19 results on '"Lunardelli, Alberta"'
Search Results
2. Stuttering-Like Dysfluencies as a Consequence of Long COVID-19
- Author
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Furlanis, Giovanni, Busan, Pierpaolo, Formaggio, Emanuela, Menichelli, Alina, Lunardelli, Alberta, Ajcevic, Milos, Pesavento, Valentina, and Manganotti, Paolo
- Abstract
Purpose: We present two patients who developed neurogenic stuttering after long COVID-19 related to SARS-CoV-2 infection. Methods and Results: Both patients experienced both physical (e.g., fatigue) and cognitive difficulties, which led to impaired function of attention, lexical retrieval, and memory consolidation. Both patients had new-onset stuttering-like speech dysfluencies: Blocks and repetitions were especially evident at the initial part of words and sentences, sometimes accompanied by effortful and associated movements (e.g., facial grimaces and oro-facial movements). Neuropsychological evaluations confirmed the presence of difficulties in cognitive tasks, while neurophysiological evaluations (i.e., electroencephalography) suggested the presence of "slowed" patterns of brain activity. Neurogenic stuttering and cognitive difficulties were evident for 4-5 months after negativization of SARS-CoV-2 nasopharyngeal swab, with gradual improvement and near-to-complete recovery. Conclusions: It is now evident that SARS-CoV-2 infection may significantly involve the central nervous system, also resulting in severe and long-term consequences, even if the precise mechanisms are still unknown. In the present report, long COVID-19 resulted in neurogenic stuttering, as the likely consequence of a "slowed" metabolism of (pre)frontal and sensorimotor brain regions (as suggested by the present and previous clinical evidence). As a consequence, the pathophysiological mechanisms related to the appearance of neurogenic stuttering have been hypothesized, which help to better understand the broader and possible neurological consequences of COVID-19.
- Published
- 2023
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3. Cognitive deficit in post-acute COVID-19: an opportunity for EEG evaluation?
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Furlanis, Giovanni, Buoite Stella, Alex, Biaduzzini, Francesco, Bellavita, Giulia, Frezza, Nicolò Arjuna, Olivo, Sasha, Menichelli, Alina, Lunardelli, Alberta, Ajčević, Miloš, and Manganotti, Paolo
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- 2023
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4. sFEra APP: Description and Usability of a Novel Tablet Application for Executive Functions Training
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Coricelli, Carol, Aiello, Marilena, Lunardelli, Alberta, Galli, Giulia, and Rumiati, Raffaella Ida
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- 2022
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5. Co-ultraPEALut in Subjective Cognitive Impairment Following SARS-CoV-2 Infection: An Exploratory Retrospective Study.
- Author
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Cenacchi, Valentina, Furlanis, Giovanni, Menichelli, Alina, Lunardelli, Alberta, Pesavento, Valentina, and Manganotti, Paolo
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COVID-19 ,COGNITION disorders ,MONTREAL Cognitive Assessment ,SARS-CoV-2 ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Neurological involvement following coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) is thought to have a neuroinflammatory etiology. Co-ultraPEALut (an anti-inflammatory molecule) and luteolin (an anti-oxidant) have shown promising results as neuroinflammation antagonists. The aim of this study was to describe cognitive impairment in patients with post-COVID-19 treated with co-ultraPEALut. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), the Prospective–Retrospective Memory Questionnaire (PRMQ), the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), and a subjective assessment were administered at baseline and after 10 months. Patients treated with co-ultraPEALut were retrospectively compared with controls. Twenty-six patients treated with co-ultraPEALut showed a significant improvement in PRMQ (T0: 51.94 ± 10.55, T1: 39.67 ± 13.02, p < 0.00001) and MoCA raw score (T0: 25.76 ± 2.3, T1: 27.2 ± 2, p 0.0260); the MoCA-adjusted score and the FSS questionnaires also showed an improvement, even though it was not statistically significant; and 80.77% of patients reported a subjective improvement. In the control subjects (n = 15), the improvement was not as pronounced (PRMQ T0: 45.77 ± 13.47, T1: 42.33 ± 16.86, p 0.2051; FSS T0: 4.95 ± 1.57, T1: 4.06 ± 1.47, p 0.1352). Patients treated with co-ultraPEALut and corticosteroids were not statistically different from those treated with co-ultraPEALut alone. Neuro-post-COVID-19 patients treated with co-ultraPEALut scored better than controls in MoCA and PRMQ questionnaires after 10 months: this may support the importance of neuroinflammation modulation for neuro-long-COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. The effect of goals and vision on movements: A case study of optic ataxia and limb apraxia
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Ambron, Elisabetta, Lingnau, Angelika, Lunardelli, Alberta, Pesavento, Valentina, and Rumiati, Raffaella I.
