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guido rodriguez


guido@unige.it

Journal articles

2010
Adolfo Paolin, Paolo Michielon, Michele Betetto, Giuseppe Sartori, Carlo Valfré, Guido Rodriguez, John M Murkin (2010)  Lower perfusion pressure during hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass is associated with decreased cerebral blood flow and impaired memory performance 6 months postoperatively.   Heart Surg Forum 13: 1. E7-12 Feb  
Abstract: We undertook to determine the influence of perfusion pressure during hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) on cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cognitive memory outcome at 6 months postoperatively.
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Flavio Nobili, Debora Mazzei, Barbara Dessi, Silvia Morbelli, Andrea Brugnolo, Paola Barbieri, Nicola Girtler, Gianmario Sambuceti, Guido Rodriguez, Marco Pagani (2010)  Unawareness of memory deficit in amnestic MCI: FDG-PET findings.   J Alzheimers Dis 22: 3. 993-1003 Jan  
Abstract: To unveil the brain metabolic correlates of (un)awareness of memory deficit in subjects with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI), forty-two outpatients underwent brain 18F-FDG-PET. Awareness of memory deficit was assessed with the Memory Complaint Questionnaire (MAC-Q), identifying two groups: low (MCI/unaware; 17 patients) and good (MCI/aware; 25 patients) aMCI awareness. Twenty-nine age-matched healthy subjects represented the control group. SPM2 was used to assess the correlation between brain metabolism and MAC-Q score, for comparisons between each patient group and controls, and between aMCI/unaware and aMCI/aware groups. The two aMCI groups were comparable in terms of age, gender, education, depression, and neuropsychological tests scores. In the whole 42-patient group, a positive correlation was found between MAC-Q score and metabolism in posterior cingulate cortex in both hemispheres and in inferior parietal lobule, middle cingulate cortex, precuneus and angular gyrus in the left hemisphere. Compared to controls, hypometabolism was found in aMCI/unaware in three large clusters, including precuneus, inferior parietal lobule and superior occipital gyrus, in the left hemisphere, and in inferior parietal lobule, angular gyrus and middle temporal gyrus in the right hemisphere. Smaller clusters of hypometabolism were found in bilateral temporal lobe in aMCI/aware. Hypometabolism in inferior parietal lobule, angular gyrus and superior temporal gyrus in the left hemisphere was highlighted in aMCI/unaware versus aMCI/aware. The significant correlation in all 42 aMCI patients points to posteromedial cortex as a key node of the network being involved in awareness of memory deficit. Patients with low awareness show a more severe hypometabolic pattern, typical of Alzheimer's disease and therefore could be more at risk of developing dementia.
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Gennaro Schettini, Stefano Govoni, Marco Racchi, Guido Rodriguez (2010)  Phosphorylation of APP-CTF-AICD domains and interaction with adaptor proteins: signal transduction and/or transcriptional role--relevance for Alzheimer pathology.   J Neurochem 115: 6. 1299-1308 Dec  
Abstract: In recent decades, the study of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and of its proteolytic products carboxy terminal fragment (CTF), APP intracellular C-terminal domain (AICD) and amyloid beta has been mostly focussed on the role of APP as a producer of the toxic amyloid beta peptide. Here, we reconsider the role of APP suggesting, in a provocative way, the protein as a central player in a putative signalling pathway. We highlight the presence in the cytosolic tail of APP of the YENPTY motif which is typical of tyrosine kinase receptors, the phosphorylation of the tyrosine, serine and threonine residues, the kinases involved and the interaction with intracellular adaptor proteins. In particular, we examine the interaction with Shc and Grb2 regulators, which through the activation of Ras proteins elicit downstream signalling events such as the MAPK pathway. The review also addresses the interaction of APP, CTFs and AICD with other adaptor proteins and in particular with Fe65 for nuclear transcriptional activity and the importance of phosphorylation for sorting the secretases involved in the amyloidogenic or non-amyloidogenic pathways. We provide a novel perspective on Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis, focussing on the perturbation of the physiological activities of APP-CTFs and AICD as an alternative perspective from that which normally focuses on the accumulation of neurotoxic proteolytic fragments.
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A Brugnolo, S Morbelli, B Dessi, N Girtler, D Mazzei, F Famà, P Barbieri, G Cabassi, P M Koulibaly, G Sambuceti, G Rodriguez, F Nobili (2010)  The reversed clock drawing test phenomenon in Alzheimer's disease: A perfusion SPECT study.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 29: 1. 1-10 01  
Abstract: To unveil a brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) pattern in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients, showing a reversed clock drawing test (CDT) phenomenon.
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Flavio Nobili, Claudio Campus, Dario Arnaldi, Fabrizio De Carli, Gaia Cabassi, Andrea Brugnolo, Barbara Dessi, Silvia Morbelli, Gianmario Sambuceti, Giovanni Abbruzzese, Guido Rodriguez (2010)  Cognitive-nigrostriatal relationships in de novo, drug-naïve Parkinson's disease patients: a [I-123]FP-CIT SPECT study.   Mov Disord 25: 1. 35-43 Jan  
Abstract: To unveil cognitive-nigrostriatal correlations in Parkinson's disease (PD), 30 de novo, drug-naïve PD patients and 15 patients with essential tremor (Controls, CTR) underwent a neuropsychological (NPS) battery and brain SPECT with [I-123]Ioflupane, as a biomarker of nigrostriatal function. Automatic extraction of uptake at caudate and putamen level was conducted through the BasGan software, also allowing partial volume effect correction. Because of the multicollinearity among neuropsychological tests and among SPECT variables, factor analysis was applied to 16 neuropsychological scores; moreover, the four SPECT variables were merged into a mean SPECT value (mSPECT). Factor analysis identified four NPS factors: a dys-executive (NPS-EX), a visuospatial (NPS-VS), a verbal memory (NPS-VM), and a "mixed" (NPD-MIX) factor. In PD group, there were inverse correlations between UPDRS-III score and both NPS-VS (P < 0.01) and mSPECT (P < 0.05), and a direct correlation between mSPECT and NPS-EX (P < 0.05). Post hoc analysis showed a direct correlation between NPS-EX and caudate uptake in both hemispheres (P < 0.05). Moreover, inverse correlations were found between UPDRS-III and, respectively, putamen uptake in the less affected hemisphere (P < 0.01), and putamen and caudate uptake in the more affected hemisphere (P < 0.05). In CTR, no correlation was found between mSPECT and either NPS or GDS values. Nigro-caudate function affects executive capabilities in PD but not in CTR, which appears to be unrelated to the disease motor severity at its onset. Instead, PD motor severity is related to nigro-putaminal impairment and visuospatial dysfunction. The role of these data as predictive features of cognitive decline and eventually dementia remains to be established in longitudinal studies.
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Claudio Babiloni, Pieter Jelle Visser, Giovanni Frisoni, Peter Paul De Deyn, Lorena Bresciani, Vesna Jelic, Guy Nagels, Guido Rodriguez, Paolo M Rossini, Fabrizio Vecchio, Danilo Colombo, Frans Verhey, Lars-Olof Wahlund, Flavio Nobili (2010)  Cortical sources of resting EEG rhythms in mild cognitive impairment and subjective memory complaint.   Neurobiol Aging 31: 10. 1787-1798 Oct  
Abstract: Are cortical electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms altered in amnesic and non-amnesic mild cognitive impairment (MCI), subjective memory complaint (SMC), and healthy elderly (Nold) subjects? Eyes-closed resting EEG was recorded in 79 Nold, 53 SMC, 51 non-amnesic MCI, and 92 amnesic MCI subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), beta 2 (20-30 Hz) and gamma (30-40 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were estimated by standardized low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (sLORETA). Results showed that (i) the frontal delta sources were greater in amplitude in the amnesic MCI and SMC subjects than in the Nold subjects (p<0.05-0.01); (ii) the parietal and occipital theta sources were lower in amplitude in the SMC subjects than in the Nold subjects (p<0.046); (iii) the occipital theta sources were greater in amplitude in the amnesic MCI subjects than in the SMC and non-amnesic MCI subjects (p<0.02-0.01); (iv) the parietal and occipital alpha 1 sources were greater in amplitude in the Nold subjects than in the SMC, non-amnesic MCI and amnesic MCI subjects (p<0.00001); (v) the central alpha 1 sources were lower in amplitude in the SMC subjects than in the non-amnesic MCI subjects (p<0.002); (vi) the occipital alpha 1 sources were greater in amplitude in the SMC subjects than in the amnesic MCI subjects (p<0.0003); (vii) the parietal and occipital alpha 2 sources were greater in amplitude in the Nold subjects than in the non-amnesic MCI subjects (p<0.041-0.0004); (viii) the occipital alpha 2 sources were greater in the SMC subjects than in the non-amnesic MCI subjects (p<0.02). These results suggest that amnesic MCI and SMC subjects present some of the typical alterations of brain neural synchronization as revealed by resting cortical EEG rhythms in Alzheimer's disease patients.
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Debora Mazzei, Andrea Brugnolo, Barbara Dessi, Nicola Girtler, Francesco Famà, Elisa Rizza, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez (2010)  Impaired access to semantic memory for the cognition of geographic space in Alzheimer's disease.   Arch Gerontol Geriatr 50: 2. 198-201 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: This study explores the possibility to capitalize from a widely used semantic fluency test, in order to investigate aspects of topographical space representation, still poorly studied in neurodegenerative diseases. Twenty-six patients with mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) and 13 healthy control (CTR) subjects underwent neuropsychological assessment at baseline (T0) and about 2 years later (T1). The cities named during category verbal fluency test ("names of cities") were marked on a map, and the polygon perimeter obtained by joining the external points was computed. Mini-mental state examination (MMSE) score, number of cities named and perimeter length were compared between T0 and T1, both within-group and between groups. MMSE score and number of cities significantly differed between AD and CTR both at T0 and at T1; perimeter length differed significantly only at T1. Between T0 and T1, all the three parameters significantly decreased in AD, while they were substantially unchanged in CTR. Besides a reduction of semantic verbal fluency, there seems to be a 'restriction' of mental geographic space representation already in mild AD. These findings should be confirmed and exploited by further ad hoc investigations.
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Silvia Morbelli, Arnoldo Piccardo, Giampiero Villavecchia, Barbara Dessi, Andrea Brugnolo, Alessandra Piccini, Anna Caroli, Giovanni Frisoni, Guido Rodriguez, Flavio Nobili (2010)  Mapping brain morphological and functional conversion patterns in amnestic MCI: a voxel-based MRI and FDG-PET study.   Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 37: 1. 36-45 Jan  
Abstract: To reveal the morphological and functional substrates of memory impairment and conversion to Alzheimer disease (AD) from the stage of amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI).
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Claudio Babiloni, Giovanni B Frisoni, Fabrizio Vecchio, Roberta Lizio, Michela Pievani, Geroldi Cristina, Claudia Fracassi, Fabrizio Vernieri, Guido Rodriguez, Flavio Nobili, Raffaele Ferri, Paolo M Rossini (2010)  Stability of clinical condition in mild cognitive impairment is related to cortical sources of alpha rhythms: An electroencephalographic study.   Hum Brain Mapp Dec  
Abstract: Previous evidence has shown that resting eyes-closed cortical alpha rhythms are higher in amplitude in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) than Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects (Babiloni et al. [2006a]: Human Brain Mapp 27:162-172; [2006b]: Clin Neurophysiol 117:252-268; [2006c]: Neuroimage 29:948-964; [2006d]: Ann Neurol 59:323-334; [2006e]: Clin Neurophysiol 117:1113-1129; [2006f]: Neuroimage 31:1650-1665). This study tested the hypothesis that, in amnesic MCI subjects, high amplitude of baseline cortical alpha rhythms is related to long-term stability of global cognition on clinical follow-up. Resting electroencephalographic (EEG) data were recorded in 100 amnesic MCI subjects during eyes-closed condition. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta1 (13-20 Hz), and beta2 (20-30 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Global cognition was indexed by mini mental state evaluation (MMSE) score at the time of EEG recordings (baseline) and about after 1 year. Based on the MMSE percentage difference between baseline and 1-year follow-up (MMSEvar), the MCI subjects were retrospectively divided into three arbitrary groups: DECREASED (MMSEvar ≤ -4%; N = 43), STABLE (MMSEvar ≈ 0; N = 27), and INCREASED (MMSEvar ≥ +4%; N = 30). Subjects' age, education, individual alpha frequency, gender, and MMSE scores were used as covariates for statistical analysis. Baseline posterior cortical sources of alpha 1 rhythms were higher in amplitude in the STABLE than in the DECREASED and INCREASED groups. These results suggest that preserved resting cortical neural synchronization at alpha frequency is related to a long-term (1 year) stable cognitive function in MCI subjects. Future studies should use serial MMSE measurements to confirm and refine the present results. Hum Brain Mapp, 2011. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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M Pagani, B Dessi, S Morbelli, A Brugnolo, D Salmaso, A Piccini, D Mazzei, G Villavecchia, S A Larsson, G Rodriguez, F Nobili (2010)  MCI patients declining and not-declining at mid-term follow-up: FDG-PET findings.   Curr Alzheimer Res 7: 4. 287-294 Jun  
Abstract: Patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) not converted to dementia at one to three years follow-up represent a heterogeneous group across studies, by including 'late converters' but also patients without any neurodegenerative disease. We tested the hypothesis that the combination of memory and brain metabolic assessment could identify subgroups of memory decliners (MCI/Decl) and non-decliners (MCI/noDecl) before a long follow-up time is available. From twenty-nine patients with amnestic MCI (aMCI) at baseline, three groups were identified at follow-up: 10 patients who converted to AD (MCI/AD); 10 patients either showing episodic memory worsening or reaching the floor effect on memory and declining in other key tests (MCI/Decl) and 9 patients showing no memory worsening or even improvement (MCI/noDecl). They were compared with a group of fourteen elderly controls (CTR) by means of basal FDG-PET voxel-based analysis (SPM2). Two hypometabolic clusters were found in MCI/AD versus CTR, including the bilateral posterior cingulate cortex, the left parietal precuneus and the left fusiform gyrus. MCI/AD showed also a large hypometabolic region, mainly including the left medium and superior temporal gyri and inferior parietal lobule, when compared to MCI/noDecl. The MCI/Decl showed a hypometabolic region in the left medial temporal lobe versus both CTR (hippocampus) and MCI/noDecl (parahippocampal gyrus and hippocampus). No significant difference was found in the comparison between CTR and MCI/noDecl, neither in the comparison between MCI/Decl and MCI/AD. Thus, non converter MCI patients comprised a sub-group of 'decliners' with AD-like metabolic and cognitive patterns, likely including 'late converters', and a sub-group lacking this pattern, with stable or improving memory function and a brain metabolic picture similar to that in healthy controls. Combining neuropsychological and FDG-PET information could be used for prognostic purposes in aMCI patients at medium-term follow-up.
