker for progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is currently available. The aim of this study was to characterise and measure Tau forms in order to verify the differential patterns among neurodegenerative disorders. Seventy-eight patients with neurodegenerative disorders and 26 controls were included in the study. Each patient underwent a standardised clinical and neuropsychological evaluation, MRI, and CSF total-Tau and phospho-Tau dosage. In CSF and cerebral cortex, a quantitative immunoprecipitation was developed. An extended (55 kDa), and a truncated (33 kDa) forms of Tau were recognised. CSF samples were assayed, the optical density of the two Tau forms was measured, and the ratio calculated (Tau ratio, 33 kDa/55 kDa forms). Tau ratio 33 kDa/55 kDa was significantly decreased in patients with PSP (0.46+/-0.16) when compared to controls, including healthy subjects (1.16+/-0.46, P=0.002) and Alzheimer disease (1.38+/-0.68, P<0.001), and when compared to frontotemporal dementia (0.98+/-0.30, P=0.008) or corticobasal degeneration syndrome (0.98+/-0.48, P=0.02). Moreover, in PSP patients Tau form ratio was lower than in other neurodegenerative extrapyramidal disorders, such as Parkinson disease (1.16+/-0.26, P=0.002) and dementia with lewy bodies (1.44+/-0.48, P<0.001). Tau ratio 33 kDa/55 kDa did not correlate either with demographic characteristics, cognitive performances or with motor impairment severity. Truncated Tau production shows a different pattern in PSP compared to other neurodegenerative disorders, supporting the view of disease-specific pathological pathways. These findings are promising in suggesting the identification of a marker for PSP diagnosis in clinical practice.
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Antonella Alberici, Barbara Borroni, Filippo Manelli, Simona Griffini, Paola Zavarise, Alessandro Padovani, Giorgio Dalla Volta (2009)  Topiramate weight loss in migraine patients.   J Neurol Sci 278: 1-2. 64-65 Mar  
Abstract: Topiramate (TPM) is generally recognized efficacious and safe in migraine prevention. A significant proportion of patients undergoing TPM administration may show weight loss. In epileptic subjects, high body mass index (BMI) was found to be predictive of weight loss under TPM therapy. We therefore aimed to study whether common clinical determinants may be associated to TPM weigh loss in migraine patients. In our clinical series, high BMI was not found a predictor of weight loss under TPM treatment. Unknown genetic and environmental factors that may determine the courses of weight loss under TPM therapy are still do be identified.
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Anna Rosati, Alessia Tomassini, Bianca Pollo, Claudia Ambrosi, Andreas Schwarz, Alessandro Padovani, Bruno Bonetti (2009)  Epilepsy in cerebral glioma: timing of appearance and histological correlations.   J Neurooncol 93: 3. 395-400 Jul  
Abstract: PURPOSE: A prospective study of patients with glioma was carried out. Special attention was paid to the first seizure, to the histology, and to the efficacy and prophylactic role of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). Prognostic factors were analyzed. METHODS: Between February 1st 2004 and April 1st 2006 patients who underwent surgical treatment at the Neurosurgery Department of Bolzano for primary or recurrent glioma were prospectively followed until April 1st 2007. Seizures at onset occurring in the absence of interictal epileptiform abnormalities were regarded as remote symptomatic seizures and not treated. RESULTS: Sixty-four individuals were registered in the study; epilepsy diagnosis was made in 27 cases and in 24 of these seizures were the onset symptom. The correlation with histological grading showed that seizures were more frequent in low-grade glioma and in secondary glioblastoma. Although epilepsy was less frequent in high-grade glioma, in these patients seizures were more difficult to control. Poor seizure control was associated with motor and sensitive focal seizures and presence of neurological deficit. Patients without epilepsy and not taking AEDs never developed seizures during the follow-up. DISCUSSION: Our study clearly shows that epilepsy is more frequent in low-grade gliomas but seizures are more difficult to control in high-grade gliomas. In both cases seizures are a quite exclusive symptom at the onset that never appears during the stable course of the disease. Amongst glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), epilepsy is more frequent in GBM developing through progression from low-grade astrocitoma. Moreover, our study strongly indicates that the prophylactic use of AEDs in glioma is not justified.
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R Gasparotti, M Grassi, D Mardighian, M Frigerio, M Pavia, R Liserre, M Magoni, L Mascaro, A Padovani, A Pezzini (2009)  Perfusion CT in patients with acute ischemic stroke treated with intra-arterial thrombolysis: predictive value of infarct core size on clinical outcome.   AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 30: 4. 722-727 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: A potential role of perfusion CT (PCT) in selecting patients with stroke for reperfusion therapies has been recently advocated. The purpose of the study was to assess the reliability of PCT in predicting clinical outcome of patients with acute ischemic stroke treated with intra-arterial thrombolysis (IAT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-seven patients with acute hemispheric ischemic stroke were investigated with PCT and treated with IAT between 3 and 6 hours of stroke onset. The infarct core was outlined on cerebral blood volume (CBV) maps by using accepted viability thresholds. The penumbra was defined as time-to-peak (TTP)-CBV mismatch. Clinical outcome was assessed by modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores at 3 months and dichotomized into favorable (mRS score, 0-2) and unfavorable (mRS score, 3-6). Data were retrospectively analyzed by multiple regression to identify predictors of clinical outcome among the following variables: age, sex, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, serum glucose level, thrombolytic agent, infarct core and mismatch size, collateral circulation, time to recanalization, and recanalization rate after IAT. RESULTS: Patients with favorable outcome had smaller cores (P = .03), increased mismatch ratios (P = .03), smaller final infarct sizes (P < .01), higher recanalization rates (P = .03), and reduced infarct growth rates (P < .01), compared with patients with unfavorable outcome. The core size was the strongest predictor of clinical outcome in an "all subset" model search (P = .01; 0.96 point increase in mRS score per any increment of 1 SD; 95% confidence interval, +0.17 to +1.75). CONCLUSIONS: PCT is a reliable tool for the identification of irreversibly damaged brain tissue and for the prediction of clinical outcome of patients with acute stroke treated with IAT.
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Anna Rosati, Silvia Marconi, Bianca Pollo, Alessia Tomassini, Laura Lovato, Emanuela Maderna, Klaus Maier, Andreas Schwartz, Nicolò Rizzuto, Alessandro Padovani, Bruno Bonetti (2009)  Epilepsy in glioblastoma multiforme: correlation with glutamine synthetase levels.   J Neurooncol 93: 3. 319-324 Jul  
Abstract: PURPOSE: The hypothesis addressed by this study is that a glutamine synthetase (GS) deficiency in neoplastic astrocytes is a possible molecular basis associated with seizure generation in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). METHODS: Quantitative Western blot analysis of GS was performed in 20 individuals operated for malignant glioma. RESULTS: The levels of GS in patients with GBM and epilepsy were significantly lower (range 0.04-1.15; mean 0.35 +/- 0.36; median 0.25) than in non-epileptic GBM individuals (range 0.78-3.97; mean 1.64 +/- 0.99; median 1.25; P = 0.002). No relationship has been found between histological features (i.e. necrosis, gliosis, stroma, inflammatory cells, giant cells, and haemosiderine) and GS expression or epilepsy. DISCUSSION: Even though the epileptogenesis in glioma is multifactorial, it is conceivable that a down-regulation of GS may have an important pro-epileptogenic role in GBM, through the slowing of glutamate-glutamine cycle. This study suggests that seizures in GBM are coupled with a highly localized enzyme deficiency. The manipulation of GS activity might constitute a novel principle for inhibiting seizures in patients with glioma epilepsy.
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Alessio Di Fonzo, Edito Fabrizio, Astrid Thomas, Emiliana Fincati, Roberto Marconi, Michele Tinazzi, Guido J Breedveld, Erik J Simons, Hsin F Chien, Joaquim J Ferreira, Martin W Horstink, Giovanni Abbruzzese, Barbara Borroni, Giovanni Cossu, Alessio Dalla Libera, Giovanni Fabbrini, Marco Guidi, Michele De Mari, Leonardo Lopiano, Emilia Martignoni, Paolo Marini, Marco Onofrj, Alessandro Padovani, Fabrizio Stocchi, Vincenzo Toni, Cristina Sampaio, Egberto R Barbosa, Giuseppe Meco, Ben A Oostra, Vincenzo Bonifati (2009)  GIGYF2 mutations are not a frequent cause of familial Parkinson's disease.   Parkinsonism Relat Disord 15: 9. 703-705 Nov  
Abstract: Mutations in the Grb10-interacting GYF protein 2 (GIGYF2) gene, within the PARK11 locus, have been nominated as a cause of Parkinson's disease in Italian and French populations. By sequencing the whole GIGYF2 coding region in forty-six probands (thirty-seven Italians) with familial Parkinson's disease compatible with an autosomal dominant inheritance, we identified no mutations. Our data add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that GIGYF2 mutations are not a frequent cause of PD.
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Massimiliano Filosto, Tiziana Cavallaro, Giorgio Pasolini, Laura Broglio, Marta Tentorio, Mariasofia Cotelli, Sergio Ferrari, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  Idiopathic hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis-linked neuropathy.   J Neurol Sci 284: 1-2. 179-181 Sep  
Abstract: Hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis (HUV) is a rare form of cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis characterized by recurrent episodes of urticaria and painful, tender, burning or itchy skin lesions, often associated with extracutaneous involvement but usually with no significant peripheral nerve damage. We describe a patient with an HUV of undetermined cause that developed a progressive multifocal sensory neuropathy whose symptoms were temporarily relieved by intravenous immunoglobulin treatment. Sural nerve biopsy showed asymmetrical multifocal nerve fiber loss and axon degeneration in nerve fascicles, a picture suggestive of ischemic damage as a likely result of a vasculitic process. We point out that an axonal neuropathy may complicate idiopathic HUV and suggest looking for peripheral nerve involvement in HUV patients.
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B Borroni, E Premi, C Agosti, A Alberici, V Garibotto, G Bellelli, B Paghera, S Lucchini, R Giubbini, D Perani, A Padovani (2009)  Revisiting brain reserve hypothesis in frontotemporal dementia: evidence from a brain perfusion study.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 28: 2. 130-135 08  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Literature data on Alzheimer's disease suggest that years of schooling and occupational level are associated with a reserve mechanism. No data on patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) are available yet. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the impact of education, occupation, and midlife leisure activities on brain reserve in bvFTD. METHODS: Fifty-four bvFTD patients entered the study and underwent neuropsychological and behavioral assessment, including the FTD-modified Clinical Dementia Rating for FTD (FTD-modified CDR), and SPECT imaging. We tested for the linear correlation of educational and occupational level, and midlife leisure activities with regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), controlling for demographic variables (age and gender) and for cognitive performance (FTD-modified CDR) (statistical parametric mapping). RESULTS: A significant relationship between higher educational and occupational attainments and lower rCBF in medial frontal cortex and dorsolateral frontal cortex, bilaterally, was found (p < 0.005). When midlife leisure activities were considered, no correlation was found. The correlation between a reserve index, accounting for both educational and occupational level, and rCBF showed the same pattern of hypoperfusion. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that education and occupation act as proxies for reserve capacity in bvFTD. These lifestyle attainments may counteract the onset of this genetic-based disease in at-risk individuals.
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Barbara Borroni, Antonella Alberici, Mario Grassi, Marinella Turla, Orazio Zanetti, Angelo Bianchetti, Giorgio Dalla Volta, Renzo Rozzini, Nicola Gilberti, Giuseppe Bellelli, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  Is Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration a Rare Disorder? Evidence from a Preliminary Study in Brescia County, Italy.   J Alzheimers Dis Sep  
Abstract: Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD) has always been considered a rare disorder, but only a few epidemiologic studies are available. The aim of the present work was to ascertain all FTLD patients in a Northern Italy area from January 2001 to December 2008, and to estimate the disease prevalence. On the census day, 213 FTD patients were still alive, resulting in an overall prevalence of 17.6 per 100,000 inhabitants. The prevalence of FTLD in patients aged 45-65 years was 22 per 100,000 inhabitants (95% CI=17-27). The prevalence of FTLD was the highest in patients aged 66-75 (78 per 100,000 inhabitants, 95% CI=56-100), and it was still high over 75 years (54 per 100,000 inhabitants, 95% CI=36-69). FTLD is a more common form of dementia than previously recognized. Our results claimed that FTLD is not only an early-onset disorder, but it is frequent in advanced age as well.
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Barbara Borroni, Mario Grassi, Chiara Costanzi, Marta Bianchi, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  Behavioral dimensions and acetylcholinesterase inhibitor-related effect in Alzheimer disease over time: a latent trajectory modeling.   Cogn Behav Neurol 22: 4. 222-228 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether treatment with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) exerts a favorable effect on the behavioral dimensions in Alzheimer disease (AD) over time. METHODS: Two hundred AD patients entered the study and underwent clinical and neuropsychologic examination. Neuropsychiatry Inventory (NPI) total scores and 4 behavioral factor scores, termed "psychosis," "moods," "apathy," and "frontal" were also evaluated. Of this large sample, 107 completed the 6-month follow-up and 83 were followed through for 1 year. Latent Trajectory Modeling analysis was applied, which allows for the estimation of a developmental trajectory over time for each case in the sample adjusting for confounders. These trajectories can be modeled to better understand individual differences in rates of change of behavioral dimensions and the relationship with AChEIs dose therapy. RESULTS: The behavioral phenotypes and NPI total scores were differently expressed, the most prevalent being the mood and the less prevalent being frontal endophenotype over time. The development relationship between the baseline and trend levels of behavioral phenotypes, or NPI total scores and the differences of AChEIs, adjusting for disease severity, concurrent drugs, and demographic data did not "travel together" through time, that is, the correlations of individual trajectories could be estimated equal to zeros. CONCLUSIONS: These data confirm that behavioral dimensions are variably represented in AD and change over time. However, AChEIs could not influence the behavioral disturbance pattern, both measured as total behavioral abnormality burden or as behavioral defined clusters.
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Barbara Borroni, Mario Grassi, Silvana Archetti, Chiara Costanzi, Marta Bianchi, Luigi Caimi, Carlo Caltagirone, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  BDNF genetic variations increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease-related depression.   J Alzheimers Dis 18: 4. 867-875  
Abstract: The gene encoding the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) has been demonstrated as a candidate for Alzheimer's disease-related depression (AD-D) susceptibility. Additionally, an association between AD-D and the functional valine to methionine (Val66Met) polymorphism has been reported. The aim of this study was to assess the genetic contribution of other BDNF variants to AD-D. Two-hundred forty-five AD patients were divided into two subgroups according to the presence (AD-D) or the absence (AD-nD) of depressive symptoms. Four single-nucleotide polymorphisms within BDNF gene were considered, i.e., C270T, rs2049045 C/G, G196A (Val66Met), and G11757C. In our sample, 35.5% of patients (n = 87) reported AD-related depressive symptoms. The individual SNP analysis showed an association between G196A and G11757C genotypes and AD-D. Accordingly, considering the allele frequencies, BDNF 196*A allele was significantly overrepresented in AD-D compared to AD-nD (OR = 1.80, 95% CI = 1.19-2.72), as well as BDNF 11757*C allele (OR = 1.90, 95% CI = 1.25-2.90). Haplotype analyses revealed that the alleles at four loci (C270T, rs2049045 C/G, G196A, G11757C) interacted to further increase the risk of AD-D. Compared to the most common not-at-risk C-C-G-G haplotype, C-G-A-C (OR = 3.55, 95% CI = 1.44-8.76, P = 0.006) and C-C-A-C haplotypes (OR = 1.72, 95% CI = 1.03-2.87, P = 0.037) were overrepresented in AD-D. This study suggests that BDNF genetic variations play a role in the susceptibility to AD-related depression.
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A Pezzini, M Grassi, E Del Zotto, C Lodigiani, P Ferrazzi, A Spalloni, R Patella, A Giossi, I Volonghi, L Iacoviello, M Magoni, L L Rota, M Rasura, A Padovani (2009)  Common genetic markers and prediction of recurrent events after ischemic stroke in young adults.   Neurology 73: 9. 717-723 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Scarce information is available on the usefulness of new prediction markers for identifying young ischemic stroke patients at highest risk of recurrence. METHODS: The predictive effect of traditional risk factors as well as of the 20210A variant of prothrombin gene, the 1691A variant of factor V gene, and the TT677 genotype of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene on the risk of recurrence was investigated in a hospital-based cohort study of 511 ischemic stroke patients younger than 45 years followed up for a mean of 43.4 months. Outcome measures were fatal/nonfatal myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, or TIA. Risk prediction was assessed with the use of the concordance c (c index), and the Net Reclassification Improvement (NRI). RESULTS: The risk of recurrence increased with increasing number of traditional factors (hazard ratio [HR] 2.29, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.57-3.35 for subjects with 1 factor: HR 5.25, 95% CI 2.45-11.2 for subjects with 2), as well as with that of predisposing genotypes (HR 1.96, 95% CI 1.33-2.89 for subjects carrying 1 at-risk genotype; HR 3.83, 95% CI 1.76-8.34 for those carrying 2). The c statistics increased significantly when the genotypes were included into a model with traditional risk factors (0.696 vs 0.635, test z = 2.41). The NRI was also significant (NRI = 0.172, test z = 2.17). CONCLUSIONS: Addition of common genetic variants to traditional risk factors may be an effective method for discriminating young stroke patients at different risk of future ischemic events.
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Valentina Garibotto, Barbara Borroni, Chiara Agosti, Enrico Premi, Antonella Alberici, Simon B Eickhoff, Simona M Brambati, Giuseppe Bellelli, Roberto Gasparotti, Daniela Perani, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  Subcortical and deep cortical atrophy in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration.   Neurobiol Aging Jun  
Abstract: Though neuroimaging, pathology and pathophysiology suggest a subcortical and deep cortical involvement in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD), no studies have comprehensively assessed the associated gray matter (GM) volume changes. We measured caudate, putamen, thalamus, and amygdala GM volume using probabilistic a-priori regions of interest (ROIs) in 53 early FTLD patients (38 behavioral variant FTD [bvFTD], 9 Semantic Dementia [SD], 6 Progressive Non-Fluent Aphasia [PNFA]), and 25 age-matched healthy controls (HC). ANOVA showed significant (P<0.001) main effect of diagnosis, and significant interactions for diagnosis and region, and diagnosis and hemisphere. Post-hoc comparisons with HC showed bilateral GM atrophy in the caudate, putamen and thalamus, in bvFTD; a left-confined GM reduction in the amygdala in SD; and bilateral GM atrophy in the caudate and thalamus, and left-sided GM reduction in the putamen and amygdala in PNFA. Correlation analyses suggested an association between GM volumes and language, psychomotor speed and behavioral disturbances. This study showed a widespread involvement of subcortical and deep cortical GM in early FTLD with patterns specific for clinical entity.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Mario Grassi, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Alessia Giossi, Irene Volonghi, Paolo Costa, Armin Grau, Mauro Magoni, Alessandro Padovani, Christoph Lichy (2009)  Do common prothrombotic mutations influence the risk of cerebral ischaemia in patients with patent foramen ovale? Systematic review and meta-analysis.   Thromb Haemost 101: 5. 813-817 May  
Abstract: Conflicting results are available on the association of prothrombotic genetic abnormalities with patent foramen ovale (PFO)-related cerebral ischaemia. We comprehensively sought and identified studies of the association of both the factor V Leiden (FV(G1691A) mutation) and the prothrombin mutation (PT(G20210A) mutation) with PFO-related cerebral ischaemia and did meta-analyses to assess the evidence for such a relation. We analysed data from six eligible studies in 856 cases and 1,001 control subjects. Additional unpublished data from a new series including 463 subjects were also entered into the analysis. The PT(G20210A) variant was significantly associated with PFO-related stroke in comparison with both control subjects (odds ratio [OR] 3.85; 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.22 to 6.66) and non-PFO-associated stroke patients (OR 2.31; 95% CI 1.20 to 4.43), whereas a trend toward an association was observed for the FV(G1691A) mutation (OR 1.18; 95% CI 0.73 to 1.90, compared to control subjects; OR 1.14; 95% CI 0.62 to 2.09, compared to non-PFO-associated stroke patients). The status of carrier of either the FV(G1691A) mutation or the PT(G20210A) variant was associated with a risk for stroke of 1.98 (95% CI 1.38 to 2.83) and 1.62 (95% CI 1.03 to 2.57), as compared to control subjects and non-PFO-associated stroke patients, respectively. Addition of common prothrombotic genetic variants to standard initial screening may contribute to stratifying PFO-associated stroke patients at different risk of ischaemic events and targeting secondary prevention strategies.
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M DE Gaetano, G Quacquaruccio, A Pezzini, M C Latella, A DI Castelnuovo, E Del Zotto, A Padovani, C Lichy, C Grond-Ginsbach, M Gattone, P Giannuzzi, M Nowak, N Novak, J Dorn, M Trevisan, M B Donati, L Iacoviello (2009)  Tissue factor gene polymorphisms and haplotypes and the risk of ischemic vascular events: four studies and a meta-analysis.   J Thromb Haemost 7: 9. 1465-1471 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The exposure of tissue factor (TF) to blood flow is the initial step in the coagulation process and plays an important role in thrombogenesis. We investigated the role of genetic polymorphisms and haplotypes of the TF gene in the risk of ischemic vascular disease. METHODS: Four hundred and twenty-two Italian patients with juvenile myocardial infarction (MI) and 434 controls, 808 US cases with MI and 1005 controls, 267 Italian cases with juvenile ischemic stroke and 209 controls and 148 German cases with juvenile ischemic stroke and 191 controls were studied. rs1361600, rs3917629 (rs3354 in the US population), rs1324214 and rs3917639 Tag single nucleotide polymorphisms were genotyped. Additionally, a meta-analysis of all previous studies on TF loci and the risk of ischemic coronary disease (ICD) was performed. RESULTS: After multivariable analysis none of the SNPs, major SNP haplotypes or haplotype-pairs showed any consistent association with MI. Pooled meta-analysis of six studies also suggested that TF polymorphisms are not associated with CHD. A significant, independent association between SNP rs1324214 (C/T) and juvenile stroke was found in Italian and German populations (OR for TT homozygotes = 0.47, 95% CI 0.24-0.92, in combined analysis). Pooled analysis also showed a significant association for haplotype H3 (OR = 0.76, 95% CI 0.57-1.00) and haplotype-pair H3-H3 (OR = 0.43, 95% CI 0.20-0.92). CONCLUSIONS: TF genetic variations were associated with the risk of ischemic stroke at young age, but did not affect ischemic coronary disease.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Irene Volonghi, Alessia Giossi, Paolo Costa, Alessandro Padovani (2009)  New insights into the pleiotropic effects of statins for stroke prevention.   Mini Rev Med Chem 9: 7. 794-804 Jun  
Abstract: There is compelling evidence that treatment with 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG CoA) reductase inhibitors - "statins" - the most important class of lipid lowering agents, reduces ischemic stroke incidence independent on their effect on serum cholesterol levels. In this review, the non-lipid-mediated - "pleiotropic" - effects of statins as well as their potential implication in developing new treatment strategies for stroke prevention will be discussed.