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- 2015
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7. STIMA: a short screening test for ideo-motor apraxia, selective for action meaning and bodily district
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Tessari, Alessia, Toraldo, Alessio, Lunardelli, Alberta, Zadini, Antonietta, and Rumiati, Raffaella Ida
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- 2015
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8. Degraded Semantic Knowledge And Accurate Object Use
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Negri, Gioia A., Lunardelli, Alberta, Reverberi, Carlo, Gigli, Gian Luigi, and Rumiati, Raffaella I.
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- 2007
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9. Controlled and Automatic Processing During Animal Word List Generation in Schizophrenia
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Moelter, Stephen T., Hill, S Kristian, Ragland, J Daniel, Lunardelli, Alberta, Gur, Ruben C., Gur, Raquel E., and Moberg, Paul J.
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- 2001
10. The Role of Amygdala in Self-Conscious Emotions in a Patient With Acquired Bilateral Damage.
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Piretti, Luca, Pappaianni, Edoardo, Lunardelli, Alberta, Zorzenon, Irene, Ukmar, Maja, Pesavento, Valentina, Rumiati, Raffaella Ida, Job, Remo, and Grecucci, Alessandro
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SHAME ,AMYGDALOID body ,EMOTIONS ,EMOTION recognition - Abstract
Shame plays a fundamental role in the regulation of our social behavior. One intriguing question is whether amygdala might play a role in processing this emotion. In the present single-case study, we tested a patient with acquired damage of bilateral amygdalae and surrounding areas as well as healthy controls on shame processing and other social cognitive tasks. Results revealed that the patient's subjective experience of shame, but not of guilt, was more reduced than in controls, only when social standards were violated, while it was not different than controls in case of moral violations. The impairment in discriminating between normal social situations and violations also emerged. Taken together, these findings suggest that the role of the amygdala in processing shame might reflect its relevance in resolving ambiguity and uncertainty, in order to correctly detect social violations and to generate shame feelings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Closing-in Behavior and Parietal Lobe Deficits: Three Single Cases Exhibiting Different Manifestations of the Same Behavior.
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Ambron, Elisabetta, Piretti, Luca, Lunardelli, Alberta, and Coslett, H. Branch
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DEMENTIA patients ,PARIETAL lobe ,STROKE patients ,FRONTAL lobe ,BEHAVIOR ,ETIOLOGY of diseases - Abstract
Closing-in behavior (CIB) is observed in copying tasks (graphic or gestural) when the copy is performed near or on the top of the model. This symptom has been classically considered to be a manifestation of constructional apraxia and is often associated with a visuospatial impairment. More recent work emphasizes the attentional and/or executive nature of the behavior and its association with frontal lobe dysfunction. We describe three patients in whom CIB was associated with posterior parietal deficits of different etiologies (stroke in Patient 1 and dementia in Patients 2 and 3). In copying figures, Patient 1 produced the shape with high accuracy but the rendering overlapped the model, while for Patients 2 and 3 the copies were distorted but overlapping or in close proximity to the target. In gesture imitation, Patient 2 performed the gestures toward the examiner’s space, while Patient 1 showed a peculiar form of CIB: when he was asked to place the ipsilesional arm in a position that mirrored the contralesional hand, Patient 1 moved his hand toward his contralesional hand. Patient 3 did not present gestural CIB. While CIB in Patient 1 was associated with selective deficits in executive functions and attention, additional visuospatial deficits were observed in Patients 2 and 3. The latter two patients showed a general visuoconstructional deficit. These case studies support a primary attentional account of CIB but also suggest that visuoconstructional impairments may contribute to the emergence of CIB, in some subjects. This evidence argues for different types of CIB with different cognitive and neural underpinnings. Furthermore, the data support the hypothesis of a differential involvement of fronto-parietal network in CIB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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12. Is it always really mothers' fault?
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Spiezio, Caterina and Lunardelli, Alberta
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Language acquisition -- Research ,Language acquisition -- Social aspects ,Mother and infant -- Research ,Mother and infant -- Psychological aspects ,Social sciences -- Research ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Falk's paper provides a nice cross-species perspective and an interesting background to formulate a theory of the evolution of human language. However, the author does not provide a complete overview and analysis of the origins of language and takes for granted the 'continuity hypothesis.' Also her 'infant parking theory' is questionable, as it is not well supported by observations.
