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Paolo Tacconi

tacconi@medicina.unica.it

Journal articles

2009
 
DOI   
PMID 
Antonino Cannas, Paolo Solla, Gianluca Floris, Paolo Tacconi, Francesco Marrosu, Maria Giovanna Marrosu (2009)  Othello syndrome in Parkinson disease patients without dementia.   Neurologist 15: 1. 34-36 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Delusional jealousy or Othello syndrome (OS) is a well-described psychiatric disorder with paranoid features reported in both organic and functional psychoses. In organic psychoses, the disorder occurs more frequently among chronic male alcoholics and in demented patients. To date, only 2 anecdotal cases of OS have been reported in Parkinson disease (PD) during dopaminergic treatment. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the presence of OS in PD patients and to study the relationship between dopaminergic treatment, avoiding the possible influence of dementia. METHODS: Five hundred sixty-three PD patients without dementia encountered in our movement disorders practice were included in the study. All patients who developed OS were studied. Relationships between clinical and familial history and dopaminergic therapy and OS were assessed. RESULTS: Six patients with OS were identified. They were all male, with a relatively recent diagnosis of PD characterized by mild-moderate motor deficit. Dopaminergic treatment had been prescribed at low dosages. Neither confusional states (including agitated confusion) nor delirium were associated with OS. The disorder became manifest mainly at time of introduction/increment of antiparkinson treatment. Invariably, OS decreased or receded after reduction/suspension of the antiparkinson drug and prescription of an atypical neuroleptic, usually clozapine or quetiapine. CONCLUSION: We hypothesize that nondemented PD patients affected by OS do not necessarily present with severe motor complications and may well have a biologic predisposition for psychiatric disorders. In our opinion this paranoid delusion is rarely considered in PD.
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DOI   
PMID 
Cannas, Solla, Floris, Tacconi, Serra, Piga, Marrosu (2009)  Reversible Pisa syndrome in patients with Parkinson's disease on dopaminergic therapy.   J Neurol Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND : The wide variability of dystonic postures manifested in the clinical course of Parkinson's disease (PD) represents a complicated on-going issue. Several recently published reports of Pisa syndrome (PS) in parkinsonian patients on dopaminergic therapy have described a variable means of onset and clinical course of this truncal dystonia. OBJECTIVE : To describe PD patients with PS, with the aim of stressing the frequent iatrogenic origin and potential reversibility of this syndrome during the initial stages of its appearance. SUBJECTS AND METHODS : Eight consecutive PD patients who developed a PS after modifications of antiparkinson therapy were studied. All patients underwent detailed clinical assessment, [(123)I]FP-CIT-SPECT being performed in three cases. Four patients were videotaped. RESULTS : All patients developed PS within a variable time-span ranging from 15 days to 3 months after adjustment of treatment. Seven cases of PS were manifested following an increase and one a decrease of dopaminergic treatment. A marked reversal of dystonia was produced in the first seven patients by the withdrawal or dose decrease of dopaminergic PS priming drug, and in the eighth patient an increase of dopaminergic therapy was necessary. CONCLUSIONS : In our opinion, the recognition of reversibility of PS during the initial stages of its appearance may be of considerable clinical importance. Indeed, it may facilitate the rapid withdrawal or reintroduction of dopaminergic treatment, thus avoiding an initial veering towards the subchronic variant and, subsequently into a chronic irreversible variant.
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2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Paolo Solla, Antonino Cannas, Socrate Congia, Gianluca Floris, Rosa Aste, Paolo Tacconi, Maria Giovanna Marrosu (2008)  Levodopa/carbidopa/entacapone-induced acute Pisa syndrome in a Parkinson's disease patient.   J Neurol Sci 275: 1-2. 154-156 Dec  
Abstract: Pisa syndrome (PS) is a dystonic lateroflexion of the trunk with a postural disturbance resembling the leaning tower of Pisa. Initially reported as a side effect related to antipsychotic therapy, this original dystonic posture is also manifested in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease and multiple system atrophy, or in rare idiopathic cases. Recent observations have described the onset of PS with subchronic course in patients affected by Parkinson's disease (PD). Here, we report on the acute development of PS in a parkinsonian patient during treatment with entacapone/levodopa/carbidopa combination. This case illustrates how, in contrast to previously well-known chronic/subchronic forms, this axial dystonic posture may occur in PD as an acute onset reversible type, related to levodopa treatment.
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2007
 