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2009
Marco Pagani, Dario Salmaso, Guido Rodriguez, Davide Nardo, Flavio Nobili (2009)  Principal component analysis in mild and moderate Alzheimer's disease--a novel approach to clinical diagnosis.   Psychiatry Res 173: 1. 8-14 Jul  
Abstract: Principal component analysis (PCA) provides a method to explore functional brain connectivity. The aim of this study was to identify regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) distribution differences between Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and controls (CTR) by means of volume of interest (VOI) analysis and PCA. Thirty-seven CTR, 30 mild AD (mildAD) and 27 moderate AD (modAD) subjects were investigated using single photon emission computed tomography with (99m)Tc-hexamethylpropylene amine oxime. Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), PCA, and discriminant analysis (DA) were performed on 54 VOIs. VOI analysis identified in both mildAD and modAD subjects a decreased rCBF in six regions. PCA in mildAD subjects identified four principal components (PCs) in which the correlated VOIs showed a decreased level of rCBF, including regions that are typically affected early in the disease. In five PCs, including parietal-temporal-limbic cortex, and hippocampus, a significantly lower rCBF in correlated VOIs was found in modAD subjects. DA significantly discriminated the groups. The percentage of subjects correctly classified was 95, 70, and 81 for CTR, mildAD and modAD groups, respectively. PCA highlighted, in mildAD and modAD, relationships not evident when brain regions are considered as independent of each other, and it was effective in discriminating groups. These findings may allow neurophysiological inferences to be drawn regarding brain functional connectivity in AD that might not be possible with univariate analysis.
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Claudio Babiloni, Raffaele Ferri, Giuliano Binetti, Fabrizio Vecchio, Giovanni B Frisoni, Bartolo Lanuzza, Carlo Miniussi, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Francesco Rundo, Andrea Cassarino, Francesco Infarinato, Emanuele Cassetta, Serenella Salinari, Fabrizio Eusebi, Paolo M Rossini (2009)  Directionality of EEG synchronization in Alzheimer's disease subjects.   Neurobiol Aging 30: 1. 93-102 Jan  
Abstract: Is directionality of electroencephalographic (EEG) synchronization abnormal in amnesic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD)? EEG data were recorded in 64 normal elderly (Nold), 69 amnesic MCI, and 73 mild AD subjects at rest condition (closed eyes). Direction of information flux within EEG functional coupling at electrode pairs was performed by directed transfer function (DTF) at delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10 Hz), alpha 2 (10-12 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), beta 2 (20-30 Hz), and gamma (30-40 Hz). Parietal to frontal direction of the information flux within EEG functional coupling was stronger in Nold than in MCI and/or AD subjects, namely for alpha and beta rhythms. In contrast, the directional flow within inter-hemispheric EEG functional coupling did not discriminate among the three groups. These results suggest that directionality of parieto-to-frontal EEG synchronization is abnormal not only in AD but also in amnesic MCI.
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Piero Calvini, Andrea Chincarini, Gianluca Gemme, Maria Antonietta Penco, Sandro Squarcia, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Roberto Bellotti, Ezio Catanzariti, Piergiorgio Cerello, Ivan De Mitri, Maria Evelina Fantacci (2009)  Automatic analysis of medial temporal lobe atrophy from structural MRIs for the early assessment of Alzheimer disease.   Med Phys 36: 8. 3737-3747 Aug  
Abstract: The purpose of this study is to develop a software for the extraction of the hippocampus and surrounding medial temporal lobe (MTL) regions from T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images with no interactive input from the user, to introduce a novel statistical indicator, computed on the intensities in the automatically extracted MTL regions, which measures atrophy, and to evaluate the accuracy of the newly developed intensity-based measure of MTL atrophy to (a) distinguish between patients with Alzheimer disease (AD), patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI), and elderly controls by using established criteria for patients with AD and aMCI as the reference standard and (b) infer about the clinical outcome of aMCI patients. For the development of the software, the study included 61 patients with mild AD (17 men, 44 women; mean age +/- standard deviation (SD), 75.8 years +/- 7.8; Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) score, 24.1 +/- 3.1), 42 patients with aMCI (11 men, 31 women; mean age +/- SD, 75.2 years +/- 4.9; MMSE score, 27.9 +/- 1.9), and 30 elderly healthy controls (10 men, 20 women; mean age +/- SD, 74.7 years +/- 5.2; MMSE score, 29.1 +/- 0.8). For the evaluation of the statistical indicator, 150 patients with mild AD (62 men, 88 women; mean age +/- SD, 76.3 years +/- 5.8; MMSE score, 23.2 +/- 4.1), 247 patients with aMCI (143 men, 104 women; mean age +/- SD, 75.3 years +/- 6.7; MMSE score, 27.0 +/- 1.8), and 135 elderly healthy controls (61 men, 74 women; mean age +/- SD, 76.4 years +/- 6.1). Fifty aMCI patients were evaluated every 6 months over a 3 year period to assess conversion to AD. For each participant, two subimages of the MTL regions were automatically extracted from T1-weighted MR images with high spatial resolution. An intensity-based MTL atrophy measure was found to separate control, MCI, and AD cohorts. Group differences were assessed by using two-sample t test. Individual classification was analyzed by using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. Compared to controls, significant differences in the intensity-based MTL atrophy measure were detected in both groups of patients (AD vs controls, 0.28 +/- 0.03 vs 0.34 +/- 0.03, P < 0.001; aMCI vs controls, 0.31 +/- 0.03 vs 0.34 +/- 0.03, P < 0.001). Moreover, the subgroup of aMCI converters was significantly different from controls (0.27 +/- 0.034 vs 0.34 +/- 0.03, P < 0.001). Regarding the ROC curve for intergroup discrimination, the area under the curve was 0.863 for AD patients vs controls, 0.746 for all aMCI patients vs controls, and 0.880 for aMCI converters vs controls. With specificity set at 85%, the sensitivity was 74% for AD vs controls, 45% for aMCI vs controls, and 83% for aMCI converters vs controls. The automated analysis of MTL atrophy in the segmented volume is applied to the early assessment of AD, leading to the discrimination of aMCI converters with an average 3 year follow-up. This procedure can provide additional useful information in the early diagnosis of AD.
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Flavio Nobili, Giovanni Abbruzzese, Silvia Morbelli, Roberta Marchese, Nicola Girtler, Barbara Dessi, Andrea Brugnolo, Cinzia Canepa, Giorgos Chr Drosos, Gianmario Sambuceti, Guido Rodriguez (2009)  Amnestic mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: a brain perfusion SPECT study.   Mov Disord 24: 3. 414-421 Feb  
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate cortical dysfunction in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients with amnestic deficit (PD-MCI). Perfusion single photon emission computed tomography was performed in 15 PD-MCI patients and compared (statistical parametric mapping [SPM2]) with three groups, i.e., healthy subjects (CTR), cognitively intact PD patients (PD), and common amnestic MCI patients (aMCI). Age, depression, and UPDRS-III scores were considered as confounding variables. PD-MCI group (P < 0.05, false discovery rate-corrected for multiple comparisons) showed relative hypoperfusion in bilateral posterior parietal lobe and in right occipital lobe in comparison to CTR. As compared to aMCI, MCI-PD demonstrated hypoperfusion in bilateral posterior parietal and occipital areas, mainly right cuneus and angular gyrus, and left precuneus and middle occipital gyrus. With a less conservative threshold (uncorrected P < 0.01), MCI-PD showed hypoperfusion in a left parietal region, mainly including precuneus and inferior parietal lobule, and in a right temporal-parietal-occipital region, including middle occipital and superior temporal gyri, and cuneus-precuneus, as compared to PD. aMCI versus PD-MCI showed hypoperfusion in bilateral medial temporal lobe, anterior cingulate, and left orbitofrontal cortex. PD-MCI patients with amnestic deficit showed cortical dysfunction in bilateral posterior parietal and occipital lobes, a pattern that can be especially recognized versus both controls and common aMCI patients, and to a lesser extent versus cognitively intact PD. The relevance of this pattern in predicting dementia should be evaluated in longitudinal studies.
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A Brugnolo, F Nobili, M P Barbieri, B Dessi, A Ferro, N Girtler, E Palummeri, D Partinico, U Raiteri, G Regesta, G Servetto, P Tanganelli, V Uva, D Mazzei, S Donadio, F De Carli, G Colazzo, C Serrati, G Rodriguez (2009)  The factorial structure of the mini mental state examination (MMSE) in Alzheimer's disease.   Arch Gerontol Geriatr 49: 1. 180-185 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: Our aim was to evaluate the factorial structure of the mini mental state examination (MMSE) in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Five hundred and twenty-four consecutive outpatients at their first diagnostic work-up (age 78.02+/-6.07 years, education 6.62+/-3.48 years, mean MMSE score 20.23+/-4.89) (+/-S.D.) with probable AD (based on DSM-IV and NINCDS-ADRDA criteria) were enrolled in a multicenter, cross-sectional, regional-based study. For the purpose of the present study, the 11 subtests composing the MMSE and the global MMSE score (ranging from 10 to 29, included) were considered. Factor analysis with Varimax rotation method identified two factors that explained about the 85% of total variance. The first factor explained the 65% of variance and mainly included temporal orientation, delayed recall, attention/concentration, and constructional praxia. The second factor explained the 20% of variance and included reading a sentence, writing a sentence, naming, verbal repetition and immediate memory. The first factor was a reliable index of cognitive deterioration along the MMSE score interval between 29 and 10, whereas the second factor was not a suitable marker in this range. The two-factor structure of the MMSE in AD is shown in a large series of patients. The first factor expresses the ability to use new information and is related with working memory. The second factor is related with a more consolidated knowledge, namely verbal abilities, and is essentially useless in mild to moderate AD.
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2008
S Morbelli, G Rodriguez, A Mignone, V Altrinetti, A Brugnolo, A Piccardo, A Pupi, P M Koulibaly, F Nobili (2008)  The need of appropriate brain SPECT templates for SPM comparisons.   Q J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 52: 1. 89-98 Mar  
Abstract: Statistical parametric mapping (SPM) is used worldwide to compare brain perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) data. The default template within the SPM package used for SPECT image normalization includes images of a group of healthy subjects studied with [(99m)Tc]HMPAO. Since [(99m)Tc]HMPAO and [(99m)Tc]ECD have shown to distribute differently in SPECT studies, we formulated the hypothesis that comparing set of [(99m)Tc]ECD data normalized by means of a [(99m)Tc]HMPAO template may lead to incorrect results.
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Flavio Nobili, Dario Salmaso, Silvia Morbelli, Nicola Girtler, Arnoldo Piccardo, Andrea Brugnolo, Barbara Dessi, Stig A Larsson, Guido Rodriguez, Marco Pagani (2008)  Principal component analysis of FDG PET in amnestic MCI.   Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 35: 12. 2191-2202 Dec  
Abstract: The purpose of the study is to evaluate the combined accuracy of episodic memory performance and (18)F-FDG PET in identifying patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) converting to Alzheimer's disease (AD), aMCI non-converters, and controls.
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Paolo M Rossini, Massimo Buscema, Massimiliano Capriotti, Enzo Grossi, Guido Rodriguez, Claudio Del Percio, Claudio Babiloni (2008)  Is it possible to automatically distinguish resting EEG data of normal elderly vs. mild cognitive impairment subjects with high degree of accuracy?   Clin Neurophysiol 119: 7. 1534-1545 Jul  
Abstract: It has been shown that a new procedure (implicit function as squashing time, IFAST) based on artificial neural networks (ANNs) is able to compress eyes-closed resting electroencephalographic (EEG) data into spatial invariants of the instant voltage distributions for an automatic classification of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects with classification accuracy of individual subjects higher than 92%.
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Paolo Vitali, Ludovico Minati, Ludovico D'Incerti, Elio Maccagnano, Nicola Mavilio, Dario Capello, Suela Dylgjeri, Guido Rodriguez, Silvana Franceschetti, Roberto Spreafico, Flavio Villani (2008)  Functional MRI in malformations of cortical development: activation of dysplastic tissue and functional reorganization.   J Neuroimaging 18: 3. 296-305 Jul  
Abstract: Functional neuroimaging and electrophysiological studies suggest that dysplastic neural tissue in malformations of cortical development may participate in task performance, and that functional organization can be altered beyond visible lesion boundaries. The aim of this work was to investigate cortical function in a heterogeneous group of patients with malformations of cortical development.
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Massimo Giusti, Lorenzo Mortara, Roberta Degrandi, Francesca Cecoli, Michele Mussap, Guido Rodriguez, Diego Ferone, Francesco Minuto (2008)  Metabolic and cardiovascular risk in patients with a history of differentiated thyroid carcinoma: A case-controlled cohort study.   Thyroid Res 1: 1. 09  
Abstract: ABSTRACT: Hyperthyroidism seems to increase metabolic and cardiovascular risk, while the effects of sub-clinical hyperthyroidism are controversial. We evaluated metabolic and cardiovascular parameters in differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) patients with suppressed thyrotropin (TSH) due to levo-thyroxine (L-T4) therapy. We studied DTC patients and, as a control group, patients with a history of surgery for non-malignant thyroid pathology. Significantly higher insulin and lower HDL-cholesterol levels were recorded in DTC subjects. In both groups, insulin levels were significantly related with body mass index (BMI) but not with age or L-T4 dosage. In DTC patients, a significant negative correlation was seen between HDL-cholesterol and BMI or L-T4 dosage. In both groups, intima-media thickness (IMT) correlated positively with age, BMI, glucose levels and systolic blood pressure. In DTC patients, increased IMT was significantly correlated with glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), cholesterol and triglycerides. In DTC patients, C-reactive protein correlated positively with insulin, insulin resistance, triglycerides and systolic blood pressure, and negatively with HDL-cholesterol. In both DTC and control subjects, fibrinogen correlated positively with age, BMI, increased IMT, HbA1c and systolic blood pressure. In DTC subjects, plasma fibrinogen concentrations correlated positively with insulin resistance, cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol, and negatively with TSH levels. Our data confirm that the favorable evolution of DTC can be impaired by a high incidence of abnormal metabolic and cardiovascular data that are, at least in part, related to L-T4 therapy. These findings underline the need for adequate L-T4 titration.
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Flavio Nobili, Giovanni B Frisoni, Florence Portet, Frans Verhey, Guido Rodriguez, Anna Caroli, Jacques Touchon, Piero Calvini, Silvia Morbelli, Fabrizio De Carli, Ugo P Guerra, Laura A Van de Pol, Pieter-Jelle Visser (2008)  Brain SPECT in subtypes of mild cognitive impairment. Findings from the DESCRIPA multicenter study.   J Neurol 255: 9. 1344-1353 Sep  
Abstract: The Development of Screening Guidelines and Clinical Criteria of Predementia Alzheimer's Disease (DESCRIPA) multicenter study enrolled patients with MCI or subjective cognitive complaints (SUBJ), a part of whom underwent optional brain perfusion SPECT. These patients were classified as SUBJ (n = 23), nonamnestic MCI (naMCI; n = 17) and amnestic MCI (aMCI; n = 40) based on neuropsychology. Twenty healthy subjects formed the control (CTR) group. Volumetric regions of interest (VROI) analysis was performed in six associative cortical areas in each hemisphere. ANOVA for repeated measures, corrected for age and center, showed significant differences between groups (p = 0.01) and VROI (p < 0.0001) with a significant group-region interaction (p = 0.029). In the post hoc comparison, SUBJ did not differ from CTR. aMCI disclosed reduced uptake in the left hippocampus and bilateral temporal cortex (compared with CTR) or in the left hippocampus and bilateral parietal cortex (compared with SUBJ). In the naMCI group, reduced VROI values were found in the bilateral temporal cortex and right frontal cortex. In the comparison between aMCI and naMCI, the former had lower values in the left parietal cortex and precuneus. Discriminant analysis between SUBJ/CTR versus all MCI patients allowed correct allocations in 73 % of cases. Mean VROI values were highly correlated (p < 0.0001) with the learning measure of a verbal memory test, especially in the bilateral precunei and parietal cortex and in the left hippocampus. In a subset of 70 patients, mean VROI values showed a significant correlation (p < 0.05) with the white matter hyperintensities score on MRI. In conclusion, MCI subtypes have different perfusion patterns. The aMCI group exhibited a pattern that is typical of early Alzheimer's disease, while the naMCI group showed a more anterior pattern of hypoperfusion. Instead, a homogeneous group effect was lacking in SUBJ.