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A Pezzini, E Del Zotto, I Volonghi, A Giossi, P Costa, A Padovani (2009)  Cerebral amyloid angiopathy: a common cause of cerebral hemorrhage.   Curr Med Chem 16: 20. 2498-2513  
Abstract: Amyloid is a term used to describe protein deposits with circumscript physical characteristics: beta-pleated sheet configuration, apple green birefringence under polarized light after Congo red staining, fibrillary structure and high insolubility. Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) defines a clinicopathological phenomenon characterized by amyloid deposition in the walls of leptomeningeal and cortical arteries, arterioles, and, less often capillaries and veins of the central nervous system. CAAs are currently classified according to the protein deposited including amyloid beta peptide (Abeta), cystatin C (ACys C), prion protein (PrP(Sc)), ABri/ADan, transthyretin (ATTR), and gelsolin (AGel). Most often amyloid deposition occurs in sporadic forms. In less common hereditary forms, a mutated variant protein or precursor protein is abnormally metabolized by proteolytic pathways in consequence of specific gene mutations, and accumulates as amyloid. The spectrum of clinical phenotypes associated with CAA-related vasculopathic changes includes both ischemic and hemorrhagic presentations, primary intracerebral hemorrhage (PICH) being probably the most well-recognized. However, in spite of accumulating data and recent progress in understanding the pathogenesis of CAA-related hemorrhage, the exact mechanisms leading to vessel rupture in these cases are yet to be established. This represents, at present, a major limitation to the identification of reliable biomarkers and the development of disease-specific treatment options. The present paper summarizes epidemiologic and clinical aspects of CAA, and highlights the presumed pathomechanisms of amyloid deposition in both sporadic and hereditary forms.
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B Borroni, C Bonvicini, A Alberici, E Buratti, C Agosti, S Archetti, A Papetti, C Stuani, M Di Luca, M Gennarelli, A Padovani (2009)  Mutation within TARDBP leads to frontotemporal dementia without motor neuron disease.   Hum Mutat 30: 11. E974-E983 Nov  
Abstract: It has been recently demonstrated that the 43-kDa transactive response (TAR)-DNA-binding protein (TARDBP) is the neuropathological hallmark of Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) with ubiquitin-positive and tau-negative inclusions. Large series of FTD patients without motor neuron disease have been previously analysed, but no TARDBP mutation was identified. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether TARDBP gene mutations may be associated with FTD. We report that a pathogenetic TARDBP mutation is causative of behavioural variant FTD (bvFTD). An aged woman in her seventies initially started to present apathy and depression associated with impairment in executive functions. The diagnosis of bvFTD (apathetic syndrome) was accomplished by three-year follow-up, and structural and functional neuroimaging. By five-years after onset, extensive electrophysiological investigations excluded subclinical motor neuron disease. In this patient, a single base substitution c.800A>G of TARDBP gene was identified. This mutation, already described as causative of ALS, predicted the amino acidic change arginine to serine at position 267 (N267S). In silico analysis demonstrated that this substitution generates a new phosphorylation site, and western blot analysis on lymphoblastoid cells reported a decrease of protein expression in N267S mutation carrier. Our study suggests that TARDBP mutations can be pathogenetic of bvFTD without motor neuron disease. TARDBP screening needs to be considered in FTD cases.
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2008
A Alberici, L Bocchio, C Geroldi, R Zanardini, C Bonomini, G Bugari, C Iacobello, L Caimi, M Gennarelli, O Zanetti, A Valerio, E Nisoli, B Borroni, A Padovani (2008)  Serum leptin levels are higher in females affected by frontotemporal lobar degeneration than Alzheimer's disease.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 79: 6. 712-715 Jun  
Abstract: Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) includes different heterogeneous conditions, mainly characterised by personality changes, along with cognitive deficits in language and executive functions. Movement disorders are variably represented. Behavioural disturbances constitute the core feature of FTLD, and eating disorders represent one of the most distinguishing symptoms between FTLD and Alzheimer's disease (AD). The biochemical correlates of such dysfunctions remain to be defined. The adipocyte derived hormone leptin is known to play a foundamental role in food intake and energy balance. To understand whether leptin could be involved in FTLD eating abnormalities, we measured serum leptin levels in 59 patients with FTLD compared with 25 with AD. Serum leptin levels in patients with FTLD were comparable with those in patients with AD. Nevertheless, females with FTLD showed significantly higher leptin levels compared with females with AD. No difference was found between FTDL and AD males or within the spectrum of patients with FTLD. Hyperphagic FTLD females showed higher circulating leptin levels in comparison with those without eating abnormalities; no differences were found between males with FTLD with respect to serum leptin and food intake disturbances. The present study showed a selective gender difference in leptin levels between females with FTLD and AD, which may suggest specific cognitive and behavioural networks need to be investigated.
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Barbara Borroni, Silvana Archetti, Antonella Alberici, Chiara Agosti, Massimo Gennarelli, Barbara Bigni, Cristian Bonvicini, Maria Ferrari, Giuseppe Bellelli, Daniela Galimberti, Elio Scarpini, Diego Di Lorenzo, Luigi Caimi, Carlo Caltagirone, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Progranulin genetic variations in frontotemporal lobar degeneration: evidence for low mutation frequency in an Italian clinical series.   Neurogenetics 9: 3. 197-205 Jul  
Abstract: Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) recognises high familial incidence, with up to 50% of patients reported to have a family history of similar dementia. It has been reported that mutations within progranulin (PGRN) gene are a major cause of FTLD in the USA and worldwide, counting for 5-10% of FTLD and for 20-25% of familiar FTLD cases. The aim of the present study was to define the role of PGRN genetic variations in a large sample of consecutive patients with FTLD in Italy. Two-hundred forty-three FTLD patients were investigated. Each subject performed a clinical and neuropsychological evaluation, a functional and structural brain imaging, and the diagnosis was confirmed by at least 1 year follow-up. PGRN sequencing was performed in all FTLD patients and in 121 healthy age-matched controls drawn from the same geographic area. Only one PGRN pathogenetic mutation was found, consisting of a four-base pair deletion in the coding sequence of exon 8 (delCACT). This mutation was recognised in four patients, being the overall frequency of mutations in our clinical series of 1.64%. Considering only patients with a well-known family history for dementia, the frequency of this mutation was 6%. Moreover, four missense mutations within intron regions (g.100474G>A, g.100674G>A, g.101266G>A, g.102070G>A) were found. The frequency of these genetic variations did not differ in patients compared to controls, and they did not influence on clinical FTLD phenotype. In conclusion, this study supports a lower frequency of PGRN mutations amongst FTLD patients in Italy compared to literature data and further underlies the genetic heterogeneity of FTLD.
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A Alberici, C Bonato, M Calabria, C Agosti, O Zanetti, C Miniussi, A Padovani, P M Rossini, B Borroni (2008)  The contribution of TMS to frontotemporal dementia variants.   Acta Neurol Scand 118: 4. 275-280 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) includes different heterogeneous conditions mainly characterized by personality changes and cognitive deficits in language and executive functions; movement disorders have also been associated with FTLD. The present study aimed to measure the primary motor cortex (M1) inhibitory and facilitatory functions in patients affected by FTLD. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study included 17 FTLD patients, 8 age-matched healthy controls and 8 Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was used to study intracortical inhibition (ICI) and facilitation (ICF) by using a double-pulse paradigm. RESULTS: FTLD patients were comparable with controls and AD patients for ICI and ICF. Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) patients presented significant reduced inhibition at ISI3; moreover two out of seven CBD patients had only ipsilateral responses. DISCUSSION: The present study reveals a selective impairment of M1 ICI inhibitory response in CBD, which may help in distinguishing among the FTLD clinical spectrum.
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Massimiliano Filosto, Marta Tentorio, Laura Broglio, Serena Buzio, Clara Lazzarini, Maria Pia Pasolini, Maria Sofia Cotelli, Mauro Scarpelli, Michelangelo Mancuso, Anna Choub, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Disulfiram neuropathy: two cases of distal axonopathy.   Clin Toxicol (Phila) 46: 4. 314-316 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Disulfiram may cause a peripheral neuropathy that is considered dose- and duration-of-exposure-related. Axonal degeneration has been described as a pathological hallmark of disulfiram toxicity, but experiments have reported a primary toxic effect of the molecule on Schwann cells and myelin. CASE REPORTS: Case 1: At the end of two months of treatment with disulfiram 250 mg/day, a 31-year-old woman complained of weakness in distal segments of the lower limbs associated with burning dysesthesias, numbness and pain in the soles of the feet and the legs below the knees; bilateral walking steppage, reduction in foot strength, absence of ankle jerk and knee tendon reflexes, and tactile stocking pin-pick and vibratory sensory impairment in the lower limbs below the knee. Disulfiram was discontinued and she recovered partially over three months. Case 2: After one month of treatment with disulfiram 1600 mg/day, a 27-year-old man reported walking impairment, distal lower limb weakness and paresthesias. He had unsteady gait with bilateral steppage and foot drop, absence of ankle jerks and overall sensation impairment below the knee. Disulfiram was discontinued and nine months later there was almost complete recovery of motor deficits, only minor motor weakness in distal leg muscles, and no dysesthesia, sensation deficits or areflexia. In both of them clinical and neurophysiological patterns were indicative of a distal axonopathy. DISCUSSION The mechanisms by which disulfiram cause injury in human nerves are unclear, though may involve carbon disulfide. The discrepancy between experimental and clinical observations is still unexplained. CONCLUSION: We report two cases of disulfiram axonal toxicity and the partial response following discontinuation of the drug.
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B Borroni, D Perani, C Agosti, D Anchisi, B Paghera, S Archetti, A Alberici, M Di Luca, A Padovani (2008)  Tau haplotype influences cerebral perfusion pattern in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and related disorders.   Acta Neurol Scand 117: 5. 359-366 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The modulating factors on phenotypic expression of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) remain still unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether tau genetic variability modulates the brain functional and the clinical phenotypic expression of FTLD. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Clinical and neurological evaluations, a standardized neuropsychological assessments as well as a brain single photon emission tomography perfusion imaging studies were performed in 48 FTLD patients. Cerebral perfusion patterns were analysed according to H1 or H2 tau haplotypes by statistical parametric mapping and principal component analysis. RESULTS: Two different patterns of cerebral dysfunction characterized the haplotypes, as hypoperfusion of frontal medial and cingulated cortex in H2-carriers and a prevalent involvement of posterior parietal regions in H1-carriers. Further, a significant increase of cerebrospinal fluid total tau and phospho tau levels was found in H2-carriers. CONCLUSIONS: These findings support a role of tau haplotype in modulating disease phenotype by influencing the hypoperfusion pattern and cerebrospinal fluid tau levels in FTLD.
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L Rozzini, B Vicini Chilovi, M Conti, I Delrio, B Borroni, M Trabucchi, A Padovani (2008)  Neuropsychiatric symptoms in amnestic and nonamnestic mild cognitive impairment.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 25: 1. 32-36 11  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The information regarding neuropsychiatric symptoms in the subtypes of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is inadequate. OBJECTIVE: To describe the behavioral neuropsychiatric symptoms of MCI in two subgroups of MCI patients with different neuropsychological characteristics. METHODS: MCI patients are classified as amnestic (aMCI) if they have a prominent memory impairment, either alone or with other cognitive impairments (multiple domains with amnesia), or nonamnestic (naMCI) if a single nonmemory domain is impaired alone or in combination with other nonmemory deficits (multiple domains without amnesia). The Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) was administrated to detect behavioral and psychological disturbances observed by the caregiver. RESULTS: 120 subjects were analyzed: 94 were classified as aMCI and 26 as naMCI. Subjects with aMCI were more compromised than those with naMCI on global cognitive functions. About 85% of MCI patients had some neuropsychiatric symptoms evaluated with the NPI and the most prevalent symptom was depression, followed by anxiety. A significantly higher prevalence of hallucinations and sleep disorders has been observed in the naMCI group in comparison with the aMCI group. CONCLUSION: Neuropsychiatric symptoms occur in the majority of persons with MCI and may be the earliest manifestation of different diseases, each one associated with different clinical profiles at the stage of MCI.
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Elisabetta Del Zotto, Alessandro Pezzini, Alessia Giossi, Irene Volonghi, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Migraine and ischemic stroke: a debated question.   J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 28: 8. 1399-1421 Aug  
Abstract: Numerous epidemiologic observations reporting high prevalence of migraine among young individuals with stroke as well as dysfunction of cerebral arteries during migraine attacks prompt speculation on the existence of a comorbidity between the two disorders. The recent finding of silent infarct-like brain lesions in migraineurs reinforced this hypothesis and raised questions on whether migraine may be a progressive disorder rather than simply an episodic disorder. Stroke can occur during the course of migraine attacks with aura, supporting the assumption of a causal relation between the two diseases. Migraine may accentuate other existing risk factors for stroke, and both jointly increase the risk of cerebral ischemia outside of migraine attacks. In this regard, the role of migraine might be that of predisposing condition for cerebral ischemia. Migraine and ischemic stroke may be the end phenotype of common pathogenic mechanisms. Evidence of a migraine-stroke relation in cases of specific disorders, such as CADASIL (cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy) and MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes), strongly supports this concept. Finally, acute focal cerebral ischemia can trigger migraine attacks, and, thus, migraine may be the consequence of stroke. In this paper, we will review contemporary epidemiologic studies, discuss potential mechanisms of migraine-induced stroke and comorbid ischemic stroke, and pose new research questions.
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Michael Witcher, Filippa Pettersson, Daphne Dupéré-Richer, Alessandra Padovani, Leslie Summers-Deluca, Albert S Baldwin, Wilson H Miller (2008)  Retinoic acid modulates chromatin to potentiate tumor necrosis factor alpha signaling on the DIF2 promoter.   Nucleic Acids Res 36: 2. 435-443 Feb  
Abstract: Transcriptional activation by nuclear hormone receptors is well characterized, but their cooperation with other signaling pathways to activate transcription remains poorly understood. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) and all-trans retinoic acid (RA) induce monocytic differentiation of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) cells in a synergistic manner. We used the promoter of DIF2, a gene involved in monocytic differentiation, to model the mechanism underlying the cooperative induction of target genes by RA and TNFalpha. We show a functional RA response element in the DIF2 promoter, which is constitutively bound by PML/RARalpha in APL cells. RA stimulates release of corepressors and recruitment of chromatin modifying proteins and additional transcription factors to the promoter, but these changes cause only a modest induction of DIF2 mRNA. Co-stimulation with RA plus TNFalpha facilitates binding of NF-kappaB to the promoter, which is crucial for full induction of transcription. Furthermore, RA plus TNFalpha greatly enhanced the level of RNA Pol II phosphorylation on the DIF2 promoter, via synergistic recruitment of TFIIH. We propose that RA mediates remodeling of chromatin to facilitate binding of transcription factors, which cooperate to enhance Pol II phosphorylation, providing a mechanism whereby nuclear receptors interact with other signaling pathways on the level of transcription.
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B Borroni, C Agosti, A Padovani (2008)  Behavioral and psychological symptoms in dementia with Lewy-bodies (DLB): frequency and relationship with disease severity and motor impairment.   Arch Gerontol Geriatr 46: 1. 101-106 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: Clinical criteria for DLB have been more and more accurate over time, and they had focused on psychotic symptoms for their high frequency. Recent literature suggests that behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) are frequently associated with DLB, beyond the presence of psychosis. Notwithstanding, the occurrence of BPSD in DLB is under-investigated, and no data are available yet in the different stages. Aim of the present study was to evaluate BPSD pattern in the different stages of DLB, and characterize the relationship with both cognitive deficits and Parkinsonian signs. Ninety-two DLB patients were enrolled and were divided into mild (n=63, 68.5%) and moderate-severe (n=29, 31.5%) subgroups according to the severity of cognitive impairment. Considering the absence/presence of symptoms, anxiety was the most common BPSD (67.4%), followed by depression (61.9%), apathy (57.6%), agitation and sleep disorder (55.4%). Psychosis was present in half of the patients. These symptoms worsened over disease course and represented a core-feature of the disease. No association between BPSD severity and the degree of motor disability was found. These observations suggest that a careful and systematic evaluation of BPSD is mandatory for carefully characterizing disease-related features and for developing new therapeutic approaches. Knowledge of the specific weight of BPSD in DLB would contribute to improve the allocation of health resources for dementia and to a better management of the disease.
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Barbara Borroni, Antonella Alberici, Chiara Agosti, Enrico Premi, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Education plays a different role in Frontotemporal Dementia and Alzheimer's disease.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 23: 8. 796-800 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The role of modifiable and non-modifiable variables in Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) as compared to Alzheimer's dDisease (AD) and to Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) or Corticobasal Degeneration Syndrome (CBDS) has not been extensively evaluated. In particular, low education levels have been reported to be a risk factor for AD, but their contribution in FTD is yet not known. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the role of education, other modifiable and non-modifiable factors in FTD as compared to AD, PSP and CBDS patients. METHODS: One hundred and seventeen FTD patients, 400 AD, 55 PSP, and 55 CBDS entered the study. Demographic and clinical characteristics were carefully recorded. Age, gender, family history for dementia and Apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype were considered as non-modifiable factors; education and comorbidities were included as modifiable variables. Regression analyses were applied in order to identify differences among groups. RESULTS: FTD differed from AD patients in terms of younger age, positive family history and gender status. In regard to APOE genotype, no differences between FTD and AD were found, but FTD showed higher prevalence of epsilon 4 allele compared to both CBDS and PSP patients (p < 0.05). When modifiable factors were considered, FTD were higher educated than AD patients (p < 0.001). Regression analysis identified younger age, positive family history, and education levels as independently associated variables to FTD diagnosis compared to AD (F = 21.27, R(2) = 24.1, p = 0.036). CONCLUSION: Our results highlight that the contribution of education and non-modifiable factors is likely different in FTD and AD. Further work is needed to completely establish the role of this modifiable variable as a potential area of intervention for dementias.
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B Borroni, M Turla, V Bertasi, C Agosti, N Gilberti, A Padovani (2008)  Cognitive and behavioral assessment in the early stages of neurodegenerative extrapyramidal syndromes.   Arch Gerontol Geriatr 47: 1. 53-61 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: Parkinson's disease (PD), Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB), Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) and Corticobasal Degeneration Syndrome (CBDS) are the most common neurodegenerative extrapyramidal syndromes. Beyond motor symptoms, cognitive dysfunctions and behavioral disturbances are reported. Neuropsychological and neuropsychiatry features in the early stages, however, are under-investigated, and few comparison studies are available yet. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the cognitive and behavioral profile in the early stages of neurodegenerative extrapyramidal syndromes. Thirty-nine PD, 27 DLB, 16 CBDS, and 24 PSP were recruited. Groups were matched for global cognitive and motor impairment. The overall sample showed a common neuropsychological core characterized by visuospatial deficits. Although in the early stage of the disease, a high presence of behavioral disturbances was detected, depression and anxiety were the most common disorders, followed by apathy and sleep disturbances. The observation of overlapping clinical entities points the attention on the need of adjunctive diagnostic markers for early differential diagnosis.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Erik Bertoletti, Marta Conti, Ilenia Delrio, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Mild parkinsonian signs and psycho-behavioral symptoms in subjects with mild cognitive impairment.   Int Psychogeriatr 20: 1. 86-95 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) may be accompanied by extra pyramidal signs (EPS), which are related to the severity and type of cognitive impairment. We aimed to elucidate further the relationship between MCI and EPS, analyzing the correlation between the severity of EPS and cognitive functions, and the presence of EPS and neuro-psychiatric features. METHODS: Data were obtained from a longitudinal study of 150 MCI outpatients. Participants underwent a clinical assessment including the Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale, the Neuropsychiatric Inventory, the Tinetti Scale, and a standardized neuropsychological battery. Mild EPS could be defined as being present (MCI with mild EPS) using a subscale of UPDRS, based on three specific symptoms: bradykinesia, rigidity and tremor. RESULTS: The two groups, one with mild EPS (24%) and one without EPS (76%), differed in gait abnormalities and presence of extrapyramidal symptoms. Groups did not differ in terms of general cognitive functions evaluated using the Mini-mental State Examination, while subjects with MCI with mild EPS performed significantly worse than those with MCI without EPS in total global score and in non-memory items of the Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale. Moreover, severity of EPS was significantly correlated with low performance on executive functions and with high performance on episodic memory. The group with MCI with mild EPS were observed to have a greater prevalence of patients with anxiety, depression, apathy and sleep disturbances than in MCI without EPS. CONCLUSION: MCI may be associated with mild parkinsonian signs, the severity of which are related to the severity of cognitive impairment, in particular of non-memory functions, and to a differential pattern of psycho-behavioral symptoms.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related hemorrhages.   Neurol Sci 29 Suppl 2: S260-S263 Sep  
Abstract: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is defined by the accumulation of amyloid in the walls of small-and medium-sized cerebral arteries. One of the most recognized complications of CAA is spontaneous, often recurrent, intracerebral hemorrhage, usually involving the cortex and/or subcortical white matter ("lobar hemorrhage"). Several useful animal and in vitro models as well as specific neuroimaging techniques have been recently developed, which are expected to provide detailed insight into the pathogenesis of CAA and contribute to the development of targeted antiamyloid therapies.
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B Borroni, S Ghezzi, C Agosti, S Archetti, C Fenoglio, D Galimberti, E Scarpini, M Di Luca, N Bresolin, G P Comi, A Padovani, R Del Bo (2008)  Preliminary evidence that VEGF genetic variability confers susceptibility to frontotemporal lobar degeneration.   Rejuvenation Res 11: 4. 773-780 Aug  
Abstract: Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) recognizes a strong genetic background, with 30-50% of cases with a positive family history. Despite several efforts to identify monogenic causes of the disease, no clear-cut genetic risk factors for sporadic FTLD are yet known. Recently, increasing evidence points to a pivotal role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the neurodegenerative process, suggesting functions not confined to its originally described vascular effects. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of VEGF as a genetic determinant to FTLD susceptibility. We evaluated a cohort of 274 unrelated Italian patients, including 161 subjects with frontotemporal dementia (FTD), 56 with corticobasal degeneration syndrome, and 57 with progressive supranuclear palsy. Genotype and allele frequencies of four well-known polymorphisms located within the VEGF promoter (-2578C/A, -1190G/A, -1154G/A, and -634G/C) were calculated in patients and in 216 age-matched healthy subjects. Genetic analysis revealed the presence of several significant changes in terms of allele, genotype, and haplotype frequency distributions between patients and controls. Marked differences were observed when the FTD patient subgroup was compared with healthy subjects. Overall, these data provide evidence for the first time that VEGF gene variability represents a susceptibility factor for sporadic FTLD, at least in an Italian population. Future confirmatory studies are mandatory.