DOI   
PMID 
Maria Antonietta Maioli, Giovanni Marrosu, Anna Mateddu, Elisabetta Solla, Nicola Carboni, Paolo Tacconi, Carlo Lai, Maria Giovanna Marrosu (2007)  A novel mutation in the central rod domain of lamin A/C producing a phenotype resembling the Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy phenotype.   Muscle Nerve 36: 6. 828-832 Dec  
Abstract: Lamins are the principal components of the nuclear lamina, a network constituting the major structural framework of the nuclear envelope. Alterations in lamin A/C have been associated with a heterogeneous series of human disorders known as laminopathies. We report the finding of a novel deletion in the central rod domain of lamin A/C exon 3 gene in four members of the same family. This genetic alteration was likely responsible for the relatively homogeneous clinical phenotype observed in our three patients, represented by a prominent cardiac conduction-system disease necessitating permanent pacemaker implantation, and limited skeletal involvement manifested by spinal rigidity and contractures. The findings from these cases further expand the clinical spectrum associated with mutations in the LMNA gene.
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2006
 
DOI   
PMID 
Antonino Cannas, Paolo Solla, Gianluca Floris, Paolo Tacconi, Patrizia Fulgheri, Socrate Congia, Andrea Spissu (2006)  Description (reporting the actual words used in written letters) of the neuropsychological and psychopathological modifications produced by dopaminergic treatment in a young patient with Parkinson's disease.   Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 30: 1. 138-140 Jan  
Abstract: Although it is an undeniable fact that dopaminergic therapy has greatly improved the quality of life and prognosis of patients with Parkinson's disease, various and serious adverse events correlated to dopaminergic drugs are not uncommon. Among these, those of neuropsychological and psychopathological nature are of particular importance, being capable of causing an upheaval in the basic personality of the patient. To this regard, the authors report the actual words of a patient himself that are far more convincing that any considerations we may express. In our opinion, the overwhelming impact of dopaminergic treatment on the psychopathological and neuropsychological equilibrium of all parkinsonian patients should unfailingly be carefully evaluated and pondered, particularly in the early onset forms of the disease.
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DOI   
PMID 
Antonino Cannas, Paolo Solla, Gianluca Floris, Paolo Tacconi, Daniela Loi, Emanuele Marcia, Maria Giovanna Marrosu (2006)  Hypersexual behaviour, frotteurism and delusional jealousy in a young parkinsonian patient during dopaminergic therapy with pergolide: A rare case of iatrogenic paraphilia.   Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 30: 8. 1539-1541 Dec  
Abstract: Neuropsychological and psychopathological modifications induced by dopaminergic drugs in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) are invariably not taken into sufficient consideration by the neurologist. Among the former, modifications of sexual urges and behaviours are of particular importance with regard to severity and variety of clinical pictures. Although rare, such modifications may assume the connotations of an aberrant sexual behaviour with criminal implications, in line with a diagnosis of paraphilia. The authors report the case of a 51-year-old male PD patient who, after a few years of dopaminergic treatment with pergolide, developed a paraphilic disorder, consistent with DSM-IV TR diagnosis of frotteurism, and delusional jealousy. The patient presented mild motor impairment and lack of or negligible cognitive deterioration, thus providing evidence that these disorders are not typical of advanced PD. Pergolide was reduced and quetiapine, an atypical neuroleptic, was introduced with subsequent subsiding of the paraphilic disorder and improvement of delusional jealousy.
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2005
2004
 