Notes:
Paolo M Rossini, Massimo Buscema, Massimiliano Capriotti, Enzo Grossi, Guido Rodriguez, Claudio Del Percio, Claudio Babiloni (2008)  Is it possible to automatically distinguish resting EEG data of normal elderly vs. mild cognitive impairment subjects with high degree of accuracy?   Clin Neurophysiol 119: 7. 1534-1545 Jul  
Abstract: It has been shown that a new procedure (implicit function as squashing time, IFAST) based on artificial neural networks (ANNs) is able to compress eyes-closed resting electroencephalographic (EEG) data into spatial invariants of the instant voltage distributions for an automatic classification of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects with classification accuracy of individual subjects higher than 92%.
Notes:
2007
Luca Odetti, Giuseppe Anerdi, Maria Paola Barbieri, Debora Mazzei, Elisa Rizza, Paolo Dario, Guido Rodriguez, Silvestro Micera (2007)  Preliminary experiments on the acceptability of animaloid companion robots by older people with early dementia.   Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc 2007: 1816-1819  
Abstract: Animaloid companion robots represent a very interesting paradigm. An increasing number of studies on this topic has been carried out in the past, involving such robots and older users affected by some kind of cognitive disease, from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to more severe stages of Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia. In the study described in this paper, an AIBO robotic dog was programmed and used to show simple reactive behaviors during the interaction with old adults. Experimental sessions were carried out with a group of 24 older subjects with cognitive deficits of relatively small entity (MMSE>23). Preliminary results seem to show the acceptability of this approach especially in subjects with a good relationship with technology. In the next future, the interaction between the robot and the old adults will be tested in more complex situations.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Emanuele Cassetta, Giuliano Binetti, Mario Tombini, Claudio Del Percio, Florinda Ferreri, Raffaele Ferri, Giovanni Frisoni, Bartolo Lanuzza, Flavio Nobili, Laura Parisi, Guido Rodriguez, Leonardo Frigerio, Mariella Gurzì, Annapaola Prestia, Fabrizio Vernieri, Fabrizio Eusebi, Paolo M Rossini (2007)  Resting EEG sources correlate with attentional span in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease.   Eur J Neurosci 25: 12. 3742-3757 Jun  
Abstract: Previous evidence has shown that resting delta and alpha electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms are abnormal in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and its potential preclinical stage (mild cognitive impairment, MCI). Here, we tested the hypothesis that these EEG rhythms are correlated with memory and attention in the continuum across MCI and AD. Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 34 MCI and 53 AD subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), and beta 2 (20-30 Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). These sources were correlated with neuropsychological measures such as Rey list immediate recall (word short-term memory), Rey list delayed recall (word medium-term memory), Digit span forward (immediate memory for digits probing focused attention), and Corsi span forward (visuo-spatial immediate memory probing focused attention). A statistically significant negative correlation (Bonferroni corrected, P < 0.05) was observed between Corsi span forward score and amplitude of occipital or temporal delta sources across MCI and AD subjects. Furthermore, a positive correlation was shown between Digit span forward score and occipital alpha 1 sources (Bonferroni corrected, P < 0.05). These results suggest that cortical sources of resting delta and alpha rhythms correlate with neuropsychological measures of immediate memory based on focused attention in the continuum of MCI and AD subjects.
Notes:
F Nobili, P M Koulibaly, G Rodriguez, M Benoit, N Girtler, P H Robert, A Brugnolo, J Darcourt (2007)  99mTc-HMPAO and 99mTc-ECD brain uptake correlates of verbal memory in Alzheimer's disease.   Q J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 51: 4. 357-363 Dec  
Abstract: Technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime ((99m)Tc-HMPAO) and technetium-99m N,N-1,2-ethylene diylbis-Lcysteine diethyl ester dihydrochloride ((99m)Tc-ECD) SPECT are widely used in Dementia Clinics for early and differential diagnosis. They have been shown to perform differently in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the impact of such differences on both research and clinical work is unknown. We investigated the differences between the 2 compounds in research work by assessing correlation between performance on a verbal memory task and cerebral perfusion in 2 matched groups of AD patients.
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Barbara Maria Colombo, Giuseppe Murdaca, Matteo Caiti, Guido Rodriguez, Lidia Grassia, Edorado Rossi, Francesco Indiveri, Francesco Puppo (2007)  Intima-media thickness: a marker of accelerated atherosclerosis in women with systemic lupus erythematosus.   Ann N Y Acad Sci 1108: 121-126 Jun  
Abstract: Accelerated atherosclerosis is an emerging problem in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We planned an observational study to determine whether in patients with SLE carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) represents an early sign of accelerated atherosclerosis and to confirm that SLE adds to the traditional cardiovascular Framingham risk factors. Thirty females with SLE (age 18-65 years) underwent anamnestic, clinical, and laboratory evaluation and B-mode ultrasonography of carotid arteries, which provides a direct and noninvasive assessment of subclinical atherosclerosis. IMT measurements were performed on the right and left common carotid arteries 1.0 cm proximal to the carotid bulb and the mean IMT value was calculated with a dedicated software. The Framingham Point Score was also calculated for each subject. SLE patients showed a mean IMT value of 0.73 +/- 0.12 (SD) mm. This value is significantly (P < 0.05) higher than that reported for an age-matched healthy female control population (0.66 +/- 0.11 SD mm). A preliminary evaluation of the Framingham Point Score, estimating the 10-year risk for women to develop cardiovascular events, indicated an increased risk of early cardiovascular events in SLE patients. In our study we have shown that patients with SLE have an increased mean IMT value compared with a healthy females control. Moreover, the evaluation of the Framingham Point Score suggests that SLE is an additional risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
Notes:
Anna Maciag, Elisa Dainese, G Marcela Rodriguez, Anna Milano, Roberta Provvedi, Maria R Pasca, Issar Smith, Giorgio Palù, Giovanna Riccardi, Riccardo Manganelli (2007)  Global analysis of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Zur (FurB) regulon.   J Bacteriol 189: 3. 730-740 Feb  
Abstract: The proteins belonging to the Fur family are global regulators of gene expression involved in the response to several environmental stresses and to the maintenance of divalent cation homeostasis. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome encodes two Fur-like proteins, FurA and a protein formerly annotated FurB. Since in this paper we show that it represents a zinc uptake regulator, we refer to it as Zur. The gene encoding Zur is found in an operon together with the gene encoding a second transcriptional regulator (Rv2358). In a previous work we demonstrated that Rv2358 is responsible for the zinc-dependent repression of the Rv2358-zur operon, favoring the hypothesis that these genes represent key regulators of zinc homeostasis. In this study we generated a zur mutant in M. tuberculosis, examined its phenotype, and characterized the Zur regulon by DNA microarray analysis. Thirty-two genes, presumably organized in 16 operons, were found to be upregulated in the zur mutant. Twenty-four of them belonged to eight putative transcriptional units preceded by a conserved 26-bp palindrome. Electrophoretic mobility shift experiments demonstrated that Zur binds to this palindrome in a zinc-dependent manner, suggesting its direct regulation of these genes. The proteins encoded by Zur-regulated genes include a group of ribosomal proteins, three putative metal transporters, the proteins belonging to early secretory antigen target 6 (ESAT-6) cluster 3, and three additional proteins belonging to the ESAT-6/culture filtrate protein 10 (CFP-10) family known to contain immunodominant epitopes in the T-cell response to M. tuberculosis infection.
Notes:
G Murialdo, M Casu, M Falchero, A Brugnolo, V Patrone, P F Cerro, P Ameri, G Andraghetti, L Briatore, F Copello, R Cordera, G Rodriguez, A M Ferro (2007)  Alterations in the autonomic control of heart rate variability in patients with anorexia or bulimia nervosa: correlations between sympathovagal activity, clinical features, and leptin levels.   J Endocrinol Invest 30: 5. 356-362 May  
Abstract: Changes in body composition, hormone secretions, and heart function with increased risk of sudden death occur in eating disorders. In this observational clinical study, we evaluated sympathovagal modulation of heart rate variability (HRV) and cardiovascular changes in response to lying-to-standing in patients with anorexia (AN) or bulimia nervosa (BN) to analyze: a) differences in autonomic activity between AN, BN, and healthy subjects; b) relationships between autonomic and cardiovascular parameters, clinical data and leptin levels in patients with eating disorders. HRV, assessed by power spectral analysis of R-R intervals, blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) were studied by tilt-table test in 34 patients with AN, 16 with BN and 30 healthy controls. Autonomic and cardiovascular findings were correlated with clinical data, and serum leptin levels. Leptin levels were lowered in AN vs BN and healthy subjects (p<0.0001), but both AN and BN patients showed unbalanced sympathovagal control of HRV due to relative sympathetic failure, prevalent vagal activity, impaired sympathetic activation after tilting, independently from their actual body weight and leptin levels. No significant correlations were obtained between HRV data vs clinical data, BP and HR findings, and leptin levels in eating disorders. Body mass indices (BMI) (p<0.02), and leptin levels (p<0.04) correlated directly with BP values. Our data showed alterations of sympathovagal control of HRV in eating disorders. These changes were unrelated to body weight and BMI, diagnosis of AN or BN, and leptin levels despite the reported effects of leptin on the sympathetic activity.
Notes:
2006
Claudio Babiloni, Luisa Benussi, Giuliano Binetti, Emanuele Cassetta, Gloria Dal Forno, Claudio Del Percio, Florinda Ferreri, Raffaele Ferri, Giovanni Frisoni, Roberta Ghidoni, Carlo Miniussi, Guido Rodriguez, Gian Luca Romani, Rosanna Squitti, Maria Carla Ventriglia, Paolo M Rossini (2006)  Apolipoprotein E and alpha brain rhythms in mild cognitive impairment: a multicentric electroencephalogram study.   Ann Neurol 59: 2. 323-334 Feb  
Abstract: Relationships between the apolipoprotein E epsilon4 allele and electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythmicity have been demonstrated in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients but not in the preclinical stage prodromic to it, namely, mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The present multicentric EEG study tested the hypothesis that presence of epsilon4 affects sources of resting EEG rhythms in both MCI and AD subjects.
Notes:
P Vitali, L Minati, G Chiarenza, A Brugnolo, N Girtler, F Nobili, C De Leo, P Rosati, G Rodriguez (2006)  The Von Restorff effect in ageing and Alzheimer's disease.   Neurol Sci 27: 3. 166-172 Jul  
Abstract: The purpose of the study was to evaluate the Von Restorff effect in normal ageing and in Alzheimer's disease (AD). A shortened paradigm was administered to three groups of subjects: young volunteers, elderly volunteers and patients with early-stage AD (MMSE>20). Each subject was presented with 25 lists of 10 words each, the target word appearing in double font size. A free recall phase followed the presentation of each list; after completion of the battery, a size recognition test was administered and subjects were inquired regarding the strategy employed and perception of target words. The total number of recalled words differed significantly among the three groups (young volunteers 144.4+/-38.6, elderly volunteers 86.5+/-17.6, patients 44.2+/-14.6). A significant difference in percentage of recall was found between target and non-target words in young (60.0+/-13.8% vs. 45.7%+/-15.0%, p<0.001) and in elderly (31.2+/-11.4% vs. 20.2+/-6.9%, p<0.001) volunteers, but not in patients (10.7+/-6.9% vs. 11.8+/-7.3%). The present study highlights that the Von Restorff effect can be detected in healthy elderly subjects, and that it is significantly reduced in patients in the early stage of AD. On the basis of the findings of the present study it is not possible to disentangle the contribution of visual-perceptual and encoding impairment, both of them potentially contributing to the observed reduction.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Raffaele Ferri, Giuliano Binetti, Andrea Cassarino, Gloria Dal Forno, Matilde Ercolani, Florinda Ferreri, Giovanni B Frisoni, Bartolo Lanuzza, Carlo Miniussi, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Francesco Rundo, Cornelis J Stam, Toshimitsu Musha, Fabrizio Vecchio, Paolo M Rossini (2006)  Fronto-parietal coupling of brain rhythms in mild cognitive impairment: a multicentric EEG study.   Brain Res Bull 69: 1. 63-73 Mar  
Abstract: Electroencephalographic (EEG) data were recorded in 69 normal elderly (Nold), 88 mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and 109 mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects at rest condition, to test whether the fronto-parietal coupling of EEG rhythms is in line with the hypothesis that MCI can be considered as a pre-clinical stage of the disease at group level. Functional coupling was estimated by synchronization likelihood of Laplacian-transformed EEG data at electrode pairs, which accounts for linear and non-linear components of that coupling. Cortical rhythms of interest were delta (2-4Hz), theta (4-8Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13Hz), beta 1 (13-20Hz), beta 2 (20-30Hz), and gamma (30-40Hz). Compared to the Nold subjects, the AD patients presented a marked reduction of the synchronization likelihood (delta to gamma) at both fronto-parietal and inter-hemispherical (delta to beta 2) electrodes. As a main result, alpha 1 synchronization likelihood progressively decreased across Nold, MCI, and mild AD subjects at midline (Fz-Pz) and right (F4-P4) fronto-parietal electrodes. The same was true for the delta synchronization likelihood at right fronto-parietal electrodes (F4-P4). For these EEG bands, the synchronization likelihood correlated with global cognitive status as measured by the Mini Mental State Evaluation. The present results suggest that at group level, fronto-parietal coupling of the delta and alpha rhythms progressively becomes abnormal though MCI and mild AD. Future longitudinal research should evaluate whether the present EEG approach is able to predict the cognitive decline in individual MCI subjects.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Emanuele Cassetta, Gloria Dal Forno, Claudio Del Percio, Florinda Ferreri, Raffaele Ferri, Bartolo Lanuzza, Carlo Miniussi, Davide V Moretti, Flavio Nobili, Roberto D Pascual-Marqui, Guido Rodriguez, Gian Luca Romani, Serenella Salinari, Orazio Zanetti, Paolo M Rossini (2006)  Donepezil effects on sources of cortical rhythms in mild Alzheimer's disease: Responders vs. Non-Responders.   Neuroimage 31: 4. 1650-1665 Jul  
Abstract: Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEI) such as donepezil act in mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) by increasing cholinergic tone. Differences in the clinical response in patients who do or do not benefit from therapy may be due to different functional features of the central neural systems. We tested this hypothesis using cortical electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythmicity. Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 58 mild AD patients (Mini Mental State Examination [MMSE] range 17-24) before and approximately 1 year after standard donepezil treatment. Based on changes of MMSE scores between baseline and follow-up, 28 patients were classified as "Responders" (MMSEvar >or=0) and 30 patients as "Non-Responders" (MMSEvar <0). EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), and beta 2 (20-30 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were studied with low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Before treatment, posterior sources of delta, alpha 1 and alpha 2 frequencies were greater in amplitude in Non-Responders. After treatment, a lesser magnitude reduction of occipital and temporal alpha 1 sources characterized Responders. These results suggest that Responders and Non-Responders had different EEG cortical rhythms. Donepezil could act by reactivating existing yet functionally silent cortical synapses in Responders, restoring temporal and occipital alpha rhythms.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Giuliano Binetti, Emanuele Cassetta, Gloria Dal Forno, Claudio Del Percio, Florinda Ferreri, Raffaele Ferri, Giovanni Frisoni, Koichi Hirata, Bartolo Lanuzza, Carlo Miniussi, Davide V Moretti, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Gian Luca Romani, Serenella Salinari, Paolo M Rossini (2006)  Sources of cortical rhythms change as a function of cognitive impairment in pathological aging: a multicenter study.   Clin Neurophysiol 117: 2. 252-268 Feb  
Abstract: The present study tested the hypothesis that cortical electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms. change across normal elderly (Nold), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects as a function of the global cognitive level.