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- 2004
13. Praxic and executive components in tool use learning: the role of imitation
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Lunardelli, Alberta
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Cognitive psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Brain damage--Patients - Abstract
Objectives: The current study intended to investigate whether social learning processes other than imitation can be traced in human adults, particularly in brain-injured patients who have lost their ability to imitate. This was undertaken by exploring the extent to which the observation of how to solve a tool-use task primed the performance of left (LBD) and right (RBD) brain-damaged patients, as well as of healthy adults. Methods: Participants were assigned to a no model condition (N), in which they were left alone to solve the problems, and a demonstration condition (D), in which they could either observe a Correct (C) or an Incorrect + Correct Demonstration (I+C) in which they witness a failed attempt followed by the correct solution of the task. Results: Consistent with predictions, LBD overall performance was significantly worse than that of control subjects, while RBD did not differ from controls. However, there was only a trend in LBD to perform worse than RBD and controls after both type of demonstrations, and alternative non-imitative processes were rarely adopted by both patient groups. Yet, looking at single cases, all LBD scoring below controls in C engaged in (goal) emulation, and all had ideomotor apraxia, those in I+C showed mimicry, and were affected by frontal dysfunction. Conclusions: The left hemisphere is indeed critical for motor control and selective neuropsychological deficits can compromise action imitation and selection of goal-directed movements, independently from each other. Our findings also suggest that when the ability to imitate actions is lost or lowered emulation may come available.
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- 2006
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14. Tomato and Tuna.
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Danek, Amory H., Gade, Miriam, Lunardelli, Alberta, and Rumiati, Raffaella I.
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- 2013
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15. Praxic and executive components in tool use learning: The role of imitation.
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Lunardelli, Alberta, Zadini, Antonietta, Gigli, Gianluigi, and Ida Rumiati, Raffaella
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SOCIAL learning , *PSYCHOLOGY of learning , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *BRAIN injuries , *BRAIN damage - Abstract
Recent research in comparative psychology suggests that similarities between the behaviour of two individuals may not be the consequence of imitation only, but also of nonimitative social-learning processes. In the present study we aimed to investigate whether these alternative learning processes can take place in human adults, specifically in patients whose ability to imitate has been reduced by brain damage. Left (LBD) and right (RBD) brain-damaged patients were asked to perform four tool use tasks in three experimental conditions: exposure to the apparatus (N); demonstration of the correct solution (C); and demonstration of a failed attempt followed by the correct solution to the problem (I + C). Results suggest that the left hemisphere is indeed critical for action and that selective neuropsychological deficits can affect action imitation and selection of goal-directed movements, independently from each other. Findings also indicate that when the ability to imitate actions is lowered emulation may become available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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16. A left basal ganglia case of dynamic aphasia or impairment of extra-language cognitive processes?
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Crescentini, Cristiano, Lunardelli, Alberta, Mussoni, Alessandro, Zadini, Antonietta, and Shallice, Tim
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APHASIA , *CEREBROVASCULAR disease patients , *SPEECH disorders , *BASAL ganglia diseases , *COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
We report the case of OTM who presented with dynamic aphasia following a stroke that occurred in the left basal ganglia. He showed drastically reduced spontaneous speech in the context of well preserved naming, repetition and comprehension skills. OTM was particularly impaired in generating words, sentences and phrases when cued by a stimulus allowing many response options. By contrast, when a single response was strongly suggested by a stimulus, he could generate verbal responses adequately. OTM's non-verbal response generation abilities varied across tasks. He performed in the normal range in a motor movement generation test and he produced as many figures as controls when tested on a figural fluency task. He showed, however, many perseverations on this test. Moreover in a random number generation task he produced more responses that were part of ascending and descending series of numbers. The patient's impairments are interpreted as a consequence of two deficits. The first of these consists of an inability to generate verbal responses particularly in situations of high competition and involves the function of left frontal regions. The second deficit is one of impaired novel thought generation as evidenced by perseverations. This second deficit has been proposed to be a function of basal ganglia damage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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17. Investigation on the Loss of Taste and Smell and Consequent Psychological Effects: A Cross-Sectional Study on Healthcare Workers Who Contracted the COVID-19 Infection
- Author