DOI   
PMID 
P Tacconi, D Manca, G Tamburini, A Cannas, M Giagheddu (2004)  Notalgia paresthetica following neuralgic amyotrophy: a case report.   Neurol Sci 25: 1. 27-29 Apr  
Abstract: We report the case of a patient who developed notalgia paresthetica during the recovery from a neuralgic amyotrophy. A 23-year-old woman had a typical neuralgic amyotrophy (severe shoulder pain, followed by a long thoracic nerve palsy); five months after the onset of pain, when scapular winging was improving, she began to feel a burning sensation in a restricted interscapular area, on the same side. Electromyography was consistent with a long thoracic nerve neuropathy, with minor neurogenic changes in deltoid and biceps brachii. Radiography of the spine was unremarkable. The notalgia paresthetica disappeared shortly before the complete recovery of scapular winging. The abnormal activation of shoulder girdle and spine extensor muscles during the time of long thoracic nerve palsy may explain the association between the two disorders.
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DOI   
PMID 
Paolo Tacconi, Davide Manca, Giorgio Tamburini, Paola Ferrigno, Gianni Cossu, Antonino Cannas, Marcello Giagheddu (2004)  Electroneurography index based on nerve conduction study data: method and findings in control subjects.   Muscle Nerve 29: 1. 89-96 Jan  
Abstract: We developed a summary score of data obtained from nerve conduction studies (NCS). The principle of such approach is that when a nonrandom trend to lower amplitudes or conduction velocities is present, it may be revealed by a summary nerve conduction score. In a group of normal subjects, peroneal, sural, ulnar, and superficial radial nerves were studied; age- and height-related F-wave and soleus H-reflex latencies were also examined. Z-scores of distal latencies, amplitudes, conduction velocities, F-wave latencies, and H-index were averaged in order to obtain three electroneurography (ENG) indices: a simple arithmetic (ENG index 1) and two weighted means (index 2 and index 3), assigning a double or triple weight to lower limb z-scores. Reference limits were established using multiple regression equations of ENG indices against age and height. This technique could be useful in providing a better cut-off between normal and diseased populations and in improving test-retest variability of NCS when follow-up studies are required.
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PMID 
Paolo Tacconi, Davide Manca, Giorgio Tamburini, Antonino Cannas, Marcello Giagheddu (2004)  Bed footboard peroneal and tibial neuropathy. A further unusual type of Saturday night palsy.   J Peripher Nerv Syst 9: 1. 54-56 Mar  
Abstract: An uncommon cause of bilateral tibial and peroneal compression neuropathy is reported. After taking alcohol and drugs, a young heroin-addicted man lay unconscious overnight in supine position, with both legs crossing the wooden board at the end of the bed, the posterior aspect of the flexed knees pressing against its edge. The following day, he had weakness of foot flexion and extension and a sensory loss consistent with a bilateral tibial and peroneal neuropathy. Symptoms resolved rapidly in the left side; in the right side, a conduction block was still demonstrable 3 weeks later.
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2002
 
DOI   
PMID 
A Cannas, A Spissu, G L Floris, S Congia, M V Saddi, M Melis, M M Mascia, F Pinna, A Tuveri, P Solla, A Milia, M Giagheddu, P Tacconi (2002)  Bipolar affective disorder and Parkinson's disease: a rare, insidious and often unrecognized association.   Neurol Sci 23 Suppl 2: S67-S68 Sep  
Abstract: Five patients (4 women) with Parkinson's disease (PD) and primary major psychiatric disorder (PMPD) meeting DSM-IV criteria for the diagnosis of bipolar affective disorder (BAD) were studied. Four patients had early onset PD. Four developed a severe psychiatric disorder a few years after starting dopaminergic therapy in presence of a mild motor disability and a mild cognitive impairment, with no evidence of cerebral atrophy at CT or MRI. Two patients developed a clear manic episode; the other three presented a severe depressive episode (in one case featuring a Cotard syndrome). None showed previous signs of long term L-dopa treatment syndrome (LTS), hallucinosis or other minor psychiatric disorders. The two manic episodes occurred shortly after an increase of dopaminergic therapy and in one case rapid cyclic mood fluctuations were observed. At the onset of psychiatric symptoms, all patients had an unspecific diagnosis of chronic delusional hallucinatory psychosis (CDHP).
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2001
 