Notes:
Flavio Nobili, Alessandro Mignone, Edoardo Rossi, Silvia Morbelli, Arnoldo Piccardo, Francesco Puppo, Francesco Indiveri, Gianmario Sambuceti, Guido Rodriguez (2006)  Migraine during systemic lupus erythematosus: findings from brain single photon emission computed tomography.   J Rheumatol 33: 11. 2184-2191 Nov  
Abstract: Headache in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is controversial, as is evidence of brain impairment in patients with SLE and headache. Perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was performed to investigate brain impairment in SLE patients with migraine-like headache either from the period of diagnosis or later in the course of disease.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Giovanni Frisoni, Mircea Steriade, Lorena Bresciani, Giuliano Binetti, Claudio Del Percio, Cristina Geroldi, Carlo Miniussi, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Filippo Zappasodi, Tania Carfagna, Paolo M Rossini (2006)  Frontal white matter volume and delta EEG sources negatively correlate in awake subjects with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease.   Clin Neurophysiol 117: 5. 1113-1129 May  
Abstract: A relationship between brain atrophy and delta rhythmicity (1.5-4 Hz) has been previously explored in Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects [Fernandez A, Arrazola J, Maestu F, Amo C, Gil-Gregorio P, Wienbruch C, Ortiz T. Correlations of hippocampal atrophy and focal low-frequency magnetic activity in Alzheimer disease: volumetric MR imaging-magnetoencephalographic study. Am J Neuroradiol. 2003 24(3):481-487]. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that such a relationship does exist not only in AD patients but also across the continuum of subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Luisa Benussi, Giuliano Binetti, Paolo Bosco, Gabriella Busonero, Simona Cesaretti, Gloria Dal Forno, Claudio Del Percio, Raffaele Ferri, Giovanni Frisoni, Roberta Ghidoni, Guido Rodriguez, Rosanna Squitti, Paolo M Rossini (2006)  Genotype (cystatin C) and EEG phenotype in Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment: a multicentric study.   Neuroimage 29: 3. 948-964 Feb  
Abstract: Previous findings demonstrated that haplotype B of CST3, the gene coding for cystatin C, is a recessive risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD; Finckh, U., von der Kammer, H., Velden, J., Michel, T., Andresen, B., Deng, A., Zhang, J., Muller-Thomsen, T., Zuchowski, K., Menzer, G., Mann, U., Papassotiropoulos, A., Heun, R., Zurdel, J., Holst, F., Benussi, L., Stoppe, G., Reiss, J., Miserez, A.R., Staehelin, H.B., Rebeck, G.W., Hyman, B.T., Binetti, G., Hock, C., Growdon, J.H., Nitsch, R.M., 2000. Genetic association of the cystatin C gene with late-onset Alzheimer disease. Arch. Neurol. 57, 1579-1583). In the present multicentric electroencephalographic (EEG) study, we analyzed the effects of CST3 haplotypes on resting cortical rhythmicity in subjects with AD and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) with the hypothesis that sources of resting EEG rhythms are more impaired in carriers of the CST3 B haplotype than non-carriers. We enrolled a population of 84 MCI subjects (42% with the B haplotype) and 65 AD patients (40% with the B haplotype). Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in all subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), and beta 2 (20-30 Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Results showed that the amplitude of alpha 1 (parietal, occipital, temporal areas) and alpha 2 (occipital area) was statistically lower in CST3 B carriers than non-carriers (P < 0.01). Whereas there was a trend towards statistical significance that amplitude of occipital delta sources was stronger in CST3 B carriers than in non-carriers. This was true for both MCI and AD subjects. The present findings represent the first demonstration of relationships between the AD genetic risk factor CST3 B and global neurophysiological phenotype (i.e., cortical delta and alpha rhythmicity) in MCI and AD subjects, prompting future genotype-EEG phenotype studies for the early prediction of AD conversion in individual MCI subjects.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Giuliano Binetti, Andrea Cassarino, Gloria Dal Forno, Claudio Del Percio, Florinda Ferreri, Raffaele Ferri, Giovanni Frisoni, Silvana Galderisi, Koichi Hirata, Bartolo Lanuzza, Carlo Miniussi, Armida Mucci, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Gian Luca Romani, Paolo M Rossini (2006)  Sources of cortical rhythms in adults during physiological aging: a multicentric EEG study.   Hum Brain Mapp 27: 2. 162-172 Feb  
Abstract: This electroencephalographic (EEG) study tested whether cortical EEG rhythms (especially delta and alpha) show a progressive increasing or decreasing trend across physiological aging. To this aim, we analyzed the type of correlation (linear and nonlinear) between cortical EEG rhythms and age. Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 108 young (Nyoung; age range: 18-50 years, mean age 27.3+/-7.3 SD) and 107 elderly (Nold; age range: 51-85 years, mean age 67.3+/-9.2 SD) subjects. The EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), and beta 2 (20-30 Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Statistical results showed that delta sources in the occipital area had significantly less magnitude in Nold compared to Nyoung subjects. Similarly, alpha 1 and alpha 2 sources in the parietal, occipital, temporal, and limbic areas had significantly less magnitude in Nold compared to Nyoung subjects. These nine EEG sources were given as input for evaluating the type (linear, exponential, logarithmic, and power) of correlation with age. When subjects were considered as a single group there was a significant linear correlation of age with the magnitude of delta sources in the occipital area and of alpha 1 sources in occipital and limbic areas. The same was true for alpha 2 sources in the parietal, occipital, temporal, and limbic areas. In general, the EEG sources showing significant linear correlation with age also supported a nonlinear correlation with age. These results suggest that the occipital delta and posterior cortical alpha rhythms decrease in magnitude during physiological aging with both linear and nonlinear trends. In conclusion, this new methodological approach holds promise for the prediction of dementia in mild cognitive impairment by regional source rather than surface EEG data and by both linear and nonlinear predictors.
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2005
G Rodriguez, S Morbelli, A Brugnolo, P Calvini, N Girtler, A Piccardo, N J Dougall, K P Ebmeier, J C Baron, F Nobili (2005)  Global cognitive impairment should be taken into account in SPECT-neuropsychology correlations: the example of verbal memory in very mild Alzheimer's disease.   Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 32: 10. 1186-1192 Oct  
Abstract: To examine the impact of severity of global cognitive impairment on SPECT-neuropsychology correlations, we correlated a verbal memory test with brain perfusion in patients with very mild Alzheimer's disease (AD), taking into account the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score as an index of global cognitive impairment.
Notes:
Flavio Nobili, Andrea Brugnolo, Piero Calvini, Francesco Copello, Caterina De Leo, Nicola Girtler, Silvia Morbelli, Arnoldo Piccardo, Paolo Vitali, Guido Rodriguez (2005)  Resting SPECT-neuropsychology correlation in very mild Alzheimer's disease.   Clin Neurophysiol 116: 2. 364-375 Feb  
Abstract: To investigate the relationships between brain function and some of the most frequently impaired cognitive domains in the first stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD), we searched for correlation between the scores on 3 neuropsychological tests and brain perfusion, assessed by single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in patients with very mild AD.
Notes:
Antonio Maria Ferro, Andrea Brugnolo, Caterina De Leo, Barbara Dessi, Nicola Girtler, Silvia Morbelli, Flavio Nobili, Davide Sebastiano Rossi, Maria Falchero, Giovanni Murialdo, Paolo M Rossini, Claudio Babiloni, Rodolfo Schizzi, Riccardo Padolecchia, Guido Rodriguez (2005)  Stroop interference task and single-photon emission tomography in anorexia: a preliminary report.   Int J Eat Disord 38: 4. 323-329 Dec  
Abstract: The aim of this preliminary study was to investigate the physiologic substrate of executive function in anorexia nervosa (AN) by assessing the relation between brain perfusion and Stroop interference task (SIT).
Notes:
2004
Marino Clavio, Flavio Nobili, Enrico Balleari, Nicola Girtler, Filippo Ballerini, Paolo Vitali, Paola Rosati, Claudia Venturino, Riccardo Varaldo, Marco Gobbi, Riccardo Ghio, Guido Rodriguez (2004)  Quality of life and brain function following high-dose recombinant human erythropoietin in low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes: a preliminary report.   Eur J Haematol 72: 2. 113-120 Feb  
Abstract: In this prospective study we evaluate the effects of high-dose recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) on quality of life (QOL) and brain function in patients with low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) (<10% marrow blasts). Preliminary data are reported.
Notes:
Davide V Moretti, Claudio Babiloni, Giuliano Binetti, Emanuele Cassetta, Gloria Dal Forno, Florinda Ferreric, Raffaele Ferri, Bartolo Lanuzza, Carlo Miniussi, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Serenella Salinari, Paolo M Rossini (2004)  Individual analysis of EEG frequency and band power in mild Alzheimer's disease.   Clin Neurophysiol 115: 2. 299-308 Feb  
Abstract: This EEG study investigates the role of the cholinergic system, cortico-cortical connections, and sub-cortical white matter on the relationship between individual EEG frequencies and their relative power bands.
Notes:
Guido Rodriguez, Paolo Vitali, Michela Canfora, Piero Calvini, Nicola Girtler, Caterina De Leo, Arnoldo Piccardo, Flavio Nobili (2004)  Quantitative EEG and perfusional single photon emission computed tomography correlation during long-term donepezil therapy in Alzheimer's disease.   Clin Neurophysiol 115: 1. 39-49 Jan  
Abstract: There is an increasing interest in the effects of the acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) in Alzheimer's disease (AD), as investigated by means of objective, neurophysiological tools. In an open-label study, we evaluated the neurophysiological effects of chronic administration of donepezil to AD patients, by means of a correlative approach between quantitative EEG (qEEG) and perfusional brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT).
Notes:
Paolo Vitali, Flavio Nobili, Umberto Raiteri, Michela Canfora, Marco Rosa, Piero Calvini, Nicola Girtler, Giovanni Regesta, Guido Rodriguez (2004)  Right hemispheric dysfunction in a case of pure progressive aphemia: fusion of multimodal neuroimaging.   Psychiatry Res 130: 1. 97-107 Jan  
Abstract: This article describes the unusual case of a 60-year-old woman suffering from pure progressive aphemia. The fusion of multimodal neuroimaging (MRI, perfusion SPECT) implicated the right frontal lobe, especially the inferior frontal gyrus. This area also showed the greatest functional MRI activation during the performance of a covert phonemic fluency task. Results are discussed in terms of bihemispheric language representation. The fusion of three sets of neuroimages has aided in the interpretation of the patient's cognitive brain dysfunction.
Notes:
F Villani, P Vitali, V Scaioli, G Rodriguez, M Rosa, T Granata, G Avanzini, R Spreafico, L Angelini (2004)  Subcortical nodular heterotopia: a functional MRI and somatosensory evoked potentials study.   Neurol Sci 25: 4. 225-229 Oct  
Abstract: Subcortical nodular heterotopia (SNH) associated with refractory epilepsy may be surgically treated, and a positive outcome can be expected following the complete excision of the malformed tissue. Recent functional neuroimaging studies have suggested the possible functional relevance of cerebral malformations, and may make it possible to improve presurgical planning, thus allowing extended resections and minimising post-operative deficits. We here report the case of a 19-year-old man with epilepsy and a giant SNH associated with diffused abnormal gyrations of the right temporal-parietal regions. Cortical functional organisation was investigated by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during sensory and motor tasks, and somatosensory evoked potentials. The results revealed enlarged and displaced motor and sensory cortical areas with heterotopic tissue functional activation. The relevance of these findings is discussed in the light of the possible surgical treatment of drug-refractory epilepsy associated with cerebral malformations: surgical treatment based on conventional MRI studies alone, without taking the functional nature of dysplastic tissues into account, may lead to considerable side effects.
Notes:
Claudio Babiloni, Giuliano Binetti, Emanuele Cassetta, Daniele Cerboneschi, Gloria Dal Forno, Claudio Del Percio, Florinda Ferreri, Raffaele Ferri, Bartolo Lanuzza, Carlo Miniussi, Davide V Moretti, Flavio Nobili, Roberto D Pascual-Marqui, Guido Rodriguez, Gian Luca Romani, Serenella Salinari, Franca Tecchio, Paolo Vitali, Orazio Zanetti, Filippo Zappasodi, Paolo M Rossini (2004)  Mapping distributed sources of cortical rhythms in mild Alzheimer's disease. A multicentric EEG study.   Neuroimage 22: 1. 57-67 May  
Abstract: The study aimed at mapping (i) the distributed electroencephalographic (EEG) sources specific for mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) compared to vascular dementia (VaD) or normal elderly people (Nold) and (ii) the distributed EEG sources sensitive to the mild AD at different stages of severity. Resting EEG (10-20 electrode montage) was recorded from 48 mild AD, 20 VaD, and 38 Nold subjects. Both AD and VaD patients had 24-17 of mini mental state examination (MMSE). EEG rhythms were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), and beta 2 (20-30 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were modeled by low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Regarding issue i, there was a decline of central, parietal, temporal, and limbic alpha 1 (low alpha) sources specific for mild AD group with respect to Nold and VaD groups. Furthermore, occipital alpha 1 sources showed a strong decline in mild AD compared to VaD group. Finally, distributed theta sources were largely abnormal in VaD but not in mild AD group. Regarding issue ii, there was a lower power of occipital alpha 1 sources in mild AD subgroup having more severe disease. Compared to previous field studies, this was the first investigation that illustrated the power spectrum profiles at the level of cortical (macroregions) EEG sources in mild AD patients having different severity of the disease with respect to VaD and normal subjects. Future studies should evaluate the clinical usefulness of this approach in early differential diagnosis, disease staging, and therapy monitoring.
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Claudio Babiloni, Raffaele Ferri, Davide V Moretti, Andrea Strambi, Giuliano Binetti, Gloria Dal Forno, Florinda Ferreri, Bartolo Lanuzza, Claudio Bonato, Flavio Nobili, Guido Rodriguez, Serenella Salinari, Stefano Passero, Raffaele Rocchi, C J Stam, Paolo M Rossini (2004)  Abnormal fronto-parietal coupling of brain rhythms in mild Alzheimer's disease: a multicentric EEG study.   Eur J Neurosci 19: 9. 2583-2590 May  
Abstract: Cholinergic deafferentation/recovery in rats mainly impinges on the fronto-parietal coupling of brain rhythms [D. P. Holschneider et al. (1999) Exp. Brain Res., 126, 270-280]. Is this reflected by the functional coupling of fronto-parietal cortical rhythms at an early stage of Alzheimer's disease (mild AD)? Resting electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms were studied in 82 patients with mild AD and in control subjects, such as 41 normal elderly (Nold) subjects and 25 patients with vascular dementia (VaD). Patients with AD and VaD had similar mini-mental state evaluation scores of 17-24. The functional coupling was estimated by means of the synchronization likelihood (SL) of the EEG data at electrode pairs, accounting for linear and non-linear components of that coupling. Cortical rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha (1 8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), beta 2 (20-30 Hz) and gamma (30-40 Hz). A preliminary data analysis (Nold) showed that surface Laplacian transformation of the EEG data reduced the values of SL, possibly because of the reduction of influences due to head volume conduction. Therefore, the final analysis was performed on Laplacian-transformed EEG data. The SL was dominant at alpha 1 band in all groups. Compared with the Nold subjects, patients with VaD and mild AD presented a marked reduction of SL at both fronto-parietal (delta-alpha) and inter-hemispherical (delta-beta) electrode pairs. The feature distinguishing the patients with mild AD with respect to patients with VaD groups was a more prominent reduction of fronto-parietal alpha 1 SL. These results suggest that mild AD is characterized by an abnormal fronto-parietal coupling of the dominant human cortical rhythm at 8-10.5 Hz.