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V Garibotto, B Borroni, E Kalbe, K Herholz, E Salmon, V Holtoff, S Sorbi, S F Cappa, A Padovani, F Fazio, D Perani (2008)  Education and occupation as proxies for reserve in aMCI converters and AD: FDG-PET evidence.   Neurology 71: 17. 1342-1349 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous reports have shown that higher education is associated with more severe brain pathology in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD), suggesting that these individuals have a functional reserve provided by education, which masks the clinical expression of a higher degree of neurodegeneration. It is unknown if a similar reserve mechanism exists in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI). The aim of this study was to assess the impact of education and occupation on brain glucose metabolism (rCMRglc) measured with FDG-PET in aMCI and in a very large sample of subjects with probable AD (pAD). METHODS: A total of 242 patients with pAD, 72 with aMCI, and 144 healthy controls participated in the study. At follow-up, 21 subjects with aMCI progressed to AD. A regression analysis was conducted (SPM2), with education and occupation as independent variables, and rCMRglc as dependent variable, adjusting for demographic data, global cognitive status, and neuropsychological scores. RESULTS: The analysis showed a significant association between higher education/occupation and lower rCMRglc in posterior temporoparietal cortex and precuneus in pAD and aMCI converters, and no correlation in aMCI nonconverters and healthy controls. This means that, when submitted to FDG-PET for diagnostic evaluation, pAD and aMCI converters with higher education/occupation had, for comparable cognitive impairment, a more severe rCMRglc reduction than the ones with lower education/occupation. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that education and occupation may be proxies for brain functional reserve, reducing the severity and delaying the clinical expression of Alzheimer disease (AD) pathology. The results in aMCI converters suggest that functional reserve is already at play in the predementia phase of AD.
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B Borroni, M Malinverno, F Gardoni, A Alberici, L Parnetti, E Premi, U Bonuccelli, M Grassi, D Perani, P Calabresi, M Di Luca, A Padovani (2008)  Tau forms in CSF as a reliable biomarker for progressive supranuclear palsy.   Neurology 71: 22. 1796-1803 Nov  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: In CSF, extended (55 kDa) and truncated (33 kDa) tau forms have been previously recognized, and the tau 33 kDa/55 kDa ratio has been found significantly reduced in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) vs in other neurodegenerative disorders. The aim of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic value of the CSF tau form ratio as a biomarker of PSP and to correlate the structural anatomic changes as measured by means of voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to CSF tau form ratio decrease. METHODS: A total of 166 subjects were included in the study (21 PSP, 20 corticobasal degeneration syndrome, 44 frontotemporal dementia, 29 Alzheimer disease, 10 Parkinson disease, 15 dementia with Lewy bodies, and 27 individuals without any neurodegenerative disorder). Each patient underwent a standardized clinical and neuropsychological evaluation. In CSF, a semiquantitative immunoprecipitation was developed to evaluate CSF tau 33 kDa/55 kDa ratio. MRI assessment and VBM analysis was carried out. RESULTS: Tau form ratio was significantly reduced in patients with PSP (0.504 +/- 0.284) when compared to age-matched controls (0.989 +/- 0.343), and to patients with other neurodegenerative conditions (range = 0.899-1.215). The area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operating characteristic analysis in PSP vs other subgroups ranged from 0.863 to 0.937 (PSP vs others, AUC = 0.897, p < 0.0001). VBM study showed that CSF tau form ratio decrease correlated significantly with brainstem atrophy. CONCLUSIONS: Truncated tau production, which selectively affects brainstem neuron susceptibility, can be considered a specific and reliable marker for PSP. Tau form ratio was the lowest in progressive supranuclear palsy with no overlap with any other neurodegenerative illness.
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B Borroni, C Agosti, G Bellelli, A Padovani (2008)  Is early-onset clinically different from late-onset frontotemporal dementia?   Eur J Neurol 15: 12. 1412-1415 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is the second most common neurodegenerative dementia in the young age after Alzheimer disease. Recent improvement in diagnostic assessment suggests that it is more common than previously, although with a great heterogeneity in clinical presentation. The different clinical patterns related to age of disease onset in behavioural variant FTD (bvFTD) have been fairly studied. Aim of the study was to evaluate whether age at disease onset modulate the heterogeneity of either cognitive impairment or behavioural disturbances in patients affected by bvFTD. METHODS: One hundred and thirty-four patients with bvFTD entered the study. Age at onset and demographic characteristics were carefully recorded. Each patient underwent a wide neuropsychological and behavioural standardized assessment, as well as a brain SPECT perfusion imaging study. RESULTS: Behavioural variant FTD were subdivided into four groups according to the age at onset. The four quartile groups did not differ for demographic characteristics and family history for dementia. Global cognitive impairment as well as analysis of the different cognitive domains and behavioural patterns were comparable. CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide evidence that the clinical heterogeneity of bvFTD is not explained by age at disease onset. Further studies are needed.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Erik Bertoletti, Marta Conti, Ilenia Delrio, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  The importance of Alzheimer disease assessment scale-cognitive part in predicting progress for amnestic mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer disease.   J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol 21: 4. 261-267 Dec  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to verify the usefulness of Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale (ADAS-Cog), in screening participants at risk of developing Alzheimer disease (AD) among populations with amnestic mild cognitive impairment(aMCI). 98 outpatients with aMCI were recruited. Participants were revaluated after 1 year: 44 (44.9%) were progressed to AD (progressors), while 54 (55.1%) did not convert (nonprogressors MCI). At baseline, cognitive performances were more impaired in progressors assessed by MMSE and by a neuropsychological battery. When tested with the ADAS-Cog subscale, the 2 groups of participants at baseline, progressors, and nonprogressors MCI, were significantly different regarding total score, memory, and nonmemory subitems. Considering a cutoff of 9.5 total score, adjusted for education, ADAS-Cog subscale showed a good performance (area under the curve = 0.67; sensitivity = 0.62%; specificity = 0.73%) in predicting conversion from aMCI to AD. Progressors aMCI were characterized at baseline by a greater cognitive impairment. ADAS-Cog subscale is a useful and brief cognitive assessment tool to screen aMCI participants converting to AD within 1 year.
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C Agosti, B Borroni, S Archetti, N M Akkawi, A Padovani (2008)  The brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) Val66Met polymorphism is not significantly correlated to Transient Global Amnesia: preliminary results of an on-going study in Brescia Province, Italy.   Neurosci Lett 443: 3. 228-231 Oct  
Abstract: Transient Global Amnesia (TGA) is a well defined pure amnesic clinical syndrome characterized by acute loss of memory in middle aged people. The aetiology of TGA is still unknown but clinical and neuroimaging studies support a hippocampi involvement, and some reports suggested a possible common genetic background in cases of familial TGA. A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) gene that causes a valine to methionine substitution at codon 66 (Val66Met) has been demonstrated to affect human memory and hippocampal function in the development and maintenance of adult neurons. Aim of this study was to evaluate the role of BDNF Val66Met polymorphism on TGA risk and all TGA clinical features. Ninety-eight TGA patients and 93 age-matched controls were enrolled in the study. Each patient underwent clinical and neurological examination, routine blood examination, EEG, Jugular vein valve (JVI) competence assessment, and neuroimaging study. TGA characteristics were carefully recorded. The distribution of BDNF genotype did not differ in TGA patients compared to controls (BDNF GG: 58.2% vs 55.9%, GA: 33.7% vs 36.6%, AA: 8.1% vs 7.5%, P=.91) as well as allele frequency (BDNF G, TGA vs CON: 75.0% vs 74.2, P=.47). No significant differences in age at onset, disease duration and recurrence or the presence of predisposing factors between TGA patients carrying BDNF AA, BDNF GA and BDNF GG genotype were found. This study, that firstly looked at genetic background in TGA, did not show a significant correlation between the BDNF Val66Met polymorphism and age of onset, risk factors, duration or recurrence of TGA.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Erik Bertoletti, Diego Ghianda, Marta Conti, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Serum albumin level interferes with the effect of donepezil in Alzheimer's disease.   Aging Clin Exp Res 20: 6. 509-512 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The most successful therapeutic approaches to Alzheimer's disease (AD) have involved acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs). In view of the different response rates to ChEIs therapy, it is important to identify the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic mechanisms which may interfere with this effect. The aim of the study is to evaluate the efficacy on cognition of donepezil, a cholinesterase inhibitor, in a sample of mild to moderate AD patients with various serum albumin levels, a condition modifying drug distribution. METHODS: Ninety-eight Alzheimer patients treated with donepezil were analyzed in an outpatient clinic between January 2003 and January 2005. At study entry, participants underwent multidimensional assessment evaluating cognitive, functional and psychobehavioral domains. All concomitant illnesses and treatments were recorded. Patients were grouped in three categories (with low, medium and high albumin levels). RESULTS: The total sample of patients showed cognitive improvement from baseline of the ADAS Cog score at three months (ADAS Cog mean change -1.4+5.4; p=0.01), cognitive stabilization at nine (ADAS Cog mean change 0.03+6.7; p=ns), and not statistically significant worsening at fifteen months (ADAS Cog mean change 0.9+7.3; p=ns). The low serum albumin level group was associated with a greater response to donepezil. In fact, cognition, evaluated by the ADAS Cog mean change from baseline, improved during the first 15 months of treatment in the low serum albumin level group, but worsened in the two higher groups. CONCLUSION: Our preliminary data suggest that serum albumin level should be monitored to evaluate the clinical efficacy of ChEIs therapy.
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B Borroni, A Alberici, E Premi, S Archetti, V Garibotto, C Agosti, R Gasparotti, M Di Luca, D Perani, A Padovani (2008)  Brain magnetic resonance imaging structural changes in a pedigree of asymptomatic progranulin mutation carriers.   Rejuvenation Res 11: 3. 585-595 Jun  
Abstract: Mutations in the progranulin (PGRN) gene have been recently demonstrated as a cause of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) with ubiquitin-immunoreactive neuronal inclusion (FTD-U). Neuropathologic, clinical, and neuroimaging features associated with PGRN mutations have been carefully described. No studies on asymptomatic subjects carrying pathogenetic PGRN mutations are available yet. These would be crucial for establishing the timing of brain changes and bringing new insight into disease pathogenesis and disease course. The aim of this study was to evaluate structural brain morphology using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and voxel-based morphometry (VBM) in asymptomatic carriers of PGRN delCACT mutation belonging to a four-generation FTLD pedigree (mean age, 37.0 +/- 12.0). The evaluation of the family proband presenting with progressive nonfluent aphasia at 53 years of age, revealed left frontotemporal hypoperfusion and atrophy. VBM analysis of gray and white matter reductions revealed no differences between asymptomatic carriers (n = 7) and controls (n = 15), and between no-carriers (n = 10) and controls (p < 0.001). DTI analysis revealed a reduction in fractional anisotropy in healthy PGRN mutation carriers in the left uncinate fasciculus, connecting the orbito-frontal regions to the temporal pole, and in the left inferior occipitofrontal fasciculus, connecting the parieto-occipital cortex to the dorsolateral frontal cortex (p < 0.001). No significant difference in fractional anisotropy between no-carriers and controls was found. Our data indicate loss of white matter integrity as an early preclinical feature in familial FTD that might antedate the onset of specific neurologic features. Alteration of fiber tracts within the perisylvian language network might represent the early hallmark of subsequent aphasia onset. The study of other pedigrees of asymptomatic PGRN mutation carriers is warranted.
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C Agosti, B Borroni, N M Akkawi, G De Maria, A Padovani (2008)  Transient global amnesia and brain lesions: new hints into clinical criteria.   Eur J Neurol 15: 9. 981-984 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Transient global amnesia (TGA) is the abrupt onset of anterograde amnesia with repetitive queries. Different hypotheses have been considered for its aetiology, but it still remains obscure. In 1990, Hodges and Warlow proposed clinical criteria for TGA. Applying these criteria, clinical studies looked for an unifying theory, considering TGA almost a primary and benign disorder. However, spare descriptions of TGA in patients with brain structural lesions have been reported. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of brain structural lesions among TGA patients. METHODS: One hundred and thirty clinically defined TGA were consecutively recruited. Among them, 13 patients (10%) showed brain structural lesions (TGA-b). RESULTS: No significant difference in clinical features, duration of TGA episode, age of onset, gender between primary TGA (TGA-p) and TGA-b were found. Triggering factors were comparable, suggesting that TGA-b should be considered in the spectrum of TGA, being clinically indistinguishable. CONCLUSIONS: Transient global amnesia deserves a careful neuroimaging study and clinical follow-up considering the high prevalence of brain lesions among these patients and the impossibility to exclude TGA-b by clinical features. The follow-up of these patients and the evaluation of involved brain areas might help to further elucidate the pathogenetic mechanisms of the disease.
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Barbara Borroni, Valentina Garibotto, Chiara Agosti, Simona Maria Brambati, Giuseppe Bellelli, Roberto Gasparotti, Alessandro Padovani, Daniela Perani (2008)  White matter changes in corticobasal degeneration syndrome and correlation with limb apraxia.   Arch Neurol 65: 6. 796-801 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Data on white matter changes in corticobasal degeneration syndrome (CBDS) are not yet available, whereas cortical gray matter loss is a feature of this condition. The structural abnormalities related to a key feature of CBDS (limb apraxia) are unknown. OBJECTIVES: To measure selective structural changes in early CBDS using diffusion tensor imaging and voxel-based morphometry and to evaluate the structural correlates of limb apraxia. DESIGN: Patient and control group comparison. SETTING: Referral center for dementia and movement disorders. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty patients with CBDS and 21 matched control subjects. INTERVENTIONS: Clinical and standardized neuropsychological evaluations, including assessment of limb apraxia. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Gray and white matter changes in early CBDS. RESULTS: Diffusion tensor imaging revealed decreases in fractional anisotropy in the long frontoparietal connecting tracts, the intraparietal associative fibers, and the corpus callosum. Fractional anisotropy was also reduced in the sensorimotor projections of the cortical hand areas. Voxel-based morphometry showed a prevalent gray matter reduction in the left hemisphere (in the inferior frontal and premotor cortices, parietal operculum, superotemporal gyrus, and hippocampus). The pulvinar, bilaterally, and the right cerebellar cortex also showed atrophy. Limb apraxia correlated with parietal atrophy and with fractional anisotropy reductions in the parietofrontal associative fibers (P < .01). The limb-kinetic component of apraxia correlated with reduction of hand sensorimotor connecting fibers. CONCLUSIONS: The present integrative approach to in vivo structural anatomy combines hodologic imaging, describing patterns of white matter connections between cortical areas, with neuropsychological data. This provides new evidence of gray matter and fiber tract abnormalities in early-phase disease and contributes to clarifying the neural basis of apraxia in CBDS.
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Roberto Zulli, Franco Nicosia, Barbara Borroni, Chiara Agosti, Paola Prometti, Paolo Donati, Massimiliano De Vecchi, Daniele Turini, Giuseppe Romanelli, Vittorio Grassi, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Increased prevalence of silent myocardial ischaemia and severe ventricular arrhythmias in untreated patients with Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment without overt coronary artery disease.   Clin Neurol Neurosurg 110: 8. 791-796 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence and the characteristics of silent myocardial ischaemia (SMI) and ventricular arrhythmias (VA) in subjects with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and their relationships with QT interval dispersion (QTD). METHODS: Thirty-three subjects with AD, 39 subjects with MCI, and 29 cognitive healthy control subjects matched for demographic characteristics, hypertensive condition, smoking habits, and laboratory parameters were enrolled. Each subject underwent clinical and cognitive examination, a structural brain imaging study, electrocardiogram (ECG), 24-h ECG recording, 24-h blood pressure monitoring, and echocardiogram. Detection and characterization of QT dispersion, SMI and VA were performed. RESULTS: The three groups were comparable regarding demographic and basal cardiovascular characteristics: notwithstanding this, SMI episodes were observed only in AD and MCI patients (19 and 14, respectively). A significantly greater prevalence of repetitive ventricular premature beats was observed in AD (mean 8.56+/-13.1) and in MCI (1.8+/-7.2) vs. control (0.7+/-1.7). The QTD, the ischaemic burden and the number of repetitive ventricular beats revealed to be significantly related. CONCLUSIONS: Increased prevalence of SMI and potentially ominous VA were found in AD and, to a lesser extent, in MCI. SMI and repetitive VA were significantly related with QTD. These findings could be related to an increased risk of sudden cardiac death in AD and MCI patients.
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Renata Rao, Anna Rosati, Paolo Liberini, Stefano Gipponi, Elisabetta Venturelli, Eluisa Sapia, Claudia Ambrosi, Alessandro Padovani (2008)  Cerebrovascular risk factors and MRI abnormalities in migraine.   Neurol Sci 29 Suppl 1: S144-S145 May  
Abstract: Case series have demonstrated an increased incidence of white matter lesions (WMLs) in patients with migraine. It is controversial whether the evidence of subclinical brain lesions relates to a higher risk of cerebrovascular disease. The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) subclinical brain lesions and cerebrovascular risk factors (hyperhomocysteinaemia, MTHFR genotype, patent foramen ovale, hypertension, smoking and hypercholesterolaemia). From our database of 1201 patients followed at our Headache Clinic since September 2003 we analysed the MRI findings of 253 individuals. All MRI were blindly analysed by a second neuroradiologist (C.A.) and patients with WMLs (study group) were evaluated. In order to assess the association of WMLs with specific vascular risk factors, patients with WMLs were matched, according to age, sex and ICHD II diagnosis, with an equal number of individuals with normal MRI (control group). Headache was classified by the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD 2004) criteria. We did not find any statistically significant difference between the two groups with regard to the presence of the cerebrovascular disease risk factors considered. Our results confirm that the WMLs are not related to the cerebrovascular disease risk factors.
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2007
Michelangelo Mancuso, Massimiliano Filosto, Anna Choub, Marta Tentorio, Laura Broglio, Alessandro Padovani, Gabriele Siciliano (2007)  Mitochondrial DNA-related disorders.   Biosci Rep 27: 1-3. 31-37 Jun  
Abstract: Mitochondrial diseases are a group of disorders due to a mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiency. They may depend on mitochondrial genome (mtDNA-related disorders) as well as on a nuclear genome defect (nDNA-related disorders). mtDNA-related disorders encompass an increasing number of clinical pictures associated with more than 250 different provisional or confirmed pathogenic changes in mtDNA. Although some clinical syndromes are nosologically defined, most of the cases present with polymorphous phenotypes ranging from pure myopathy to multi-system involvement. Complexity of mitochondrial genetics is in part responsible for the extreme clinical intra- and inter-familial heterogeneity of this group of diseases. In this review, we briefly report an updated classification and overview the main clinical pictures of this class of diseases.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Homocysteine and cerebral ischemia: pathogenic and therapeutical implications.   Curr Med Chem 14: 3. 249-263  
Abstract: Homocysteine is a thiol aminoacid synthesized during the metabolism of methionine. Increased plasma levels of homocysteine can be the result of mutations in the enzymes responsible for homocysteine metabolism, particularly cystathionine-beta synthase (CBS) and 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR). Additionally, nutritional deficiencies in B vitamin cofactors required for homocysteine metabolism, including folic acid, vitamin B6 (pyridoxal phosphate), and/or vitamin B12 (methylcobalamin), can induce hyperhomocysteinemia. Over the last decade, following in vitro and in vivo observations of a homocysteine-associated vascular pathology, convincing epidemiological evidence has been gathered on the relation between moderate elevation of plasma homocysteine and vascular disease, including cerebral ischemia. However, causality has yet to be established. The association between homocysteine and ischemic stroke might be a spurious epidemiological finding because of confounding or it might reflect reverse causality. If this is the case, elevated levels of plasma homocysteine should be interpreted as an epiphenomenon secondary to the vascular disease itself. Thus, whether lowering homocysteine concentration prevents cerebral ischemia remains to be determined. The only method to answer the question of the causal relation between homocysteine and ischemic stroke is by intervention trials in which patients at high vascular risk, such as those who have had a recent cerebral ischemic event are randomly allocated to placebo or homocysteine-lowering multivitamin therapy, and followed prospectively. Some of these randomized controlled trials are currently ongoing. Their results should hopefully resolve the issue in the next future.
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Elena Marcello, Fabrizio Gardoni, Daniela Mauceri, Stefano Romorini, Andreas Jeromin, Roberta Epis, Barbara Borroni, Flaminio Cattabeni, Carlo Sala, Alessandro Padovani, Monica Di Luca (2007)  Synapse-associated protein-97 mediates alpha-secretase ADAM10 trafficking and promotes its activity.   J Neurosci 27: 7. 1682-1691 Feb  
Abstract: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a chronic neurodegenerative disorder caused by a combination of events impairing normal neuronal function. Here we found a molecular bridge between key elements of primary and secondary pathogenic events in AD, namely the elements of the amyloid cascade and synaptic dysfunction associated with the glutamatergic system. In fact, we report that synapse-associated protein-97 (SAP97), a protein involved in dynamic trafficking of proteins to the excitatory synapse, is responsible for driving ADAM10 (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase 10, the most accredited candidate for alpha-secretase) to the postsynaptic membrane, by a direct interaction through its Src homology 3 domain. NMDA receptor activation mediates this event and positively modulates alpha-secretase activity. Furthermore, perturbing ADAM10/SAP97 association in vivo by cell-permeable peptides impairs ADAM10 localization in postsynaptic membranes and consequently decreases the physiological amyloid precursor protein (APP) metabolism. Our findings indicate that glutamatergic synapse activation through NMDA receptor promotes the non-amyloidogenic APP cleavage, strengthening the correlation between APP metabolism and synaptic plasticity.
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A Alberici, C Geroldi, M Cotelli, A Adorni, M Calabria, G Rossi, B Borroni, A Padovani, O Zanetti, A Kertesz (2007)  The Frontal Behavioural Inventory (Italian version) differentiates frontotemporal lobar degeneration variants from Alzheimer's disease.   Neurol Sci 28: 2. 80-86 Apr  
Abstract: The objective was to evaluate the construct validity of the Italian version of the Frontal Behavioural Inventory (FBI) and its usefulness in the differential diagnosis of dementias. Standard criteria were used in the clinical diagnosis of dementias in 83 patients and 33 agematched healthy volunteers. The FBI scale was translated from English into Italian language and back-translated. Cronbach's alpha, inter-rater and test-retest reliability, FBI convergent validity and discriminant analysis were calculated. FBI profile was compared between patients affected by frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). The FBI showed a high internal consistency and inter-rater reliability and it distinguished normal behavioural conditions from those presented in FTLD or AD. An 86.8% diagnostic accuracy was calculated by the discriminant analysis, selecting only age at disease onset and FBI, and particularly distinguishing behavioural variants within the FTLD spectrum. FTLD patients showed a characteristic behavioural profile. The FBI might be a reliable and useful diagnostic tool for dementias in clinical practice.