PMID 
M E Brunkow, J C Gardner, J Van Ness, B W Paeper, B R Kovacevich, S Proll, J E Skonier, L Zhao, P J Sabo, Y Fu, R S Alisch, L Gillett, T Colbert, P Tacconi, D Galas, H Hamersma, P Beighton, J Mulligan (2001)  Bone dysplasia sclerosteosis results from loss of the SOST gene product, a novel cystine knot-containing protein.   Am J Hum Genet 68: 3. 577-589 Mar  
Abstract: Sclerosteosis is an autosomal recessive sclerosing bone dysplasia characterized by progressive skeletal overgrowth. The majority of affected individuals have been reported in the Afrikaner population of South Africa, where a high incidence of the disorder occurs as a result of a founder effect. Homozygosity mapping in Afrikaner families along with analysis of historical recombinants localized sclerosteosis to an interval of approximately 2 cM between the loci D17S1787 and D17S930 on chromosome 17q12-q21. Here we report two independent mutations in a novel gene, termed "SOST." Affected Afrikaners carry a nonsense mutation near the amino terminus of the encoded protein, whereas an unrelated affected person of Senegalese origin carries a splicing mutation within the single intron of the gene. The SOST gene encodes a protein that shares similarity with a class of cystine knot-containing factors including dan, cerberus, gremlin, prdc, and caronte. The specific and progressive effect on bone formation observed in individuals affected with sclerosteosis, along with the data presented in this study, together suggest that the SOST gene encodes an important new regulator of bone homeostasis.
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PMID 
W Balemans, M Ebeling, N Patel, E Van Hul, P Olson, M Dioszegi, C Lacza, W Wuyts, J Van Den Ende, P Willems, A F Paes-Alves, S Hill, M Bueno, F J Ramos, P Tacconi, F G Dikkers, C Stratakis, K Lindpaintner, B Vickery, D Foernzler, W Van Hul (2001)  Increased bone density in sclerosteosis is due to the deficiency of a novel secreted protein (SOST).   Hum Mol Genet 10: 5. 537-543 Mar  
Abstract: Sclerosteosis is a progressive sclerosing bone dysplasia with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. Radiologically, it is characterized by a generalized hyperostosis and sclerosis leading to a markedly thickened and sclerotic skull, with mandible, ribs, clavicles and all long bones also being affected. Due to narrowing of the foramina of the cranial nerves, facial nerve palsy, hearing loss and atrophy of the optic nerves can occur. Sclerosteosis is clinically and radiologically very similar to van Buchem disease, mainly differentiated by hand malformations and a large stature in sclerosteosis patients. By linkage analysis in one extended van Buchem family and two consanguineous sclerosteosis families we previously mapped both disease genes to the same chromosomal 17q12-q21 region, supporting the hypothesis that both conditions are caused by mutations in the same gene. After reducing the disease critical region to approximately 1 Mb, we used the positional cloning strategy to identify the SOST gene, which is mutated in sclerosteosis patients. This new gene encodes a protein with a signal peptide for secretion and a cysteine-knot motif. Two nonsense mutations and one splice site mutation were identified in sclerosteosis patients, but no mutations were found in a fourth sclerosteosis patient nor in the patients from the van Buchem family. As the three disease-causing mutations lead to loss of function of the SOST protein resulting in the formation of massive amounts of normal bone throughout life, the physiological role of SOST is most likely the suppression of bone formation. Therefore, this gene might become an important tool in the development of therapeutic strategies for osteoporosis.
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PMID 
A Cannas, A Spissu, G L Floris, M V Saddi, G Cossu, M Melis, P Tacconi, A Milia, M M Mascia, M Giagheddu (2001)  Chronic delusional hallucinatory psychosis in early-onset Parkinson's disease: drug-induced complication or sign of an idiopathic psychiatric illness?   Neurol Sci 22: 1. 53-54 Feb  
Abstract: Chronic delusional psychosis with hallucinations (CDHP) is commonly assumed to complicate the later stages of Parkinson's disease, as a side effect of antiparkinsonian medication. We studied 7 patients with early onset PD, who had developed psychiatric manifestations consisting in CDHP after a few years of antiparkinsonian therapy. All patients underwent a neurological, psychiatric and brain imaging (CT or MRI) evaluation. Detailed clinical history was recorded in order to reveal prior psychiatric illness and to analyse the relationship between neurological disease, cognitive impairment and psychosis. Our findings suggest that CDHP occurring in patients with early onset PD, normal or slightly impaired cognitive functions and normal CT/MRI scans is invariably the expression of a coexisting psychiatric illness which prior to onset of the neurologic disease had not been correctly diagnosed and which has been disclosed by dopaminergic therapy.
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PMID 
M Giagheddu, G Tamburini, M Piga, P Tacconi, A Giagheddu, A Serra, P Siotto, L Satta, L Demelia, F Marrosu (2001)  Comparison of MRI, EEG, EPs and ECD-SPECT in Wilson's disease.   Acta Neurol Scand 103: 2. 71-81 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficiency of a few methodologies in detecting anatomo-functional brain abnormalities in patients with Wilson's disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-three patients with Wilson's disease underwent almost simultaneously brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computerized electroencephalography (EEG), multimodal evoked potentials (EPs) and ECD single photon computerized tomography (SPECT) evaluation. The clinical picture was of the neurologic type in 8 patients and of the hepatic type in 15. RESULTS: MRI was abnormal in 7 patients with neurological manifestations. The EPs proved pathologic in 7 neurologically symptomatic patients and in 4 cases with hepatic form. These results agree with those reported in other case studies. The EEG records were abnormal only in 3 cases. Nevertheless, the most interesting finding of this study is the particular frequency (86%) of diffuse or focal decrease of ECD uptake shown by brain SPECT. CONCLUSION: We highlight the use of this interesting procedure in the therapeutic monitoring of this disease.
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1998
 