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2003
G Rodriguez, C De Leo, N Girtler, P Vitali, E Grossi, F Nobili (2003)  Psychological and social aspects in management of Alzheimer's patients: an inquiry among caregivers.   Neurol Sci 24: 5. 329-335 Dec  
Abstract: A survey in the cities of Genoa and Savona (Italy) was performed to examine stress levels in caregivers of patients with Alzheimer's disease in the context of a project of the Italian Ministry of Health named Cronos. It offered free anticholinesterase inhibitor therapy to patients who addressed dedicated Neurological Units; in this occasion caregivers could be invited to express the main difficulties encountered in managing demented people during an interview conducted by health personnel of the Neurophysiology Service. Caregivers were mainly women, daughters or spouses, with a medium educational level, retired, housekeepers, employees or teachers; they claimed a lowering of economic standard of living of the family owing to extra expenses for assistance. Satisfaction was expressed towards specialists, while support by general practitioners and other sanitary services was usually lacking and money contribution from the government or territorial services was considered inadequate. From the emotional point of view, caregivers claim loss of free time, friendships and hobbies, and feel isolated in the social context; sometimes the patient's death is thought of as a solution. A strong need for information and support is clearly emerging and any further interventions should take these requirements into consideration.
Notes:
G Rodriguez, C De Leo, N Girtler, P Vitali, E Grossi, F Nobili (2003)  Psychological and social aspects in management of Alzheimer's patients: an inquiry among caregivers.   Neurol Sci 24: 5. 329-335 Dec  
Abstract: A survey in the cities of Genoa and Savona (Italy) was performed to examine stress levels in caregivers of patients with Alzheimer's disease in the context of a project of the Italian Ministry of Health named Cronos. It offered free anticholinesterase inhibitor therapy to patients who addressed dedicated Neurological Units; in this occasion caregivers could be invited to express the main difficulties encountered in managing demented people during an interview conducted by health personnel of the Neurophysiology Service. Caregivers were mainly women, daughters or spouses, with a medium educational level, retired, housekeepers, employees or teachers; they claimed a lowering of economic standard of living of the family owing to extra expenses for assistance. Satisfaction was expressed towards specialists, while support by general practitioners and other sanitary services was usually lacking and money contribution from the government or territorial services was considered inadequate. From the emotional point of view, caregivers claim loss of free time, friendships and hobbies, and feel isolated in the social context; sometimes the patient's death is thought of as a solution. A strong need for information and support is clearly emerging and any further interventions should take these requirements into consideration.
Notes:
2002
G Rodriguez, M Delmonte, P Vitali, C Bordoni, C Barone, F Nobili (2002)  Duplex scanning of neck vessels: need for extending the consensus on indications.   Neurol Sci 22: 6. 437-441 Mar  
Abstract: We studied the percentage and distribution of appropriate indications for duplex scanning of neck vessels in an outpatient population. A total of 650 consecutive outpatients sent by their general practitioner (GP) or a specialist for duplex scanning of epi-aortic arterial vessels were studied. The aim was to verify the percentage of appropriate (APR) an inappropriate (INAPR) indications for the examination, according to the current literature. After analysis of indications as reported by GPs or specialists and a brief anamnestic examination, 77% of patients were found to have had one or more APR and 23% of patients had none. Analysis of severity of atheromasic lesions between the two groups showed that patients with APR had significantly ( p<0.001, chi-square test) more severe lesions than patients with INAPR. In more detail, no patient with INAPR had severe (>60%) stenosis while 6.4% of patients with APR had severe stenosis. Moreover, the percentage of normal examinations or intima-media thickness only was 32.5% in patients with INAPR but fell to 17.2% in patients with APR. In the entire group, women were more represented than men even after consideration of the natural prevalence of female gender in the local population. Among inappropriate indications for the examination, isolated dizziness or vertigo, syncope and tinnitus were the most frequent. Continuous medical education is needed to reduce inappropriate indications and thus to find solutions, although partial, to shorten the waiting lists that have become an urgent problem for the public health systems of several Western countries. However, this appears to be difficult challenge, as experiments conducted on this issue by other researchers only gave transient positive results.
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Guido Rodriguez, Paolo Vitali, Caterina De Leo, Fabrizio De Carli, Nicola Girtler, Flavio Nobili (2002)  Quantitative EEG changes in Alzheimer patients during long-term donepezil therapy.   Neuropsychobiology 46: 1. 49-56  
Abstract: Twenty patients affected with probable mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD; NINCDS-ADRDA criteria; 14 women and 6 men, mean age 75.2 +/- 7.1 years) who regularly received an oral acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (AChEI; donepezil 5 mg/day; Dz group) were compared with a control group of 11 AD patients (6 women and 5 men, mean age 73.5 +/- 6.0 years) diagnosed and followed up in the pre-AChEIs era (C group). At basal evaluation (t(0)), the 2 groups were comparable for age, education, and severity of disease (Global Deterioration Scale). All patients underwent quantitative EEG (qEEG, average reference, 10-20 International System), and were reexamined about 1 year later (t(1); i.e., after 12.3 +/- 3.6 months the Dz group, and after 13.7 +/- 3.9 months the C group). Log-transformed values of two qEEG bands, i.e. 2-6 and 6.5-12 Hz, were averaged between adjacent channels (frontal F3 and F7, F4 and F8; parietotemporal P3 and T7, P4 and T8) to obtain a qEEG ratio (6.5-12/2-6 Hz.) from one frontal and one temporoparietal region in each hemisphere. Neuropsychological impairment was summarized by the Mini-Mental Status Examination (MMSE). At t(0), both the MMSE score and the qEEG ratio values were somewhat higher in the C than in the Dz group, although nonsignificantly. Between t(0) and t(1), the MMSE score decreased significantly (p < 0.01) more in the C group (-4.36 +/- 2.25) than in the Dz group (-1.45 +/- 2.16), as did the qEEG ratio in the right frontal region (p < 0.01), whereas in the left frontal region the significance level was not reached (p = 0.02). Between t(0) and t(1), the qEEG ratio difference in both frontal regions and in the right temporoparietal region significantly correlated with the MMSE difference (p < 0.01), but neither with time between examinations nor with the difference on the Visual Search Test score. Long-term treatment with Dz led to a lesser deterioration of qEEG, paralleling a milder neuropsychological decline. The effect was significant in frontal regions, possibly because they are relatively spared during the mild-to-moderate phases of the disease.
Notes:
Flavio Nobili, Paolo Vitali, Michela Canfora, Nicola Girtler, Caterina De Leo, Giuliano Mariani, Alberto Pupi, Guido Rodriguez (2002)  Effects of long-term Donepezil therapy on rCBF of Alzheimer's patients.   Clin Neurophysiol 113: 8. 1241-1248 Aug  
Abstract: The recent introduction of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) therapy for Alzheimer's Disease (AD) has led to the need to assess the brain's response to the therapy on an objective, neurophysiological basis. Brain perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was used in an open-label study to evaluate the effect of chronic Donepezil administration to a group of patients affected by mild to moderate AD, compared to a group of AD patients not receiving AChEIs and kept under observation for a similar period.
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F Nobili, M Cutolo, A Sulli, P Vitali, S Vignola, G Rodriguez (2002)  Brain functional involvement by perfusion SPECT in systemic sclerosis and Behçet's disease.   Ann N Y Acad Sci 966: 409-414 Jun  
Abstract: Involvement of the central nervous system is frequent in systemic immune-mediated diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, Behçet's disease (BD), and systemic sclerosis (SSc). Structural brain examinations, such as computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, may be useful in diagnosing and following-up these cerebral syndromes in some cases, but they are more often inconclusive. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with perfusion tracers is a powerful method that can disclose brain involvement in many clinical situations, even in patients with subtle neurological symptoms. In fact, perfusion tracers can disclose regional hypoperfusion caused by both ischemia due to vascular narrowing and neuronal metabolic derangement due to direct neuronal damage. The latter phenomenon occurs because the blood flow to the brain is strictly regulated by metabolic demands, so that hypometabolism is reflected by hypoperfusion in most instances. SPECT findings in 42 mainly neurologically asymptomatic patients with SSc and in eight mainly neurologically symptomatic patients with BD are reported. SPECT was shown to be very sensitive and disclosed brain functional deficits in approximately half of SSc patients without neurological complaints and in all patients with BD, who had various neurological symptoms but usually inconclusive structural brain examinations.
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Flavio Nobili, Malick Koulibaly, Paolo Vitali, Octave Migneco, Giuliano Mariani, Klaus Ebmeier, Alberto Pupi, Philippe H Robert, Guido Rodriguez, Jacques Darcourt (2002)  Brain perfusion follow-up in Alzheimer's patients during treatment with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors.   J Nucl Med 43: 8. 983-990 Aug  
Abstract: Transient cognitive and behavioral stabilization of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the main goal of long-term acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (AChEI) therapy, but response to treatment is variable and, indeed, only some of the patients are stabilized. This is usually assessed by means of clinical and neuropsychologic scales, whereas functional neuroimaging could allow objective evaluation of the topographic correlates of the effect of therapy on brain functioning. The aim of this study was to evaluate brain perfusion changes by SPECT in AD patients during chronic AChEI therapy in relation to their cognitive evolution.
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G Rodriguez, A Sulli, M Cutolo, P Vitali, F Nobili (2002)  Carotid atherosclerosis in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a preliminary case-control study.   Ann N Y Acad Sci 966: 478-482 Jun  
Abstract: A preliminary study was undertaken to investigate the severity of atherosclerotic lesions of neck arteries in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in comparison with matched controls. The working hypothesis derives from the recent view that the atherosclerotic plaque is essentially an inflammatory lesion. Thus, patients affected by a chronic inflammatory disease, such as RA, might show acceleration of atherosclerosis despite treatment with anti-inflammatory drugs. In 19 patients with RA the prevalence of atherosclerosis of internal carotid arteries, as seen on high-resolution duplex-scanning of neck arteries, was significantly (p < 0.05) higher than in 19 controls, whereas no significant difference was found for the other arteries. Factors underlying this finding are not known; increased levels of homocysteine and other thiol compounds that may enhance atherosclerosis in RA patients deserve further investigation. Moreover, more specific factors of RA are currently being investigated. In fact, immune complexes fixing C1q bind to endothelial receptors, thus triggering an upregulation of adhesion molecules, such as E-selectin and intercellular and vascular cell adhesion molecules 1, on the endothelium surface.
Notes:
2001
F Nobili, F Copello, F Buffoni, P Vitali, N Girtler, C Bordoni, E Safaie-Semnani, G Mariani, G Rodriguez (2001)  Regional cerebral blood flow and prognostic evaluation in Alzheimer's disease.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 12: 2. 89-97 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: The present investigation reports the application of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF; (133)Xe method) to prognostic purposes in a consecutive series of 76 patients (mean age 68.4 +/- 8.7 years) with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD; NINCDS-ADRDA criteria). The likelihood that rCBF from a posterior temporal-inferior parietal area in each hemisphere at the first visit may predict timing of achievement of three endpoints (i.e. loss of activity of daily living, ADL, incontinence and death due to end-stage AD) was tested by the 'lifereg' procedure of the Statistical Analysis System package. With respect to baseline evaluation, 32 patients lost ADL 20.6 +/- 17.4 months later, 31 developed incontinence 27.1 +/- 19.0 months later, and 16 patients died after 40.9 +/- 23.8 months of follow-up. Baseline rCBF significantly predicted all end-points: the loss of ADL (left hemisphere: p = 0.04; right hemisphere: p = 0.02), incontinence (p = 0.02 in both hemispheres) and death (p = 0.01 in both hemispheres). Statistical significance was maintained for the loss of ADL and incontinence both in a subgroup of mildly demented patients, in whom death was not considered due to the low number of patients who died, and in a multivariate analysis including patient age, age at onset, sex, duration of illness, Mini-Mental State Examination score and presence of extrapyramidal signs and psychotic symptoms at the first visit. This study shows that rCBF measurement in a posterior temporal-inferior parietal area may give prognostic information on timing of evolution of AD, whenever performed during the course of the disease, and may be utilized both in clinical practice and for social planning.
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G Murialdo, A Barreca, F Nobili, A Rollero, G Timossi, M V Gianelli, F Copello, G Rodriguez, A Polleri (2001)  Relationships between cortisol, dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate and insulin-like growth factor-I system in dementia.   J Endocrinol Invest 24: 3. 139-146 Mar  
Abstract: Changes in the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPAA) function, entailing elevated cortisol circulating titres, occur in aging and in some neurological conditions, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). Excess cortisol has neurotoxic effects which affect hippocampal neurones. Dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHEAS) has an antiglucocorticoid activity and neuroprotective effects, but its levels decrease with aging. Glucocorticoids influence the production of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and modify its systemic and neurotrophic biological activity by inducing changes in IGF-binding proteins (IGFBPs). We looked for relationships between cortisol, DHEAS levels, and IGF-I - IGFBPs system in AD. Cortisol, DHEAS and GH levels at 02:00, 08:00, 14:00, 20:00 h, basal IGF-I, IGFBP-1 and IGFBP-3 levels were determined by RIAs or IRMA in 25 AD patients, aged 58-89 yr, and in 12 age-matched healthy controls. AD subjects had higher cortisol, lower DHEAS levels and increased cortisol/DHEAS ratio (C/Dr) than controls. In AD cases, total IGF-I, IGFBP-3, and IGF-I/IGFBP ratios were significantly lowered, while IGFBP-1 levels were significantly higher than in controls. We found a significant inverse correlation between IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels vs C/Dr, and between both IGF-I/IGFBPs ratios vs mean cortisol levels. IGFBP-3 correlated directly with DHEAS. Cortisol was directly and IGF-I inversely correlated with cognitive impairment. In AD patients we found that alterations in HPAA function and elevated C/Dr are related to lowered total and free IGF-I levels. These findings and their relationship to cognitive impairment suggest that changes in hormonal set-up might influence the clinical presentation of the disease.
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F Nobili, P Vitali, P Calvini, F Bollati, N Girtler, M Delmonte, G Mariani, G Rodriguez (2001)  Clinical correlative evaluation of an iterative method for reconstruction of brain SPECT images.   Nucl Med Biol 28: 6. 627-632 Aug  
Abstract: Brain SPECT and PET investigations have showed discrepancies in Alzheimer's disease (AD) when considering data deriving from deeply located structures, such as the mesial temporal lobe. These discrepancies could be due to a variety of factors, including substantial differences in gamma-cameras and underlying technology. Mesial temporal structures are deeply located within the brain and the commonly used Filtered Back-Projection (FBP) technique does not fully take into account either the physical parameters of gamma-cameras or geometry of collimators. In order to overcome these limitations, alternative reconstruction methods have been proposed, such as the iterative method of the Conjugate Gradients with modified matrix (CG). However, the clinical applications of these methods have so far been only anecdotal. The present study was planned to compare perfusional SPECT data as derived from the conventional FBP method and from the iterative CG method, which takes into account the geometrical and physical characteristics of the gamma-camera, by a correlative approach with neuropsychology.