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Ian McKeith, John O'Brien, Zuzana Walker, Klaus Tatsch, Jan Booij, Jacques Darcourt, Alessandro Padovani, Raffaele Giubbini, Ubaldo Bonuccelli, Duccio Volterrani, Clive Holmes, Paul Kemp, Naji Tabet, Ines Meyer, Cornelia Reininger (2007)  Sensitivity and specificity of dopamine transporter imaging with 123I-FP-CIT SPECT in dementia with Lewy bodies: a phase III, multicentre study.   Lancet Neurol 6: 4. 305-313 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) needs to be distinguished from other types of dementia because of important differences in patient management and outcome. Current clinically based diagnostic criteria for DLB have limited accuracy. Severe nigrostriatal dopaminergic degeneration occurs in DLB, but not in Alzheimer's disease or most other dementia subtypes, offering a potential system for a biological diagnostic marker. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the sensitivity and specificity, in the ante-mortem differentiation of probable DLB from other causes of dementia, of single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) brain imaging with the ligand (123)I-2beta-carbometoxy-3beta-(4-iodophenyl)-N-(3-fluoropropyl) nortropane ((123)I-FP-CIT), which binds to the dopamine transporter (DAT) reuptake site. Diagnostic accuracy, positive and negative predictive values, and inter-reader agreement were the secondary endpoints and a subgroup of possible DLB patients was also included. METHODS: We did a phase III study in which we used a (123)I-FP-CIT SPECT scan to assess 326 patients with clinical diagnoses of probable (n=94) or possible (n=57) DLB or non-DLB dementia (n=147) established by a consensus panel (in 28 patients no diagnosis could be made). Three readers, unaware of the clinical diagnosis, classified the images as normal or abnormal by visual inspection. The study had 90% power to detect the differences between our anticipated sensitivity (0.80) and specificity (0.85) targets and prespecified lower thresholds (sensitivity 0.65, specificity 0.73) using one-sided binomial tests with a significance level of alpha=0.025. FINDINGS: Abnormal scans had a mean sensitivity of 77.7% for detecting clinical probable DLB, with specificity of 90.4% for excluding non-DLB dementia, which was predominantly due to Alzheimer's disease. A mean value of 85.7% was achieved for overall diagnostic accuracy, 82.4% for positive predictive value, and 87.5% for negative predictive value. Inter-reader agreement for rating scans as normal or abnormal was high (Cohen's kappa=0.87). The procedure was well tolerated with few adverse events. INTERPRETATION: A revision of the International Consensus Criteria for DLB has recommended that low DAT uptake in the basal ganglia, as shown by SPECT or PET imaging, be a suggestive feature for diagnosis. Our findings confirm the high correlation between abnormal (low binding) DAT activity measured with (123)I-FP-CIT SPECT and a clinical diagnosis of probable DLB. The diagnostic accuracy is sufficiently high for this technique to be clinically useful in distinguishing DLB from Alzheimer's disease.
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Luca Rozzini, Daniela Costardi, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Simone Franzoni, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation in patients with mild cognitive impairment treated with cholinesterase inhibitors.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 22: 4. 356-360 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Individuals who have Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) may be in a transitional stage between aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD). The high rate of conversion from MCI to AD makes early treatment an important clinical issue. Recent evidence suggests that cognitive training intervention may reduce the rate of progression to AD. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the efficacy of a NeuroPsychological Training (TNP) in patients with MCI who are treated with cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs), compared with patients MCI treated only with ChEIs and patients not treated, in a longitudinal, one year follow-up study. METHODS: One year longitudinal and retrospective comparison study of neuropsychological performances in 59 subjects affected by Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) according to Petersen's criteria. Fifteen subjects were randomised to receive TNP plus cholinesterase inhibitors; 22 subjects cholinesterase inhibitors alone and 22 subjects no treatment. All the subjects referring memory complaints, corroborated by an informant, underwent a multidimensional assessment concerning neuropsychological, behavioural and functional characteristics, at baseline and after one year follow-up. RESULTS: Subjects without treatment maintained their cognitive, functional and behavioural status after one year; patients treated only with ChEIs improved in depressive symptoms whereas subjects treated with TNP and ChEIs showed significant improvements in different cognitive areas, such as memory, abstract reasoning and in behavioural disturbances, particularly depressive symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: A long-term TNP in ChEIs-treated MCI subjects induces additional cognitive and mood benefits.
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Claudia Repetto, Rosa Manenti, Maria Cotelli, Marco Calabria, Orazio Zanetti, Barbara Borroni, Alessandro Padovani, Carlo Miniussi (2007)  Right hemisphere involvement in non-fluent primary progressive aphasia.   Behav Neurol 18: 4. 239-243  
Abstract: We described a 56-years-old man with a diagnosis of "non-fluent primary progressive aphasia" (NfPPA). An accurate neuropsychological, neurological and neuroimaging evaluation was performed in order to assess clinical and behavioural features of the patient. From a neuropsychological point of view, the patient showed a typical cognitive profile of subjects affected by NfPPA: a prominent language deficit, associated with impairments in several cognitive domains after three years from the onset of the symptomatology. The most intriguing feature is that SPECT revealed hypoperfusion in the right frontal cortex, albeit the patient is right-handed. This unexpected finding shows that NfPPA may arise not only from cortical abnormalities in the language-dominant left hemisphere, but also from right hemisphere involvement in a right hander (crossed aphasia).
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B Borroni, M Grassi, C Costanzi, M Zanetti, S Archetti, S Franzoni, L Caimi, A Padovani (2007)  Haplotypes in cathechol-O-methyltransferase gene confer increased risk for psychosis in Alzheimer disease.   Neurobiol Aging 28: 8. 1231-1238 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The gene encoding catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) has been suggested as a candidate for Alzheimer-related psychosis (AD-P) susceptibility, and an association between AD-P and a functional valine to methionine polymorphism has been reported. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the genetic contribution of other COMT variants to the risk of AD-P. METHODS: Two hundred and forty-six AD patients underwent clinical and neuropsychological examination as well as an evaluation of behavioural and psychiatric disturbances. They were subsequently divided into two subgroups according to the presence (AD-P) or the absence (AD-nP) of psychotic symptoms. Four single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within COMT gene were evaluated, i.e. rs737865, rs737864, intron 1 C2754delC, and the well-known valine/methionine variant (rs4680). Analyses were performed on the single locus and pairwise disequilibrium of loci, and multi-locus haplotype. RESULTS: The individual SNP analysis confirmed an association for the valine/methionine variant with AD-P. Haplotype analyses revealed that the alleles at four loci (rs737865, rs737864, intron 1 C2754delC, rs4680) interacted to create the risk of psychosis in AD, as A-C-C-G haplotype (OR=2.08, 95% CI=1.02-4.27, P=0.044) and G-C-delC-G haplotype (OR=2.54, 95% CI=1.32-4.90, P=0.006) in respect to the most common and not-at-risk A-C-C-A haplotype which was significantly overrepresented in AD-P. CONCLUSIONS: The present findings provide evidence of COMT genetic variations' role in the susceptibility to AD-related psychosis. The observation of a haplotype effect of different polymorphisms within the COMT gene puts emphasis on the usefulness of haplotype analysis in better defining individualized genetic risk profiles in AD.
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D Costardi, L Rozzini, C Costanzi, D Ghianda, S Franzoni, A Padovani, M Trabucchi (2007)  The Italian version of the pain assessment in advanced dementia (PAINAD) scale.   Arch Gerontol Geriatr 44: 2. 175-180 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience. It's recognized to be modified by individual memory, expectation, and emotion. The most accurate evidence of pain and its intensity is based on patient's description and self-report. One of the main problems in assessing pain in dementia concerns with the impairment of communication and memory. Unfortunately, the most used tools to evaluate pain have been developed for normal aging people, requiring verbal and cognitive skills. Therefore, proper instruments are urged to be developed, tested, and validated to assess pain in a cognitively impaired population. The purpose of this study was to assess the validity of the PAINAD in the Italian version as a reliable tool for measuring pain in demented people.
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A Pezzini, M Grassi, L Iacoviello, E Del Zotto, S Archetti, A Giossi, A Padovani (2007)  Inherited thrombophilia and stratification of ischaemic stroke risk among users of oral contraceptives.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 78: 3. 271-276 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Whether use of oral contraceptives is a risk factor for arterial ischaemic stroke is controversial. In particular, few data are available on what criteria should be adopted to establish an individual profile of risk before the start of oral contraceptives. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The effects of oral contraceptives and their interaction with the G1691A polymorphisms of the factor V gene, the G20210A polymorphisms of the prothrombin gene and the C677T polymorphisms of the MTHFR gene on the risk of cerebral ischaemia were determined in a series of 108 consecutive women aged <45 years with ischaemic stroke and 216 controls, in a hospital-based case-control study design. RESULTS: Use of oral contraceptives was associated with an increased risk of cerebral ischaemia (odds ratio (OR) 3.95; 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.29 to 6.78). ORs for stroke were 2.25 (95% CI 1.15 to 4.40), 3.94 (95% CI 2.28 to 6.81) and 8.87 (95% CI 3.72 to 21.1) for non-oral contraceptive users with the TT MTHFR genotype, oral contraceptive users without the TT MTHFR genotype and oral contraceptive users with the TT MTHFR genotype, respectively, when compared with non-oral contraceptive users without the TT MTHFR genotype, with a multiplicative independent effect. Compared with non-oral contraceptive users, ORs for stroke were 2.65 (95% CI 1.46 to 4.81) for oral contraceptive users with none of the studied polymorphisms and 22.8 (95% CI 4.46 to 116.00) for oral contraceptive users with at least one of the studied polymorphisms, with a synergistic effect. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to the effects of oral contraceptives may increase the risk of ischaemic stroke in women with an inherited prothrombotic background. Testing for these genetic variants may allow more accurate stratification of the population at risk before long-term use of oral contraceptives is prescribed.
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Barbara Borroni, Enrico Premi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Combined biomarkers for early Alzheimer disease diagnosis.   Curr Med Chem 14: 11. 1171-1178  
Abstract: Few public health problems have captured the attention of the biomedical and lay communities alike as has Alzheimer Disease (AD). Several questions remain still open in disease management, as the necessity to delineate disease process from "normal ageing". In the last few years, Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) has received significant attention, thus it represents the major risk factor for AD. Not all people diagnosed as having MCI, however, will develop AD, hence there is a need to reliably predict progression. To this aim, different biomarkers have been proposed with the attempt to identify MCI people who already have pre-clinical AD. Neuropsychological assessment, peripheral and CSF biomarkers as well as neuroimaging findings (both structural and functional) have reported variable accuracy values, but better results have been obtained by combined biomarker approach. In this review, we summarise the most recent findings on combined biomarkers and their usefulness in clinical practice for the early and preclinical diagnosis of AD.
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Barbara Borroni, Simona Maria Brambati, Chiara Agosti, Stefano Gipponi, Giuseppe Bellelli, Roberto Gasparotti, Valentina Garibotto, Monica Di Luca, Paola Scifo, Daniela Perani, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Evidence of white matter changes on diffusion tensor imaging in frontotemporal dementia.   Arch Neurol 64: 2. 246-251 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Two major clinical variants of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) have been described: frontal variant (fvFTD) and temporal variant (tvFTD). OBJECTIVE: To analyze white matter (WM) and gray matter (GM) tissue organization in patients with fvFTD and tvFTD by means of diffusion tensor imaging and voxel-based morphometry, and the correlations with neuropsychological and behavioral variables. DESIGN AND SETTING: Frontotemporal dementia clinic-based cohort and structural magnetic resonance imaging acquisition for voxel-based morphometry and diffusion tensor imaging measurements. Abnormalities were detected by a comparison with healthy control subjects. These variables were also correlated with clinical scores. Patients Thirty-six patients (28 with fvFTD and 8 with tvFTD) in early disease stage and 23 healthy controls who underwent standardized clinical and neuropsychological evaluation and magnetic resonance imaging. INTERVENTIONS: Diffusion tensor imaging and voxel-based morphometry. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Neuroimaging analyses resulted in localized GM atrophy and reductions of white matter densities; the latter correlated with behavioral scores. RESULTS: Voxel-based morphometry analysis showed separate patterns of GM atrophy in the 2 groups. Diffusion tensor imaging showed different WM reduction patterns in patients with fvFTD and tvFTD. The fvFTD group showed a selective WM reduction in the superior longitudinal fasciculus, interconnecting the frontal and occipital and the temporal and parietal regions. Conversely, patients with tvFTD were characterized by WM reductions in the inferior longitudinal fasciculus, which affected the connections between anterior temporal and frontal regions. The WM reductions in fvFTD paralleled both behavioral disturbances measured by Frontal Behavioral Inventory and neuropsychological deficits affecting frontal functions. CONCLUSIONS: The fvFTD and tvFTD variants are associated not only with selective local GM reductions but also with significant WM damage in early disease phase. The different WM patterns contribute to the different clinical syndromes in FTD and could be responsible for the further progression of atrophy in the later disease stages.
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Barbara Borroni, Mario Grassi, Chiara Agosti, Barbara Paghera, Antonella Alberici, Monica Di Luca, Daniela Perani, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Latent profile analysis in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and related disorders: clinical presentation and SPECT functional correlates.   BMC Neurol 7: 05  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD) thus recently renamed, refers to a spectrum of heterogeneous conditions. This same heterogeneity of presentation represents the major methodological limit for the correct evaluation of clinical designation and brain functional correlates. At present, no study has investigated clinical clusters due to specific cognitive and behavioural disturbances beyond current clinical criteria. The aim of this study was to identify clinical FTLD presentation, based on cognitive and behavioural profile, and to define their SPECT functional correlations. METHODS: Ninety-seven FTLD patients entered the study. A clinical evaluation and standardised assessment were preformed, as well as a brain SPECT perfusion imaging study. Latent Profile Analysis on clinical, neuropsychological, and behavioural data was performed. Voxel-basis analysis of SPECT data was computed. RESULTS: Three specific clusters were identified and named "pseudomanic behaviour" (LC1), "cognitive" (LC2), and "pseudodepressed behaviour" (LC3) endophenotypes. These endophenotypes showed a comparable hypoperfusion in left temporal lobe, but a specific pattern involving: medial and orbitobasal frontal cortex in LC1, subcortical brain region in LC2, and right dorsolateral frontal cortex and insula in LC3. CONCLUSION: These findings provide evidence that specific functional-cluster symptom relationship can be delineated in FTLD patients by a standardised assessment. The understanding of the different functional correlates of clinical presentations will hopefully lead to the possibility of individuating diagnostic and treatment algorithms.
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R Lucchini, E Albini, L Benedetti, S Zoni, A Caruso, E Nan, P Pasqualetti, P M Rossini, G Binetti, L Benussi, G Parrinello, R Gasparotti, A Padovani, F Draicchio, L Alessio (2007)  Neurological and neuropsychological features in Parkinsonian patients exposed to neurotoxic metals.   G Ital Med Lav Ergon 29: 3 Suppl. 280-281 Jul/Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Environmental exposure to heavy metals and especially manganese (Mn) took place in Valcamonica, Italy, where a high prevalence of Parkinsonism was observed (age and sex standardized 407/100,000; 95% CI: 393.87-420.12), and the Standardized Morbidity Ratios was associated with environmental Mn levels. METHODS: A cross sectional study compared Parkinsonian patients residents in Valcamonica with patients from Brescia, Italy. Age- and sex-matched healthy individuals were recruited as controls. The protocol included information on clinical, occupational, residential history and life habits, neuro-psychological testing, and assessment of genetic polymorphism. RESULTS: The target group included 65 patients and 52 controls from Valcamonica, 28 patients and 14 controls from Brescia. Age at onset of the disease was lower in women from both areas. After adjusting for age and age at onset, patients from Valcamonica showed more severe motor impairment at the UPDRS scale, higher damage of cognitive and motor functions at MMSE, Token and Trial Making tests. Genetic variables showed a different allelic distribution of DRD4 gene between cases and controls, outside Valcamonica, where a less frequent familiarity for parkinsonism was reported. CONCLUSIONS: Parkinsonian patients with previous exposure to metals showed a more severe neuropsychological phenotype, without detectable contribution from genetic factors.
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S Hyrenbach, A Pezzini, E del Zotto, A Giossi, C Lichy, M Kloss, I Werner, A Padovani, T Brandt, C Grond-Ginsbach (2007)  No association of the -105 promoter polymorphism of the selenoprotein S encoding gene SEPS1 with cerebrovascular disease.   Eur J Neurol 14: 10. 1173-1175 Oct  
Abstract: A common pro-inflammatory promoter variant of the selenoprotein S encoding gene (SEPS1) was studied in young stroke patients from Italy and Germany and in healthy control subjects. The -105A-allele was found in 56 of 205 (27.3%) patients with ischemic stroke IS because of a spontaneous cervical artery dissection (CAD), and in 69 of 295 (23.4%) patients <50 years with IS of non-CAD origin. The SEPS -105A promoter variant was detected in 87 of 393 healthy control subjects (22.1%) and in 11 of 55 CAD patients without IS (20%). The non-significant differences of SEPS1 allele frequencies between disease groups and healthy controls suggest that the SEPS1 -105A allele is not a major-risk factor for stroke.
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A Alberici, C Bonato, B Borroni, M Cotelli, F Mattioli, G Binetti, M Gennarelli, M D Luca, A Simonati, D Perani, P Rossini, A Padovani (2007)  Dementia, delusions and seizures: storage disease or genetic AD?   Eur J Neurol 14: 9. 1057-1059 Sep  
Abstract: We describe a case of a young patient suffering from a rapidly progressive cognitive decline, associated with delusions, myoclonus and seizures and with no family history for dementia. Clinical features, along with skin biopsy findings were overlapping storage disease; the genetic analysis, however, demonstrated a de novo presenilin 1 mutation. The present report suggests the usefulness of genetic determinations in early-onset cases of dementia, even without an autosomal dominant trait of inheritance; for these cases and their relatives an extensive genetic counselling should be recommended.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Mario Grassi, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Alessia Giossi, Roberto Monastero, Giorgio Dalla Volta, Silvana Archetti, Paola Zavarise, Cecilia Camarda, Roberto Gasparotti, Mauro Magoni, Rosolino Camarda, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Migraine mediates the influence of C677T MTHFR genotypes on ischemic stroke risk with a stroke-subtype effect.   Stroke 38: 12. 3145-3151 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The objective was to investigate the role of C677T MTHFR polymorphism in migraine pathogenesis and in the migraine-ischemic stroke pathway. METHODS: A first genotype-migraine association study was conducted on 100 patients with migraine with aura (MA), 106 with migraine without aura (MO), and 105 subjects without migraine, which provided evidence in favor of association of the TT677 MTHFR genotype with increased risk of MA compared with both control subjects (OR, 2.48; 95% CI, 1.11 to 5.58) and patients with MO (OR, 2.21; 95% CI, 1.01 to 4.82). Based on these findings, mediational models of the genotype-migraine-stroke pathway were fitted on a group of 106 patients with spontaneous cervical artery dissection, 227 young patients whose ischemic stroke was unrelated to a spontaneous cervical artery dissection (noncervical artery dissection), and 187 control subjects, and a genotype-migraine partial mediation model was selected. RESULTS: Both migraine and the TT genotype were more strongly associated to the subgroup of patients with spontaneous cervical artery dissection (OR, 4.06; 95% CI, 1.63 to 10.02 for MA; OR, 5.45; 95% CI, 3.03 to 9.79 for MO; OR, 2.87; 95% CI, 1.45 to 5.68 for TT genotype) than to the subgroup of patients with noncervical artery dissection ischemic stroke (OR, 2.22; 95% CI, 1.00 to 4.96 for MA; OR, 1.81; 95% CI, 1.02 to 3.22 for TT genotype) as compared with controls. CONCLUSIONS: Migraine may act as mediator in the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase-ischemic stroke pathway with a more prominent effect in the subgroup of patients with spontaneous artery dissection.
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Maria Cotelli, Barbara Borroni, Rosa Manenti, Valeria Ginex, Marco Calabria, Andrea Moro, Antonella Alberici, Marina Zanetti, Orazio Zanetti, Stefano F Cappa, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Universal grammar in the frontotemporal dementia spectrum: evidence of a selective disorder in the corticobasal degeneration syndrome.   Neuropsychologia 45: 13. 3015-3023 Oct  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: While sentence comprehension has been reported to be defective in frontotemporal dementia (FTD), it is still unclear if this disorder reflects the presence of syntactic impairment, or may be attributed to other factors, such as executive or working memory dysfunction. In order to assess the status of syntactic knowledge in a group of patients belonging to the FTD spectrum, we investigated their ability to detect violations of Universal Grammar principles in a sentence judgement task. METHODS: The group included four semantic dementia patients (SD), nine frontal variant of FTD patients (FvFTD), 15 progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) patients, and 11 corticobasal degeneration syndrome (CBDS) patients. Their performance was compared to a group of 10 patients with mild probable Alzheimer disease (AD) and to 10 healthy volunteers. The patients underwent a standard aphasia test and a sentence comprehension test. The experimental study included five kinds of violations: semantic coherence (SC), verb-subject agreement (VSAgr), pronominalization involving clitic movement (ClM), interrogatives (WhS) and contrastive focus constructions (CFC). RESULTS: The FTD patients performed within normal range in the aphasia test, and in the sentence comprehension test. Within the FTD subgroups, only patients with CBDS were significantly impaired in detecting three of the five kinds of violations. AD patients were also impaired in the detection of WhS and SC anomalies and in sentence comprehension. DISCUSSION: The present findings indicate that, within the FTD spectrum, an impairment of syntactic knowledge can be found only in CBDS patients, even in the absence of clinical evidence of aphasia.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Marta Conti, Erik Bertoletti, Ilenia Delrio, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Conversion of amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment to dementia of Alzheimer type is independent to memory deterioration.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 22: 12. 1217-1222 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Mild Cognitive Impairment defines a transitional stage between normal ageing and dementia, and reflects the clinical situation where a person has memory complaints and objective evidence of cognitive impairment but no evidence of dementia. To plan the care of patients with MCI, it is important to predict as accurately as possible potential risk factors modulating the conversion to AD. AIM: To investigate the risk factors associated of conversion to dementia of Alzheimer type (AD) for subjects with amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment (aMCI). METHODS AND MATERIALS: One hundred nineteen subjects consecutively recruited who met the operational criteria for aMCI (with or without deficits in other cognitive domains). They underwent multidimensional assessment and a neuropsychological battery at baseline and at follow-up, after 1 year. Diagnosis for dementia was based on a deficit in two or more cognitive domains severe enough to affect the participant functional abilities. Subjects converted to AD over time were classified as Demented; subjects that remained unchanged, or became cognitively normal during follow-up, were defined as Stable. RESULTS: Demented MCI (N = 40; 33.6%) were older (mean age 73.5 +/- 8.5 vs. 69.2 +/- 7.0; p = 0.006) when compared to Stable (N = 79; 66.4) and their global cognitive performances, at baseline, were more compromised when assessed by ADAS-Cog (mean score 10.7 +/- 3.9 vs 6.7 +/- 3.4; p = .000) and by MMSE (mean score 26.1 +/- 1.9 vs. 27.3 +/- 1.8; p = 0.002). Demented were similarly compromised in basic activities of daily living (BADL mean 0.2 +/- 0.4 vs 0.1 +/- 0.3 functions lost; p = NS) but more compromised on instrumental daily functions (IADL mean 0.7 +/- 0.8 vs. 0.1 +/- 0.5 functions lost; p = 0.001). The presence of white matter lesions (WML) on CT or MRI was more pronounced in Demented group (p = 0.02). After 1 year; Demented worsened on phonemic verbal fluency (PFL) (p = 0.009), Raven's coloured matrices (p = 0.003), Trail Making test A and B (p = 0.008 and p = 0.007 respectively) and in Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) (p =0 .000) respect to Stable. Logistic regression analysis revealed that ADAS-Cog basal score, Trail Making B, IADL but not memory deterioration were significantly associated to the conversion to AD. CONCLUSIONS: In subjects with aMCI poor global cognitive performance at baseline, the worsening on executive functions and on functional status but not the worsening on memory functions are independently associated with the conversion to dementia of Alzheimer type at 1 year, follow-up.