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Claudia Canaletti, Corrado Negro, Luisa Dudine, Ingrid Santini, Giulia Abram, Marta Paris, Valentina Pesavento, Paolo Manganotti, Barbara Gregoretti, Federico Ronchese, Alberta Lunardelli, Fabiola Giudici, Vera Baroni, Dudine, Luisa, Canaletti, Claudia, Giudici, Fabiola, Lunardelli, Alberta, Abram, Giulia, Santini, Ingrid, Baroni, Vera, Paris, Marta, Pesavento, Valentina, Manganotti, Paolo, Ronchese, Federico, Gregoretti, Barbara, and Negro, Corrado
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Health Personnel ,Psychological intervention ,Disease ,psychological distre ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,healthcare worker ,psychological distress ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,smell lo ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,healthcare workers ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,Brief Research Report ,Ageusia ,taste disorder ,smell loss ,Smell ,Distress ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Taste disorder ,Taste ,Anxiety ,Public Health ,medicine.symptom ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between psychological distress and taste and sense of smell dysfunctions on healthcare workers (HCW) who contracted the COVID-19 infection in the midst of the disease outbreak. Reports of sudden loss of taste and smell which persist even after recovery from COVID-19 infection are increasingly recognized as critical symptoms for COVID-19 infections. Therefore, we conducted a cross-sectional study on COVID-19 HCW (N = 104) who adhered to respond to a phone semistructured interview addressing the virus symptoms and associated psychological distress. Data were collected from June to September 2020. Findings confirm the association between experienced taste/olfactory loss and emotional distress and suggest that dysfunctions of taste and smell correlate positively with anxiety and depression. Furthermore, their psychological impact tends to persist even after the recovery from the disease, suggesting the need for appropriate psychological interventions to prevent people from developing more serious or long-lasting psychological disorders and, as far as HCW, to reduce the risk of work-related distress.
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- 2021
18. Investigation on the Loss of Taste and Smell and Consequent Psychological Effects: A Cross-Sectional Study on Healthcare Workers Who Contracted the COVID-19 Infection.
- Author
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Dudine L, Canaletti C, Giudici F, Lunardelli A, Abram G, Santini I, Baroni V, Paris M, Pesavento V, Manganotti P, Ronchese F, Gregoretti B, and Negro C
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Health Personnel, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Smell, Taste, Ageusia, COVID-19
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between psychological distress and taste and sense of smell dysfunctions on healthcare workers (HCW) who contracted the COVID-19 infection in the midst of the disease outbreak. Reports of sudden loss of taste and smell which persist even after recovery from COVID-19 infection are increasingly recognized as critical symptoms for COVID-19 infections. Therefore, we conducted a cross-sectional study on COVID-19 HCW ( N = 104) who adhered to respond to a phone semistructured interview addressing the virus symptoms and associated psychological distress. Data were collected from June to September 2020. Findings confirm the association between experienced taste/olfactory loss and emotional distress and suggest that dysfunctions of taste and smell correlate positively with anxiety and depression. Furthermore, their psychological impact tends to persist even after the recovery from the disease, suggesting the need for appropriate psychological interventions to prevent people from developing more serious or long-lasting psychological disorders and, as far as HCW, to reduce the risk of work-related distress., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Dudine, Canaletti, Giudici, Lunardelli, Abram, Santini, Baroni, Paris, Pesavento, Manganotti, Ronchese, Gregoretti and Negro.)
- Published
- 2021
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19. Tomato and tuna: a test for language-free assessment of action understanding.
- Author
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Danek AH, Gade M, Lunardelli A, and Rumiati RI
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- Aged, Animals, Aphasia diagnosis, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Language, Solanum lycopersicum, Male, Tuna, Aphasia psychology, Comprehension, Neuropsychological Tests
- Abstract
Objective: We introduce a novel test that allows pictorial, nonverbal assessment of action understanding., Background: Focusing on action goals and the sequential nature of actions, the "Tomato and Tuna Test" tests whether exposure to the accomplished goal of an action is sufficient to infer the preceding action. This aspect has rarely been addressed in conventional paradigms., Methods: We used the Tomato and Tuna Test in conjunction with another task, the Kissing and Dancing Test, to detect action understanding deficits in 11 patients (mean age 72 ± 6 years) with chronic brain lesions ± aphasia. We compared their performance to an age- and education-matched control group and to 15 young controls (mean age 24 ± 3 years). To investigate the influence of language deficits on test performance, we compared the scores of our patients with and without aphasia., Results: Our patients were less accurate than the matched controls on the Tomato and Tuna Test, though not slower. The Kissing and Dancing Test did not differentiate between patients and matched controls. Young controls performed better than patients on both tests., Conclusions: We found no performance differences between our aphasic and nonaphasic patients, confirming our assumption that both tests measure action understanding without requiring intact language abilities. We recommend the "Tomato and Tuna Test" as a new nonverbal measure of action understanding that can reveal subtle deficits.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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