Notes:
L Basano, P Ottonello, F Nobili, P Vitali, F B Pallavicini, B Ricca, T Prastaro, A Robert, G Rodriguez (2001)  Pulsatile electrical impedance response from cerebrally dead adult patients is not a reliable tool for detecting cerebral perfusion changes.   Physiol Meas 22: 2. 341-349 May  
Abstract: The original objective of this work was to verify the possibility of using electrical pulsatile cerebral impedance measurements as a diagnostic aid for assessing the brain-death condition in adults; a subordinate target was to validate a simple method for detecting perfusional changes in the brain. To this end, impedance signals were recorded, for a comparative study, from both live subjects and brain-dead patients, using a simple four-electrode arrangement. Rather unexpectedly, pulsatile transcephalic impedance waveforms exhibiting a temporal dependance similar to those of live subjects were detected in artificially ventilated, cerebrally dead, adult subjects; distributions of the time delays between impedance peaks and ECG peaks were also recorded for the two groups (dead and live subjects). These data provided no evidence, at the 1% significance level, against the hypothesis that the two sample groups are drawn from identical populations. The detection of impedance variations from brain-dead patients can be explained by the residual persistence of blood flow through the scalp, by mechanical variations synchronous with the heart beat and by the presence of the oscillating flow and the systolic spikes that precede the final blood flow arrest. The fact that impedance variations can be traced back to a multiplicity of causes, unrelated to the normal unidirectional flow, renders the transcephalic impedance method inappropriate for detecting cerebral perfusion changes in adults. This conclusion is also strengthened by some theoretical results recently derived from a multilayer model of the head.
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S Vignola, F Nobili, P Picco, M Gattorno, A Buoncompagni, P Vitali, G Mariani, G Rodriguez (2001)  Brain perfusion spect in juvenile neuro-Behçet's disease.   J Nucl Med 42: 8. 1151-1157 Aug  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow was evaluated by (99m)Tc-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime SPECT in 7 patients (age range, 7--18 y; mean age, 9.1 y) affected with Behçet's disease and signs or symptoms of central nervous system involvement at different times of their clinical history.
Notes:
2000
M Cutolo, F Nobili, A Sulli, C Pizzorni, M Briata, F Faelli, P Vitali, G Mariani, F Copello, B Seriolo, C Barone, G Rodriguez (2000)  Evidence of cerebral hypoperfusion in scleroderma patients.   Rheumatology (Oxford) 39: 12. 1366-1373 Dec  
Abstract: To investigate regional cerebral blood flow by (99m)Tc-hexamethylpropylenamineoxime (HMPAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in a series of 40 patients (mean age 58.5+/-11.5 yr) affected by systemic sclerosis (SSc) in comparison with age-matched healthy controls.
Notes:
G Murialdo, A Barreca, F Nobili, A Rollero, G Timossi, M V Gianelli, F Copello, G Rodriguez, A Polleri (2000)  Dexamethasone effects on cortisol secretion in Alzheimer's disease: some clinical and hormonal features in suppressor and nonsuppressor patients.   J Endocrinol Invest 23: 3. 178-186 Mar  
Abstract: Alterations in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPAA) and failure of dexamethasone (DXT) to suppress cortisol secretion occur in Alzheimer's disease (AD). This study was aimed to settle possible differences in some clinical (age, body weight, body mass index, dementia severity) and hormonal parameters in AD patients non-responders to overnight 1 mg-DXT suppression test compared with the responder subjects. ACTH, cortisol and dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHEAS) day-time levels were assessed in 25 AD patients and in 12 age-matched healthy controls before DXT administration. In view of their neuroprotective effects, plasma levels of Insulin-like Growth Factor-I (IGF-I) and of IGF-Binding Proteins (IGFBPs) were also determined. After DXT, 8 AD subjects (32%) showed cortisol levels above the conventional cut-off of 140 nmol/L. No significant differences were found in clinical parameters in suppressor vs nonsuppressor patients. AD subjects showed higher cortisol, cortisol/DHEAS ratios, and lower DHEAS levels in comparison with controls. Both ACTH and cortisol levels were not different in suppressor and nonsuppressor patients, but DHEAS levels were significantly lower in nonsuppressor cases, who also exhibited ACTH and cortisol periodicities more altered than in suppressor and in control subjects. IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels were lower and those of IGFBP-1 higher in nonsuppressor than in suppressor cases and in healthy controls. IGF-I/IGFBPs system data were correlated with cognitive impairment and adrenal steroid levels in AD patients.
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G Murialdo, F Nobili, A Rollero, M V Gianelli, F Copello, G Rodriguez, A Polleri (2000)  Hippocampal perfusion and pituitary-adrenal axis in Alzheimer's disease.   Neuropsychobiology 42: 2. 51-57  
Abstract: The hippocampus is involved in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and regulates the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPAA). Enhanced cortisol secretion has been reported in AD. Increased cortisol levels affect hippocampal neuron survival and potentiate beta-amyloid toxicity. Conversely, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and its sulfate (DHEAS) are believed to antagonize noxious glucocorticoid effects and exert a neuroprotective activity. The present study was aimed at investigating possible correlations between hippocampus perfusion - evaluated by SPECT - and HPAA function in AD. Fourteen patients with AD and 12 healthy age-matched controls were studied by (99m)Tc-HMPAO high-resolution brain SPECT. Plasma adrenocorticotropin, cortisol, and DHEAS levels were determined at 2.00, 8.00, 14.00, 20.00 h in all subjects and their mean values were computed. Cortisol/DHEAS ratios (C/Dr) were also calculated. Bilateral impairment of SPECT hippocampal perfusion was observed in AD patients as compared to controls. Mean cortisol levels were significantly increased and DHEAS titers were lowered in patients with AD, as compared with controls. C/Dr was also significantly higher in patients. Using a stepwise procedure for dependent SPECT variables, the variance of hippocampal perfusional data was accounted for by mean basal DHEAS levels. Moreover, hippocampal SPECT data correlated directly with mean DHEAS levels, and inversely with C/Dr. These data show a relationship between hippocampal perfusion and HPAA function in AD. Decreased DHEAS, rather than enhanced cortisol levels, appears to be correlated with changes of hippocampal perfusion in dementia.
Notes:
G Rodriguez, P Vitali, P Calvini, C Bordoni, N Girtler, G Taddei, G Mariani, F Nobili (2000)  Hippocampal perfusion in mild Alzheimer's disease.   Psychiatry Res 100: 2. 65-74 Dec  
Abstract: Perfusion and metabolic studies in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) have so far yielded conflicting results on the functional status of the hippocampal region, whose deep location in the brain makes it critical to optimize the image-reconstruction technique employed in emission tomography. We used a brain-dedicated device (CERASPECT) to perform single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) studies with 99mTc-hexamethylpropylene-amine-oxime in 22 consecutive patients (mean age: 74+/-6.5 years) with mild [mini-mental status examination (MMSE) score > or =15, mean 20.8+/-3.2], probable AD. The control subjects were 11 healthy elderly people (mean age: 70.5+/-6.5 years). In patients, the total score on the selective reminding test (SRT) was used as an index of memory function. Counts from a hippocampal and a temporoparietal region of interest in each hemisphere were referred to the average thalamic counts. To optimize SPECT images, we used conventional filtered back-projection (FBP) reconstruction and a new iterative method of conjugate gradients (CG), which takes into account the geometrical and physical characteristics of the gamma-camera. Hippocampal perfusion in the two hemispheres was significantly lower in patients than in control subjects, regardless of which reconstruction method was used, and correlated with the MMSE score. The correlation between hippocampal perfusion and the SRT score was significantly (bootstrap procedure) higher with the CG method than with the FBP method (CG: r=0.52 and 0.54; FBP: r=0.39 and 0.47, for the right and left hemisphere, respectively). These results show hippocampal hypoperfusion in patients with mild AD, a correlation between hippocampal perfusion and the severity of cognitive impairment, and enhanced identification of these subtle perfusional changes with the use of an alternative image-reconstruction method that improves the spatial resolution of SPECT images.
Notes:
1999
G Rodriguez, F Nobili, F Copello, P Vitali, M V Gianelli, G Taddei, E Catsafados, G Mariani (1999)  99mTc-HMPAO regional cerebral blood flow and quantitative electroencephalography in Alzheimer's disease: a correlative study.   J Nucl Med 40: 4. 522-529 Apr  
Abstract: In this study the neuropsychological status of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) was correlated with quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) both in the cortex and in deep gray matter structures.
Notes:
F Nobili, F Copello, P Vitali, T Prastaro, S Carozzo, G Perego, G Rodriguez (1999)  Timing of disease progression by quantitative EEG in Alzheimer' s patients.   J Clin Neurophysiol 16: 6. 566-573 Nov  
Abstract: This prospective study was planned to assess whether quantitative EEG (qEEG) can give an estimate of the timing of achievement of three endpoints (loss of activities of daily living, incontinence, and death) in 72 consecutive patients (53 females, 19 males; mean age, 70.8) affected with probable Alzheimer's disease, as defined according to the NINCDS-ADRDA criteria. Power-weighted, log-transformed relative values of the four conventional EEG bands were considered in a central-posterior temporal region for each hemisphere. The hypothesis was tested by the lifereg procedure of the Statistical Analysis System package (first significance level accepted, P < or = 0.01). Because patients were in different stages of the disease, the statistical analysis was performed in the entire group as well as in the subgroup of 41 patients (mean age, 69.6) with mild dementia (scoring 3 or 4 on the global deterioration scale). In the whole group, the loss of activities of daily living was predicted by delta power in either side (P = 0.01), incontinence was predicted by alpha power in the right side (P < 0.01), whereas the statistical significance was not reached for death (P < 0.05). In the subgroup of mild demented patients, the loss of activities of daily living was predicted by delta power in the left side (P = 0.01), incontinence by both delta (P < 0.01) and alpha (P < 0.001) power in the right side, and death was not significantly predicted (P = 0.08). Quantitative EEG is a low-cost, discomfort-free technique which may be used to obtain information on the timing of disease evolution. The results showed in mild Alzheimer's disease appear especially interesting to attempt a prediction of the future time course of the disease from its beginning.
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G Rodriguez, F Copello, P Vitali, G Perego, F Nobili (1999)  EEG spectral profile to stage Alzheimer's disease.   Clin Neurophysiol 110: 10. 1831-1837 Oct  
Abstract: The present study was undertaken to investigate whether a synoptic parameter of quantitative EEG (qEEG), such as the power spectral profile, may be used as a simple marker to stage Alzheimer's disease (AD) in the clinical setting.
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1998
F Nobili, P Calvini, G Taddei, P Vitali, G Mariani, G Rodriguez (1998)  Feasibility in the clinical setting of perfusion brain SPECT imaging employing a brain-dedicated gamma camera and the conjugate gradients with modified matrix reconstruction method.   Ital J Neurol Sci 19: 6. 373-377 Dec  
Abstract: In the present study, we compared Tc-99m HMPAO single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) brain images obtained using the conventional filtered backprojection (FBP) reconstruction method with the new reconstruction method of conjugate gradients with modified matrix (CGMM). The two methods were employed to generate SPECT images of a brain perfusion study in a 41-year-old patient who had suffered from multiple embolisation of the right hemisphere. Marked improvement in spatial resolution was achieved by CGMM reconstruction as compared to FBP reconstruction; this considerably helped in defining grey matter structures and low-uptake white-matter areas, both in the normal cerebral areas and in the hemisphere that had been affected by stroke. Although the relatively long time still required by the CGMM procedure might be considered as a significant drawback to date, with the increasing diffusion of the new computer facilities the CGMM method can be proposed as a valuable alternative to the standard FBP technique in order to better recognise cerebral areas with different tracer uptake.
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G Rodriguez, F Nobili, G Rocca, F De Carli, M V Gianelli, G Rosadini (1998)  Quantitative electroencephalography and regional cerebral blood flow: discriminant analysis between Alzheimer's patients and healthy controls.   Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 9: 5. 274-283 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: Forty-two patients with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) and 18 elderly healthy controls underwent quantitative EEG (qEEG) and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF; 133Xe clearance) examinations. Correlations were sought between relative qEEG band powers and percent rCBF values in a posterior temporoparietal region of interest in either hemisphere. Moreover, stepwise discriminant analysis was applied to study the accuracy of the two techniques in differentiating AD from healthy ageing. rCBF and qEEG were correlated with one another, especially in the right hemisphere (p values ranging from <0.001 to <0.01). Significant correlations were found between Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) and relative power of both the 2- to 6-Hz and the 6.5- to 12-Hz bands on either side (p < 0.001), and between MMSE and left rCBF (p < 0.005), while the correlation with right rCBF was poorer (p < 0.02). The statistical procedure identified the right values of both examinations for the discriminant analysis. Sensitivity of qEEG and rCBF employed together was 88% and specificity 89%, with a total accuracy of 88.3%. The unrecognized patients (n = 5) were affected by mild AD (4 scoring 3 at the Global Deterioration Scale and 1 scoring 4). qEEG alone showed an accuracy of 77% in the whole group and of 69% in mild AD, and rCBF alone an accuracy of 75% in the whole group and of 71% in mild AD. It is concluded that qEEG and rCBF examinations employed together are accurate tools to differentiate AD from normal ageing, although a lower degree of accuracy is achieved in mildly demented patients.
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A Paolin, G Rodriguez, M Betetto, G Simini (1998)  Cerebral hemodynamic response to CO2 after severe head injury: clinical and prognostic implications.   J Trauma 44: 3. 495-500 Mar  
Abstract: To study the cerebrovascular reactivity to CO2 after severe head injury to establish the clinical and prognostic relevance of CO2 reactivity.
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G Rodriguez, P Vitali, F Nobili (1998)  Long-term effects of boxing and judo-choking techniques on brain function.   Ital J Neurol Sci 19: 6. 367-372 Dec  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured by 133-xenon inhalation in 24 amateur and 20 professional boxers, and in 10 judoka. Results were compared with those from age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Eighteen boxers (9 amateurs and 9 professionals) and all judoka also underwent electroencephalography (EEG). Mean rCBF values did not differ between either amateur boxers orjudoka and controls, whereas in professional boxers rCBF was significantly (p<.001) reduced in the whole brain, especially in the frontocentral regions. Healthy subjects, judoka, and amateur boxers showed a similar distribution of global CBF (gCBF, the mean of 32 probes) values, although 12.5% of amateurs had a significantly lower gCBF than controls. Among professional boxers, 25% showed a significantly low gCBF value; in the remaining 75%, gCBF was below the mean value of controls but did not reach statistical significance. Regional hypoperfusion, mainly in the frontocentral regions of both sides, was found in 35% of professional and in 29% of amateur boxers. A correlation between gCBF values and number of official matches was not found in boxers. EEG was normal in all judoka and amateur boxers, but it was abnormal in 3 professionals. This study shows the relevance of the neurophysiological assessment of athletes engaged in violent sports which can cause brain impairment. In fact, while professional boxers may show brain functional impairment in comparison to normal subjects, judoka do not. The lack of correlation between CBF values in boxers and the number of official matches points to the difficulty of taking into account variables, such as the number and the severity of matches during training.
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1997
S Francione, F Priano, A Ferrari, G Bottini, G Rodriguez, G Rosadini, C Munari (1997)  Neuropsychological study during video-EEG recording of successive partial seizures of right temporo-central origin.   Ital J Neurol Sci 18: 4. 209-214 Aug  
Abstract: A 15-year-old, right-handed boy underwent video-EEG study as a first step in presurgical evaluation for a severe drug-resistant right temporo-central epilepsy. He was monitored while performing neuropsychological tests over a 67-minute period during which 23 brief seizures were recorded. Despite his right-handedness, both inter-ictal and ictal verbal performances were impaired. Analysis of the relationships between the characteristics of the EEG and the neuropsychological results revealed that a worsening in cognitive performances correlated with an increase in inter-ictal abnormalities, particularly when subclinical paroxysms were present; that the cognitive tasks executed peri-ictally were correctly performed in almost 50% of the cases; and that the error rate was higher when a task was presented during or immediately after a seizure rather than before its onset. A Wada test, performed on the basis of the cognitive results, demonstrated right hemisphere dominance for language. Our observations underline the importance of neuropsychological testing in presurgical procedures, and suggest that it should be performed peri-ictally whenever possible.