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Ruggero Capra, Alessandra Sottini, Cinzia Cordioli, Federico Serana, Marco Chiarini, Luigi Caimi, Alessandro Padovani, Roberto Bergamaschi, Luisa Imberti (2007)  IFNbeta bioavailability in multiple sclerosis patients: MxA versus antibody-detecting assays.   J Neuroimmunol 189: 1-2. 102-110 Sep  
Abstract: Anti-IFNbeta antibodies are related to IFNbeta bioavailability loss in multiple sclerosis. We investigated the reliability of radioimmunoprecipitation and cytopathic assays in detecting binding (BAbs) and neutralizing (NAbs) antibodies and the correlation of these antibodies to MxA mRNA production. Eleven percent of IFNbeta-treated patients showed a lack of MxA induction, with an inverse correlation between MxA mRNA and the presence of BAbs and NAbs. Some patients had contemporary MxA induction in the presence of high NAb titres, thus calling into question the reliability of cytopathic assay. Since anti-IFNbeta antibodies well correlated with MxA induction loss, MxA assay is an appropriate test to determine IFNbeta bioavailability.
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Massimiliano Filosto, Giuliano Tomelleri, Paola Tonin, Mauro Scarpelli, Gaetano Vattemi, Nicolò Rizzuto, Alessandro Padovani, Alessandro Simonati (2007)  Neuropathology of mitochondrial diseases.   Biosci Rep 27: 1-3. 23-30 Jun  
Abstract: The term "mitochondrial diseases" (MD) refers to a group of disorders related to respiratory chain dysfunction. Clinical features are usually extremely heterogeneous because MD may involve several tissues with different degrees of severity. Muscle and brain are mostly affected, probably because of their high dependence on oxidative metabolism. Muscle can be the only affected tissue or involved as a part of a multi-system disease; ragged red fibers, accumulation of structurally altered mitochondria and cytochrome-c-oxidase (COX) negative fibers are the main pathological features. In mitochondrial encephalopathies, central nervous system (CNS) structures are affected according to different patterns of distribution and severity. Characteristic lesions are neuronal loss, vasculo-necrotic changes, gliosis, demyelination and spongy degeneration. In accordance with either grey matter or white matter involvement two main groups of diseases may be distinguished. Neuronal loss and vasculo-necrotic multifocal lesions are the common features of grey matter involvement; demyelination and spongy degeneration occur when white matter is affected, often associated with less severe lesions of the grey structures. Grey matter lesions are prevalent in MERRF, MELAS, Alpers and Leigh syndromes. White matter involvement is always seen in Kearns-Sayre syndrome and was recently described in mtDNA depletion syndrome linked to dGK mutations and in the rare conditions associated with complex I and II deficiency. In this review we describe the main histopathological features of muscle and CNS lesions in mitochondrial diseases.
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M Cotelli, B Borroni, R Manenti, M Zanetti, A Arévalo, S F Cappa, A Padovani (2007)  Action and object naming in Parkinson's disease without dementia.   Eur J Neurol 14: 6. 632-637 Jun  
Abstract: The present study aimed to assess the ability in objects and actions naming in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients. Further, we wished to assess the effect of a particular conceptual dimension, i.e. manipulability, on the naming of object and actions. Patients were recruited from the Department of Neurology, University of Brescia. Thirty-two were diagnosed as PD, according to published criteria, and 15 healthy volunteers matched in age and education to patients' sample. All patients underwent a detailed clinical and neurological evaluation. The stimuli used in the action-object picture naming task were taken from the Center for Research in Language-International Picture Naming Project corpus. To assess the effect of manipulability (or the involvement of fine hand movements) the noun-verb stimuli were re-categorized into manipulable and non-manipulable items (i.e. objects which can or cannot be manipulated and actions which do or do not involve fine hand movements). Patients showed a deficit both in action and object naming, compared with controls. In addition, patients with PD but not controls were significantly more impaired in action than in object naming. The current study supports the view that action naming is affected in patients with PD, possibly reflecting the presence of prefrontal dysfunction.
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Alessandro Padovani, Chiara Agosti, Enrico Premi, Giuseppe Bellelli, Barbara Borroni (2007)  Extrapyramidal symptoms in Frontotemporal Dementia: prevalence and clinical correlations.   Neurosci Lett 422: 1. 39-42 Jul  
Abstract: In the present study we aimed at evaluating the prevalence and the associated clinical, neuropsychological and behavioral features of extrapyramidal symptoms in Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) patients. Seventy-five patients fulfilling clinical criteria of FTD were consecutively enrolled. Each patient underwent clinical and extrapyramidal sign examination, and neuropsychological and behavioral disturbance evaluation. Each patient was submitted to both brain MRI and SPECT, documenting frontotemporal atrophy/hypoperfusion pattern. Parkinsonian symptoms in FTD were associated with a specific endophenotype characterized by higher incidence of psychotic symptoms, memory deficits and psychomotor speed ability abnormalities. Careful description of the spectrum of presentation of FTD may be of help for further understanding the underpinnings of the disease.
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Massimiliano Filosto, Giuseppe Rossi, Anna Maria Pelizzari, Serena Buzio, Marta Tentorio, Laura Broglio, Michelangelo Mancuso, Marianna Rinaldi, Mauro Scarpelli, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  A high-dose bortezomib neuropathy with sensory ataxia and myelin involvement.   J Neurol Sci 263: 1-2. 40-43 Dec  
Abstract: Bortezomib, a proteasome inhibitor used in the treatment of multiple myeloma, is known to induce an axonal, dose-dependent neuropathy clinically characterized by pain, paresthesias, burning dysesthesias and numbness. In this study, we describe a patient treated with high-dose bortezomib whose main clinical feature was severe sensory ataxia. Electrodiagnostic studies showed, other than axonal changes, myelin involvement.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Erik Bertoletti, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and depressive symptoms in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease.   Aging Clin Exp Res 19: 3. 220-223 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (AChEis) therapy in Alzheimer Disease (AD) has been shown to provide cognitive benefits and to slow progression of the disease. AChEis have also been demonstrated to improve behavioral symptoms, although there seem to be subtle differences in the magnitude of response. The aim of our study was to evaluate the effect of 16 weeks treatment with AChEis on depressive symptoms in a selected sample of AD patients in routine clinical practice. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A study of 135 patients with Alzheimer's disease. All subjects were assessed at baseline (upon initiation of AChEis therapy) and re-evaluated after 16 weeks. RESULTS: At baseline, "Depressed" and "Not depressed" patients were categorized according to DSM IV criteria for depression in Alzheimer Disease. After 16 weeks of treatment with AchEis, we observed an improvement of mood in the "Depressed" patients. In this group "Mood symptoms", measured with GDS, were independently associated with GDS "Mood symptoms" at baseline, but not with improvement on cognition (mean change of MMSE), age or sex. CONCLUSIONS: In depressed AD subjects, AChEis treatment improves depressive symptoms evaluated by GDS. This improvement is independent of cognition enhancement.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Erik Bertoletti, Marta Conti, Ilenia Delrio, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2007)  Cognitive and psychopathologic response to rivastigmine in dementia with Lewy bodies compared to Alzheimer's disease: a case control study.   Am J Alzheimers Dis Other Demen 22: 1. 42-47 Feb/Mar  
Abstract: Cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs) are effective in improving cognition and behavior in patients affected by Alzheimer's disease (AD) as well as by Lewy bodies dementia (DLB). The authors compared the effect of rivastigmine in the treatment of cognitive impairment and behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) in 30 AD and in 30 DLB patients. At baseline, DLB compared to AD patients showed a greater number of extrapyramidal symptoms (P < .005) and were similar regarding cognitive symptoms and BPSD. After treatment, both groups showed a comparable cognitive and psycho-behavioral improvement. A significant difference between AD and DLB patients was found for hallucinations (P < .002). Rivastigmine produces comparable cognitive benefits in patients with DLB and AD and also a significant improvement of behavioral disorders. These findings support the view that ChEIs should be considered a first-line treatment of the cognitive and psycho-behavioral symptoms of both AD and DLB.
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2006
Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Erik Bertoletti, Marta Conti, Ilenia Del Rio, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors modulate the rate of progression of amnestic mild cognitive impairment.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 21: 6. 550-555 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Predictors of progression to dementia in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) define different groups with higher risks of progression. To date, efforts to differentiate those who will progress to dementia from those who will not have proved inconclusive, and while grades of risk have been identified, their generalizability is not clear. AIM: To examine the clinical and socio-demographical risk factors for progression of memory decline in a sample of subjects with referred memory complaints who met criteria for amnestic MCI. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Seventy-four subjects consecutively recruited who met the operational criteria for amnestic MCI. They underwent multidimensional assessment and a neuropsychological battery at baseline and at follow-up, after one year. Memory decline was defined using the short story mean score change (at follow-up and at baseline). Subjects showing memory decline, with or without conversion to AD over time, were classified as having progressive MCI; subjects that remained unchanged or improved during follow-up were considered as having stable MCI. RESULTS: Subjects with progressive MCI (n = 39, 53%) were older (p = <0.001) and more educated (p = 0.01) compared to stable MCI (n = 35, 47%) and their global cognitive performances, at baseline, were more compromised when assessed by ADAS-Cog (p = 0.05). Antihypertensive drug prescription was greater in the stable MCI compared to progressive MCI (p = 0.01) and significant higher levels of plasma total homocysteine were observed in progressive MCI (p = 0.03). When analyzed in a logistic regression model, the prescription of Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibitors (ACE) was found to be independently associated to the stability of cognitive function, whereas older age, higher education, higher levels of plasma total homocysteine and total ADAS-Cog basal score were independently associated with the progression of cognitive decline. CONCLUSIONS: Older age, higher education, poor global cognitive performance, higher levels of plasma total homocysteine are independently associated with the progression of memory decline while the prescription of ACE Inhibitors is a protective factor for cognitive deterioration.
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A Pezzini, M Grassi, E Del Zotto, D Assanelli, S Archetti, R Negrini, L Caimi, A Padovani (2006)  Interaction of homocysteine and conventional predisposing factors on risk of ischaemic stroke in young people: consistency in phenotype-disease analysis and genotype-disease analysis.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 77: 10. 1150-1156 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Whether the association between mild hyperhomocysteinaemia and ischaemic stroke is the consequence of a predisposing genetic background or is due to the confounding influence of established predisposing factors remains to be determined. METHODS: Plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) concentration and the distribution of the C677T genotypes of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase gene (MTHFR) were compared in 174 consecutive patients with stroke aged <45 years and 155 age and sex-matched controls. The effect of conventional risk factors on the relationship between phenotype-disease and genotype-disease was analysed by two-way and three-way interaction analysis and by the classification and regression trees (CART) model. RESULTS: tHcy concentrations were markedly higher in patients with ischaemic stroke (median 11.9 micromol/l, range 2.0-94.0) than in controls (median 9.8 micromol/l, range 4.7-49.6). An increased risk was also associated with the TT677 genotype (odds ratio (OR) 1.98; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.04 to 3.78) and with the T allele (1.40; 95% 1.03 to 1.92) of the MTHFR gene. A differential effect of Hcy levels on risk of stroke was observed according to the distribution of environmental-behavioural risk factors, with a stronger influence in the subcategory of people with hypertension and smokers (OR 24.8; 95% CI 3.15 to 196). A comparable environmental-dependent TT677 MTHFR genotype-stroke association was observed in the genotype-disease analysis. CONCLUSIONS: A consistency of phenotype-disease analysis and genotype-disease analysis is indicated by analysing specific subcategories of patients, defined by the distribution of established risk factors. The assumption that the Hcy-stroke relationship is unlikely due to a reverse-causality bias is indirectly supported by our data.
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A Padovani, C Costanzi, N Gilberti, B Borroni (2006)  Parkinson's disease and dementia.   Neurol Sci 27 Suppl 1: S40-S43 Mar  
Abstract: Parkinson's disease (PD) is one of the most common neurodegenerative disorders, affecting about 1% of the population over the age of 60. In addition to motor abnormalities, there are several non-motor signs and symptoms that may create a considerable burden for patients and care-givers. Dementia is common and affects approximately 40% of PD patients during the course of the disease, the risk for the development of dementia being 6 times higher than in non-PD age-matched controls. In most cases, PD patients with dementia (PDD) display a dysexecutive syndrome and visuospatial deficits, while memory is relatively unaffected. The overlap between PDD and dementia with Lewy bodies suggests that they likely share similar underlying neuropathological processes.
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Barbara Borroni, Mario Grassi, Chiara Agosti, Silvana Archetti, Chiara Costanzi, Cristina Cornali, Carlo Caltagirone, Luigi Caimi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  Cumulative effect of COMT and 5-HTTLPR polymorphisms and their interaction with disease severity and comorbidities on the risk of psychosis in Alzheimer disease.   Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 14: 4. 343-351 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to investigate the cumulative effect of the genes likely involved in Alzheimer disease (AD)-related psychosis and their interaction with disease stage and environmental factors. METHODS: Two hundred thirty-four patients with AD underwent clinical and neuropsychologic examination, behavioral and psychiatric disturbances evaluation, and were subsequently divided into two subgroups according to the presence (AD-P) or the absence (AD-nP) of psychotic symptoms. Cathecol-O-methyltransferase (COMT), serotonin gene-linked promoter region (5-HTTLPR), and Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) genotypes were performed. RESULTS: COMT*H (H/H or H/liter; odds ratio [OR]: 2.4; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.13-5.11) and 5-HTTLPR*S (S/S or S/liter, OR: 2.14; 95% CI: 1.13-4.07) were associated with AD-P. A gene dose effect was observed; in fact, carriers of both polymorphisms showed a fivefold risk for psychosis compared with patients bearing no polymorphisms. An interaction between these two genetic variations with disease stage and ischemic cardiomyopathy was found, the latter influencing AD-P risk only if "at-risk" genetic polymorphisms were present. The combined trend effect of COMT*H plus 5-HTTLPR*S and advance disease stage on AD-P risk was approximately 200% greater than that predicted by assuming additive effects, whereas the one obtained by COMT*H plus 5-HTTLPR*S and ischemic cardiomyopathy was 50% greater. ApoE genotype did not influence AD-P risk. CONCLUSIONS: These findings claim for a synergic effect of COMT*H and 5-HTTLPR*S polymorphisms on the risk of psychosis in AD and for their interaction with disease stage and ischemic cardiomyopathy. This study suggests that considering both the genetic background and the environmental correlates might provide new insight for understanding psychosis mechanisms related to AD.
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N Akkawi, P Locatelli, B Borroni, C Agosti, A Pezzini, R Stefini, A Padovani (2006)  A complicated case of intracranial hypotension: diagnostic and management strategies.   Neurol Sci 27: 1. 63-66 Apr  
Abstract: We report a case of a patient aged 66 years, with spontaneous intracranial hypotension presenting initially with postural headache, complicated by subdural haematomas and followed by progressive decline of his clinical condition evolving in obtundation state, cranial nerve involvement and gaze paralysis. The patient underwent a long course of different therapeutical approaches: medical and surgical treatment, intrathecal saline infusion and epidural blood patching (EBP). Rapid and dramatic relief of the patient's symptoms was obtained after a third lumbar EBP and he was discharged asymptomatic two weeks later.
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N Maalikjy Akkawi, C Agosti, M Grassi, B Borroni, A Pezzini, L A Vignolo, A Padovani (2006)  Weather conditions and transient global amnesia. A six-year study.   J Neurol 253: 2. 194-198 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: The aetiology of transient global amnesia (TGA) is still unknown. Various events or activities have been shown to trigger TGA. A common feature of these events is an increased sympathetic activity which in turn may be influenced by meteorological factors. This prompted us to evaluate the influence of climatic parameters, and their variation on the incidence of TGA. METHODS: A total of 223 cases of TGA admitted to our hospital over a six-year period were studied. The study consisted of a comparison between the climatic parameters of days with TGA and those without TGA. The meteorological database included daily values of parameters recorded at the meteorological station of the town during this period. RESULTS: The onset of TGA was significantly correlated with lower daily,monthly and seasonal temperature values. Most cases of TGA were found when the temperature was less than 6.9 degrees C,whereas the frequency of TGA was minimum when it was more than 24 degrees C (P < 0.0001). Only temperature had a significant independent effect: an increase of 1 sd = 8.4 degrees C decreases the TGA admission odds of 0.78 (95 % CI: 0.62 to 0.97), i.e -22% (95 % CI: -38% to -3 %). CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests an association between TGA occurrence and low ambient temperature. Multicentre studies taking into account climatic differences between countries are necessary to confirm our findings.
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B Borroni, M Grassi, C Agosti, C Costanzi, S Archetti, S Franzoni, C Caltagirone, M Di Luca, L Caimi, A Padovani (2006)  Genetic correlates of behavioral endophenotypes in Alzheimer disease: role of COMT, 5-HTTLPR and APOE polymorphisms.   Neurobiol Aging 27: 11. 1595-1603 Nov  
Abstract: Several studies have been conducted to understand the genetic correlates of Alzheimer disease (AD)-related behavioral and psychological symptoms in dementia (BPSD). However, given that BPSD rarely occur in isolation, it has been suggested that targeting BPSD individually is too narrow of an approach if one wants to accurately define all the associated risk factors. To date, we know of no work on genetic polymorphisms related to behavioral endophenotypes in AD. The present study sought to evaluate the relationship between such behavioral endophenotypes in AD and genetic variations in dopamine- or serotonin-related genes, such as catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) or 5-HTT gene-linked promoter region (5-HTTLPR), and apolipoprotein E (APOE). Among 232 AD patients who underwent clinical and neuropsychological examination, a behavioral and psychiatric evaluation, and genotyping at COMT, 5-HTTPLR, and APOE; 66.4% showed more than one behavioral symptom. By Principal Component Analysis of Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) symptoms four endophenotypes were identified, these were termed "psychosis", "moods", "apathy", and "frontal". Modeling NPI symptom-endophenotype-genotype relationships, and taking into account possible confounds (i.e. demographic characteristics, comorbidities, concomitant pharmacological treatments, and disease severity) by latent variable models, COMT and 5-HTTLPR genetic variations correlated with "frontal" and "psychosis" endophenotypes. APOE genotype did not correlate with any endophenotype. These findings suggest that the possibility of identifying distinct phenotypes on a genetic basis among AD patients exists, and suggest that clustering of BPSD into endophenotypes might provide a new strategy for guiding future research on this issue.
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Koren K Mann, Kelly Davison, Myrian Colombo, April L Colosimo, Zuanel Diaz, Alessandra M S Padovani, Qi Guo, P James Scrivens, Wenli Gao, Sylvie Mader, Wilson H Miller (2006)  Antimony trioxide-induced apoptosis is dependent on SEK1/JNK signaling.   Toxicol Lett 160: 2. 158-170 Jan  
Abstract: Very little is known concerning the toxicity of antimony, despite its commercial use as a flame retardant and medical use as a treatment for parasitic infections. Our previous studies show that antimony trioxide (Sb(2)O(3)) induces growth inhibition in patient-derived acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) cell lines, a disease in which a related metal, arsenic trioxide (As(2)O(3)), is used clinically. However, signaling pathways initiated by Sb(2)O(3) treatment remain undefined. Here, we show that Sb(2)O(3) treatment of APL cells is associated with increased apoptosis as well as differentiation markers. Sb(2)O(3)-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) correlated with increased apoptosis. In addition, when we decreased the buffering capacity of the cell by depleting glutathione, ROS production and apoptosis was enhanced. Arsenic-resistant APL cells with increased glutathione levels exhibited increased cross-resistance to Sb(2)O(3). Based on studies implicating c-jun kinase (JNK) in the mediation of the response to As(2)O(3), we investigated the role for JNK in Sb(2)O(3)-induced apoptosis. Sb(2)O(3) activates JNK and its downstream target, AP-1. In fibroblasts with a genetic deletion in SEK1, an upstream regulator of JNK, Sb(2)O(3)-induced growth inhibition as well as JNK activation was decreased. These data suggest roles for ROS and the SEK1/JNK pathway in the cytotoxicity associated with Sb(2)O(3) exposure.
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B Borroni, D Anchisi, B Paghera, B Vicini, N Kerrouche, V Garibotto, A Terzi, L A Vignolo, M Di Luca, R Giubbini, A Padovani, D Perani (2006)  Combined 99mTc-ECD SPECT and neuropsychological studies in MCI for the assessment of conversion to AD.   Neurobiol Aging 27: 1. 24-31 Jan  
Abstract: Identifying pre-clinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) in subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a major issue in clinical diagnosis. Establishing a combination of predictive markers from different fields of research might help in increasing the diagnostic accuracy. Aim of this study was to evaluate the potential role of 99mTc-ECD single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and memory scores in predicting conversion to AD in MCI subjects. Thirty-one MCI subjects underwent a clinical and neuropsychological examination, and a regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) SPECT scan at baseline. Subjects had been followed periodically through 2 years in order to monitor the progression of cognitive symptoms. Canonical variate analysis of principal components was able to separate all subjects who converted to AD from those who remained stable, the former being characterized by a specific hypometabolic pattern, involving the parietal and temporal lobes, precuneus, and posterior cingulate cortex. Canonical correlation analysis of combined baseline memory deficits and rCBF SPECT images identified pre-clinical AD with a sensitivity and specificity of 77.8%. The pattern of hypoperfusion 99mTc-ECD SPECT and the severity of memory deficits predict the risk of progression to probable AD dementia in MCI subjects.