PMID 
G Tamburini, P Tacconi, P Ferrigno, A Cannas, G M Massa, R Mastinu, F Velluzzi, A Loviselli, M Giagheddu (1998)  Visual evoked potentials in hypothyroidism: a long-term evaluation.   Electromyogr Clin Neurophysiol 38: 4. 201-205 Jun  
Abstract: Visual Evoked Potentials (VEP) were measured in 9 new-diagnosed hypothyroid female patients--mean age 46 +/- 12 ys--before treatment, during (with monthly evaluations) thyroid hormone replacement therapy and after long-term therapy, at the achievement as well as one year after having achieved and maintained euthyroidism. Three of the hypothyroids had abnormally prolonged latencies (m.v. 131.7 +/- 7.9 ms), while 7 had lower than normal amplitude (m.v. 2.3 +/- 2.8 microV). No remarkable change of amplitude was observed after the achievement of euthyroidism, after a mean time of 5.9 +/- 4.9 months (range 2-14 months). A significant shortening of latency (m 128.3 +/- 7.6 ms), even still higher than the control value (m 122.7 +/- 3.7 ms) was found. Significant correlation between P100 latency and thyroid hormone levels was found for TT4 (r = 0.3353; p = 0.005), TT3 (r = 0.2568; p = 0.032) and FT4 (r = 0.3572; p = 0.002). No further improvement in P100 latency (m 129.5 +/- 7.2 ms; p = 0.037) was found one year after the achievement of euthyroidism, while a remarkable amplitude increase (m 9.2 +/- 3.4 micro; p = 0.001) was observed. Our findings indicate that, as well as other studied parameters, VEP are reversibly alterated in hypothyroidism, probably in relation to metabolic rather than to structural alterations. Moreover, VEP can represent a useful neurophysiologic parameter for quantitation of SNC involvement in hypothyroidism.
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PMID 
P Tacconi, P Ferrigno, L Cocco, A Cannas, G Tamburini, P Bergonzi, M Giagheddu (1998)  Sclerosteosis: report of a case in a black African man.   Clin Genet 53: 6. 497-501 Jun  
Abstract: Sclerosteosis is a rare genetic disorder of bone modelling, similar to, but distinct from, van Buchem disease; it has been described almost exclusively in Afrikaners of South Africa, a white population of Dutch ancestry. Isolated cases have been reported in a girl in Japan, a boy in Spain, and in multiracial families in Brazil and USA. Here we report a case of sclerosteosis in a black man born in Senegal. He presented with the full features of the disease: tall stature; syndactyly: nail dysplasia; massive sclerosis of the long tubular bones, the ribs, the pelvis and the skull; multiple cranial nerve involvement: optic atrophy, facial palsy and trigeminal neuralgia. Radiologic examination, visual and brainstem auditory evoked potentials, computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the skull were performed. This seems to be the first case of the disease in a black African individual, with no known relationship with Dutch ancestry.
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PMID 
M G Rachele, V Mascia, P Tacconi, N Dessi, F Marrosu, M Giagheddu (1998)  Conjugal amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a report on a couple from Sardinia, Italy.   Ital J Neurol Sci 19: 2. 97-100 Apr  
Abstract: A conjugal case of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) observed in Sardinia, Italy is reported. This is believed to be the ninth such observation described in the literature. The couple had lived together for 38 years in a house adjacent to the distillery they owned. No exogenous factors were revealed which could explain the genesis of the disease in either patients. Particularly, exposure to alcohol does not appear to have been involved in causing ALS. On the basis of statistical and epidemiological evaluations, the most likely explanation is that this association was purely coincidental.
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1994
 