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F Nobili, M Cutolo, A Sulli, A Castaldi, F Sardanelli, S Accardo, G Rosadini, G Rodriguez (1997)  Impaired quantitative cerebral blood flow in scleroderma patients.   J Neurol Sci 152: 1. 63-71 Nov  
Abstract: Systemic Sclerosis (SSc) is a multisystem disease characterised by proliferation of vascular tissue, obliterative microvascular lesions and diffuse organ fibrosis. Despite widespread vascular disease, Central Nervous System complaints are only infrequently reported and it is uncertain whether they merely derive from systemic complications or whether they may be also caused by a primary vascular process within the brain. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was quantitatively measured by the 133Xenon clearance technique in twenty-seven consecutive SSc patients without relevant systemic complications and with different severity of vascular involvement, as staged by nailfold capillary videomicroscopy (NCV). Absolute, percent, and asymmetry rCBF values were compared (z-statistics) with age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Cerebral MRI and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) were also performed. Doppler sonography of neck vessels and Transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) were performed in patients presenting rCBF reduction. Cerebral hypoperfusion was found in the 52% of patients, i.e.: in 33% of patients with the 'early' NCV pattern, in 56% of patients with the 'active' pattern, and in 67% of patients with the 'late' NCV pattern. Thirty percent were the MRIs showing focal and/or diffuse signal abnormalities in the white matter of both hemispheres with the highest rate (44%) in the 'late' NCV pattern. MMSE disclosed mild dementia in one patient in the 'late' NCV group and some mistakes in 6 more patients, in the 'active' or 'late' NCV groups, whereas TCD failed to find significant stenosis of Willis' arteries. Cerebral hypoperfusion is shown for the first time in a substantial part of SSc patients without either neurological symptoms or relevant systemic complications. It is suggested that the rCBF reduction might be related to the systemic scleroderma microangiopathy although, probably due to the paucity of connective tissue in cerebral vessels, the vast majority of patients remains in a subclinical phase.
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1996
P Mazzone, G Rodriguez, A Arrigo, F Nobili, R Pisani, G Rosadini (1996)  Cerebral haemodynamic changes induced by spinal cord stimulation in man.   Ital J Neurol Sci 17: 1. 55-57 Feb  
Abstract: Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has been shown to influence cerebral perfusion in both experimental models and humans. With the aim of further verifying such an effect, twelve patients had an epidural (cervical or dorsal) lead inserted percutaneously and underwent regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) examinations (133-Xenon inhalation method) before and during SCS. Mean blood velocity (MBV) in the middle cerebral artery was also measured in seven cases by means of transcranial Doppler. In the patients with a cervical lead, a symmetrical increase in rCBF was found, mainly in the anterior regions (from +8% to +21%). MBV increased in four cervical lead implants (from +16% to +20%) and in one case with a dorsal lead (+15%). These results suggest that cerebral perfusion may increase in patients undergoing SCS through a cervical lead. Although the mechanism involved in the increase in rCBF remains to be clarified, frontal lobe functional activation by the ascending reticular pathways through the thalamo-cortical projections might be hypothesised.
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G Rodriguez, F Nobili, A Arrigo, F Priano, F De Carli, S Francione, M Gambaro, G Rosadini (1996)  Prognostic significance of quantitative electroencephalography in Alzheimer patients: preliminary observations.   Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol 99: 2. 123-128 Aug  
Abstract: In 31 Alzheimer outpatients followed up for a mean time of 26.4 months the hypothesis that quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) could predict the loss of activities of daily living (ADL), the onset of incontinence, and death was tested by the Weibull proportional hazard model of 'lifereg' procedure of the Statistical Analysis System package. A central-posterior temporal region was considered in either side (power-weighted, log transformed relative values). Right delta predicted both the loss of ADL and death, whereas right theta predicted the onset of incontinence. Left values gave borderline significant results toward all end-points, whereas power-weighted mean frequency always gave borderline results. The curves calculated for predicted times may be a valid support for the clinician in attempting prognostic judgments of disease evolution.
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C Brunelli, F Nobili, P Spallarossa, L Olivotti, P Rossettin, G Rodriguez, S Caponnetto (1996)  Cerebral blood flow reserve in patients with syndrome X.   Coron Artery Dis 7: 8. 587-590 Aug  
Abstract: Patients with syndrome X frequently show disorders of oesophageal motility, bronchial reactivity or impaired vasodilator capacity of peripheral vascular beds. For these reasons, it has been suggested that syndrome X may represent a generalized abnormality of vascular and non-vascular smooth muscle function, rather than an isolated coronary problem.
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F d'Onofrio, S Salvia, V Petretta, V Bonavita, G Rodriguez, G Tedeschi (1996)  Quantified-EEG in normal aging and dementias.   Acta Neurol Scand 93: 5. 336-345 May  
Abstract: The value of quantitative electroencephalography (q-EEG) in the differential diagnosis of multi-infarct dementia (MID) and dementia of Alzheimer's type (DAT) is controversial. To evaluate the possible diagnostic role of q-EEG in these two conditions we studied 18 healthy adults, 16 healthy elderly (HE), 29 DAT patients and 45 MID patients. MID patients showed a significant increase of delta activity on the occipital regions, a significant widespread increase of theta activity, a significant widespread decrease of alpha activity. DAT patients showed a significant widespread increase of delta and theta activity, a significant widespread decrease of alpha activity. Spectral profile analysis showed an asymptotic exponential peak frequency at 4.33 HZ, and the disappearance of dominant activity in DAT patients; a 1 Hz decrease of peak frequency with a preserved normal profile in MID patients. We conclude that q-EEG is a useful ancillary test to differentiate MID from DAT.
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F Nobili, G Rodriguez, A Arrigo, B M Stubinski, E Rossi, R Cerri, E Damasio, G Rosadini, A A Marmont (1996)  Accuracy of 133-xenon regional cerebral blood flow and quantitative electroencephalography in systemic lupus erythematosus.   Lupus 5: 2. 93-102 Apr  
Abstract: Comparative assessment of sensitivity and specificity of regional Cerebral Blood Flow (rCBF) by 133-Xenon inhalation and quantitative Electroencephalography (qEEG) in patients with Neuropsychiatric Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (NP-SLE).
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1995
P Mazzone, R Pisani, F Nobili, A Arrigo, M Gambaro, G Rodriguez (1995)  Assessment of regional cerebral blood flow during spinal cord stimulation in humans.   Stereotact Funct Neurosurg 64: 4. 197-201  
Abstract: Increased cerebral perfusion has been reported in both animal models and humans undergoing spinal cord stimulation (SCS). However, this was an inconsistent finding and variables able to influence regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) following SCS are poorly investigated. We report our experience on rCBF measurements by the xenon-133 inhalation technique in 20 patients receiving acute and chronic SCS for different pathologies in basal conditions. Neither acute nor chronic SCS induced significant rCBF changes in the group of patients as a whole. However females, non-atherosclerotic patients and patients with a cervical SCS lead, showed a trend (borderline statistical significance) toward a redistribution of rCBF with increased values in frontoprerolandic and decreased values in postrolandic regions. Although SCS appears to influence intracerebral distribution more than absolute changes in blood flow, the mechanisms underlying such a phenomenon remain unknown. Functional activation of frontal lobes by the ascending reticular pathways through the thalamofrontal projections could be one possible hypothesis which has to be confirmed by further studies.
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1994
G Rodriguez, S Bertolini, F Nobili, A Arrigo, P Masturzo, N Elicio, M Gambaro, G Rosadini (1994)  Regional cerebral blood flow in familial hypercholesterolemia.   Stroke 25: 4. 831-836 Apr  
Abstract: Although epidemiologic investigations are trying to clarify the role of plasma lipid concentrations (primarily cholesterol and its subfractions) as risk factors for both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, little information is available regarding the effect of sustained hypercholesterolemia on cerebral perfusion.
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G L Viale, E V Sehrbundt, M Cossu, C Viola, G Rodriguez, A Pau, C Bernucci (1994)  Longitudinal study of cerebral blood flow following early or delayed surgery for ruptured intracranial aneurysms.   Acta Neurochir (Wien) 131: 1-2. 6-11  
Abstract: Out of a series of 43 cases operated on for ruptured intracranial aneurysms over a 12-month-period, 32 patients were followed up to 12 months postoperatively with repeated evaluations of cerebral blood flow, using the Xenon133 inhalation technique. No statistically significant differences in cerebral perfusion were detected between the subgroups of good-grade patients, who were submitted respectively to early, or delayed surgery. Depression of flow in the affected hemisphere of poor-grade patients was principally related to the preoperative occurrence of an intracerebral haematoma. The overall results were not consistent with the hypothesis that early surgical intervention results in long-lasting effects on the cerebral circulation.
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G L Viale, E V Sehrbundt, M Cossu, C Viola, G Rodriguez, A Pau, C Bernucci (1994)  Longitudinal study of cerebral blood flow following early or delayed surgery for ruptured intracranial aneurysms.   Acta Neurochir (Wien) 131: 1-2. 6-11  
Abstract: Out of a series of 43 cases operated on for ruptured intracranial aneurysms over a 12-month-period, 32 patients were followed up to 12 months postoperatively with repeated evaluations of cerebral blood flow, using the Xenon133 inhalation technique. No statistically significant differences in cerebral perfusion were detected between the subgroups of good-grade patients, who were submitted respectively to early, or delayed surgery. Depression of flow in the affected hemisphere of poor-grade patients was principally related to the preoperative occurrence of an intracerebral haematoma. The overall results were not consistent with the hypothesis that early surgical intervention results in long-lasting effects on the cerebral circulation.
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1993
G Rodriguez, F Nobili, F De Carli, S Francione, S Marenco, M A Celestino, K Hassan, G Rosadini (1993)  Regional cerebral blood flow in chronic stroke patients.   Stroke 24: 1. 94-99 Jan  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to investigate regional cerebral blood flow parameters during the postacute phase of unilateral ischemic stroke and to correlate them with clinical data.
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G Rodriguez, F Nobili, M A Celestino, S Francione, G Gulli, K Hassan, S Marenco, G Rosadini, R Cordera (1993)  Regional cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular reactivity in IDDM.   Diabetes Care 16: 2. 462-468 Feb  
Abstract: To investigate both rCBF and cerebrovascular reactivity, evaluated as pre- and post-ACZ rCBF differences in a group of IDDM patients with differences in duration of disease and severity of complications.
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F Nobili, G Rodriguez, S Marenco, F De Carli, M Gambaro, C Castello, R Pontremoli, G Rosadini (1993)  Regional cerebral blood flow in chronic hypertension. A correlative study.   Stroke 24: 8. 1148-1153 Aug  
Abstract: Cerebral hypoperfusion has occasionally been reported during essential hypertension. We explored regional cerebral blood flow in a large series of neurologically asymptomatic hypertensive patients to determine relations among cerebral blood flow, concomitant main vascular risk factors, and the most common signs of end-organ damage.
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A Rossi, M A Balestrero, F Cella, M Cossu, D Masoni, G Rodriguez, E Sehrbundt Viale, G Viale (1993)  Intra- and postoperative cerebral blood flow in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage from a ruptured aneurysm   Minerva Anestesiol 59: 11. 567-570 Nov  
Abstract: The CBF of eight patients, who underwent surgery for ruptured aneurysm, was monitored using the termodiffusion technique (TDF). The device employed in this investigation allowed a continuous monitoring in "real time" of the cortical flow. The purpose of the study was to detect disorders of autoregulation, which were evaluated with the autoregulation index (AI). Autoregulation was correlated with the neurological preoperative grading, the postoperative changes of CBF (Xe133 clearance) and the outcome. The results of this preliminary study showed a correlation between these parameters and stressed the value of CBF monitoring during surgery.
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1992
1991
R Testa, G Rodriguez, F Dagnino, A Grasso, A Gris, S Marenco, F Nobili, D Risso, G Rosadini, G Celle (1991)  Effects of beta-adrenoreceptor antagonists on cerebral blood flow of cirrhotic patients with portal hypertension.   J Clin Pharmacol 31: 2. 136-139 Feb  
Abstract: The current study evaluated the effect of two beta adrenergic-blocking agents, propranolol (PRP) and atenolol (ATN), versus placebo on cerebral blood flow (CBF) of three homogeneous groups of cirrhotic patients with portal hypertension. CBF was measured by the noninvasive 133-Xenon inhalation method at rest and 1 hour after a single oral dose of PRP (40 mg), or ATN (100 mg), or placebo. Blood pressure and heart rate (HR) were measured at the beginning of each examination, and end-tidal pCO2(PeCO2) was monitored. The HR decreased significantly in both the PRP and ATN groups (P less than .01), whereas no changes were recorded for both PeCO2 and mean arterial blood pressure (MABP). The comparisons of the CBF differences among groups (ANOVA with the significance levels adjusted by the Bonferroni's correction) showed a significant increase in CBF after ATN as compared with both placebo (P less than .02) and PRP (P less than .01), whereas no significant differences were seen after PRP as compared with placebo. Our results confirm that PRP does not significantly affect CBF, whereas ATN induces an increase in CBF, although the underlying mechanism is difficult to explain.
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G Rosadini, P Cogorno, S Marenco, F Nobili, G Rodriguez (1991)  Brain functional imaging in senile psychopathology.   Int J Psychophysiol 10: 3. 271-280 Jan  
Abstract: Quantified electroencephalogram (EEG) and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) measurements are reliable and currently employed techniques in the functional exploration of the aging brain; they can be routinely employed, since discomfort to the patient is minimal. Topographical analysis of EEG and rCBF results is performed in our laboratory by a fully automated mapping system, which also enables statistical comparisons in real time. The goal of our study is to ascertain if there are systematic modifications in the topographic distribution of rCBF and EEG parameters in normal aging, dementia, cerebrovascular disease and in conditions of increased risk for cerebral pathology (e.g. hypertension). Dementias and cerebrovascular pathologies present characteristic brain functional abnormalities, which can be detected by comparing the patient data to an age-matched normal population by the appropriate statistical tests; therefore, the accurate selection of healthy aged controls appears as a crucial issue in order to improve the sensitivity of statistics.
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M Meglio, B Cioni, M Visocchi, F Nobili, G Rodriguez, G Rosadini, F Chiappini, S Sandric (1991)  Spinal cord stimulation and cerebral haemodynamics.   Acta Neurochir (Wien) 111: 1-2. 43-48  
Abstract: An increase of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) has been shown to occur in man during spinal cord stimulation (SCS) by Hosobuchi (1986) and by Meglio et al. (1988) using the 133-Xenon wash-out technique. In this paper we report the effects of SCS on CBF as measured by two different techniques: 8 patients were studied with the 133-Xe method and 28 with the transcranial doppler sonography (TCD), in two cases both studies were performed. The aim of our study was to: 1-verify the effect of SCS on CBF, 2-compare observations made by two different methods, and 3-evaluate a possible correlation between the stimulated spinal segmental level and the modification of CBF. The results of our study confirm that SCS interacts with the mechanisms of regulation of CBF. The stimulation of different spinal cord levels in the same patient can produce different effects and such effects are reproducible. An increase of CBF is more likely to occur with the stimulation of the cervical spinal cord. In patients studied by both methods the sign of CBF changes induced by SCS was the same. Finally, in two patients the effect of SCS on CO2 autoregulation was studied with TCD. The results of such a study, although preliminary, suggest that CO2 and SCS have a competitive effect upon the mechanisms of regulation of CBF.