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A Padovani, B Borroni, S M Brambati, C Agosti, M Broli, R Alonso, P Scifo, G Bellelli, A Alberici, R Gasparotti, D Perani (2006)  Diffusion tensor imaging and voxel based morphometry study in early progressive supranuclear palsy.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 77: 4. 457-463 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A comprehensive characterisation of grey and white matter changes in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), the second most common extrapyramidal syndrome after Parkinson disease, is still not available. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate grey and white matter changes in mild PSP patients by voxel based morphometry (VBM) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), respectively. METHODS: 14 mild PSP patients and 14 healthy controls entered the study and underwent a clinical and neuropsychological evaluation according with a standardised assessment. Each subject had a structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study. Processing analysis of MRI data was carried out according to optimised VBM and fractional anisotropy was determined. RESULTS: Compared with the controls, in PSP patients VBM analysis showed a significant clusters of reduced grey matter in premotor cortex, frontal operculum, anterior insula, hippocampus, and parahippocampal gyrus, bilaterally. With regard to subcortical brain regions, the pulvinar, dorsomedial and anterior nuclei of the thalamus, and superior and inferior culliculum were affected bilaterally. A bilateral decrease in fractional anisotropy in superior longitudinal fasciculus, anterior part of corpus callosum, arcuate fascicolus, posterior thalamic radiations, and internal capsule, probably involving the cortico-bulbar tracts, was present in PSP patients. CONCLUSIONS: These data provide evidence for both grey and white matter degeneration in PSP from the early disease stage. These structural changes suggest that atrophy of cortical and subcortical structures and neurodegeneration of specific fibre tracts contribute to neurological deficits in PSP.
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Barbara Borroni, Cristina Brambilla, Paolo Liberini, Renata Rao, Silvana Archetti, Elisabetta Venturelli, Stefano Gipponi, Luigi Caimi, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  Investigating the association between Notch3 polymorphism and migraine.   Headache 46: 2. 317-321 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether the functional Notch3 polymorphism T6746C, which is not causative for cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), might be a risk factor for migraine. BACKGROUND: It has been recently demonstrated that migraine is characterized by subclinical brain infarctions and white matter lesions. Several genetic risk factors have been associated with migraine, but no study has unraveled a possible relationship between migraine and Notch3, which is involved in vascular damage. Mutations in Notch3 gene have been demonstrated to be pathogenetic for CADASIL, a small vessel disease of the brain characterized by migraine. METHODS: A total of 156 migraine patients and 128 nonheadache healthy volunteers entered the study. Demographic and clinical characteristics were carefully recorded, and a neurological work-up was performed. Moreover, each subject underwent a blood sampling for Notch3 genotype determination. RESULTS: Notch3 genotypes as well as allele frequencies did not differ in migraine patients compared to controls, even adjusting for the presence of possible confounds. No difference has been found either in migraine patients with aura or in those without aura. CONCLUSIONS: These findings support the view that functional polymorphism T6746C in Notch3 gene is not involved in increasing the risk of migraine or migraine subtypes.
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A Pezzini, V Caso, C Zanferrari, E Del Zotto, M Paciaroni, C Bertolino, M Grassi, G Agnelli, A Padovani (2006)  Arterial hypertension as risk factor for spontaneous cervical artery dissection. A case-control study.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 77: 1. 95-97 Jan  
Abstract: Because of the presumed non-atherosclerotic pathogenesis, the potential link between spontaneous cervical artery dissection (sCAD) and common risk factors for atherosclerosis has never been investigated systematically. Therefore, this prospective, multicentre, case-control study compared the frequency of tobacco use, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hypercholesterolaemia among a group of consecutive patients with sCAD (n = 153), a group of patients with ischaemic stroke, not related to CAD (non-CAD), and a group of controls. As opposed to the other variables, a trend towards a significant association was seen when the prevalence of hypertension was compared among patients with sCAD and controls (26.8% v 17.0%; odds ratio (OR) 1.79; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.98 to 3.27; p = 0.058). Hypertension was also significantly associated with the subgroup of patients with sCAD and cerebral infarction (OR, 1.94; 95% CI, 1.01 to 3.70; p = 0.045), particularly when involving the vertebral arteries (OR, 2.69; 95% CI, 1.20 to 6.04; p = 0.017). These findings might help define the spectrum of pathogenic conditions predisposing to sCAD and provide information to help investigate the combined effect of such susceptibility factors in future studies.
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Maria Lorenza Muiesan, Alessandro Padovani, Massimo Salvetti, Cristina Monteduro, Paolo Poisa, Bianca Bonzi, Anna Paini, Elisabetta Cottini, Chiara Agosti, Maurizio Castellano, Damiano Rizzoni, Amedeo Vignolo, Enrico Agabiti-Rosei (2006)  Headache: Prevalence and relationship with office or ambulatory blood pressure in a general population sample (the Vobarno Study).   Blood Press 15: 1. 14-19  
Abstract: The association of headache and arterial hypertension is still controversial, although headache is usually considered a symptom of hypertension. The aim of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of headache in a general population sample and the relationship with arterial hypertension, as diagnosed by office measurements and ambulatory monitoring of blood pressure (BP). PATIENTS AND METHODS: In the randomized sample of the Vobarno population, 301 subjects (126 males, 175 females, age range 35-50 years) underwent a structured standardized headache questionnaire, office and 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring. RESULTS: Prevalence of lifetime headache and of migraine was greater in females than in males. Office and 24-h BP values did not differ between subjects without headache and subjects with headache. No differences in headache prevalence (58% vs 55%), migraine prevalence (32% vs 28%) and use of analgesic drugs in the presence of headache (82% vs 78%) were observed between hypertensive patients (93.5% newly diagnosed, 6.5% treated) and normotensive subjects. CONCLUSIONS: In a general population sample, hypertension (diagnosed by office and/or 24-h BP) is not associated with headache.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Gherardo Mazziotti, Giuseppina Ruggeri, Fabio Franco, Alessia Giossi, Andrea Giustina, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  Thyroid autoimmunity and spontaneous cervical artery dissection.   Stroke 37: 9. 2375-2377 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The possibility that a disorder of immunity might have a role in the mechanism of local inflammatory alterations leading to spontaneous cervical artery dissection (sCAD) has been recently advocated. METHODS: We explored this hypothesis in a case-control study, including patients with sCAD (n=29) and patients with non-CAD ischemic stroke (non-CAD; n=29). Serum levels of antithyroperoxidase, antithyroglobulin, and antithyroid-stimulating hormone receptor antibodies, antinuclear antibodies, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies, antidouble-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid antibodies, antiextractable nuclear antigen antibodies, rheumatoid factor, C3 and C4 complement fraction, and cryoglobulins were measured in all subjects. RESULTS: Antithyroid autoimmunity was found in 31.0% (9 of 29) of patients with sCAD and 6.9% (2 of 29) of patients with non-CAD ischemic stroke (P=0.041). CONCLUSIONS: Autoimmunity may be involved in the process of local inflammation related to sCAD occurrence. The hypothesis that the arterial disease might be one phenotypic expression of a generalized activation of immunity warrants further investigations.
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M Cotelli, B Borroni, R Manenti, A Alberici, M Calabria, C Agosti, A Arévalo, V Ginex, P Ortelli, G Binetti, O Zanetti, A Padovani, S F Cappa (2006)  Action and object naming in frontotemporal dementia, progressive supranuclear palsy, and corticobasal degeneration.   Neuropsychology 20: 5. 558-565 Sep  
Abstract: Action naming has been reported to be disproportionately impaired in comparison to object naming in patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD). This finding has been attributed to the crucial role of frontal cortex in action naming. The investigation of object and action naming in the different subtypes of FTD, as well as in the related conditions of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and corticobasal degeneration (CBD), may thus contribute to the elucidation of the cerebral correlates of the action-object discrepancy as well as provide clues to the underlying cognitive mechanisms. The results indicated that, with the exception of semantic dementia, action naming was more impaired than object naming in all patient groups. The discrepancy was similar in frontal variant of FTD and Alzheimer's disease patients, whereas patients with nonfluent primary progressive aphasia, PSP, and CBD were significantly more impaired in the oral production of actions than of objects. These findings indicate that action naming impairment is not a general feature of FTD, but rather is associated with conditions that affect the frontoparietal-subcortical circuits involved in action knowledge and action representation.
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Hugo Vanderstichele, Karen De Vreese, Kaj Blennow, Niels Andreasen, Christian Sindic, Adrian Ivanoiu, Harald Hampel, Katharina Bürger, Lucilla Parnetti, Alessia Lanari, Allesandro Padovani, Monica DiLuca, Miriam Bläser, Annika Ohrfelt Olsson, Hans Pottel, Frank Hulstaert, Eugeen Vanmechelen (2006)  Analytical performance and clinical utility of the INNOTEST PHOSPHO-TAU181P assay for discrimination between Alzheimer's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies.   Clin Chem Lab Med 44: 12. 1472-1480  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Total tau (T-tau) and beta-amyloid((1-42)) (Abeta(1-42)) levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) can differentiate Alzheimer's disease (AD) from normal aging or depressive pseudo-dementia. Differential diagnosis from dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) in clinical settings is difficult. METHODS: The analytical performance of the INNOTEST PHOSPHO-TAU(181P) assay was validated in terms of selectivity, sensitivity, specificity, precision, robustness, and stability. Clinical utility of the assay alone, or combined with T-tau and Abeta(1-42), for discrimination of AD (n=94) from patients suffering from DLB (n=60) or from age-matched control subjects (CS) (n=60) was assessed in a multicenter study. RESULTS: CSF concentrations of tau phosphorylated at threonine 181 (P-tau(181P)) in AD was significantly higher than in DLB and CS. Discriminant analysis, a classification tree, and logistic regression showed that P-tau(181P) was the most statistically significant single variable of the three biomarkers for discrimination between AD and DLB. CONCLUSIONS: P-tau(181P) quantification is a robust and reliable assay that may be useful in discriminating AD from DLB.
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Barbara Borroni, Mario Grassi, Chiara Costanzi, Silvana Archetti, Luigi Caimi, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  APOE genotype and cholesterol levels in lewy body dementia and Alzheimer disease: investigating genotype-phenotype effect on disease risk.   Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 14: 12. 1022-1031 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: APOE is the most recognized genetic risk factor for sporadic late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD). The role of APOE genotype in Lewy body dementia (LBD) is still unknown as well as the relationship between APOE genotype and cholesterol levels. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to explore the association between APOE genotype and cholesterol levels in patients with LBD and those with AD. METHODS: Eighty-two patients with LBD were consecutively enrolled as well as a comparable number of patients with AD and comparison group. Each subject underwent a clinical and neuropsychologic evaluation and APOE genotyping. RESULTS: The distribution of APOE genotypes significantly differed between AD and LBD cases compared with the comparison group, with the APOE epsilon4+ (epsilon4+/epsilon4 + or epsilon4+/epsilon4-) genotype more frequent in patient subgroups. Different models have been fitted, and total APOE epsilon4-hypercholesterolemia complete interaction effect was claimed in predicting their relationship on disease outcome. Subjects with hypercholesterolemia and heterozygous for APOE epsilon4 allele had more than threefold risk to develop AD compared both with the comparison group and with those with LBD. The risk to develop AD in hypercholesterolemic and APOE epsilon4 homozygous subjects was 13-fold compared with the comparison group and those with LBD. Conversely, there was not evidence for APOE epsilon4-hypercholesterolemia complete interaction effect in LBD and in the comparison group. CONCLUSIONS: This study highlighted that APOE is a risk factor not only for AD, but also for LBD, and that the APOE-cholesterol pathway differently affects AD and LBD. This approach may aid the search for the identification of an interactive effect of APOE genotype and modifiable risk factors, i.e., hypercholesterolemia, eventually resulting in individualized and effective cholesterol-lowering therapy in at-risk subjects.
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Martina Chiappelli, Barbara Borroni, Silvana Archetti, Elena Calabrese, Massimiliano M Corsi, Massimo Franceschi, Alessandro Padovani, Federico Licastro (2006)  VEGF gene and phenotype relation with Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment.   Rejuvenation Res 9: 4. 485-493  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) represents one potential mechanism whereby vascular and Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathologies are related. The authors investigated whether AD cases, especially those having a rapid cognitive decline, more commonly carried a functional promoter gene variant for VEGF (-2578C/A) and showed elevated plasma levels of Vegf. In addition, the authors investigated whether patterns of association also were found for mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and conversion from MCI to AD. METHODS: Group 1 included 317 AD cases and 320 unaffected control subjects. Group 2 included 113 MCI patients and 130 control subjects. Plasma levels of Vegf were measured by chemiluminescence for a subset of group 1. Genotype determinations were made for all subjects. FINDINGS: The VEGF AA genotype was associated with an increased risk of developing AD (OR = 1.616, p = 0.046). This genotype also was associated with an accelerated cognitive decline in APOE small epsilon4 positive patients with AD (AA vs. CC OR = 6.5, p = 0.04). The VEGF AA genotype was a risk factor for MCI (OR = 2.5, p = 0.037) and MCI conversion to AD in APOE small epsilon4+ (OR = 6.5, CI = 2.014-20.980; p = 0.002). Vegf plasma levels were higher in patients with AD than controls (230 pg/mL vs. 42 pg/mL), and were even higher in those patients with a fast cognitive decline and the APOE epsilon4 allele. INTERPRETATION: Modulation of VEGF expression is a potential mechanism associated with the risk of developing AD and its clinical deterioration.
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Barbara Borroni, Renata Rao, Paolo Liberini, Elisabetta Venturelli, Michela Cossandi, Silvana Archetti, Luigi Caimi, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (Glu298Asp) polymorphism is an independent risk factor for migraine with aura.   Headache 46: 10. 1575-1579 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether the functional endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) Glu298Asp polymorphism, which has been demonstrated to decrease the endothelial NOS activity, might be a risk factor for migraine. BACKGROUND: It has widely demonstrated that nitric oxide (NO) is involved in migraine pathogenesis. Several genetic risk factors have been associated with migraine, but no study has unraveled a possible relationship between migraine and eNOS Glu298Asp. Methods.-One hundred fifty-six migraine patients and 125 healthy nonheadache volunteers entered the study. Demographic and clinical characteristics were carefully recorded, and a neurological workup was performed. RESULTS: eNOS AspAsp homozygous patients had a 3-fold time risk for migraine with aura (MA) when compared to migraine without aura (MO) patients (OR-3.02, 95% CI-1.21 to 7.51), and more than 2-fold time increased risk when compared to control subjects (OR-2.21, 95% CI-1.00 to 5.04). In migraine patients, no difference in age at onset, mean attack's intensity, family history for any of the studied comorbidities, or the presence of comorbidities was found in eNOS AspAsp homozygous compared to eNOS GluGlu or eNOS GluAs carriers. CONCLUSIONS: Homozygous Asp298, a common variant of the eNOS gene, is an independent risk factor for MA in this study population.
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Barbara Borroni, Daniela Perani, Silvana Archetti, Chiara Agosti, Barbara Paghera, Giuseppe Bellelli, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  Functional correlates of Apolipoprotein E genotype in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration.   BMC Neurol 6: 08  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: It has been recently demonstrated that in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD) memory deficits at presentation are commoner than previously thought. Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) genotype, the major genetic risk factor in sporadic late-onset Alzheimer Disease (AD), modulates cerebral perfusion in late middle-age cognitively normal subjects. ApoE epsilon4 homozygous have reduced glucose metabolism in the same regions involved in AD. The aim of this study was to determine whether ApoE genotype might play a key-role in influencing the cerebral functional pattern as well as the degree of memory deficits in FTLD patients. METHODS: Fifty-two unrelated FTLD patients entered the study and underwent a somatic and neurological evaluation, laboratory examinations, a brain structural imaging study, and a brain functional Single Photon Emission Tomography study. ApoE genotype was determined. RESULTS: ApoE genotype influenced both clinical and functional features in FTLD. ApoE epsilon4-carriers were more impaired in long-term memory function (ApoE epsilon4 vs. ApoE non epsilon4, 6.3 +/- 3.9 vs. 10.1 +/- 4.2, p = 0.004) and more hypoperfused in uncus and parahippocampal regions (x,y,z = 38,-6,-20, T = 2.82, cluster size = 100 voxels; -32,-12,-28, T= 2.77, cluster size = 40 voxels). CONCLUSION: The present findings support the view that ApoE genotype might be considered a disease-modifying factor in FTLD, thus contributing to define a specific clinical presentation, and might be of relevance for pharmacological approaches.
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B Borroni, M Broli, C Costanzi, S Gipponi, N Gilberti, C Agosti, A Padovani (2006)  Primitive reflex evaluation in the clinical assessment of extrapyramidal syndromes.   Eur J Neurol 13: 9. 1026-1028 Sep  
Abstract: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the role of primitive reflexes (PRs) as additional alert sign in routine clinical practice in patients with extrapyramidal syndrome. We considered glabellar, snout, palmomental and grasp reflexes in patients with mild stage of Lewy body dementia (LBD), corticobasal degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy or Parkinson disease (PD). We also enrolled mild Alzheimer disease (AD) patients, and healthy subjects, as controls. LBD patients showed the highest prevalence of PRs compared with the other groups. The odds ratio of the risk of LBD in PRs > or = 2 was 27.9 (95% CI 2.9-269.0) compared with control group, 14.6 (95% CI 2.7-79.6) compared with mild AD, and 19.7 (95% CI 3.7-104.3) compared with PD. These data suggest that the occurrence of combination of PRs might be an useful additional warning sign of possible diffuse Lewy body pathology more than other causes of extrapyramidal syndrome.
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Luca Rozzini, Cristina Cornali, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Diego Ghianda, Alessandro Padovani, Marco Trabucchi (2006)  Predictors of institutionalization in demented patients discharged from a rehabilitation unit.   J Am Med Dir Assoc 7: 6. 345-349 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The decision to place a patient with dementia in long-term care is complex and based on the patient's and the caregiver's characteristics, and on the sociocultural context. Most studies assessing predictors of nursing home placement focused primarily on the characteristics of either the patient, such as dementia severity and difficult behaviors, or the caregiver, such as subjective burden and health status. However, only a few studies comprehensively investigated how both a caregiver's and a patient's characteristics influence nursing home placement. OBJECTIVE: To identify the patient's and the caregiver's characteristics that influence discharge to a nursing home in demented patients consecutively admitted to an intermediate care setting. METHODS: Observational study of 214 patients with dementia consecutively admitted to a Rehabilitation Unit for Dementia in Northern Italy (length of stay 35.1 +/- 14.9 days). The main evaluated outcome was the final destination (home vs nursing home). RESULTS: In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, adjusted for age, gender, cognitive status, and behavioral disturbances, 4 predictors were associated with nursing home placement: living alone (OR 8.79, 95% CI 2.33-33.16; P = .001), degree of dementia severity (CDR, OR 1.69, 95% CI 1.02-2.83; P = .04), compromised functional status (Barthel index admission, OR 3.15, 95% CI 1.05-9.48; P = .04), and caregiver's burden (CBI, OR 2.89, 95% CI 1.15-7.29; P = .02). CONCLUSIONS: Data suggest that living alone, patient's functional impairment, severity of dementia, and caregiver's burden were independent predictors of institutionalization. The interaction between a patient's and a caregiver's characteristics has an important effect on the rate of nursing home placement in demented patients.
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Barbara Borroni, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2006)  Predicting Alzheimer dementia in mild cognitive impairment patients. Are biomarkers useful?   Eur J Pharmacol 545: 1. 73-80 Sep  
Abstract: A correct clinical diagnosis in the early stage of Alzheimer disease is not only of importance given the current available treatment with acetylcholine esterase inhibitors, but would be the basis for disease-modifying therapy slowing down or arresting the degenerative process. Moreover, in the last years, several efforts have been made to determine if a patient with mild cognitive impairment has incipient Alzheimer disease, i.e. will progress to Alzheimer disease with dementia, or have a benign form of mild cognitive impairment. In this review, the recent published reports regarding progress in early and preclinical Alzheimer disease diagnosis are discussed and the role of peripheral and cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers highlighted. Approaches combining panels of different biomarkers show promise for discovering profiles that are characteristic of Alzheimer disease, even in the pre-symptomatic stage. More work is needed but available novel perspectives offered by recent introduced technologies shed some lights in identifying incipient Alzheimer disease in mild cognitive impairment subjects.
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Matthias Riemenschneider, Lidija Konta, Patricia Friedrich, Sandra Schwarz, Kevin Taddei, Frauke Neff, Alessandro Padovani, Heike Kölsch, Simon M Laws, Norman Klopp, Heike Bickeböller, Stefan Wagenpfeil, Jakob C Mueller, Albert Rosenberger, Janine Diehl-Schmid, Silvana Archetti, Nicola Lautenschlager, Barbara Borroni, Ulrich Müller, Thomas Illig, Reinhard Heun, Rupert Egensperger, Jürgen Schlegel, Hans Förstl, Ralph N Martins, Alexander Kurz (2006)  A functional polymorphism within plasminogen activator urokinase (PLAU) is associated with Alzheimer's disease.   Hum Mol Genet 15: 16. 2446-2456 Aug  
Abstract: A number of susceptibility loci for Alzheimer's disease (AD) have been identified including a region on Chromosome 10q21-q22. Within this region the plasminogen activator urokinase gene (PLAU) was considered as a reasonable candidate from its functional implication in plasmin generation, a serine protease capable of degrading beta-Amyloid (Abeta) protein. We screened 56 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) around PLAU using 1751 individuals from four independent case-control samples (Munich, N=679; Bonn N=282; Brescia (Italy) N=219; Perth (Australia) N=557 and one discordant sib-pair sample (Munich N=622). In brain tissue samples of neuropathologically confirmed cases with AD (N=33) we analyzed plaque counts according to the risk allele. We identified that one functional exonic SNP (rs2227564) is associated with development of AD using the four independent case-control samples (Munich, P=0.02; Bonn, P=0.005; Brescia (Italy), P=0.001; Perth (Australia), P=0.03) and the discordant sib-pair sample (P=0.001). In brain tissue, from neuropathologically confirmed cases with AD, we identified significantly higher plaque counts in carriers of the risk allele (N=6; 60.3+/-16.9) compared with non-carriers (N=9; 26.3+/-8.8; P=0.007). This study provides compelling evidence of a genetic and functional involvement of a common PLAU variant into the pathogenesis of AD. Further functional investigations are warranted to elucidate the specific role of PLAU, respectively, PLAU variants in the metabolism of Abeta proteins.
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Mattia Gambarin, Enza Maria Valente, Paolo Liberini, Giuseppe Barrano, Alberto Bonizzato, Alessandro Padovani, Giuseppe Moretto, Mirta Fiorio, Bruno Dallapiccola, Nicola Smania, Antonio Fiaschi, Michele Tinazzi (2006)  Atypical phenotypes and clinical variability in a large Italian family with DYT1-primary torsion dystonia.   Mov Disord 21: 10. 1782-1784 Oct  
Abstract: The GAG deletion in the DYT1 gene usually causes a typical form of primary torsion dystonia (PTD) with early onset in a limb, rapid generalization, and sparing of cranial-cervical muscles, but atypical phenotypes have often been reported. Here, we describe a large DYT1 Italian family with phenotypically heterogeneous PTD that recapitulates all the atypical features associated with the DYT1 mutation, including late age at onset, focal or segmental phenotypes, onset or spreading of dystonia to the cranial-cervical muscles. Of 38 healthy family members, 15 also carried the DYT1 mutation, with an estimated penetrance of 21%. A literature review of atypical familial cases of DYT1-PTD showed that late onset, cervical involvement, and limited progression of dystonia are features frequently seen in DYT1 families. However, nearly all of these atypical patients fall within at least one of the clinical categories that best predict the DYT1 carrier status, namely, early onset, onset in a limb, and family history positive for early-onset dystonia.