PMID 
S Congia, A Cannas, G Borghero, P Tacconi, S Uselli, M Vacca, P Ferrigno, R Ferrai (1994)  Sensitivity and specificity of the EEG versus CT in acute cortical and subcortical stroke.   Funct Neurol 9: 6. 297-301 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: 122 patients with acute stroke were examined in order to demonstrate the sensitivity and the specificity of EEG versus CT findings, in distinguishing cortical from subcortical lesions. To do this the electroencephalographic diagnosis performed by two different electroencephalographers was compared with the neuroimaging diagnosis. The results showed a sensitivity of 77% and a specificity of 75%. Furthermore, the EEG findings can also provide physiopathological data, in that the cortical lesions are likely to be due to embolism, while the subcortical lesions are more likely to be due to the pathological process of the intracerebral blood-vessels and the lesions of the watershed territories to hemodynamic phenomena.
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1992
 
PMID 
A Cannas, B Costa, P Tacconi, L Pinna, A Fiaschi (1992)  Dementia of Alzheimer type (DAT) in a man chronically exposed to pesticides.   Acta Neurol (Napoli) 14: 3. 220-223 Jun  
Abstract: A patient chronically exposed to pesticides with dementia of Alzheimer type (DAT) is presented. We evaluate the pathogenic role of these substances in the disease and suggest the usefulness of an epidemiological attention on the environmental factors in certain neurodegenerative diseases.
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PMID 
S Congia, A Cannas, P Tacconi, G Borghero, S Montaldo, A Porcella (1992)  Thalamic hemorrhage. 30 cases studied: clinico-tomodensitometric correlations.   Acta Neurol (Napoli) 14: 1. 22-28 Feb  
Abstract: The clinico-tomographic correlations in 30 patients hospitalized for primary thalamic hemorrhage were studied. Arterial hypertension, observed in 90% of patients, represented the most important risk factor. Twenty-six subjects showed a sensory-motor hemisyndrome contralaterally to the lesion, nineteen showed alteration in level of consciousness from confusion to stupor and coma. Twelve subjects had poorly reactive pupils and eleven speech disturbances with involvement of the left thalamus. Seven patients died following hemorrhage; all subjects presented ventricular bleeding, severe disturbance of consciousness and arterial hypertension. On admission to hospital impairment of consciousness was the most significant unfavourable prognostic factor.
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1991
 
PMID 
A Cannas, P Tacconi, L Pinna, S Congia, B Costa, A Fiaschi (1991)  Rigidity and painful muscle spasms in a patient with probable myelitis.   Ital J Neurol Sci 12: 6. 587-591 Dec  
Abstract: We describe a case of continuous motor unit potential (MUP) activity of central origin (unlike stiff man syndrome and progressive encephalomyelitis) characterized clinically by rigidity, painful muscle spasms, abnormal postures and spinal myoclonus. The topography of the manifestations, the subacute and benign course, the presence of stable sequels 2 years after onset and a searching process of differential diagnosis lead us to attribute the condition to an inflammation of the cord, which makes the case of particular clinical interest.
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1989
 
PMID 
B Costa, P Tacconi, L Pinna, A Cannas, A Fiaschi (1989)  Segmental myoclonus in a young man who had had localized encephalitis in childhood.   Ital J Neurol Sci 10: 3. 357-359 Jun  
Abstract: A man who had had an episode of localized encephalitis, diagnosed as viral cerebellitis in childhood came to observation at the age of 23 for attacks of segmental myoclonus of the cervical axial musculature. BAEP changes at brainstem level in this case point to involvement of the Guillain-Mollaret triangle in the pathogenesis of this syndrome.
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1988
 
PMID 
B Costa, P Tacconi, A Cannas, L Pinna, A Fiaschi (1988)  Cerebral toxoplasmosis in AIDS. Case report.   Ital J Neurol Sci 9: 2. 161-163 Apr  
Abstract: In a patient with AIDS presenting partial epilepsy cerebral toxoplasmosis was diagnosed on the serological and CT evidence. The diagnosis was confirmed by the immediate response to sulfonamide therapy.
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