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G Rodriguez, R Coppola, F De Carli, S Francione, S Marenco, F Nobili, J Risberg, G Rosadini, S Warkentin (1991)  Regional cerebral blood flow asymmetries in a group of 189 normal subjects at rest.   Brain Topogr 4: 1. 57-63  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) asymmetries were studied in 189 subjects (96 males and 93 females) at rest with the 133Xenon inhalation method using a fixed detector system. rCBF asymmetries in the resting condition were very small, nevertheless a significant (p less than 0.001) effect for their topographical distribution was present, reflecting higher rCBF in the right fronto-temporal and left parieto-occipital regions. rCBF asymmetries were not correlated with age, and there were no significant differences between males and females. Asymmetries are therefore useful from a statistical point of view in detecting rCBF abnormalities in the resting condition: they are more stable than absolute values in normal subjects and no matching according to age or sex is required when statistical comparisons are performed.
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G Rodriguez, R Coppola, F De Carli, S Francione, S Marenco, F Nobili, J Risberg, G Rosadini, S Warkentin (1991)  Regional cerebral blood flow asymmetries in a group of 189 normal subjects at rest.   Brain Topogr 4: 1. 57-63  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) asymmetries were studied in 189 subjects (96 males and 93 females) at rest with the 133Xenon inhalation method using a fixed detector system. rCBF asymmetries in the resting condition were very small, nevertheless a significant (p less than 0.001) effect for their topographical distribution was present, reflecting higher rCBF in the right fronto-temporal and left parieto-occipital regions. rCBF asymmetries were not correlated with age, and there were no significant differences between males and females. Asymmetries are therefore useful from a statistical point of view in detecting rCBF abnormalities in the resting condition: they are more stable than absolute values in normal subjects and no matching according to age or sex is required when statistical comparisons are performed.
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G Rodriguez, S Francione, M Gardella, S Marenco, F Nobili, G Novellone, E Reggiani, G Rosadini (1991)  Judo and choking: EEG and regional cerebral blood flow findings.   J Sports Med Phys Fitness 31: 4. 605-610 Dec  
Abstract: Ten judoka were examined at rest by EEG and regional Cerebral Blood Flow (rCBF) (133-Xenon inhalation method); in seven of them a syncope was induced by choking and EEG was recorded during the loss of consciousness while rCBF was measured immediately after recovery. Baseline EEG and rCBF examinations were normal. During choking, EEG showed diffuse 2-3 Hz. high voltage waves, predominantly in the anterior regions, then the EEG gradually recovered to normal. After choking, rCBF decreased in all but one subject, slightly in four and more markedly in two. Our findings suggest that there is no evidence of permanent CNS functional changes due to judo practice and choking. The variable rCBF features soon after choking-induced syncope may reflect a different timing of recovery from cerebral ischemia for each subject.
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M Cossu, A Dorcaratto, A Pau, G Rodriguez, E Sehrbundt Viale, D Siccardi, G L Viale (1991)  Changes in infratentorial blood flow following experimental cerebellar haemorrhage. A preliminary report.   Ital J Neurol Sci 12: 3 Suppl 11. 69-73 Jun  
Abstract: The temporal progression of changes in blood flow within the hemispheric cerebellar cortex, following an experimental cerebellar ipsilateral haemorrhage, was investigated in rats by using the hydrogen clearance technique. Stereotactical injection of 50 microliters of fresh autologous blood into the paramedian white matter was found to produce an early drop of cerebellar blood flow, with subsequent rise toward higher values. An increase of the intracranial pressure only occurred at the time of injection of blood. Arterial blood gases, mean arterial blood pressure and blood glucose levels did not exhibit significant changes. Histochemical evaluations of glycogen phosphorylase showed a posthaemorrhagic pattern of enzyme depletion, consistent with the occurrence of an ischaemic damage in both the cerebellum and the brain stem.
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1990
S Warkentin, A Nilsson, J Risberg, S Karlson, K Flekköy, G Franzén, L Gustafson, G Rodriguez (1990)  Regional cerebral blood flow in schizophrenia: repeated studies during a psychotic episode.   Psychiatry Res 35: 1. 27-38 Apr  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) measurements and clinical ratings were performed on 17 schizophrenic patients and a subgroup of 10 medication-free patients before and after treatment. While clinically exacerbated patients had normal blood flow, patients in remission showed a redistribution of flow with lower values in frontal areas. Anteroposterior ratios correlated with the degree of behavioral disturbances, suggesting that the level of frontal lobe activity in schizophrenia may be a function of the patient's clinical state at the time of study.
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G Rosadini, S Marenco, F Nobili, G Novellone, G Rodriguez (1990)  Acute effects of acetyl-L-carnitine on regional cerebral blood flow in patients with brain ischaemia.   Int J Clin Pharmacol Res 10: 1-2. 123-128  
Abstract: Ten male patients with brain ischaemia were studied. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured in the resting condition and 1 h after intravenous infusion of 1500 mg acetyl-L-carnitine. rCBF values were compared to those of a control population of the same age decade by a computer mapping system of our own design, which enables rapid visual inspection of cerebral blood flood values distribution and of statistical significance of differences. Beneficial effects of the drug were observed in at least four patients, especially in the affected hemisphere, in another four, rCBF elevations in the areas which were lowest on resting examination were observed, which was paralleled by reductions in surrounding zones. In two patients no modification of rCBF values after acetylcarnitine was seen.
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H S Goldsmith, P Bacciu, M Cossu, A Pau, G Rodriguez, G Rosadini, P Ruju, E Sehrbundt Viale, S Turtas, G L Viale (1990)  Regional cerebral blood flow after omental transposition to the ischaemic brain in man. A five year follow-up study.   Acta Neurochir (Wien) 106: 3-4. 145-152  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow, recorded by the 133Xenon inhalation method, was measured preoperatively and over a five years postoperative period in six patients with completed stroke and stabilized neurological deficits, who had undergone omental transposition for revascularization of the ischaemic brain. Comparisons of the preoperative blood flow values with those recorded following surgery demonstrate a postoperative increase of blood flow in five patients, with a high statistical degree of significance in four of them at the final examination. The flow increase was noted over the infarcted areas of the brain, upon which the omentum had been placed, as well as areas of the ischaemic hemisphere without omental placement and the contralateral hemisphere. Out of the five patients who demonstrated preoperative flow values below the expected norm for age, four showed final postoperative cerebral blood flow within the normal limits for their age. The results are consistent with the assumption that the transposed omentum played a role in postoperative blood flow increase, by adding collateral circulation to the ischaemic brain.
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1989
G Rodriguez, P Cogorno, A Gris, S Marenco, C Mesiti, F Nobili, G Rosadini (1989)  Regional cerebral blood flow and anxiety: a correlation study in neurologically normal patients.   J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 9: 3. 410-416 Jun  
Abstract: Regional CBF (rCBF) was evaluated by the 133Xe inhalation method in 60 neurologically normal patients (30 men and 30 women) and hemispheric and regional values were correlated with anxiety measurements collected by a self-rating questionnaire before and after the examination. Statistically significant negative correlations between rCBF and anxiety measures were found. rCBF reduction for high anxiety levels is in line with results previously reported by others and could be related to lower performance levels for moderately high anxiety scores as those reported in the present population. This could perhaps be explained by rearrangement of flow from cortical zones to deeper areas of the brain, classically known to be implicated in the control of emotions. However, these results should be interpreted cautiously, since they were obtained in patients and not in normal subjects.
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G Rosadini, M Cossu, F De Carli, S Marenco, F Nobili, G Rodriguez (1989)  Evaluation of cerebral blood flow data in stroke patients using a mapping system.   Stroke 20: 9. 1182-1189 Sep  
Abstract: We retrospectively examined regional cerebral blood flow values in 78 patients in the stabilized phase of stroke to evaluate the consistency of lateralization compared with computed tomographic imaging. Examinations were performed using the xenon-133 inhalation technique, and the data were processed and displayed by a computer-assisted system of our own design that allows statistical analysis in real time and is suitable for clinical use. The consistency of lateralization correlated with computed tomographic findings was tested for absolute values, percent distribution, and asymmetries. The latter yielded the highest degree of sensitivity (in 83.3% of the patients the affected hemisphere was correctly identified). Absolute values showed at least one hypoperfused area in the affected hemisphere in 48.7% of the patients, and percent distribution did so in 57.7%. Furthermore, the combination of the three methods of data analysis yielded a sensitivity of 91%; the remaining 9% of the patients, however, exhibited some abnormalities of regional cerebral blood flow (bilateral or contralateral hypoperfusion). Although good agreement was found for lateralization by computed tomography and by the combined use of the three methods of analysis, a complete overlap between functional and structural examinations should not be expected. Problems concerning the sensitivity of the xenon-133 inhalation technique under conditions of low blood flow and the statistical analysis of regional cerebral blood flow data are discussed.
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G Rosadini, M Cossu, F De Carli, S Marenco, F Nobili, G Rodriguez (1989)  Evaluation of cerebral blood flow data in stroke patients using a mapping system.   Stroke 20: 9. 1182-1189 Sep  
Abstract: We retrospectively examined regional cerebral blood flow values in 78 patients in the stabilized phase of stroke to evaluate the consistency of lateralization compared with computed tomographic imaging. Examinations were performed using the xenon-133 inhalation technique, and the data were processed and displayed by a computer-assisted system of our own design that allows statistical analysis in real time and is suitable for clinical use. The consistency of lateralization correlated with computed tomographic findings was tested for absolute values, percent distribution, and asymmetries. The latter yielded the highest degree of sensitivity (in 83.3% of the patients the affected hemisphere was correctly identified). Absolute values showed at least one hypoperfused area in the affected hemisphere in 48.7% of the patients, and percent distribution did so in 57.7%. Furthermore, the combination of the three methods of data analysis yielded a sensitivity of 91%; the remaining 9% of the patients, however, exhibited some abnormalities of regional cerebral blood flow (bilateral or contralateral hypoperfusion). Although good agreement was found for lateralization by computed tomography and by the combined use of the three methods of analysis, a complete overlap between functional and structural examinations should not be expected. Problems concerning the sensitivity of the xenon-133 inhalation technique under conditions of low blood flow and the statistical analysis of regional cerebral blood flow data are discussed.
Notes:
1988
G Rodriguez, S Warkentin, J Risberg, G Rosadini (1988)  Sex differences in regional cerebral blood flow.   J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 8: 6. 783-789 Dec  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow was measured by the 133-xenon inhalation method during resting in 38 healthy men and 38 healthy women matched pairwise for age in the range 18-72 years. The results showed 11% higher global flow level in the women in all ages. A similar and significant regression of flow by age was seen for both sexes. The regional flow distribution also showed some sex-related differences. Frontal regions showed an asymmetry in the men with higher values on the right side. The female flows were more symmetric. As a hypothesis, it is suggested that the higher flow level in women may be a systemic phenomenon. In fact, other authors have found a higher cardiac index in females. The sex differences in regional flow pattern might be due to differences in the functional organization of the cortex and/or to differences in the mental processes of the "resting" state.
Notes:
G Rodriguez, S Warkentin, J Risberg, G Rosadini (1988)  Sex differences in regional cerebral blood flow.   J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 8: 6. 783-789 Dec  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow was measured by the 133-xenon inhalation method during resting in 38 healthy men and 38 healthy women matched pairwise for age in the range 18-72 years. The results showed 11% higher global flow level in the women in all ages. A similar and significant regression of flow by age was seen for both sexes. The regional flow distribution also showed some sex-related differences. Frontal regions showed an asymmetry in the men with higher values on the right side. The female flows were more symmetric. As a hypothesis, it is suggested that the higher flow level in women may be a systemic phenomenon. In fact, other authors have found a higher cardiac index in females. The sex differences in regional flow pattern might be due to differences in the functional organization of the cortex and/or to differences in the mental processes of the "resting" state.
Notes:
1987
G Rodriguez, R Testa, G Celle, A Gris, S Marenco, F Nobili, G Novellone, G Rosadini (1987)  Reduction of cerebral blood flow in subclinical hepatic encephalopathy and its correlation with plasma-free tryptophan.   J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 7: 6. 768-772 Dec  
Abstract: Cerebral blood flow (CBF), measured by the noninvasive xenon-133 inhalation method, EEG, and plasma levels of ammonia (NH3) and free tryptophan were determined in 18 hospitalized cirrhotic patients affected with subclinical hepatic encephalopathy, as diagnosed by the Kurtz test. CBF results were significantly lower (p less than 0.001) in the patients' group as compared with a sex- and age-matched normal control population, although seven patients had values in the normal range. NH3 was increased only in six, while free tryptophan was increased in all but two patients. A significant negative correlation (p = 0.02) between CBF and free tryptophan was found, even though it appears to be difficult to interpret. We suggest that CBF impairment in some cirrhotic patients with subclinical hepatic encephalopathy may be related to the systemic metabolic derangement caused by the liver disease; free tryptophan could have some implication in producing CBF reduction.
Notes:
1985
F Arvigo, M Cossu, B Fazio, A Gris, A Pau, G Rodriguez, G Rosadini, E Sehrbundt Viale, D Siccardi, S Turtas (1985)  Cerebral blood flow in minor cerebral contusion.   Surg Neurol 24: 2. 211-217 Aug  
Abstract: Seventeen patients with minor cerebral contusion were selected from a series of patients with head injuries of various severity, who had undergone repeat evaluations of the regional cerebral blood flow. The mean global flow (expressed as mean global initial slope index) on early examination was found to be significantly lower, compared with that recorded in healthy volunteers. A tendency towards the recovery of higher flow values was apparent in repeat evaluations that were performed several weeks after the injury. Interhemispheric asymmetries of flow were a common occurrence, with lower perfusion and reduced attenuation values on computed tomography scans being, however, in good agreement only in approximately half of the cases.
Notes:
1982
M Cossu, M Cabri, F De Carli, V Montano, G Rodriguez, A Siccardi, R Traverso, G Rosadini (1982)  Regional cerebral blood flow: normal values in healthy volunteers obtained by a 32 probes xenon 133 inhalation system.   Boll Soc Ital Biol Sper 58: 12. 766-772 Jun  
Abstract: Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured in 15 healthy young volunteers in psycho-sensorial rest by the 32 probes Xe133 inhalation system. The mean hemispheric values are in good agreement with those reported in literature and obtained with a limited number of probes. The regional values of the flow in the gray matter are higher in the basal-temporal and frontal regions. This regional pattern is not evident for the other considered parameters (flow in the white matter, mean flow, "weight" of the gray matter).
Notes:
N F Barbieri, D Consoli, G Rodriguez, G Rosadini (1982)  [Statistical study on the medical management of patients with epilepsy in a district of Reggio Calabria].   Minerva Med 73: 47. 3347-3351 Dec  
Abstract: The epilepsy service provided by 143 doctors in the district of Vibo Valentia (Calabria) which has a population of 180,000 was studied by a team of specially trained medical students. The answers to a questionnaire given in personal interviews were statistically processed and revealed: a) a 3-4% incidence of epilepsy corresponding closely to the national average (Almost all doctors questioned had epileptic patients). b) that only 3% of the doctors tested drug concentration in the blood, while 33% relied on regular EEG checks. c) that Depakin (valproic acid) was the drug most often used, followed by Metinal-Idontoine (phenytoin + barbiturate), Dintoine (phenytoin) and Gardenal (phenobarbital). Almost all doctors were in favour of refresher courses to improve the service to epileptic patients.
Notes:
1978
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