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C Agosti, N M Akkawi, B Borroni, A Padovani (2006)  Recurrency in transient global amnesia: a retrospective study.   Eur J Neurol 13: 9. 986-989 Sep  
Abstract: Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a well-defined clinical syndrome of unknown etiology, which often occurs once in life. Several mechanisms have been proposed but only trigger events have been clearly associated with the attack such as physical exertion, emotional stress, sexual intercourse or immersion in cold water. According to our knowledge, this is the first study, which associates trigger events and TGA recurrency. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the risk factors which contribute to TGA recurrency. TGA patients consecutively admitted, performed clinical and neurological evaluation, electroencephalogram and structural brain imaging scan. TGA-trigger events were evaluated and comorbidities were carefully recorded. The risk factor sum was calculated as the sum of the considered triggers. Eighty-five TGA patients were grouped according to the presence of single TGA (n = 73) or two episodes of TGA (n = 12). The 14.11% of patients experienced two episodes. A logistic regression analysis showed that the more increased number of TGA the more number of trigger events (P < 0.11; chi2 = 6.38; beta = -3.29). These observations claim that TGA may be considered a complex epiphenomenon, and the sum of the trigger factors can be responsible for recurring of this almost unique-in-life event.
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2005
Giuseppe Lauria, Alessandra Majorana, Monica Borgna, Raffaella Lombardi, Paola Penza, Alessandro Padovani, Pierluigi Sapelli (2005)  Trigeminal small-fiber sensory neuropathy causes burning mouth syndrome.   Pain 115: 3. 332-337 Jun  
Abstract: Burning mouth syndrome is a common disorder that frequently affects women in the 5th-7th decade. It is characterized by persisting painful symptoms mainly involving the anterior two-thirds of the tongue. For several years it has been attributed to psychological causes. We investigated the innervation of the epithelium of the tongue to assess whether damage of peripheral nerve fibers underlies the pathogenesis of the disease. We examined 12 patients with clinically definite burning mouth syndrome for at least 6 months. We obtained superficial biopsies of the lateral aspect of the anterior two-thirds of the tongue from all patients and nine healthy controls. Immunohistochemical and confocal microscope co-localization studies were performed with cytoplasmatic, cytoskeletric, Schwann cell, and myelin markers for pathological changes. The density of epithelial nerve fibers was quantified. Patients showed a significantly lower density of epithelial nerve fibers than controls, with a trend toward correlation with the duration of symptoms. Epithelial and sub-papillary nerve fibers showed diffuse morphological changes reflecting axonal degeneration. Our study demonstrates that burning mouth syndrome is caused by a trigeminal small-fiber sensory neuropathy and that superficial biopsy of the tongue can be helpful in assessing the diagnosis. These findings shed light into the pathogenesis of this common disorder and could contribute to evaluate targeted therapies in patients.
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Giuseppe Bellelli, Elena Lucchi, Nadia Minicuci, Luca Rozzini, Angelo Bianchetti, Alessandro Padovani, Marco Trabucchi (2005)  Results of a multi-level therapeutic approach for Alzheimer's disease subjects in the "real world" (CRONOS project): a 36-week follow-up study.   Aging Clin Exp Res 17: 1. 54-61 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Recently, the Italian Ministry of Health started a national project (CRONOS project), aiming at assessing how a multi-level therapeutic approach--including 2-year free-of-charge treatment with cholinesterase inhibitors (ChE-I), pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic management of behavioral disorders, periodic multi-dimensional assessment, and informal caregivers' counseling-performs in subjects with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD). Five hundred and three Alzheimer Evaluation Units (AEUs) were instituted for this purpose all over Italy. In this paper we present the results of this approach in a large population of AD subjects followed for 36 weeks by 14 AEUs in Eastern Lombardy, Italy. METHODS: The project lasted for two years (September 2000-September 2002). Subjects eligible for the CRONOS project had a diagnosis of probable AD, a Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) score at baseline ranging from 10 to 26, and onset of cognitive disorders between 40 and 90 years of age. Periodic clinical and multi-dimensional assessments, including MMSE, Activities of Daily Living (ADL) and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) were made at 12 and 36 weeks; ChE-I doses, psychotropic and antidepressant drugs were also re-assessed at all clinical examinations. Caregivers were instructed about dementia and drug-related problems. RESULTS: Of the 808 subjects who completed the 36-week follow-up, 441 were naïves (i.e., never previously treated with ChE-I drugs) and 367 non-naïves. At 12 weeks, both naïves (mean variation from baseline = 0.8 points) and non-naïves (mean variation from baseline = 0.5 points) improved their MMSE scores, while at 36 weeks only naïves improved (mean variation from baseline = 0.1) and non-naïves decreased (mean variation from baseline = -1.2). The IADL and ADL scores progressively and mildly declined from baseline to the 36th week (ADL, mean variation from baseline = -0.5 for naïves, -0.3 for non-naïves; IADL = -0.7 for naïves, mean variation from baseline = -0.4). However, when the MMSE, ADL and IADL variations were controlled for age, sex and education, no significant time effect was found (MMSE, Wilks' lambda p = 0.34; ADL, Wilks' lambda p = 0.25; IADL, Wilks' lambda p = 0.3, respectively). These patterns were apparently unrelated to ChE-I doses. Neuroleptic use doubled in naïves and antidepressants increased in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: This multi-level therapeutic approach seems to slow down progression in cognitive and functional performance, in both naïve and non-naïve subjects. The possibility of recurrent examinations by specialized physicians, accurate, lose management of psychotropic drugs, and informal counseling to caregivers probably aid in achieving such results in a "real world" population of AD elderly subjects living at home. Future studies are needed to assess whether a multi-level therapeutic approach including higher ChE-I dose may perform better in these subjects.
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Martina Zimmermann, Barbara Borroni, Flaminio Cattabeni, Alessandro Padovani, Monica Di Luca (2005)  Cholinesterase inhibitors influence APP metabolism in Alzheimer disease patients.   Neurobiol Dis 19: 1-2. 237-242 Jun/Jul  
Abstract: Platelets mirror pathogenic alterations in the central nervous system of Alzheimer disease (AD) patients: an alteration of the Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) forms pattern and decreased alpha-secretase activity--the non-amyloidogenic APP processing enzyme--were demonstrated. Platelets were analysed at baseline and after 30 days of cholinesterase inhibitor (ChEI) treatment (T30). ADAM10 levels, alpha- and beta-secretase activity were assessed measuring ADAM10 immunoreactivity, sAPPalpha release and the membrane-attached C-terminal fragments produced by beta- and alpha-secretase cleavage, that is, CTF99 and CTF83, respectively. ChEIs treatment rescues impaired APP metabolism increasing significantly ADAM10 levels (T30 vs. T0, P < 0.05), alpha-secretase activity (T30 vs. T0, P < 0.05) and reducing beta-secretase cleavage (T30 vs. T0, P < 0.05). Restoration of the balance between the mutually exclusive alpha- and beta-secretase pathway in APP processing caused by short-term ChEIs treatment potentially represents a key event in AD therapy linking in vivo cholinergic effect to APP metabolism. The use of platelets may represent a useful tool to follow molecular aspects of pharmacological response in AD patients.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Mario Grassi, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Silvana Archetti, Raffaella Spezi, Veronica Vergani, Deodato Assanelli, Luigi Caimi, Alessandro Padovani (2005)  Cumulative effect of predisposing genotypes and their interaction with modifiable factors on the risk of ischemic stroke in young adults.   Stroke 36: 3. 533-539 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Combinations of multiple predisposing polymorphisms and their interactions with modifiable factors may result in synergistic effects on the risk of ischemic stroke. These mechanisms are more likely to play a relevant role in younger individuals. METHODS: The cumulative effect of the 20210A variant of prothrombin gene, the 1691A variant of factor V gene, the TT677 genotype of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene, and the epsilon4-carriership of the apolipoprotein (APOE) gene, as well as their interactions with modifiable predisposing factors, were determined in a series of 163 stroke patients aged younger than 45 years and 158 controls. RESULTS: Odds ratios (ORs) for stroke were 1.73 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.20 to 2.51) in subjects with 1 polymorphism and 3.00 (95% CI, 1.43 to 6.30) in those with > or =2. Compared with nonsmokers with none of the studied polymorphisms, ORs for stroke were 1.88 (95% CI, 1.18 to 3.00) and 3.55 (95% CI, 1.40 to 8.98) for nonsmokers with 1 and 2 polymorphisms, respectively, and 3.99 (95% CI, 2.00 to 7.96) and 15.99 (95% CI, 4.01 to 63.3) for smokers. Compared with nonhypertensive subjects bearing no polymorphisms, ORs were 1.91 (95% CI, 1.28 to 2.87) and 3.68 (95% CI, 1.64 to 8.26) for nonhypertensive subjects with 1 and 2 polymorphisms, 3.28 (95% CI, 1.01 to 10.7) and 10.79 (95% CI, 1.01 to 115.4) for hypertensive. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest a gene-dose effect of the examined prothrombotic and proatherogenic gene variants and a synergistic effect of these polymorphisms and modifiable risk factors in the pathogenesis of cerebral ischemia in young adults.
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L Iacoviello, A Di Castelnuovo, M Gattone, A Pezzini, D Assanelli, R Lorenzet, E Del Zotto, M Colombo, E Napoleone, C Amore, A D'Orazio, A Padovani, G de Gaetano, P Giannuzzi, M B Donati (2005)  Polymorphisms of the interleukin-1beta gene affect the risk of myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke at young age and the response of mononuclear cells to stimulation in vitro.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 25: 1. 222-227 Jan  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the role of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) gene polymorphisms as a link between inflammation, coagulation, and risk of ischemic vascular disease at young age. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 406 patients with myocardial infarction (MI) at young age, frequency-matched for age, sex, and recruitment center, with 419 healthy population-based controls and 134 patients with ischemic stroke at young age, matched by age and sex, with 134 healthy population-based controls, were studied. Subjects carrying the TT genotype of the -511C/T IL-1beta polymorphism showed a decreased risk of MI (odds ratio [OR], 0.36; 95% CI, 0.20 to 0.64) and stroke (OR, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.13 to 0.81) after adjustment for conventional risk factors. In both studies, the T allele showed a codominant effect (P=0.0020 in MI; P=0.021 in stroke). Mononuclear cells from volunteers carrying the T allele showed a decreased release of IL-1beta and a decreased expression of tissue factor after stimulation with lipopolysaccharide compared with CC homozygotes. The presence of a monoclonal antibody against IL-1beta during cell stimulation resulted in a marked reduction of tissue factor activity expression. CONCLUSIONS: -511C/T IL-1beta gene polymorphism affects the risk of MI and ischemic stroke at young age and the response of mononuclear cells to inflammatory stimulation.
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Nabil Maalikjy Akkawi, B Borroni, C Agosti, M Magoni, M Broli, A Pezzini, A Padovani (2005)  Volume cerebral blood flow reduction in pre-clinical stage of Alzheimer disease: evidence from an ultrasonographic study.   J Neurol 252: 5. 559-563 May  
Abstract: The association of decreased cerebral blood flow with the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD) has been a recent target of interest. By using neuroimaging techniques, growing attention has been devoted to the identification of preclinical AD. In this study, color duplex sonography of cervical arteries was used to measure mean cerebral blood flow (CBF) on 55 amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) patients. Two years after enrollment, excluding patients who progressed to dementia other than AD, two subgroups were identified, patients who developed AD (MCI converters) and patients with preserved cognitive and functional level (MCI non-converters). Examining the mean difference of CBF measured at baseline in the two subgroups obtained, a significant difference was noticed (MCI converters 539.3 +/- 114.3 vs MCI non converters 636.0 +/- 143.9, p < 0.05). MCI patients with CBF higher than median value (558 ml/min) had lower risk of developing AD (specificity 72.2%, sensitivity 68.4%) within a two year follow-up. Ultrasonography of the cervical arteries is a simple, non invasive and widespread technique useful in detecting CBF decline during the MCI stage, thus identifying patients who later will convert to AD.
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Luca Rozzini, Barbara Vicini Chilovi, Giuseppe Bellelli, Erik Bertoletti, Marco Trabucchi, Alessandro Padovani (2005)  Effects of cholinesterase inhibitors appear greater in patients on established antihypertensive therapy.   Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 20: 6. 547-551 Jun  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: There is increasing evidence that hypertension may contribute to development of dementia. Studies show that blood pressure lowering therapy might protect against cognitive deterioration and that antihypertensive treatment reduce the incidence of dementia. AIM: We hypothesize that administration of cholinesterase inhibitors (AChEis) to patients with Alzheimer's Disease (AD) receiving antihypertensive medications therapy would result in clinical benefits for a period of 40 weeks in routine clinical practice. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Patients with possible or probable AD were enrolled from 16 Alzheimer evaluation units (UVA) of Brescia and Cremona (Northern Italy). Patients treated with donepezil, rivastigmine and galantamine for 40 weeks independently of dosages were selected. Patients were evaluated at baseline (T0), 4 weeks (T1), 16 weeks (T2) and 40 weeks (T3). RESULTS: 416 patients completed the study at 40 weeks; of these 255 were 'non users' while 161 utilized antihypertensive drugs ('users'). The mean change in MMSE score from baseline to week 40 demonstrate that antihypertensive-treated patients improved by 0.7 points while patients receiving only AChEis remain stables. Analyzing separately patients (n = 183) that ameliorate (responders) on cognition at T3 ( >/= 1 point MMSE score increase) a significant differences in favor of 'users' antihypertensive drugs over 'non users' on cognition at weeks 16 and 40 has been demonstrated. In particular, at T2 the mean change of MMSE from baseline in 'users' was 3.2 +/- 2.6 vs 'non users' 2.2 +/- 2.3 ( p = 0.016) and at T3 was 3.5 +/- 2.5 vs 'non users' 2.0.2.7+/-1.6 ( p = 0.018). Antihypertensive drugs were independently associated with cognitive improvement in responder patients treated with AChEis (95% CI: 0.41-1.79; p = 0.002). CONCLUSION: Antihypertensive medications in AD patients treated with AChEis are associated with an independent improvement on cognition after 40 weeks of treatment.
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Barbara Borroni, Chiara Agosti, Giuliana Martini, Roberta Volpi, Cristina Brambilla, Luigi Caimi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2005)  Cholinesterase inhibitors exert a protective effect on endothelial damage in Alzheimer disease patients.   J Neurol Sci 229-230: 211-213 Mar  
Abstract: It has been recently suggested that in Alzheimer disease (AD), the current available therapy with cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs) influences platelets amyloid precursor protein (APP) metabolism towards the nonamyloidogenic pathway. In order to investigate whether ChEIs may exert a protective role on vascular damage due to abeta deposition, several parameters of coagulation and fibrinolysis were assessed. Twenty patients with mild AD and 30 age-matched controls entered the study. All subjects performed a multidimensional neuropsychological assessment and a laboratory protocol. Individuals with vascular risk factors and systemic diseases were excluded. In mild AD patients, increased levels of markers of endothelial dysfunction, such as thrombomodulin (TM) and sE-selectin (sE-sel), were seen. After 1-month ChEIs treatment, a significant reduction of TM (p<0.05) and sE-sel (p<0.05) values towards the normal range was observed. These findings suggest that endothelial-related ChEIs action might contribute to the clinical efficacy in AD, slowing down pathology progression.
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Barbara Borroni, Cristina Brambilla, Paolo Liberini, Renata Rao, Silvana Archetti, Stefano Gipponi, Giorgio Dalla Volta, Alessandro Padovani (2005)  Functional serotonin 5-HTTLPR polymorphism is a risk factor for migraine with aura.   J Headache Pain 6: 4. 182-184 Sep  
Abstract: In the present work, we report that the functional serotonin transporter gene promoter (5-HTTLPR) polymorphism is involved in migraine pathogenesis. The distribution of 5-HTTLPR genotypes was significantly different in MA patients (S/S vs. S/L vs. L/L=32.7 vs. 42.3 vs. 25.0%), MO patients (18.5 vs. 39.1 vs. 42.4%) and CON (18.0 vs. 51.3 vs. 30.7%; chi-square test, p<0.05). In 5-HTTLPR S/S carriers, the odds ratio for MA risk was 2.60 (95% confidence interval [95%CI]=1.75-3.85) compared to CON, and it was 2.14 (95%CI=1.42-3.21) compared to MO. These data provide a further insight on the complex genotype-phenotype relationship involved in MA pathogenesis, and might eventually result in new and individualised prognostic and therapeutic measures.
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Roberto Zulli, Franco Nicosia, Barbara Borroni, Chiara Agosti, Paola Prometti, Paolo Donati, Massimiliano De Vecchi, Giuseppe Romanelli, Vittorio Grassi, Alessandro Padovani (2005)  QT dispersion and heart rate variability abnormalities in Alzheimer's disease and in mild cognitive impairment.   J Am Geriatr Soc 53: 12. 2135-2139 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effect of cardiovascular changes (i.e., QT interval, QT dispersion (QTD), heart rate variability (HRV), and other cardiovascular measures) in subjects with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). DESIGN: Each subject underwent clinical and cognitive examination, a structural brain imaging study, echocardioDoppler, electrocardiogram (ECG), HRV analysis using 24-hour ECG monitoring, and 24-hour blood pressure monitoring. SETTING: Community population-based sample of patients admitted to an AD center for investigation of cognitive disturbances. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-three subjects with AD, 39 subjects with MCI, and 29 cognitive healthy subjects (controls) matched for demographic characteristics, hypertensive condition, smoking habits, and laboratory parameters were enrolled consecutively. MEASUREMENTS: Clinical and cognitive examination, structural brain imaging study, echocardioDoppler, ECG, HRV analysis using 24-hour ECG monitoring, and 24-hour blood pressure monitoring. RESULTS: QTD and QT corrected dispersion mean values were significantly higher in patients with AD than in patients with MCI and controls and higher in patients with MCI than in controls. HRV time and domain parameters were lower in patients with AD than in patients with MCI and controls. No difference in other cardiovascular measures was found. QTD and HRV were found to be significantly correlated with the degree of cognitive impairment. CONCLUSION: These findings support the presence of a peculiar neuroanatomic dysfunction in patients with AD and MCI that parallels the disease progression. These noninvasive parameters might prove to be powerful predictive tools in the worsening of cognitive function and mortality risk.
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Carlo Caltagirone, Angelo Bianchetti, Monica Di Luca, Patrizia Mecocci, Alessandro Padovani, Elvezio Pirfo, Pierluigi Scapicchio, Umberto Senin, Marco Trabucchi, Massimo Musicco (2005)  Guidelines for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease from the Italian Association of Psychogeriatrics.   Drugs Aging 22 Suppl 1: 1-26  
Abstract: A committee of experts from the Italian Association of Psychogeriatrics compiled the following report, which was then approved by a Steering Committee (comprising 20 specialists in neurology, psychiatry or geriatrics) from the Association and by two Alzheimer associations representing patients and families: the Italian Association for Alzheimer's Disease and the Italian Federation for Alzheimer's Disease. The report is based on a comprehensive review of the scientific literature on the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, discusses methodological aspects of dementia management, and details the limitations of current therapies. These guidelines are, in general, consistent with the principles of evidence-based medicine; however, for some controversial or poorly investigated issues, the guidelines integrate scientific evidence with experience and opinions from experts working in the clinical setting. In particular, the clinical experience of experts has been used to define recommendations for starting and interrupting pharmacotherapy, and to critically review evidence about the efficacy of non-pharmacological interventions. The principal pharmacotherapeutic interventions covered in the guidelines are acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, galantamine, rivastigmine, and tacrine) and memantine. The main non-pharmacological interventions reviewed are memory training, reality orientation therapy, and combined non-pharmacological interventions. Other issues covered are opportunities for Alzheimer's disease prevention, various modalities of care, and the treatment of comorbidities.
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Barbara Borroni, Daniela Perani, Marcella Broli, Francesca Colciaghi, Valentina Garibotto, Barbara Paghera, Chiara Agosti, Raffaele Giubbini, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2005)  Pre-clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer disease combining platelet amyloid precursor protein ratio and rCBF spect analysis.   J Neurol 252: 11. 1359-1362 Nov  
Abstract: Platelet Amyloid Precursor Protein ratio of different abnormal forms and 99mTc-ECD SPECT perfusion analysis were evaluated in Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) subjects who progressed to Alzheimer Disease (AD) and in stable MCI. We report that their combined evaluation increases the discriminative power of the analysis in identifying presymptomatic AD. The positive predictive value of these combined markers in identifying progressive MCI was 0.87, and the negative predictive value was 0.90. This observation suggests that the interplay of different markers should be considered for enhancing diagnostic accuracy of pre-clinical AD.
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Davide Anchisi, Barbara Borroni, Massimo Franceschi, Nasser Kerrouche, Elke Kalbe, Bettina Beuthien-Beumann, Stephano Cappa, Olaf Lenz, Stephan Ludecke, Alessandra Marcone, Rüdiger Mielke, Paola Ortelli, Alessandro Padovani, Oriana Pelati, Alberto Pupi, Elio Scarpini, Simon Weisenbach, Karl Herholz, Erik Salmon, Vjera Holthoff, Sandro Sorbi, Ferruccio Fazio, Daniela Perani (2005)  Heterogeneity of brain glucose metabolism in mild cognitive impairment and clinical progression to Alzheimer disease.   Arch Neurol 62: 11. 1728-1733 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Subjects with amnesic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) may include patients at high risk for progression to Alzheimer disease (AD) and a population with different underlying pathologic conditions. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the potential roles of positron emission tomography with fluorodeoxyglucose F 18 (18FDG-PET) and memory scores in identifying subjects with aMCI and in predicting progression to dementia. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS: Sixty-seven patients at European centers for neurologic and AD care who were diagnosed as having aMCI each underwent an extensive clinical and neuropsychological examination and an 18FDG-PET study. Forty-eight subjects were followed up periodically for at least 1 year, and progression to dementia was evaluated. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Brain glucose metabolism and memory scores. RESULTS: Fourteen subjects with aMCI who converted to AD within 1 year showed bilateral hypometabolism in the inferior parietal, posterior cingulate, and medial temporal cortex. Subjects with "stable" aMCI presented with hypometabolism in the dorsolateral frontal cortex. The severity of memory impairment, as evaluated by the California Verbal Learning Test-Long Delay Free Recall scores, correlated with the following brain metabolic patterns: scores less than 7 were associated with a typical 18FDG-PET AD pattern, and scores of 7 or higher were associated with hypometabolism in the dorsolateral frontal cortex and no progression to AD. CONCLUSION: These data provide evidence for clinical and functional heterogeneity among subjects with aMCI and suggest that 18FDG-PET findings combined with memory scores may be useful in predicting short-term conversion to AD.
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Giorgio Dalla Volta, Massimiliano Guindani, Paola Zavarise, Simona Griffini, Alessandro Pezzini, Alessandro Padovani (2005)  Prevalence of patent foramen ovale in a large series of patients with migraine with aura, migraine without aura and cluster headache, and relationship with clinical phenotype.   J Headache Pain 6: 4. 328-330 Sep  
Abstract: A relationship between migraine and patent foramen ovale (PFO) has been observed in relatively small series of patients so far. Furthermore, the exact mechanism underlying such an association remains unknown. In the present study we determined the prevalence of PFO by contrast-enhanced transcranial Doppler (TCD) in a group of 260 patients with migraine with aura (MA+), 74 patients with migraine without aura (MA-), and 38 patients with cluster headache (CH). One-hundred-sixty-one MA+subjects (61.9%), 12 MA-subjects (16.2%), and 14 CH-subjects (36.8%) were PFO-carriers. The association was independent on the frequency of migraine attacks and complexity of aura. Finally, among the 15 patients who had a history of at least one migraine attack occurring during a Valsalva maneuver only one subject turned out to be PFO-carrier. Our findings confirm previous observations of a link between MA+, CH, and PFO. They also suggest that such an association is independent on migraine clinical phenotype and is probably unrelated to the pathogenic mechanism of paradoxical embolism.
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A Pezzini, F Granella, M Grassi, C Bertolino, E Del Zotto, P Immovilli, E Bazzoli, A Padovani, C Zanferrari (2005)  History of migraine and the risk of spontaneous cervical artery dissection.   Cephalalgia 25: 8. 575-580 Aug  
Abstract: The pathophysiology of spontaneous cervical artery dissection (sCAD) is largely unknown. An association with migraine has been suggested, but not definitively proven. In the setting of a hospital-based prospective case-control study we assessed personal and family history of migraine in 72 patients with sCAD, 72 patients with cerebral infarct unrelated to a CAD (non-CAD) and 72 control subjects. Personal history of migraine was significantly associated to sCAD compared to non-CAD (59.7% vs. 30.6%; OR 3.14; 95% CI 1.41-7.01) and controls (18.1%; OR 7.41; 95% CI 3.11-17.64). As opposed to migraine with aura, migraine without aura was significantly more frequent among sCAD than among non-CAD (56.9% vs. 25.0%; OR 3.91; 95% CI 1.71-8.90) and controls (12.5%; OR 9.84; 95% CI 3.85-25.16). Similar results were observed when the frequencies of family history of migraine were compared. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that migraine may represent a predisposing condition for sCAD.
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Koren K Mann, Alessandra M S Padovani, Qi Guo, April L Colosimo, Ho-Young Lee, Jonathan M Kurie, Wilson H Miller (2005)  Arsenic trioxide inhibits nuclear receptor function via SEK1/JNK-mediated RXRalpha phosphorylation.   J Clin Invest 115: 10. 2924-2933 Oct  
Abstract: We have previously published that 2 proven treatments for acute promyelocytic leukemia, As2O3 and retinoic acid, can be antagonistic in vitro. We now report that As2O3 inhibits ligand-induced transcription of the retinoic acid receptor, as well as other nuclear receptors that heterodimerize with the retinoid X receptor alpha (RXRalpha). As2O3 did not inhibit transactivation of the estrogen receptor or the glucocorticoid receptor, which do not heterodimerize with RXRalpha. We further show that As2O3 inhibits expression of several target genes of RXRalpha partners. Phosphorylation of RXRalpha has been reported to inhibit nuclear receptor signaling, and we show by in vivo labeling and phosphoamino acid detection that As2O3 phosphorylated RXRalpha in the N-terminal ABC region exclusively on serine residues. Consistent with our previous data implying a role for JNK in As2O3-induced apoptosis, we show that pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of JNK activation decreased As2O3-induced RXRalpha phosphorylation and blocked the effects of As2O3 on RXRalpha-mediated transcription. A mutational analysis indicated that phosphorylation of a specific serine residue, S32, was primarily responsible for inhibition of RXRalpha-mediated transcription. These data may provide some insight into the rational development of chemotherapeutic combinations involving As2O3 as well as into molecular mechanisms of arsenic-induced carcinogenesis resulting from environmental exposure.
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Monica Di Luca, Enzo Grossi, Barbara Borroni, Martina Zimmermann, Elena Marcello, Francesca Colciaghi, Fabrizio Gardoni, Marco Intraligi, Alessandro Padovani, Massimo Buscema (2005)  Artificial neural networks allow the use of simultaneous measurements of Alzheimer disease markers for early detection of the disease.   J Transl Med 3: Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that in platelets of mild Alzheimer Disease (AD) patients there are alterations of specific APP forms, paralleled by alteration in expression level of both ADAM 10 and BACE when compared to control subjects. Due to the poor linear relation among each key-element of beta-amyloid cascade and the target diagnosis, the use of systems able to afford non linear tasks, like artificial neural networks (ANNs), should allow a better discriminating capacity in comparison with classical statistics. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the accuracy of ANNs in AD diagnosis. METHODS: 37 mild-AD patients and 25 control subjects were enrolled, and APP, ADM10 and BACE measures were performed. Fifteen different models of feed-forward and complex-recurrent ANNs (provided by Semeion Research Centre), based on different learning laws (back propagation, sine-net, bi-modal) were compared with the linear discriminant analysis (LDA). RESULTS: The best ANN model correctly identified mild AD patients in the 94% of cases and the control subjects in the 92%. The corresponding diagnostic performance obtained with LDA was 90% and 73%. CONCLUSION: This preliminary study suggests that the processing of biochemical tests related to beta-amyloid cascade with ANNs allows a very good discrimination of AD in early stages, higher than that obtainable with classical statistics methods.
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Barbara Borroni, Despina Yancopoulou, Miho Tsutsui, Alessandro Padovani, Stephen J Sawcer, John R Hodges, Maria Grazia Spillantini (2005)  Association between tau H2 haplotype and age at onset in frontotemporal dementia.   Arch Neurol 62: 9. 1419-1422 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The frontotemporal dementia (FTD) syndromes have been associated with the microtubule-associated tau protein since tau gene mutations have been demonstrated to be the cause of FTD and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17. In cases of FTD without tau gene mutations, however, it is unclear whether genetic variability in the tau gene is associated with the development or modulation of FTD. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether genetic variability in tau and apolipoprotein E (ApoE) modulates and contributes to the development of FTD. Design and Patients The distribution of tau gene haplotypes and the ApoE genotype were investigated in 86 patients with well-characterized FTD and 50 control subjects. RESULTS: No difference in the distribution of the tau H1 and H2 haplotypes between FTD cases and controls was observed, whereas the ApoE epsilon4 allele was more frequent in FTD cases. The presence of at least 1 tau H2 allele was found to be significantly associated with an earlier age of onset in patients with FTD. The association between the H2 allele and age at onset was not related to family history, clinical presentation, or ApoE genotype. CONCLUSION: These findings support a role of tau protein in modulating disease phenotype by influencing the age at onset in these FTD cases.
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2004
Barbara Borroni, Silvana Archetti, Chiara Agosti, Nabil Akkawi, Cristina Brambilla, Luigi Caimi, Carlo Caltagirone, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2004)  Intronic CYP46 polymorphism along with ApoE genotype in sporadic Alzheimer Disease: from risk factors to disease modulators.   Neurobiol Aging 25: 6. 747-751 Jul  
Abstract: Increasing biological and clinical findings argue for a link between brain cholesterol turnover and Alzheimer Disease (AD), high cerebral levels of the former increasing Abeta load. Cerebral cholesterol elimination involves two mechanisms dependent on Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) and cholesterol 24-hydroxylase (CYP46). The aim of this study was to evaluate an intronic variation in CYP46 (intron 2, T --> C ) along with ApoE genotype as risk factors for AD and to establish the correlation between CYP46/ApoE polymorphism and disease progression. One-hundred and fifty-seven AD patients, who had been followed periodically through 1-year follow-up after enrollment, and 134 age- and gender-matched controls entered the study. The distribution of CYP46 genotypes was significantly different in AD compared to controls (P<0.004), being CYP*C allele higher in AD patients ( P<0.002). ApoE 4 genotype was more frequent in AD (41.4%) than in controls (15.9%, P<0.0001). The odds ratio (OR) for AD risk in CYP46*C carriers was 2.8, and in ApoE epsilon4 carriers was 4.05; the OR for having both CYP46*C and ApoE epsilon4 was 17.75, demonstrating the their synergic effect on AD risk. In AD patients, CYP46*C along with ApoE epsilon4 genotype were associated with a higher cognitive decline at 1-year follow-up (P<0.02). These findings provide direct evidence that CYP46 and ApoE polymorphisms synergically increase the risk for AD development, and influence on the rate of cognitive decline.
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Francesca Colciaghi, Barbara Borroni, Martina Zimmermann, Camilla Bellone, Annalisa Longhi, Alessandro Padovani, Flaminio Cattabeni, Yves Christen, Monica Di Luca (2004)  Amyloid precursor protein metabolism is regulated toward alpha-secretase pathway by Ginkgo biloba extracts.   Neurobiol Dis 16: 2. 454-460 Jul  
Abstract: Clinical trials report that Ginkgo biloba extracts (e.g., EGb761) reduce cognitive symptoms in age-associated memory impairment and dementia, including Alzheimer disease (AD). However, the mechanisms behind their neuroprotective ability remain to be fully established. In this study, the effect of EGb761 on the amyloid precursor protein (APP) metabolism has been investigated by both in vitro and in vivo models. To this aim, alpha-secretase, the enzyme regulating the non-amyloidogenic processing of APP and the release of alphaAPPs, the alpha-secretase metabolite, were studied in superfusates of hippocampal slices after EGb761 incubation, and in hippocampi and cortices of EGb761-treated rats. PKC translocation state was evaluated as well. EGb761 increases alphaAPPs release through a PKC-independent manner. This effect is not accompanied by a modification of either APP forms or alpha-secretase expression. Moreover, EGb761 influence on alphaAPPs release was strictly dependent on treatment dosage. Our findings suggest that the benefit of EGb761 reported by previous clinical studies is underscored by a specific biological mechanism of this compound on APP metabolism, directly affecting the release of the non-amyloidogenic metabolite. Additional research will be needed to clearly define the effective clinical relevance, thus considering EGb761 as a possible supplementary treatment in dementing diseases.
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Ingrid Hausser, Uta Müller, Stefan Engelter, Philippe Lyrer, Alessandro Pezzini, Alessandro Padovani, Birgit Moormann, Otto Busse, Ralf Weber, Tobias Brandt, Caspar Grond-Ginsbach (2004)  Different types of connective tissue alterations associated with cervical artery dissections.   Acta Neuropathol 107: 6. 509-514 Jun  
Abstract: This study describes the technical handling and the diagnostic evaluation of skin biopsies in order to standardize the assessment of the delicate morphologic abnormalities that are found in patients with spontaneous cervical artery dissections (sCAD). Skin biopsies from 126 patients with sCAD and from 29 healthy relatives were analyzed. The morphology of the connective tissue was normal in 54 patients with sCAD (43%) and aberrant in 72 patients with sCAD (57%). These latter patients were classified into three groups: in 43 patients, we repeatedly observed composite collagen fibrils and elastic fibers with fragmentation and minicalcifications. In 13 further patients, the dermis was significantly thinner than in healthy subjects. The collagen fibers contained fibrils with highly variable diameters. In a third group of 16 sCAD patients, the abnormalities were restricted to the elastic fibers (with fragmentation and minicalcifications) without significant alterations in the morphology of the collagen fibrils. The finding of different morphologic classes of aberrations among patients suggests that the connective tissue defects are genetically heterogeneous. The segregation of the connective tissue phenotype in three families suggested an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance.
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F Colciaghi, E Marcello, B Borroni, M Zimmermann, C Caltagirone, F Cattabeni, A Padovani, M Di Luca (2004)  Platelet APP, ADAM 10 and BACE alterations in the early stages of Alzheimer disease.   Neurology 62: 3. 498-501 Feb  
Abstract: Amyloid precursor protein (APP), ADAM 10, and beta-site-APP cleaving enzyme (BACE) alterations were evaluated in platelets of 31 patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) and 15 age-matched controls. A significant modification of these proteins and enzymes involved in the amyloid cascade was detected from the earliest clinically detectable disease stage. This observation suggests that AD is associated with an early metabolic derangement toward amyloidogenic pathways and supports the potential value of APP and secretase measurements for early diagnosis of AD.
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Barbara Borroni, Francesca Colciaghi, Silvana Archetti, Elena Marcello, Luigi Caimi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2004)  Predicting cognitive decline in Alzheimer disease. Role of platelet amyloid precursor protein.   Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 18: 1. 32-34 Jan/Mar  
Abstract: An altered pattern of platelet amyloid precursor protein (APP) forms, consisting of a reduced ratio of the upper (130 kDa) to the lower (110 to 106 kDa) immunoreactivity band (APPr), is associated with Alzheimer disease (AD), although in the early stages of AD this pattern shows high variability. To explore whether APPr values at baseline may predict the rate of cognitive decline, we evaluated patients with mild AD before and after 1 year of treatment with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. Lower APPr at baseline was the only predictor of progressive cognitive decline, suggesting that this biomarker might be a useful indicator of prognosis for patients with AD.
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Alessandro Pezzini, Mario Grassi, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Elena Bazzoli, Silvana Archetti, Deodato Assanelli, Nabil Maalikjy Akkawi, Alberto Albertini, Alessandro Padovani (2004)  Synergistic effect of apolipoprotein E polymorphisms and cigarette smoking on risk of ischemic stroke in young adults.   Stroke 35: 2. 438-442 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The effect of apolipoprotein E (APOE) polymorphisms on stroke risk may be influenced by the coexistence of modifiable predisposing conditions. We explored the interactions of APOE genotypes and conventional risk factors in a case-control study of young adults with cerebral infarct. METHODS: We analyzed 124 consecutive patients (age, 34.7+/-7.3 years) and 147 age- and sex-matched controls. APOE genotypes were determined by restriction fragment-length polymorphism analysis. RESULTS: The prevalence of the epsilon4 allele and epsilon34 genotype was slightly higher in cases than in controls (0.125 versus 0.071 and 0.242 versus 0.136, respectively). Carriers of the epsilon34 genotype and epsilon4 allele were associated with an increased risk of stroke on multivariate analysis compared with the epsilon33 genotype and non-epsilon4 carriers, respectively (odds ratio [OR], 2.29; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.10 to 4.76; and OR, 2.27; 95% CI, 1.13 to 4.56). ORs for stroke were 2.99 (95% CI, 1.64 to 5.45), 2.69 (95% CI, 1.25 to 5.77), and 5.39 (95% CI, 1.59 to 18.30) for smokers with the epsilon33 genotype, nonsmokers with the epsilon34 genotype, and smokers with the epsilon34 genotype, respectively, compared with nonsmokers with the epsilon33 genotype. Similar results were obtained when epsilon4 carriers and non-epsilon4 carriers were compared in the same interaction model. No significant interaction between APOE and hypertension was found. CONCLUSIONS: In young adults, the APOE epsilon4 allele and cigarette smoking act synergistically, increasing an individual's propensity to have a cerebral ischemic event. This finding may help in determining an individual's predisposition to stroke and more targeted preventive interventions.
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Barbara Borroni, Chiara Agosti, Silvana Archetti, Chiara Costanzi, Silvia Bonomi, Diego Ghianda, Gian Luigi Lenzi, Luigi Caimi, Monica Di Luca, Alessandro Padovani (2004)  Catechol-O-methyltransferase gene polymorphism is associated with risk of psychosis in Alzheimer Disease.   Neurosci Lett 370: 2-3. 127-129 Nov  
Abstract: There is emerging evidence that psychosis in Alzheimer Disease (AD) represents a clinically relevant phenotype with a distinct biological process. It has been reported that a functional polymorphism of the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene predisposes to an increased risk for schizophrenia and likely to psychosis susceptibility. Aim of this study was to evaluate functional COMT genetic variation as a risk factor for psychosis in Alzheimer Disease. One hundred eighty-one AD patients and 208 age-matched controls underwent clinical and neuropsychological examination, behavioural and psychiatric disturbances evaluation, and ApoE and COMT genotyping. The distribution of COMT genotypes did not significantly differ in AD compared to controls. Among patients with psychosis (32.6%), 88.1% were COMT*H carriers (COMT H/H or COMT H/L, p < .01). The Odds Ratio (OR) for risk of psychosis in COMT*H carriers was 2.66 (confidence interval, CI 95%: 1.6-6.62), taking into account possible confounding factors. A comparable influence of COMT polymorphism on psychosis over the course of the disease was reported. These findings suggest that COMT polymorphism influences on the risk of psychosis since the early stages, and claims for the possibility to identify distinct phenotypes on genetic basis among AD patients.
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L Mosconi, D Perani, S Sorbi, K Herholz, B Nacmias, V Holthoff, E Salmon, J - C Baron, M T R De Cristofaro, A Padovani, B Borroni, M Franceschi, L Bracco, A Pupi (2004)  MCI conversion to dementia and the APOE genotype: a prediction study with FDG-PET.   Neurology 63: 12. 2332-2340 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To investigate whether the combination of fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose (FDG) PET measures with the APOE genotype would improve prediction of the conversion from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to Alzheimer disease (AD). METHOD: After 1 year, 8 of 37 patients with MCI converted to AD (22%). Differences in baseline regional glucose metabolic rate (rCMRglc) across groups were assessed on a voxel-based basis using a two-factor analysis of variance with outcome (converters [n = 8] vs nonconverters [n = 29]) and APOE genotype (E4 carriers [E4+] [n = 16] vs noncarriers [E4-] [n = 21]) as grouping factors. Results were considered significant at p < 0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons. RESULTS: All converters showed reduced rCMRglc in the inferior parietal cortex (IPC) as compared with the nonconverters. Hypometabolism in AD-typical regions, that is, temporoparietal and posterior cingulate cortex, was found for the E4+ as compared with the E4- patients, with the E4+/converters (n = 5) having additional rCMRglc reductions within frontal areas, such as the anterior cingulate (ACC) and inferior frontal (IFC) cortex. For the whole MCI sample, IPC rCMRglc predicted conversion to AD with 84% overall diagnostic accuracy (p = 0.003). Moreover, ACC and IFC rCMRglc improved prediction for the E4+ group, yielding 100% sensitivity, 90% specificity, and 94% accuracy (p < 0.0005), thus leading to an excellent discrimination. CONCLUSION: Fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose-PET measures may improve prediction of the conversion to Alzheimer disease, especially in combination with the APOE genotype.
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Barbara Borroni, Chiara Agosti, Cristina Brambilla, Veronica Vergani, Elisabetta Cottini, Nabil Akkawi, Alessandro Padovani (2004)  Is transient global amnesia a risk factor for amnestic mild cognitive impairment?   J Neurol 251: 9. 1125-1127 Sep  
Abstract: Transient Global Amnesia (TGA) is a common condition of unknown aetiology characterised by the abrupt onset of severe anterograde amnesia, which lasts less than 24 hours. Some authors have suggested that subclinical impairment of memory functions may persist for much longer, but neuropsychological assessment lasting years after TGA attack has not been performed so far. The aim of this study was to evaluate longterm cognitive functions in patients with a previous TGA episode. Fifty-five patients underwent a standardised neuropsychological assessment after at least one-year from the TGA attack, and were compared with 80 age-matched controls. TGA patients showed worse performances on tests evaluating verbal and nonverbal long-term memory and attention, with comparable global cognitive functions. By applying current criteria for amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI-a) on TGA subjects, a group consisting of 18/55 (32.7%) MCI-a subjects was identified. There was no association between the presence of MCI-a and demographic variables, vascular risk factors, years since the TGA episode, or ApoE genotype. This study demonstrates that TGA appears to be a relatively benign syndrome although objective memory deficits fulfilling MCI-a criteria persist over time, as detected by multidimensional neuropsychological tasks performed at long-term follow-up.
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Martina Zimmermann, Fabrizio Gardoni, Elena Marcello, Francesca Colciaghi, Barbara Borroni, Alessandro Padovani, Flaminio Cattabeni, Monica Di Luca (2004)  Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors increase ADAM10 activity by promoting its trafficking in neuroblastoma cell lines.   J Neurochem 90: 6. 1489-1499 Sep  
Abstract: Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) are the only currently available drugs for treating Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Some authors have suggested a function of AChEIs not only in the induction of AChE overproduction and alternative splicing shifts but also a possible role of these drugs in amyloid metabolism beyond their well-known symptomatic effect. Here, we investigate the mechanisms of action of the AChEI donepezil on APP (amyloid precursor protein) metabolism and on the activity/trafficking of the alpha-secretase candidate ADAM 10, in differentiated human neuroblastoma cells (SH-SY5Y). In these cells, the activity of AChE is significantly decreased after 2 h of donepezil treatment. Further, SH-SY5Y cells released significantly more sAPPalpha into the medium, whereas total APP levels in cell lysates were unchanged. Interestingly, treated cells showed increased ADAM 10 levels in membrane compartments. This effect was prevented by pretreatment with tunicamycin or brefeldin, suggesting that donepezil affects trafficking and/or maturation of ADAM 10; additionally, this pretreatment significantly decreased sAPPalpha levels. Pre-incubation with atropine decreased release of sAPPalpha significantly but did not revert ADAM 10 activity to control levels further suggesting that donepezil acts not solely through a purely receptor mediated pathway. These findings indicate that donepezil exerts multiple mechanisms involving processing and trafficking of key proteins involved in AD pathogenesis.
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Barbara Borroni, Guido Tiberio, Stefano Bonardelli, Elisabetta Cottini, Maurizio Facheris, Nabil Akkawi, Alessandro Pezzini, Edoardo Cervi, Stefano Maria Giulini, Alessandro Padovani (2004)  Is mild vascular cognitive impairment reversible? Evidence from a study on the effect of carotid endarterectomy.   Neurol Res 26: 5. 594-597 Jul  
Abstract: Mild vascular cognitive impairment (mVCI) is a broader term that is intended to detect cognitive loss before the development of dementia. The identification of preventable risk factors as well as therapeutic strategies of intervention is still unclear. It has been suggested that carotid endarterectomy (CEA) improves cognitive functions, beyond the well-known preventive effect upon future stroke events. In the present study, we evaluated the beneficial effect of CEA in restoring mVCI. Among a large sample of subjects, who underwent CEA for severe carotid stenosis, two groups were identified according to the absence (CON) or the presence of cognitive impairment (mVCI). A multidimensional neuropsychological and behavioural assessment was performed in the week prior, and at a 3-month follow-up after CEA. The incidence of mVCI in this sample was 38%. Seventy-eight patients completed the follow-up (48 CON, 30 mVCI). Both groups showed a clinical improvement after CEA, although the effect was significantly higher in the mVCI group in regard to verbal memory (short story, p < 0.05), and attention (digit span, p < 0.05) scores. At follow-up, 60% of mVCI subjects were classified as having normal cognitive functions. Index of disease severity and peripheral arterial disease were found to be the predictors of improvement. These findings support that mVCI represents a heterogeneous, in some cases reversible condition. CEA might be considered a therapeutic option to treat and prevent cognitive decline in mVCI patients.
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